HSC examines when county ordinances are (and aren't) preempted by state statutes
State v. Pickell (HSC December 26, 2023)
Background. Michael Pickell was charged with operating
a vehicle while under the influence of an intoxicant. He filed a motion to
suppress evidence challenging the basis for the traffic stop.
At the hearing, Officer Raul Mehra testified that
he was on duty in Kihei one night when he saw Pickell in the left-turn-only lane
with his left-turn signal on at the intersection of Pi‘ilani Highway and Ohukai
Road. In Pickell’s lane was a left-turn-only sign and a left directional arrow.
Next to the traffic light there was a gin that indicated left-turn only. When
Pickell’s light turned green, he made a U-turn instead of turning left onto
Ohukai Road. The turn required Pickell to drive across double solid yellow
lines and a dashed white line. Officer Mehra initiated a traffic stop. Pickell
said he was going home but later said he was going to Safeway. He also said he
thought he could make a lawful U-turn because he was from California and did
not know if U-turns were legal in Hawai'i. No signs near the intersection
permitted U-turns.
The district court—with the Hon. Blaine J.
Kobayashi presiding—denied the motion to suppress. Pickell entered a
conditional plea and appealed. The ICA affirmed and the HSC took certiorari.
The preemption problem. Pickell argued that HRS §
291C-82(c) requires a sign expressly prohibiting him from making U-turns:
The director of
transportation and the counties by ordinance with respect to the highways under
their respective jurisdictions prohibit the turning of any vehicle so as to
proceed in the opposite direction on the highway at any location where such
turning would be dangerous to those using the highway or would unduly interfere
with the free movement of traffic.
The prosecution countered with Maui County Code §
10.24.100(E):
In all cases where
official marks, buttons, sings or directional arrows painted on the pavement
are placed within or adjacent to intersections, no operator of a vehicle shall
execute a movement at such intersections, otherwise than as directed and
required by such marks, buttons, signs or arrows.
When a county ordinance is preempted by state
statutes, the county must yield. The HSC characterized the issue as one of
preemption and whether HRS § 291C-82(c) preempts the county code. “The
legislature shall create counties, and may create other political subdivisions
within the State, and provide the government thereof. Each political
subdivision shall have and exercise such powers as shall be conferred under
general laws.” Haw. Const. Art. VIII, Sec. 1.
In other words, “a county’s powers are limited to
those conferred by the legislature under general laws.” Ruggles v. Yagong,
135 Hawai'i 411, 422, 353 P.3d 953, 964 (2015). The Legislature empowered
counties to enact laws that are not “inconsistent with, or tending to defeat,
the intent of any state statute where the statute does not disclose an express
or implied intent that the statute shall be exclusive or uniform throughout the
State.” HRS § 46.-1.5(13).
The two paths to preemption. The statute preempts “any
ordinance that either conflicted with the intent of a state statute or
legislated in an area already staked out by the legislature for exclusive and
statewide statutory treatment.” Richardson v. City and Cnty of Honolulu,
76 Hawai'i 46, 60, 868 P.2d 1193, 1207 (1994). The HSC broke the Richardson test
down into two alternatives.
A municipal ordinance may be preempted by state
law if “(1) it covers the same subject matter embraced within a comprehensive
state statutory scheme disclosing an express or implied intent to be exclusive
and uniform throughout the state or (2) it conflicts with state law.” Id.
at 62, 868 P.2d at 1209.
The state’s traffic code is not a “comprehensive
state statutory scheme” preempting counties from regulating traffic. The HSC examined the first
alternative. When determining if the ordinance covers the same subject matter
as a state statutory scheme, the HSC looked to the “comprehensive statutory
scheme.” See In re: Application of Anamizu, 52 Haw. 550, 554, 481 P.2d
116, 119 (1971); Citizens Utilities Co. v. County of Kauai, 72 Haw. 285,
814 P.2d 398 (1991).
The HSC surveyed the State Traffic Code enacted in
1971. According to the HSC, the legislative history “evinces clear legislative
intent to allow counites to enact their own traffic ordnances.” Moreover, the
traffic code applies throughout the State “and in all political subdivisions
therein provided that any matter not covered in this chapter relating to rules
of the road may be subject to appropriate county ordinances in any county.” HRS
§ 291C-162. The Code also “shall not be deemed to prevent counties with respect
to streets and highways under their jurisdiction” from regulating traffic. HRS
§ 291C-163(a)(2).
The HSC also examined HRS § 291C-82, its legislative
history, and various amendments. Although the statute no longer states it, the
history shows that it was intended to apply to dangerous locations at highways
and did not address intersections. That was enough for the HSC to conclude that
it does not indicate a comprehensive state statutory scheme. The ordinance is
not preempted under the first alternative of the Richardson test.
The ordinance does not conflict with state law. A county ordinance is
preempted when it conflicts with state law. Richardson, 76 Hawai'i at
62, 868 P.2d at 1209. A conflict arises when the ordinance “prohibits what the
statute permits or permits what the statute prohibits.” Waikiki Resort
Hotel, Inc. v. City and Cnty of Honolulu, 63 Haw. 222, 241, 624 P.2d 1353,
1366 (1981).
The HSC held that MCC § 10.24.100(E) does not conflict
with HRS § 291C-82. The statute requires signs prohibiting U-turns in areas
deemed dangerous. It was intended to apply to highway locations and does not
refer to intersections. The ordinance, however, requires a driver follow
directional movements on markings and signs at intersections. The HSC noted
that abiding by signs, pavement markings, and signals under the county
ordinance would not cause a driver to violate HRS § 291C-82(c). “Drivers executing
left turns as required by the signs satisfy MCC § 10.24.100(E); they do not
violate HRS § 291C-82(c) because they are not executing U-turns against
prohibitive signage. Alternative, if an intersection has a sign prohibiting a
U-turn as well as a sign and markings indicating left turn only, a driver could
adhere to both by making a left turn.” The statute and ordinance co-exist and “neither
permits what the other prohibits.” The HSC held there was no conflict.
Without preemption, the county ordinance applies and was violated by Pickell. Having upheld the county ordinance, the HSC held that Officer Mehra had reasonable suspicion to stop Pickell. He saw him make a U-turn at an intersection that only allowed a left turn. That was reasonable suspicion to believe Pickell violated MCC § 10.24.100(E).
Comments
1.There were signs prohibiting U-turns at other intersections on the same hwy that have the same combination of signs, lights, and road-markings as this one, plus the addition of a no U-turn or Trucks, no U-turn sign. markings as this one. The absence of such a sign at this one is an indication that U-turns were not prohibited according to the signage scheme. According to this opinion, cars can't even make a U-turn at an intersection that says "Trucks, no U-turn," so not only is the sign superfluous in it's entirety because U-turns are already prohibited, but the distinction between cars and trucks is irrelevant because all vehicles are prohibited from doing a U-turn there.
2. A U-turn IS a left turn. There is no U-shaped traffic light. If it points left, that's where you make your U-turn. This decision makes it so there are no U-turns permitted at any intersection except in the very rare case where it says U-turn permitted. I think there are two of those on Maui.
3. The police officer cited the state law and not the county ordinance as the reason for pulling the driver over.