Key: (1) language to be deleted (2) new language
CHAPTER 405-H.F.No. 2654
An act relating to public safety; allowing
personalized license plates to be issued for certain
trucks resembling pickup trucks; providing for
separate form for assignment of vehicle title;
clarifying transfer from dealer provision; increasing
allowable radius for transportation of certain farm
products; specifying requirements for motor vehicle
broker sign; driving while impaired; clarifying that
juvenile's age as it relates to DWI-related driver's
license revocation refers to the date of violation
instead of the date of conviction; providing
reasonable time to petition for driver's license
reinstatement; ensuring uniformity of amount of
handling charge allowed for certain driver's license
reinstatements; clarifying reinstatement handling fee;
appropriating money; amending Minnesota Statutes 1996,
sections 168.12, subdivision 2a; 168A.01, by adding a
subdivision; 168A.11, subdivision 1; and 221.025;
Minnesota Statutes 1997 Supplement, sections 168.27,
subdivision 10; 169.121, subdivision 4; 171.19;
171.20, subdivision 4; and 171.29, subdivision 2.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MINNESOTA:
Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 1996, section 168.12,
subdivision 2a, is amended to read:
Subd. 2a. [PERSONALIZED PLATES; RULES.] Personalized
license plates must be issued to an applicant for registration
of a passenger automobile including a passenger automobile
registered as a classic car, pioneer car, collector car, or
street rod; van; pickup truck as defined in section 168.011,
subdivision 29, and any other truck with a registered gross
weight of 9,000 pounds or less and commonly known as a pickup
truck manufacturer's nominal rated capacity of one ton or less
and resembling a pickup truck; motorcycle including a classic
motorcycle; or self-propelled recreational vehicle, upon
compliance with the laws of this state relating to registration
of the vehicle and upon payment of a one-time fee of $100 in
addition to the registration tax required by law for the
vehicle. The registrar shall designate a replacement fee for
personalized license plates that is calculated to cover the cost
of replacement. This fee must be paid by the applicant whenever
the personalized license plates are required to be replaced by
law. In lieu of the numbers assigned as provided in subdivision
1, personalized license plates must have imprinted on them a
series of not more than seven numbers and letters in any
combination. When an applicant has once obtained personalized
plates, the applicant shall have a prior claim for similar
personalized plates in the next succeeding year as long as
current registration is maintained. The commissioner of public
safety shall adopt rules in the manner provided by chapter 14,
regulating the issuance and transfer of personalized license
plates. No words or combination of letters placed on
personalized license plates may be used for commercial
advertising, be of an obscene, indecent, or immoral nature, or
be of a nature that would offend public morals or decency. The
call signals or letters of a radio or television station are not
commercial advertising for the purposes of this subdivision.
Notwithstanding the provisions of subdivision 1,
personalized license plates issued under this subdivision may be
transferred to another motor vehicle owned or jointly owned by
the applicant, upon the payment of a fee of $5, which must be
paid into the state treasury and credited to the highway user
tax distribution fund. The registrar may by rule provide a form
for notification. A personalized license plate issued for a
classic car, pioneer car, collector car, street rod, or classic
motorcycle may not be transferred to a vehicle not eligible for
such a license plate.
Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, if the
personalized license plates are lost, stolen, or destroyed, the
applicant may apply and shall receive duplicate license plates
bearing the same combination of letters and numbers as the
former personalized plates upon the payment of the fee required
by section 168.29.
Fees from the sale of permanent and duplicate personalized
license plates must be paid into the state treasury and credited
to the highway user tax distribution fund.
Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 1997 Supplement, section
168.27, subdivision 10, is amended to read:
Subd. 10. [ESTABLISHED PLACE OF BUSINESS.] All licensees
under this section shall have an established place of business
which shall include as a minimum:
(1) For a new motor vehicle dealer, the following:
(a) a commercial building owned or under lease by the
licensee. The lease shall be for a minimum term of one year.
The building shall contain office space where the books,
records, and files necessary to conduct the business are kept
and maintained with personnel available during normal business
hours. Dealership business hours must be conspicuously posted
on the place of doing business and readily viewable by the
public;
(b) a bona fide contract or franchise (1) in effect with a
manufacturer or distributor of the new motor vehicles the dealer
proposes to sell, broker, wholesale, or auction, or (2) in
effect with the first-stage manufacturer or distributor of new
motor vehicles purchased from a van converter or modifier which
the dealer proposes to sell, broker, wholesale, or auction, or
(3) in effect with the final stage manufacturer of the new type
A, B, or C motor homes which the dealer proposes to sell,
broker, wholesale, or auction;
(c) a facility for the repair and servicing of motor
vehicles and the storage of parts and accessories, not to exceed
ten miles distance from the principal place of business. Such
service may be provided through contract with bona fide
operators actually engaged in such services;
(d) an area either indoors or outdoors to display motor
vehicles which is owned or under lease by the licensee; and
(e) a sign clearly identifying the dealership by name which
is readily viewable by the public.
(2) For a used motor vehicle dealer, the following:
(a) a commercial building owned or under lease by the
licensee. The lease shall be for a minimum term of one year.
The building shall contain office space where the books,
records, and files necessary to conduct the business are kept
and maintained with personnel available during normal business
hours or automatic telephone answering service during normal
business hours. Dealership business hours must be conspicuously
posted on the place of doing business and readily viewable by
the public;
(b) an area either indoors or outdoors to display motor
vehicles which is owned or under lease by the licensee; and
(c) a sign clearly identifying the dealership by name which
is readily viewable by the public.
(3) For a motor vehicle lessor, the following: a
commercial office space where the books, records, and files
necessary to conduct the business are kept and maintained with
personnel available during normal business hours or an automatic
telephone answering service during normal business hours.
Business hours must be conspicuously posted on the place of
doing business and readily viewable by the public. The office
space must be owned or under lease for a minimum term of one
year by the licensee.
(4) For a motor vehicle wholesaler, the following: a
commercial office space where the books, records, and files
necessary to conduct the business are kept and maintained with
personnel available during normal business hours or an automatic
telephone answering service during normal business hours. The
office space must be owned or under lease for a minimum term of
one year by the licensee.
(5) For a motor vehicle auctioneer, the following: a
permanent enclosed commercial building, within or without the
state, on a permanent foundation, owned or under lease by the
licensee. The lease shall be for a minimum term of one year.
The building shall contain office space where the books,
records, and files necessary to conduct the business are kept
and maintained with personnel available during normal business
hours or an automatic telephone answering service during normal
business hours.
(6) For a motor vehicle broker, the following: a
commercial office space where books, records, and files
necessary to conduct business are kept and maintained with
personnel available during normal business hours, or an
automatic telephone answering service available during normal
business hours. Business hours must be conspicuously posted on
the place of business and readily viewable by the public. A
sign, clearly identifying the motor vehicle broker by name and
viewable by the public, must be posted on the place of business.
listing the broker's business hours, must be posted in a
location and manner readily viewable by a member of the public
visiting the office space. The office space must be owned or
under lease for a minimum term of one year by the licensee.
(7) If a new or used motor vehicle dealer maintains more
than one place of doing business in a county, the separate
places shall be listed on the application. If additional places
of business are maintained outside of one county, separate
licenses shall be obtained for each county.
(8) If a motor vehicle lessor, wholesaler, auctioneer, or
motor vehicle broker maintains more than one permanent place of
doing business, either in one or more counties, the separate
places shall be listed in the application, but only one license
shall be required. If a lessor proposes to sell previously
leased or rented vehicles or if a broker proposes to establish
an office at a location outside the seven-county metropolitan
area, as defined in section 473.121, subdivision 2, other than
cities of the first class, the lessor or broker must obtain a
license for each nonmetropolitan area county in which the
lessor's sales are to take place or where the broker proposes to
locate an office.
(9) If a motor vehicle dealer, lessor, wholesaler, or motor
vehicle broker does not have direct access to a public road or
street, any privately owned roadway providing access to a public
road or street must be clearly identified and adequately
maintained.
Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 1996, section 168A.01, is
amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 17c. [SECURE REASSIGNMENT.] "Secure reassignment"
means a separate form that (1) may be used by a dealer to assign
and warrant title to a vehicle; (2) is prescribed by the
department; and (3) contains security features complying with
the Motor Vehicle Information and Cost Savings Act, as amended,
codified at United States Code, title 49, chapter 327, and
regulations of the United States Department of Transportation
adopted under that act.
Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 1996, section 168A.11,
subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. [APPLICATION UPON TRANSFER.] If a dealer
buys a vehicle and holds it for resale and procures the
certificate of title from the owner, and complies with
subdivision 2 hereof, the dealer need not apply for a
certificate of title, but upon transferring the vehicle to
another person other than by the creation of a security interest
shall promptly execute the assignment and warranty of title by a
dealer, showing the names and addresses of the transferee and of
any secured party holding a security interest created or
reserved at the time of the resale, and the date of the security
agreement in the spaces provided therefor on the certificate or
secure reassignment. With respect to motor vehicles subject to
the provisions of section 325E.15, the dealer shall also, in the
space provided therefor on the certificate or secure
reassignment, state the true cumulative mileage registered on
the odometer or that the exact mileage is unknown if the
odometer reading is known by the transferor to be different from
the true mileage. The transferee shall complete the application
for title section on the certificate of title or separate title
application form prescribed by the department. The dealer shall
mail or deliver the certificate to the department registrar or
deputy registrar with the transferee's application for a new
certificate and appropriate taxes and fees, within ten days.
Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 1997 Supplement, section
169.121, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. [ADMINISTRATIVE PENALTIES.] (a) The commissioner
of public safety shall revoke the driver's license of a person
convicted of violating this section or an ordinance in
conformity with it as follows:
(1) for an offense under subdivision 1: not less than 30
days;
(2) for an offense under subdivision 1a: not less than 90
days;
(3) for an offense occurring within five years after a
prior impaired driving conviction or a prior license revocation,
or any time after two or more prior impaired driving convictions
or prior license revocations: (i) if the current conviction is
for a violation of subdivision 1, not less than 180 days and
until the court has certified that treatment or rehabilitation
has been successfully completed where prescribed in accordance
with section 169.126; or (ii) if the current conviction is for a
violation of subdivision 1a, not less than one year and until
the court has certified that treatment or rehabilitation has
been successfully completed where prescribed in accordance with
section 169.126;
(4) for an offense occurring within five years after the
first of two prior impaired driving convictions or prior license
revocations: not less than one year, together with denial under
section 171.04, subdivision 1, clause (9), until rehabilitation
is established in accordance with standards established by the
commissioner;
(5) for an offense occurring any time after three or more
prior impaired driving convictions or prior license
revocations: not less than two years, together with denial
under section 171.04, subdivision 1, clause (9), until
rehabilitation is established in accordance with standards
established by the commissioner.
(b) If the person convicted of violating this section is
under the age of 21 years at the time of the violation, the
commissioner of public safety shall revoke the offender's
driver's license or operating privileges for a period of six
months or for the appropriate period of time under paragraph
(a), clauses (1) to (5), for the offense committed, whichever is
the greatest period.
(c) For purposes of this subdivision, a juvenile
adjudication under this section, section 169.129, an ordinance
in conformity with either of them, or a statute or ordinance
from another state in conformity with either of them is an
offense.
(d) Whenever department records show that the violation
involved personal injury or death to any person, not less than
90 additional days shall be added to the base periods provided
above.
(e) If the person is convicted of violating subdivision 1,
paragraph (f), the commissioner of public safety shall revoke
the person's driver's license for twice the period of time
otherwise provided for in this subdivision.
(f) Except for a person whose license has been revoked
under paragraph (b), and except for a person who commits a
violation described in subdivision 3, paragraph (c), clause (4),
(child endangerment), any person whose license has been revoked
pursuant to section 169.123 as the result of the same incident,
and who does not have a prior impaired driving conviction or
prior license revocation, is subject to the mandatory revocation
provisions of paragraph (a), clause (1) or (2), in lieu of the
mandatory revocation provisions of section 169.123.
Sec. 6. Minnesota Statutes 1997 Supplement, section
171.19, is amended to read:
171.19 [PETITION FOR LICENSE REINSTATEMENT.]
Any person whose driver's license has been refused,
revoked, suspended, canceled, or disqualified by the
commissioner, except where the license is revoked or
disqualified under section 169.123 or 171.186, may file a
petition for a hearing in the matter in the district court in
the county wherein such person shall reside and, in the case of
a nonresident, in the district court in any county, and such
court is hereby vested with jurisdiction, and it shall be its
duty, to set the matter for hearing upon 15 days' written notice
to the commissioner, and thereupon to take testimony and examine
into the facts of the case to determine whether the petitioner
is entitled to a license or is subject to revocation,
suspension, cancellation, disqualification, or refusal of
license, and shall render judgment accordingly. The petition
for hearing must either be filed within 180 days of the
effective date of the order of revocation, suspension,
cancellation, disqualification, or refusal to license or be
filed before expiration of the withdrawal period, whichever
occurs first. The petition shall be heard by the court without
a jury and may be heard in or out of term. The commissioner may
appear in person, or by agents or representatives, and may
present evidence upon the hearing by affidavit personally, by
agents, or by representatives. The petitioner may present
evidence by affidavit, except that the petitioner must be
present in person at such hearing for the purpose of
cross-examination. In the event the department shall be
sustained in these proceedings, the petitioner shall have no
further right to make further petition to any court for the
purpose of obtaining a driver's license until after the
expiration of one year after the date of such hearing.
Sec. 7. Minnesota Statutes 1997 Supplement, section
171.20, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. [REINSTATEMENT FEE.] Before the license is
reinstated, a person whose driver's license has been suspended
under section 171.16, subdivision 2; 171.18, except subdivision
1, clause (10); or 171.182, or who has been disqualified from
holding a commercial driver's license under section 171.165 must
pay a fee of $25 until June 30, 1999, and $20 thereafter. When
this fee is fees are collected by a county-operated office of
deputy registrar, a $3.50 handling charge is imposed in the
amount specified under section 168.33, subdivision 7. The
handling charge must be deposited in the treasury of the place
for which the deputy registrar was appointed and the
reinstatement fee and surcharge must be deposited in an approved
state depository as directed under section 168.33, subdivision
2. A suspension may be rescinded without fee for good cause.
Sec. 8. Minnesota Statutes 1997 Supplement, section
171.29, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. [FEES, ALLOCATION.] (a) A person whose driver's
license has been revoked as provided in subdivision 1, except
under section 169.121 or 169.123, shall pay a $30 fee before the
driver's license is reinstated.
(b) A person whose driver's license has been revoked as
provided in subdivision 1 under section 169.121 or 169.123 shall
pay a $250 fee plus a $10 surcharge before the driver's license
is reinstated. The $250 fee is to be credited as follows:
(1) Twenty percent shall be credited to the trunk highway
fund.
(2) Fifty-five percent shall be credited to the general
fund.
(3) Eight percent shall be credited to a separate account
to be known as the bureau of criminal apprehension account.
Money in this account may be appropriated to the commissioner of
public safety and the appropriated amount shall be apportioned
80 percent for laboratory costs and 20 percent for carrying out
the provisions of section 299C.065.
(4) Twelve percent shall be credited to a separate account
to be known as the alcohol-impaired driver education account.
Money in the account is appropriated as follows:
(i) The first $200,000 in a fiscal year is to the
commissioner of children, families, and learning for programs in
elementary and secondary schools.
(ii) The remainder credited in a fiscal year is
appropriated to the commissioner of transportation to be spent
as grants to the Minnesota highway safety center at St. Cloud
State University for programs relating to alcohol and highway
safety education in elementary and secondary schools.
(5) Five percent shall be credited to a separate account to
be known as the traumatic brain injury and spinal cord injury
account. $100,000 is annually appropriated from the account to
the commissioner of human services for traumatic brain injury
case management services. The remaining money in the account is
annually appropriated to the commissioner of health to establish
and maintain the traumatic brain injury and spinal cord injury
registry created in section 144.662 and to reimburse the
commissioner of economic security for the reasonable cost of
services provided under section 268A.03, clause (o).
(c) The $10 surcharge shall be credited to a separate
account to be known as the remote electronic alcohol monitoring
pilot program account. The commissioner shall transfer the
balance of this account to the commissioner of finance on a
monthly basis for deposit in the general fund.
(d) When these fees are collected by a county-operated
office of deputy registrar, a handling charge is imposed in the
amount specified under section 168.33, subdivision 7. The
handling charge must be deposited in the treasury of the place
for which the deputy registrar was appointed and the
reinstatement fees and surcharge must be deposited in an
approved state depository as directed under section 168.33,
subdivision 2.
Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes 1996, section 221.025, is
amended to read:
221.025 [EXEMPTIONS.]
The provisions of this chapter requiring a certificate or
permit to operate as a motor carrier do not apply to the
intrastate transportation described below:
(a) the transportation of students to or from school or
school activities in a school bus inspected and certified under
section 169.451 and the transportation of children or parents to
or from a Head Start facility or Head Start activity in a Head
Start bus inspected and certified under section 169.451;
(b) the transportation of solid waste, as defined in
section 116.06, subdivision 22, including recyclable materials
and waste tires, except that the term "hazardous waste" has the
meaning given it in section 221.011, subdivision 31;
(c) a commuter van as defined in section 221.011,
subdivision 27;
(d) authorized emergency vehicles as defined in section
169.01, subdivision 5, including ambulances; and tow trucks
equipped with proper and legal warning devices when picking up
and transporting (1) disabled or wrecked motor vehicles or (2)
vehicles towed or transported under a towing order issued by a
public employee authorized to issue a towing order;
(e) the transportation of grain samples under conditions
prescribed by the board;
(f) the delivery of agricultural lime;
(g) the transportation of dirt and sod within an area
having a 50-mile radius from the home post office of the person
performing the transportation;
(h) the transportation of sand, gravel, bituminous asphalt
mix, concrete ready mix, concrete blocks or tile and the mortar
mix to be used with the concrete blocks or tile, or crushed rock
to or from the point of loading or a place of gathering within
an area having a 50-mile radius from that person's home post
office or a 50-mile radius from the site of construction or
maintenance of public roads and streets;
(i) the transportation of pulpwood, cordwood, mining
timber, poles, posts, decorator evergreens, wood chips, sawdust,
shavings, and bark from the place where the products are
produced to the point where they are to be used or shipped;
(j) the transportation of fresh vegetables from farms to
canneries or viner stations, from viner stations to canneries,
or from canneries to canneries during the harvesting, canning,
or packing season, or transporting sugar beets, wild rice, or
rutabagas from the field of production to the first place of
delivery or unloading, including a processing plant, warehouse,
or railroad siding;
(k) the transportation of property or freight, other than
household goods and petroleum products in bulk, entirely within
the corporate limits of a city or between contiguous cities
except as provided in section 221.296;
(l) the transportation of unprocessed dairy products in
bulk within an area having a 100-mile radius from the home post
office of the person providing the transportation;
(m) the transportation of agricultural, horticultural,
dairy, livestock, or other farm products within an area having a
25-mile 100-mile radius from the person's home post office and
the carrier may transport other commodities within the 25-mile
100-mile radius if the destination of each haul is a farm;
(n) passenger transportation service that is not charter
service and that is under contract to and with operating
assistance from the department or the metropolitan council;
(o) the transportation of newspapers, as defined in section
331A.01, subdivision 5, telephone books, handbills, circulars,
or pamphlets in a vehicle with a gross vehicle weight of 10,000
pounds or less; and
(p) transportation of potatoes from the field of
production, or a storage site owned or otherwise controlled by
the producer, to the first place of processing.
The exemptions provided in this section apply to a person
only while the person is exclusively engaged in exempt
transportation.
Sec. 10. [APPROPRIATION.]
$15,775,000 is appropriated from the trunk highway fund to
the commissioner of administration to complete renovation and
life safety improvements to the transportation building in the
capitol complex. This is the final state appropriation for this
project.
Sec. 11. [EFFECTIVE DATE.]
Sections 3 and 4 are effective the day following final
enactment.
Presented to the governor April 10, 1998
Signed by the governor April 20, 1998, 11:30 a.m.
Official Publication of the State of Minnesota
Revisor of Statutes