This chapter's purpose is to establish a fee and a charge, payable
to the city, in an amount equal to the city's administrative costs
and expenses for:
A. Removing,
impounding, storing, or releasing a lawfully impounded vehicle; and
B. Conducting
a hearing and processing an appeal after a vehicle is impounded.
(Ord. 5392 § 2, 2004)
The city council finds, determines and declares that:
A. California's
Vehicle Code and section
10.28.120 of this code authorize the police department and other duly authorized persons to remove motor vehicles from the city's streets and hold, or "impound," the vehicles for certain violations of the law, such as: unpaid parking tickets, expired registration, illegal parking, driving under the influence or without a license, speed contests, or reckless driving. The
Vehicle Code also permits the police department to impound vehicles for preserving evidence, investigating a crime and other lawful reasons. The city's police department regularly impounds vehicles in violation of those laws.
B. To
provide the public with dependable, expeditious towing, storage and
roadside assistance for motor vehicle collisions, inoperative vehicles,
stolen and recovered vehicles or illegally parked vehicles, the city's
police department operates a towing program. Through an award and
a city contract, one or more private-sector companies not only tow
and store vehicles for the public, but also remove and garage impounded
vehicles on the city's behalf. At the police department's request,
the private companies under contract with the city tow these vehicles
and keep them safe until the owner or the owner's agent requests the
impounded vehicle's release.
C. Vehicle
Code section 22850.5(a) authorizes the city to adopt an ordinance
for imposing a vehicle impound release fee equal to the city's administrative
expenses related to removing, impounding, storing or releasing vehicles.
Additionally,
Vehicle Code section 22850.5(b)(4) allows the city to
impose a charge, as part of its administrative costs, for providing
a hearing or an appeal on the impounded vehicle's removal, impoundment,
storage or release, if the registered owner, the legal owner or either
one's agent requests in writing the hearing or appeal.
D. As
part of a study of the police department's costs in using private
contractors to provide vehicle towing, storage, and roadside assistance
to the public, the city's internal audit department determined that
when the police department impounds a vehicle and later releases it
to its owner, the city incurs substantial labor costs and administrative
expenses, including, but not limited to:
2. Contacting
the court or prosecutor and confirming the vehicle is no longer needed
as evidence;
3. Verifying
that Department of Motor Vehicle registration fees were paid;
4. Releasing
the impound hold on the vehicle; and
5. Conducting
a post-impound hearing or processing a post-impound appeal.
E. When
the police department lawfully impounds a vehicle for a violation
of the law, the vehicle's owner—rather than the public at large—should
reimburse the city for its costs to impound the vehicle. Therefore,
creating a vehicle impound release fee and requiring the vehicle's
owner to pay the fee are appropriate means for not only recovering
the city's administrative costs and expenses, but also ensuring that
the general public does not shoulder the burden of paying them.
F. When
the vehicle's owner requests a hearing or an appeal concerning the
impounded vehicle's removal, impoundment, storage, or release, that
person— rather than the public at large— should reimburse
the city for its costs to conduct the hearing and process the appeal.
Therefore, creating a post-impound hearing charge and requiring the
vehicle's owner to pay the charge are appropriate means for not only
recovering the city's administrative costs and expenses, but also
ensuring that the general public does not shoulder the burden of paying
them.
(Ord. 5392 § 2, 2004)
For purposes of this chapter, the following words and phrases
have the meanings ascribed to them unless the context otherwise requires:
"Legal owner"
has the same meaning as that term is defined in California
Vehicle Code section 370, or any successor legislation. The term includes
the legal owner's agent.
"Official police tow services provider"
means a person who:
1.
Has a written contract with the city's police department or
another city department;
2.
Furnishes towing service, such as: roadside assistance, towing,
storage or a related operation for a damaged, inoperative, abandoned,
stolen, recovered, impounded or illegally parked vehicle; and
3.
Is authorized in the city's contract to collect from a registered
owner or a legal owner any one or more of the charges that are listed
in the contract's "Schedule of Rates and Charges for the City of Glendale's
Official Police Tow Services" for providing towing service.
"Person"
means an individual, company, firm, association, trust, estate,
partnership, corporation, limited liability company or an entity,
however organized.
"Registered owner"
has the same meaning as that term is defined in California
Vehicle Code section 505, or any successor legislation. The term includes
the registered owner's agent.
"Vehicle"
has the same meaning as that term is defined in California
Vehicle Code section 670, or any successor legislation.
(Ord. 5392 § 2, 2004)
The police department shall not collect from a registered owner or a legal owner the vehicle impound release fee under section
10.56.040 or the post-impound hearing charge under section
10.56.050, or both, under any of the following circumstances:
A. When
the vehicle was:
1. Reported
stolen and recovered;
2. Driven
or taken without the registered owner's or the legal owner's express
or implied permission, and the vehicle was evidence of a crime, contained
evidence of a crime or was part of a criminal investigation;
5. Lien
sold under
Civil Code section 3068.1 to 3074 and
Vehicle Code section
22851 or any successor legislation, and the lien sale proceeds were
insufficient to pay the tow provider's total charges and administrative
costs.
B. When
a court orders a waiver of the vehicle impound release fee or the
post-impound hearing charge, or both.
C. When
state law or this code exempts or excludes a registered owner or a
legal owner from paying a vehicle impound release fee or a post-impound
hearing charge, or both.
(Ord. 5392 § 2, 2004)
The police department shall refund the impound release fee and
the post-impound hearing charge to a registered owner or a legal owner
who paid the fee and the charge, if the hearing officer whom the police
department appoints to conduct the post-impound hearing or process
the post-impound appeal determines that:
A. A reasonable
ground for removing, impounding, or storing the vehicle did not exist;
C. The
facts disclosed at the hearing or in the appeal warrant the impound
release fee's refund.
(Ord. 5392 § 2, 2004)