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17mph past limit in nc have a court date have to show up what does that will i have my lics taken from me or will i not be able to drive in nc for 30days and will that be the same in sc

2007-04-22 06:01:20 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Politics & Government Law Enforcement & Police

4 answers

Check with the NC court to see if they allow "Study At Home" school. If they do, ask the court fo it! Here, in California, you can do it by mail.

2007-04-22 06:07:36 · answer #1 · answered by John S 6 · 1 0

It's according to the court and the judge. What i recommend is to call the court and ask if you can go to a driving school and pay the fine and maybe they can lower the speed so you want lose you NC lic for 30 days..You might have to pay a higher fine but it will be worth it in the long run..Most insurance companies dont look at anything under 14 mph over the speed limit..

2007-04-22 06:12:00 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

If you were issued a summons, you must appear in court. Usually, though, you can agree to pay the bill at a place arranged by the police department that issued the ticket. Just call the station, tell that the you are not going to contest the charges, and would like to pay the ticket. If this was your first offense, it would be strange to revoke your license over this.

If you have an outstanding ticket in another state, you cannot drive in that state until the charge is cleared. The state can contact your home state as request that they to revoke your license. South Carolina will not be legally obligated to do so, but if the request is reasonable, and you failed to appear in court, there'd no reason for them not to do so.

After that, you'd have to answer, not only for the speeding ticket, but why you ignored a summons to court. That's a mess you'll want to avoid.

2007-04-22 06:09:48 · answer #3 · answered by jtrusnik 7 · 1 0

No, the laws apply in the state where you broke the law. The best thing you can do is pay the speeding ticket. Your insurance company will likely be notified and your insurance rates will go up because you will be a higher risk. The court date is only if you are disputing the ticket. Pay it and then quit thinking about it. Everyone makes mistakes. This isn't that bad.

2007-04-22 06:21:27 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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