Filed 6/1/17
APPELLATE DIVISION
SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA
COUNTY OF ORANGE
THE PEOPLE, CASE NO. 30-2016-00843760
Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. IRM477178)
v. OPINION
TAMARA SUE FARLEIGH,
Defendant and Appellant.
Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County, Harbor Justice
Center, Joy Markman, Judge. Affirmed.
* * *
Defendant/Appellant Tamara Sue Farleigh appeals her conviction of violating
Vehicle Code section 22350, the Basic Speed Law.1
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On September 9, 2015, at approximately 4:35 p.m., Officer Cody Bates noticed
defendant was smoking and holding the cigarette out of the left window while driving.
The officer also saw that she was holding a cellphone in her right hand and looking down
at the screen, which was activated. The defendant was traveling 45 miles per hour
approaching a busy intersection with numerous restaurants and shops and with no hands
on the steering wheel. The officer initiated a traffic stop. The defendant told the officer
that she was using her cellphone for GPS navigation.
1
All further statutory references will be to the Vehicle Code unless otherwise stated.
The officer testified that the weather was dry and clear, there was no water on the
roadway, traffic was heavy, and the posted speed limit was 50 miles per hour. Finally,
when asked whether the defendant‟s speed was “appropriate for roadway conditions,” the
officer responded “If you‟re speaking of the roadway itself and not the conduct of the
driver, 45 miles per hour would be appropriate for that roadway.” The officer cited the
defendant for violating the Basic Speed Law. On the citation, the officer marked “zero”
as the safe speed.
At trial, the court defined roadway as “everything going on, on that road, not
whether it‟s dry, not whether it‟s heavy or light traffic; everything going on at that time.”
The trial court went on to conclude that the way someone is driving can form the basis of
a violation of the Basic Speed Law, holding that “I cannot believe that it‟s reasonable
speed for prevailing conditions, i.e., conditions include not just the speed limit, but how a
person is driving. Driving without hands, per se – per se, to me is unreasonable and
unsafe, going 45 miles an hour without hands.” At the end of the hearing, the trial court
reiterated her conclusion that “prevailing conditions” are “a very general concept, and I
think it allows an officer to give a ticket based on all the conditions, including the way a
driver drives, the conditions on the road, other cars.”
The defendant timely appealed.
DISCUSSION
This case poses a straightforward question of statutory interpretation. Under the
Basic Speed Law, can an officer ticket a person who is driving at a speed which is safe
for current road and weather conditions because the speed is unsafe for the manner in
which the person is driving? With no case law on point, this question is a matter of first
impression.
“In matters of statutory construction our fundamental concern is with legislative
intent. [Citation.] In order to determine such intent, we begin with the language of the
statute itself. [Citation.] If the language is clear, there is no need to resort to other indicia
of intent; there is no need for further construction. [Citation.] However, „every statute
2
should be construed with reference to the whole system of law of which it is a part, so
that all may be harmonized and have effect. [Citation.] Legislative intent will be
determined so far as possible from the language of the statutes, read as a whole.‟
[Citation.]” (People v. Moon (2011) 193 Cal.App.4th 1246, 1249-1250.) Finally,
“[a]nother „fundamental rule[ ] of statutory construction is that a law should not be
applied in a manner producing absurd results, because the Legislature is presumed not to
intend such results.‟ [Citation.]” (San Jose Unified School Dist. v. Santa Clara County
(2017) 7 Cal App.5th 967, 982.) Applying these rules to the present case, leads to the
conclusion that the Basic Speed Law, read as a whole, regulates speed based on the
totality of circumstances, including the way a person is driving.
Section 22350, the Basic Speed Law, provides: “No person shall drive a vehicle
upon a highway at a speed greater than is reasonable or prudent having due regard for
weather, visibility, the traffic on, and the surface and width of, the highway, and in no
event at a speed which endangers the safety of persons or property.”
The first part of the statute – regulating speed that is “greater than is reasonable or
prudent having due regard for weather, visibility, the traffic on, and the surface and width
of, the highway” – by its plain language regulates speed specifically with regard to four
external factors outside of the driver‟s control (i.e., “weather,” “visibility,” “traffic,” and
“the surface . . . of the highway”). From the terms of this portion of the statute, it is
obvious that the Legislature did not intend to include speed relative to unlike factors such
as the behavior of the driver. (See Imperial Merchant Services, Inc. v. Hunt (2009) 47
Cal.4th 381, 389 [utilizing the familiar maxim of statutory construction “expressio unius
est exlusio alterius, or „to express or include one thing implies the exclusion of the other‟
”].)
The second part of the statue – regulating speed “which endangers the safety of
persons and property” – is broader. By its terms, this portion of the statute prohibits
excessive speed in general without any limitation. This portion of the statute places the
focus not on a set of express factors, but on “the safety of persons and property.”
3
Limiting the factors the police and courts could consider to factors external to the
driver‟s behavior, as the defense would have us do, would write the second portion of the
statute out of the Basic Speed Law and write in a limitation which the Legislature did not
see fit to include. The first portion of the statute prohibits driving over the speed
appropriate for external conditions, and the second portion of the statute prohibits driving
at any excessive speed. Read together, both portions of the statute have effect and protect
the public from any sort of dangerous speed.
At the trial, the defense and the trial court debated the consequences of either
construction of the Basic Speed Law selected by the court. At trial (and further on
appeal), the defense warned that, unmoored from external conditions, the Basic Speed
Law would become a catchall for all sorts of driving behavior the police find distracting,
even when the behavior has not been proscribed by statute. (See, e.g., People v. Spriggs
(2014) 224 Cal. App.4th 150, 165 [holding that section 23123, subdivision (a) prohibits
listening and talking on a wireless telephone, but not looking at a map application while
driving].) For its part, the trial court warned that limiting the Basic Speed Law to external
conditions would force the police to stand idly by while drivers careen down the road
behaving in all sorts of hazardous ways. It is not for this court to choose between rival
absurdities, but to interpret that statue as written, and, as written, the statute does not limit
the factors that the police can consider in determining whether a driver is driving at an
excessive speed. (See Hale v. Superior Court (2017) 225 Cal.App.4th 268, 276
[cautioning that in using the “absurd result” rule, the judiciary risks “ „rewriting statutes
to find an unexpressed legislative intent‟ ” and acting as a “super-Legislature”].)
4
In the present case, the officer testified that the defendant‟s speed was unsafe for
the way in which she was driving. Because the Basic Speed Law is not limited to
regulating speed with reference to conditions external to the driver herself, this evidence
is sufficient to support a conviction, and the judgment is affirmed.
DAVID A. HOFFER
Judge
5
Richard Allen Baylis for Defendant and Appellant.
Xavier Becerra, Attorney General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
6