It very well could be. Are there no other indications of the officers identification on the ticket at all? Badge number? Patrol unit number? Some courts allow officers to 'amend' the ticket in court, some don't. My best suggestion is to show up on the date on the ticket and plead "not guilty" and explain the reason to the judge. I have seen drivers get off in the past due to this omission.
no
This is so small I doubt it. Just pay it and forget it.
I have the same question! I was looking over the ticket I got last night and realized the officer clearly wrote a 9 as the last number in my drivers license number and the last number of my drivers license number is really a 3...I really hope this makes the ticket void.
The officer always has the right to void a ticket after the fact as well as if he cannot he can forgo going to court on said date and the charges will be dismissed.
It is very unlikely that a traffic ticket will be dismissed if the Officer does not record the birth date correctly.
No. The officer could always say you refused to sign. Besides , you obviously know if you were stopped for a moving violation. Don't try to weasel out of this. You may just get in more trouble. Go to traffic court and tell it to the judge. Call the local PD [ non-emergency number ] and see if the officer is required to even request that you sign.
of course its not void...but, theres a but there..the arresting officer must read it to you before u accept together with ur rights if u dont know so..
Depends on the state....Usually most states hold this to be harmless error that can be corrected immediately or by reissuing the ticket. Mainly it depends upon whether your ticket correctly informs you of your charge. I live in Southwest Michigan and my Girlfriend got a minor parking ticket in a subdivision. The Officer who wrote the ticket did not enter my Girlfriend's license plate number correctly and mistakenly entered an "F" instead of an "E". My Girlfriend called to ask if the ticket should be waived because of the officer's error and the county office waived the entire ticket. Other than that one letter the entire parking ticket was correct and accurate. The make/model, color, and violation were all correct. However, because the error was made by the officer, the ticket was void.
No. It is superfluous. The officer will come to court accompanied by the inspection and calibration certificates and the usage logs that are required to be kept.
No it will not void the ticket. There are standard speed limits set by state statute which must be obeyed whether they are posted or not. Exceeding these can result in a violation.
when we declare any function with void,it doesnt return any value
over here in Ireland it would be void