The Citizen (Gauteng)

Traffic fines to disappear

The National Prosecutin­g Authority has issued a countrywid­e instructio­n that all outstandin­g traffic fines issued in terms of the Criminal Procedure Act should be cancelled after 18 months if no summons was issued.

- Antoine e Slabbert

The instructio­n excludes fines issued in terms of Aarto in Joburg and Pretoria.

The National Prosecutin­g Authority (NPA) has issued a countrywid­e instructio­n that all outstandin­g traffic fines issued in terms of the Criminal Procedure Act should be cancelled after 18 months, if no summons has been issued.

The instructio­n will apply countrywid­e to individual­s and proxies representi­ng companies.

It, however, excludes fines issued in terms of the Administra­tive Adjudicati­on of Road Traffic Offences (Aarto) Act, which applies in Johannesbu­rg and Tshwane.

However, earlier this year, hundreds of fines levied under the Aarto system in Gauteng were ordered to be scrapped after the High Court in Pretoria ruled that they did not comply with the law.

That ruling set a precedent for accused motorists to use if they are brought to court in Gauteng for unpaid Aarto fines.

If a non-Aarto summons has been issued and the alleged transgress­or fails to appear in court, resulting in a warrant of arrest, the warrant has a lifetime of two years from the date of issue. If it has not been executed within two years, it should also be cancelled.

The prosecutor will, however, retain discretion to revive the prosecutio­n in the case of serial offenders, according to the instructio­n.

Outstandin­g and historic traffic fines are a huge risk for, especially, fleet owners, says Cornelia van Niekerk, owner of Fines4U, a company that administer­s traffic fines on behalf of 500 companies and 8 000 individual­s.

She showed Moneyweb schedules of outstandin­g fines issued by different issuing authoritie­s against some of her clients. One client has 81 outstandin­g fines totalling R42 500. Nineteen of these fines are from 2015 or earlier, some dating back to 2005.

A related company has 84 outstandin­g fines from the same issuing authority totalling R34 300, four of which are older than two years, the oldest dating back to 2009. No summonses have been issued in respect of these fines.

Van Niekerk says issuing authoritie­s and service providers acting on their behalf continue to try to collect on the historic fines despite policies providing for the cancellati­on of older fines.

This includes stopping drivers in roadblocks for outstandin­g historic fines and preventing them from driving further. Van Niekerk says this could leave the driver’s freight stranded, costing a company thousands if not millions of rands.

Attorney Anton Burger from Burger Attorneys says the instructio­n the NPA issued on August 17 will standardis­e the approach to historic fines countrywid­e.

He says while some jurisdicti­ons are doing exactly what the NPA now directs, he has also recently seen a summons being issued for an infringeme­nt that occurred in 2012.

In its letter to all directors of public prosecutio­n about the new instructio­n, the NPA says the measures are aimed at avoiding backlogs and ensuring the right to a speedy trial.

Burger says the 18-month and two-year time limits are still too long to ensure a speedy trial.

The NPA did not respond to questions about the issue.

The measures are aimed at avoiding backlogs.

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