Stanton wrote:R v Tresham is an 18 year old case which resulted in amendments to the HTA. I'd suggest you have a look at
R. v Hajivasilis which is more current and relevant. In Hajivasilis, the Court of Appeal clarified that certain sections of the HTA
can apply to private property.
I'm not happy to read that, but I really appreciate it. These laws are incredibly confusing! Moving violations aren't applicable on private property, but stuff like this is? You can drive on private property without a licence or insurance, but you can't do so with the wrong sticker on your car? I thought I was protected on private property, and was doing my utmost to avoid breaking any laws once I determined something was wrong. I have an appointment with a paralegal on Friday, and will file my disclosure request after speaking with them to be sure I'm going about this the right way.
Markus wrote:So what would have caused the officer in this case to further investigate the numbers on a seemingly valid sticker? Is it normal police procedure to verify these numbers or is it likely that there was something the OP did/said that would warrant a further and a very much in-depth investigation?
I'd love to know that as well. I suspect this is all automated, and my plate would have come up as having an expired sticker on the car (I own two similar cars I haven't been able to drive this year due to personal reasons). There were three officers sitting in a parking lot on a break (official or otherwise), and the car in question is a mint condition 1990's BMW M3 that the officer complimented me on several times despite his otherwise very hostile tone. I parked the car right near them, too, not even thinking I'd broken any laws, so it wouldn't exactly have been a stretch for one of them to run my plates while they were parked there for over an hour talking.
After he 'stopped' me he took over a half hour apparently just to determine that he could not in fact seize my plate as it was legally attached to the car and the car was insured. You'd think he would realize that might indicate I'm not attempting to cheat the system, especially given that I was able to correct this that same afternoon, but I never got the chance to talk to him beforehand.
I can't believe the laws in this province actually permit someone to be arrested for making an easily correctible mistake even if the car in question is parked in their driveway! How could that possibly make sense? I had no way of knowing I had the wrong sticker on the car from looking at it, either, as I didn't handle the renewal or the sticker application and I have two similar cars. I did know I had no front plate mounted on the car (as there is no place for one), and I thought that was what he was concerned with. I typically place the plate prominently on my windshield, but had forgotten it at home as was intending to retrieve it.
Amazing what we put up with in this province. When I did a bumper swap in my garage on one of my cars years ago it apparently would have been an offense to remove the rear plate had I done the work in my driveway instead of my garage.