jeffreyt2000
Member
In San Francisco, there is a shortage of parking in certain areas. In some of these areas you will find what I will call "driveway curb cuts" where there is no actual driveway. What I mean by this is that the curb cuts exists (dropping the curb to street level) as if the entrance to a driveway but there is no driveway. On the other side of the sidewalk from the cut in the curb is a permanent fence, side of a building, or other structure where a vehicle cannot enter. I am trying to determine if it is legal to park in these locations (I believe it is) and/or if you can reasonably fight a ticket for parking there.
My reasoning is:
1. per CA Streets And Highways code section 5870: "“Driveway” means a paved portion of a public street providing an unobstructed passage from the roadway to an offstreet area used for driving, servicing, parking, or otherwise accommodating motor vehicles."
2. What I am describing (the area between the "driveway cuts") does not provide passage to an offstreet area for accommodating vehicles because on teh other side of the sidewalk is a wall, fence, etc.
3. The sidewalk is a public access way and is NOT "an offstreet area for accommodating vehicles ..."
4. Therefore my contention is:
a. a driveway by the definition given does not exist since there is no area to which I am blocking passage
b. the curb cuts do not define a driveway, they are simply a planned or historical item for a potential driveway to exist at that location
c. thus parking at that location is not blocking driveway and a ticket should not be issued
So, am I missing something?
and yes, I recently received a ticket for parking in one of these areas. The owner of the building called the police to have me ticketed. Across the sidewalk from the curb cuts is the outline of what looks like a garage door, but in reality it is just a pretend garage door frame nailed to a solid wood wall. The polite officer apologized and said that the owner asked that I be towed, but since the owner would not "open the door" to prove I was blocking access they would not tow my car - but he had the right to have my car ticketed. The owner later lectured me that it is his property and he pays a lot of money for the property so he has the right to "protect my parking area". I asked what parking area and he said "the street in front of my driveway" pointing to the curb cuts as if they defined a driveway.
I am protesting the ticket based on the logic above. So I am wondering if I am missing something specific to SF and CA codes.
Thank you
My reasoning is:
1. per CA Streets And Highways code section 5870: "“Driveway” means a paved portion of a public street providing an unobstructed passage from the roadway to an offstreet area used for driving, servicing, parking, or otherwise accommodating motor vehicles."
2. What I am describing (the area between the "driveway cuts") does not provide passage to an offstreet area for accommodating vehicles because on teh other side of the sidewalk is a wall, fence, etc.
3. The sidewalk is a public access way and is NOT "an offstreet area for accommodating vehicles ..."
4. Therefore my contention is:
a. a driveway by the definition given does not exist since there is no area to which I am blocking passage
b. the curb cuts do not define a driveway, they are simply a planned or historical item for a potential driveway to exist at that location
c. thus parking at that location is not blocking driveway and a ticket should not be issued
So, am I missing something?
and yes, I recently received a ticket for parking in one of these areas. The owner of the building called the police to have me ticketed. Across the sidewalk from the curb cuts is the outline of what looks like a garage door, but in reality it is just a pretend garage door frame nailed to a solid wood wall. The polite officer apologized and said that the owner asked that I be towed, but since the owner would not "open the door" to prove I was blocking access they would not tow my car - but he had the right to have my car ticketed. The owner later lectured me that it is his property and he pays a lot of money for the property so he has the right to "protect my parking area". I asked what parking area and he said "the street in front of my driveway" pointing to the curb cuts as if they defined a driveway.
I am protesting the ticket based on the logic above. So I am wondering if I am missing something specific to SF and CA codes.
Thank you