smurfslayer
Be vewwy, vewwy quiet. We’re hunting sasquatch77
- Joined
- Dec 16, 2016
- Posts
- 17,569
- Reaction score
- 27,062
I am interested in why they couldn't enforce their own policies and procedures. Most often those policies and procedures are what the courts look at when the state law is silent, and courts give deference to the agencies own interpretations of their rules/policies if ambiguous.
there was enabling legislation, and state administrative code, but MVA had no stated ‘authority’ explicitly or implicitly to charge more than the receipt, and in such a case they wanted a notarized receipt. I’m ok with it, if the ‘policy’ is authorized properly and theirs was not. Maybe they did have that authority but they couldn’t cite it or point to it so I insisted they accept the receipt. I grew up there, and had seen quite a few really awful things happen to people. Like sending some guy home because some seller signed the wrong line on the title, only way to correct is get a new title from Glen Burnie. I had to do that dance once, and that was a major, day long affair. Or the guy who was assessed a compulsory insurance fee of almost $3000.00 on a beater, Dodge Dart Swinger - he was in front of me in line. The car wasn’t even worth $300.00 - their fee was $200 for the first 30 days without insurance, and 5 or 7 dollars per day after that. At that time, there was no cap on that amount.
When I was 19, I had a couple of vehicles and got cheaper insurance on the newer one I kept full coverage on, so I called to have the old insurance company cancel that policy. They cancelled -all- my policies, landing me on the compulsory insurance violator list. MVA sends insurance proof demand letters every 6-12 months to those people, seemingly in perpetuity. I got a demand letter in I think it was 2000 for a car I sold in 1989. In my last MVA interaction, I ended up speaking with a woman on either Christmas eve or the day before who thought my situation sounded peculiar, so she did some digging. I expected nothing but later in the afternoon she called me back, found the previous insurance paperwork, and the sale of the car - she even sent me a letter advising the demand was satisfied.
I can’t imagine having to deal with MD MVA again...