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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
Donut Shop
Failure to appear.
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<blockquote data-quote="mswaim" data-source="post: 10901924" data-attributes="member: 538"><p>How old is this citation? </p><p></p><p>CVC section 16028(a) & (b) states you must present proof upon demand. If you cannot, or are taking too long and the officer's services are needed elsewhere - they are to mark it as no proof provided and put the burden on you to prove it when you appear on the other items.</p><p></p><p>If it has been turned over to a collection agency, most likely you will be forced to deal with them.</p><p></p><p>It is not uncommon for courts in any state to tack on penalties for failure to appear/pay, and is is equally common for the collections company to tack on their fees.</p><p></p><p>Your biggest fear right now should be the fact the court notified DMV of your failure to pay/appear. They will eventually, and when they do your license will be suspended.</p><p></p><p></p><p>RDJ - I assume your cheap shot is driven by your position that accessing a $300 fee for allowing a traffic fine to go delinquent is unique to California?</p><p></p><p>I'm assuming the Texas courts never access additional fines, fees, "court costs", etc.?? Is that what you are saying?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="mswaim, post: 10901924, member: 538"] How old is this citation? CVC section 16028(a) & (b) states you must present proof upon demand. If you cannot, or are taking too long and the officer's services are needed elsewhere - they are to mark it as no proof provided and put the burden on you to prove it when you appear on the other items. If it has been turned over to a collection agency, most likely you will be forced to deal with them. It is not uncommon for courts in any state to tack on penalties for failure to appear/pay, and is is equally common for the collections company to tack on their fees. Your biggest fear right now should be the fact the court notified DMV of your failure to pay/appear. They will eventually, and when they do your license will be suspended. RDJ - I assume your cheap shot is driven by your position that accessing a $300 fee for allowing a traffic fine to go delinquent is unique to California? I'm assuming the Texas courts never access additional fines, fees, "court costs", etc.?? Is that what you are saying? [/QUOTE]
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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
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