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High Court of New Zealand Decisions |
Last Updated: 26 November 2015
This case has been anonymized
IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND PALMERSTON NORTH REGISTRY
CRI-2008-454-55
L
Appellant
v
NEW ZEALAND POLICE
Respondent
Hearing: 3 February 2009
Counsel: Appellant in person
B D Vanderkolk for Respondent
Judgment: 12 February 2009 at 4pm
I direct the Registrar to endorse this judgment with a delivery time of 4pm on the
12th day of February 2009.
RESERVED JUDGMENT OF MACKENZIE J
[1] The appellant was, on 23 October 2008, following a defended hearing before Justices of the Peace in the District Court at Feilding, convicted and fined on a charge of exceeding the 100km per hour speed limit. He appeals against that
conviction.
L V NZ POLICE HC PMN CRI-2008-454-55 12 February 2009
[2] On 5 March 2008, the appellant was travelling towards Palmerston North on State Highway 3 near Awahuri. Sergeant Fraser, an experienced police officer, was driving a patrol car in the opposite direction. The patrol car was fitted with a Stalker DSR radar device which was in ‘hold’ mode. When he noticed the appellant’s vehicle approaching at what he thought was an excessive speed, Sergeant Fraser pushed the transmit button to turn the unit on. He looked at the speed on the radar device showing for the oncoming vehicle which he saw was 118kph. He pushed the
‘lock’ button, which locks the speed at which the device is
recording the speed of the target vehicle at the point of
locking. At that
point it was locked at 117kph. The device also locks the speed of the
patrol car at that point in
time, which was displayed as 99kph.
Sergeant Fraser immediately compared the 99kph shown with the speed recorded on
the vehicle’s
speedometer and his evidence was that it was the same speed
within 2kph, that being the variance shown on the testing of the speedometer
of
which the Sergeant gave evidence.
[3] The appellant gave evidence and said that he had in his vehicle a
GPS unit. He gave evidence that the maximum speed recorded
by the GPS, as
sighted by him at the particular time, was 104kph. He said that that meant
that since leaving Palmerston North that
morning, travelling to Bulls, spending
time in Bulls and then travelling back again, the vehicle on those two legs of
the trip had
not exceeded at any time 104kph. He said that the GPS had a
documented margin of error of about plus or minus 3kph.
[4] At the hearing the appellant explored fully in cross examination, both of Sergeant Fraser and of the police expert who gave evidence in relation to the accuracy and testing of the radar device, a number of issues relating to the accuracy of the reading obtained and factors which might influence that accuracy. Of particular relevance, and the principal basis of the present appeal, is the influence of a possible shadowing effect. The essence of that is that because the radar device is installed in a moving vehicle, the obtaining of an accurate reading of the speed of a target vehicle is dependent upon there being also an accurate reading of the speed of the patrol vehicle. The radar device obtains the reading of the patrol car speed by means of a radar signal from the road ahead of the patrol car. The essence of the
appellant’s contention is that if the signal from which the speed of
the patrol car is recorded is received not from the road
ahead of the vehicle
but from another vehicle travelling ahead of the patrol car, the device will
under record the speed of the patrol
car. It is for that reason that the speed
“locked in” for the patrol car must be compared with the speed shown
on the
patrol car speedometer. If the two are not the same (within margins of
tolerance), then the reading of the speed of the target vehicle
will not be
reliable.
[5] This issue was explored in some detail. The Justices
found that the procedures and processes for ensuring the
Stalker DSR is
accurate and the requirements for maintenance and compliance with the
police standards and protocols had
been met. They held that the GPS in the
Landcruiser could not be guaranteed to be accurate. They noted that the
defendant contested
the accuracy of the reading, in particular, because of the
possible shadowing effect. They held that the essential element was exceeding
the speed limit and, based on the evidence presented, the Court found the case
proved.
[6] On this appeal, the appellant relies particularly on the
proposition that the speed of the patrol car, as shown on the radar
device, was
not crossed checked against the speedometer in accordance with the
required processes. Sergeant Fraser’s
evidence, as I have set it out,
was that he first locked in the speed, and then immediately checked the
vehicle’s speedometer.
Mr L submits that the checking of the
vehicle speed should have been carried out prior to locking in the speed on the
radar
device. He relies upon descriptions of the process of obtaining radar
verification in the NZ Police Calibration Unit Speed Detection
Operators Module.
The most relevant passage reads:
Radar verification
There are three parts to radar verification:
2. a steady target reading
3. readings consistent with visual observation and audio tone
4. ground speed readings confirmed by patrol speedometer
When the operator is satisfied the target vehicle is producing the correct
reading they should lock the reading and take the appropriate
enforcement
action. It is not always possible to lock the target vehicle’s speed.
However, failure to lock the speed will
not prevent normal enforcement action
being taken.
[7] That document does not purport to contain procedures
which must necessarily be followed, nor does it purport
to establish a strict
order in which the steps must be carried out, as Mr L contends. It is obvious
that the comparison between
the speed on the radar device and the speed on the
speedometer must be made immediately, to avoid any opportunity for a change in
the actual speed of the patrol car. The passage which I have set out does not
prescribe a strict order in which the steps must
be taken. The actions to be
taken prior to “locking” the reading appear directed towards
establishing that an offence
may have been committed so as to justify the step
of “locking” the reading. They are not directed to the evidential
issues which may arise at trial after the reading has been locked and
enforcement action taken. There is in law no requirement
that the officer must
check the speedometer before locking in the radar device. The natural
sequence, in the absence
of a clear direction to the contrary in the operating
instructions, would seem to be to lock in the speed on the radar device, and
then to check that the speedometer is showing the same reading. Sergeant
Fraser’s evidence is that is what he did here. His
evidence sufficiently
establishes the cross check between the radar device reading and the
patrol car speedometer.
[8] Mr L also relies on some evidence that there may have been a truck and trailer unit in front of the patrol car. Sergeant Fraser’s evidence was that he did not recall that there was anything travelling in front of him. Under cross examination, when that proposition was put to him, he said that he could not recall being behind a truck. He said that he was travelling at 100kph and if he had been behind a truck doing that speed he would have stopped it for speeding. The Justices were entitled to prefer that evidence to Mr L ’s evidence that the patrol car had been following a truck. The Justices were also able to make a factual finding that they preferred the evidence of the speed record from the radar detector to that from the GPS in the appellant’s vehicle.
[9] The appellant refers to Cunningham v Police HC AK
CRI-2007-404-322 28
October 2008, in which it was held that if there is a reasonable doubt as to
whether the beam which monitors patrol car speed was
correctly monitoring the
static ground in front of the vehicle, then the charge will not be proved.
That is undoubtedly correct.
This is a question of fact. I do not
consider that the evidence here necessarily raises a reasonable doubt. The
proposition inherent in the Justices’ findings, that a reasonable doubt
did not exist, was fully open to them.
[10] In the Notice of Appeal, the appellant submits that the hearing was
conducted in a manner that was unfair and prejudicially
affected the outcome.
No oral submissions were directed to this aspect. Having considered the
transcript, I am satisfied that
the conduct of the hearing was entirely proper.
The appellant also submits that the Court did not adequately provide the reasons
for its decision. The judgment of the Justices, though brief, sufficiently
addressed all of the relevant issues. The question was
essentially one of fact
and the reasons make sufficiently clear the basis for the decision of the
Justices in this regard.
[11] The appellant in the Notice of Appeal also submits that an order
should not have been entered against him because there was
no mens rea or
negligence or had the offence been committed it could only have been the result
of a genuine mistake. This ground, not the subject
of additional oral
submissions, must also fail. The offence is not one in respect of which mens
rea must be established.
[12] For these reasons, the appeal is dismissed. Costs are
reserved.
“A D MacKenzie J”
Solicitors: Crown Solicitor, Palmerston North for Respondent
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