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-   Traffic Tickets & Car Insurance Discussion (https://www.gtcarz.com/traffic-tickets-car-insurance-discussion-18/)
-   -   What if the info is wrong on the ticket??? (https://www.gtcarz.com/traffic-tickets-car-insurance-discussion-18/what-if-info-wrong-ticket-745/)

Sham 02-21-2005 10:15 AM


Originally Posted by chrias
As mentioned before, the unpaid fines are in relation to unpaid parking and 407 tolls. If these are not paid then you will not get your plate sticker.


Why does the government care about unpaid 407 tolls? The 407 is privatized now.

drifter420 02-23-2005 04:31 PM

I have unpaid 407 for 4 years now and still able to renew my sticker.. mind you I have to get renewed sticker this march *knock on wood*

ss_z28 03-07-2005 08:21 AM

I got a speeding ticket like your's befor the cop messed my plates up and spelled my name wrong, i took it to the court house after the cop gave me the ticket i got a judge and he took care of it and the ticket was dropped, you shoud do the same you'll get off,

Civic01 03-07-2005 01:13 PM


Originally Posted by chrias
You're confused. Your driver's license is in accordance to your name. You cannot renew your plates if you have any unpaid ETR bills or parking fines as per Moosexing's post. HTA fines have nothing to do with plate renewals.

You can still renew your license if you have any unpaid HTA fines. It's when your license becomes suspended due to unpaid fines that you can't renew. You must pay your outstanding HTA fines at any Provincial Offences court office and THEN you have go to MTO and pay $150 to reinstate your driver's license. Don't assume that because you paid your fines your license will be automatically reinstated. You are still suspended until MTO tells you otherwise.

If you pay the outstanding amount for the "UNPAID" fines yet fail to pay the $150 fee you are considered "unlicenced" and are not a "suspended" driver.

rustysoap 04-01-2006 10:15 PM

what if the date was wrong? by 4 months? i.e. ticket really issued April 1 2006, but on ticket stated as january 4 2006.

i.e.

YYYY/MM/DD

supposed to be 2006/04/01

ticket states 2006/01/04

gldwngr 04-01-2006 10:26 PM

Depends on the JP. Probably fixable though.

The ticket isn't evidence so errors on it don't necessarily invalidate the ticket. Most errors on the ticket can be amended in court with the permission of teh JP, and most JPs are quite liberal giving out that permission.

The real evidence is in the cop's notebook. If the notebook has errors, then there is a chance.

sky_kid 04-01-2006 11:09 PM

I hate people who think that they can get off on a ticket because the cop put the date down wrong or some like that.

If I was a Judge, and someone came into my court with like that, I would tack on a 100$ court fee and throw them out for that.

I was at court a few days ago fighting a few things and there was some kid with his mom, and they were talking about how 'Oh he put the date down wrong so the ticket is invalid blah blah '

Lady, shut the **** up. Just because a cop had momentary dislexia does not mean that you didnt break the law.


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