22658
. (a) The owner or person in lawful possession of private
property, including an association of a common interest development
as defined in Sections 4080 and 4100 or Sections 6528 and 6534 of the
Civil Code, may cause the removal of a vehicle parked on the
property to a storage facility that meets the requirements of
subdivision (n) under any of the following circumstances:
(1) There is displayed, in plain view at all entrances to the
property, a sign not less than 17 inches by 22 inches in size, with
lettering not less than one inch in height, prohibiting public
parking and indicating that vehicles will be removed at the owner's
expense, and containing the telephone number of the local traffic law
enforcement agency and the name and telephone number of each towing
company that is a party to a written general towing authorization
agreement with the owner or person in lawful possession of the
property. The sign may also indicate that a citation may also be
issued for the violation.
(2) The vehicle has been issued a notice of parking violation, and
96 hours have elapsed since the issuance of that notice.
(3) The vehicle is on private property and lacks an engine,
transmission, wheels, tires, doors, windshield, or any other major
part or equipment necessary to operate safely on the highways, the
owner or person in lawful possession of the private property has
notified the local traffic law enforcement agency, and 24 hours have
elapsed since that notification.
(4) The lot or parcel upon which the vehicle is parked is improved
with a single-family dwelling.
(b) The tow truck operator removing the vehicle, if the operator
knows or is able to ascertain from the property owner, person in
lawful possession of the property, or the registration records of the
Department of Motor Vehicles the name and address of the registered
and legal owner of the vehicle, shall immediately give, or cause to
be given, notice in writing to the registered and legal owner of the
fact of the removal, the grounds for the removal, and indicate the
place to which the vehicle has been removed. If the vehicle is stored
in a storage facility, a copy of the notice shall be given to the
proprietor of the storage facility. The notice provided for in this
section shall include the amount of mileage on the vehicle at the
time of removal and the time of the removal from the property. If the
tow truck operator does not know and is not able to ascertain the
name of the owner or for any other reason is unable to give the
notice to the owner as provided in this section, the tow truck
operator shall comply with the requirements of subdivision (c) of
Section 22853 relating to notice in the same manner as applicable to
an officer removing a vehicle from private property.
(c) This section does not limit or affect any right or remedy that
the owner or person in lawful possession of private property may
have by virtue of other provisions of law authorizing the removal of
a vehicle parked upon private property.
(d) The owner of a vehicle removed from private property pursuant
to subdivision (a) may recover for any damage to the vehicle
resulting from any intentional or negligent act of a person causing
the removal of, or removing, the vehicle.
(e) (1) An owner or person in lawful possession of private
property, or an association of a common interest development, causing
the removal of a vehicle parked on that property is liable for
double the storage or towing charges whenever there has been a
failure to comply with paragraph (1), (2), or (3) of subdivision (a)
or to state the grounds for the removal of the vehicle if requested
by the legal or registered owner of the vehicle as required by
subdivision (f).
(2) A property owner or owner's agent or lessee who causes the
removal of a vehicle parked on that property pursuant to the
exemption set forth in subparagraph (A) of paragraph (1) of
subdivision (l) and fails to comply with that subdivision is guilty
of an infraction, punishable by a fine of one thousand dollars
($1,000).
(f) An owner or person in lawful possession of private property,
or an association of a common interest development, causing the
removal of a vehicle parked on that property shall notify by
telephone or, if impractical, by the most expeditious means
available, the local traffic law enforcement agency within one hour
after authorizing the tow. An owner or person in lawful possession of
private property, an association of a common interest development,
causing the removal of a vehicle parked on that property, or the tow
truck operator who removes the vehicle, shall state the grounds for
the removal of the vehicle if requested by the legal or registered
owner of that vehicle. A towing company that removes a vehicle from
private property in compliance with subdivision (l) is not
responsible in a situation relating to the validity of the removal. A
towing company that removes the vehicle under this section shall be
responsible for the following:
(1) Damage to the vehicle in the transit and subsequent storage of
the vehicle.
(2) The removal of a vehicle other than the vehicle specified by
the owner or other person in lawful possession of the private
property.
(g) (1) (A) Possession of a vehicle under this section shall be
deemed to arise when a vehicle is removed from private property and
is in transit.
(B) Upon the request of the owner of the vehicle or that owner's
agent, the towing company or its driver shall immediately and
unconditionally release a vehicle that is not yet removed from the
private property and in transit.
(C) A person failing to comply with subparagraph (B) is guilty of
a misdemeanor.
(2) If a vehicle is released to a person in compliance with
subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1), the vehicle owner or authorized
agent shall immediately move that vehicle to a lawful location.
(h) A towing company may impose a charge of not more than one-half
of the regular towing charge for the towing of a vehicle at the
request of the owner, the owner's agent, or the person in lawful
possession of the private property pursuant to this section if the
owner of the vehicle or the vehicle owner's agent returns to the
vehicle after the vehicle is coupled to the tow truck by means of a
regular hitch, coupling device, drawbar, portable dolly, or is lifted
off the ground by means of a conventional trailer, and before it is
removed from the private property. The regular towing charge may only
be imposed after the vehicle has been removed from the property and
is in transit.
(i) (1) (A) A charge for towing or storage, or both, of a vehicle
under this section is excessive if the charge exceeds the greater of
the following:
(i) That which would have been charged for that towing or storage,
or both, made at the request of a law enforcement agency under an
agreement between a towing company and the law enforcement agency
that exercises primary jurisdiction in the city in which is located
the private property from which the vehicle was, or was attempted to
be, removed, or if the private property is not located within a city,
then the law enforcement agency that exercises primary jurisdiction
in the county in which the private property is located.
(ii) That which would have been charged for that towing or
storage, or both, under the rate approved for that towing operator by
the Department of the California Highway Patrol for the jurisdiction
in which the private property is located and from which the vehicle
was, or was attempted to be, removed.
(B) A towing operator shall make available for inspection and
copying his or her rate approved by the Department of the California
Highway Patrol, if any, within 24 hours of a request without a
warrant to law enforcement, the Attorney General, district attorney,
or city attorney.
(2) If a vehicle is released within 24 hours from the time the
vehicle is brought into the storage facility, regardless of the
calendar date, the storage charge shall be for only one day. Not more
than one day's storage charge may be required for a vehicle released
the same day that it is stored.
(3) If a request to release a vehicle is made and the appropriate
fees are tendered and documentation establishing that the person
requesting release is entitled to possession of the vehicle, or is
the owner's insurance representative, is presented within the initial
24 hours of storage, and the storage facility fails to comply with
the request to release the vehicle or is not open for business during
normal business hours, then only one day's storage charge may be
required to be paid until after the first business day. A business
day is any day in which the lienholder is open for business to the
public for at least eight hours. If a request is made more than 24
hours after the vehicle is placed in storage, charges may be imposed
on a full calendar day basis for each day, or part thereof, that the
vehicle is in storage.
(j) (1) A person who charges a vehicle owner a towing, service, or
storage charge at an excessive rate, as described in subdivision (h)
or (i), is civilly liable to the vehicle owner for four times the
amount charged.
(2) A person who knowingly charges a vehicle owner a towing,
service, or storage charge at an excessive rate, as described in
subdivision (h) or (i), or who fails to make available his or her
rate as required in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) of subdivision
(i), is guilty of a misdemeanor, punishable by a fine of not more
than two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500), or by imprisonment
in a county jail for not more than three months, or by both that fine
and imprisonment.
(k) (1) A person operating or in charge of a storage facility
where vehicles are stored pursuant to this section shall accept a
valid bank credit card or cash for payment of towing and storage by a
registered owner, the legal owner, or the owner's agent claiming the
vehicle. A credit card shall be in the name of the person presenting
the card. "Credit card" means "credit card" as defined in
subdivision (a) of Section 1747.02 of the Civil Code, except, for the
purposes of this section, credit card does not include a credit card
issued by a retail seller.
(2) A person described in paragraph (1) shall conspicuously
display, in that portion of the storage facility office where
business is conducted with the public, a notice advising that all
valid credit cards and cash are acceptable means of payment.
(3) A person operating or in charge of a storage facility who
refuses to accept a valid credit card or who fails to post the
required notice under paragraph (2) is guilty of a misdemeanor,
punishable by a fine of not more than two thousand five hundred
dollars ($2,500), or by imprisonment in a county jail for not more
than three months, or by both that fine and imprisonment.
(4) A person described in paragraph (1) who violates paragraph (1)
or (2) is civilly liable to the registered owner of the vehicle or
the person who tendered the fees for four times the amount of the
towing and storage charges.
(5) A person operating or in charge of the storage facility shall
have sufficient moneys on the premises of the primary storage
facility during normal business hours to accommodate, and make change
in, a reasonable monetary transaction.
(6) Credit charges for towing and storage services shall comply
with Section 1748.1 of the Civil Code. Law enforcement agencies may
include the costs of providing for payment by credit when making
agreements with towing companies as described in subdivision (i).
(l) (1) (A) A towing company shall not remove or commence the
removal of a vehicle from private property without first obtaining
the written authorization from the property owner or lessee,
including an association of a common interest development, or an
employee or agent thereof, who shall be present at the time of
removal and verify the alleged violation, except that presence and
verification is not required if the person authorizing the tow is the
property owner, or the owner's agent who is not a tow operator, of a
residential rental property of 15 or fewer units that does not have
an onsite owner, owner's agent or employee, and the tenant has
verified the violation, requested the tow from that tenant's assigned
parking space, and provided a signed request or electronic mail, or
has called and provides a signed request or electronic mail within 24
hours, to the property owner or owner's agent, which the owner or
agent shall provide to the towing company within 48 hours of
authorizing the tow. The signed request or electronic mail shall
contain the name and address of the tenant, and the date and time the
tenant requested the tow. A towing company shall obtain, within 48
hours of receiving the written authorization to tow, a copy of a
tenant request required pursuant to this subparagraph. For the
purpose of this subparagraph, a person providing the written
authorization who is required to be present on the private property
at the time of the tow does not have to be physically present at the
specified location of where the vehicle to be removed is located on
the private property.
(B) The written authorization under subparagraph (A) shall include
all of the following:
(i) The make, model, vehicle identification number, and license
plate number of the removed vehicle.
(ii) The name, signature, job title, residential or business
address, and working telephone number of the person, described in
subparagraph (A), authorizing the removal of the vehicle.
(iii) The grounds for the removal of the vehicle.
(iv) The time when the vehicle was first observed parked at the
private property.
(v) The time that authorization to tow the vehicle was given.
(C) (i) When the vehicle owner or his or her agent claims the
vehicle, the towing company prior to payment of a towing or storage
charge shall provide a photocopy of the written authorization to the
vehicle owner or the agent.
(ii) If the vehicle was towed from a residential property, the
towing company shall redact the information specified in clause (ii)
of subparagraph (B) in the photocopy of the written authorization
provided to the vehicle owner or the agent pursuant to clause (i).
(iii) The towing company shall also provide to the vehicle owner
or the agent a separate notice that provides the telephone number of
the appropriate local law enforcement or prosecuting agency by
stating "If you believe that you have been wrongfully towed, please
contact the local law enforcement or prosecuting agency at [insert
appropriate telephone number]." The notice shall be in English and in
the most populous language, other than English, that is spoken in
the jurisdiction.
(D) A towing company shall not remove or commence the removal of a
vehicle from private property described in subdivision (a) of
Section 22953 unless the towing company has made a good faith inquiry
to determine that the owner or the property owner's agent complied
with Section 22953.
(E) (i) General authorization to remove or commence removal of a
vehicle at the towing company's discretion shall not be delegated to
a towing company or its affiliates except in the case of a vehicle
unlawfully parked within 15 feet of a fire hydrant or in a fire lane,
or in a manner which interferes with an entrance to, or exit from,
the private property.
(ii) In those cases in which general authorization is granted to a
towing company or its affiliate to undertake the removal or commence
the removal of a vehicle that is unlawfully parked within 15 feet of
a fire hydrant or in a fire lane, or that interferes with an
entrance to, or exit from, private property, the towing company and
the property owner, or owner's agent, or person in lawful possession
of the private property shall have a written agreement granting that
general authorization.
(2) If a towing company removes a vehicle under a general
authorization described in subparagraph (E) of paragraph (1) and that
vehicle is unlawfully parked within 15 feet of a fire hydrant or in
a fire lane, or in a manner that interferes with an entrance to, or
exit from, the private property, the towing company shall take, prior
to the removal of that vehicle, a photograph of the vehicle that
clearly indicates that parking violation. Prior to accepting payment,
the towing company shall keep one copy of the photograph taken
pursuant to this paragraph, and shall present that photograph and
provide, without charge, a photocopy to the owner or an agent of the
owner, when that person claims the vehicle.
(3) A towing company shall maintain the original written
authorization, or the general authorization described in subparagraph
(E) of paragraph (1) and the photograph of the violation, required
pursuant to this section, and any written requests from a tenant to
the property owner or owner's agent required by subparagraph (A) of
paragraph (1), for a period of three years and shall make them
available for inspection and copying within 24 hours of a request
without a warrant to law enforcement, the Attorney General, district
attorney, or city attorney.
(4) A person who violates this subdivision is guilty of a
misdemeanor, punishable by a fine of not more than two thousand five
hundred dollars ($2,500), or by imprisonment in a county jail for not
more than three months, or by both that fine and imprisonment.
(5) A person who violates this subdivision is civilly liable to
the owner of the vehicle or his or her agent for four times the
amount of the towing and storage charges.
(m) (1) A towing company that removes a vehicle from private
property under this section shall notify the local law enforcement
agency of that tow after the vehicle is removed from the private
property and is in transit.
(2) A towing company is guilty of a misdemeanor if the towing
company fails to provide the notification required under paragraph
(1) within 60 minutes after the vehicle is removed from the private
property and is in transit or 15 minutes after arriving at the
storage facility, whichever time is less.
(3) A towing company that does not provide the notification under
paragraph (1) within 30 minutes after the vehicle is removed from the
private property and is in transit is civilly liable to the
registered owner of the vehicle, or the person who tenders the fees,
for three times the amount of the towing and storage charges.
(4) If notification is impracticable, the times for notification,
as required pursuant to paragraphs (2) and (3), shall be tolled for
the time period that notification is impracticable. This paragraph is
an affirmative defense.
(n) A vehicle removed from private property pursuant to this
section shall be stored in a facility that meets all of the following
requirements:
(1) (A) Is located within a 10-mile radius of the property from
where the vehicle was removed.
(B) The 10-mile radius requirement of subparagraph (A) does not
apply if a towing company has prior general written approval from the
law enforcement agency that exercises primary jurisdiction in the
city in which is located the private property from which the vehicle
was removed, or if the private property is not located within a city,
then the law enforcement agency that exercises primary jurisdiction
in the county in which is located the private property.
(2) (A) Remains open during normal business hours and releases
vehicles after normal business hours.
(B) A gate fee may be charged for releasing a vehicle after normal
business hours, weekends, and state holidays. However, the maximum
hourly charge for releasing a vehicle after normal business hours
shall be one-half of the hourly tow rate charged for initially towing
the vehicle, or less.
(C) Notwithstanding any other provision of law and for purposes of
this paragraph, "normal business hours" are Monday to Friday,
inclusive, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., inclusive, except state holidays.
(3) Has a public pay telephone in the office area that is open and
accessible to the public.
(o) (1) It is the intent of the Legislature in the adoption of
subdivision (k) to assist vehicle owners or their agents by, among
other things, allowing payment by credit cards for towing and storage
services, thereby expediting the recovery of towed vehicles and
concurrently promoting the safety and welfare of the public.
(2) It is the intent of the Legislature in the adoption of
subdivision (l) to further the safety of the general public by
ensuring that a private property owner or lessee has provided his or
her authorization for the removal of a vehicle from his or her
property, thereby promoting the safety of those persons involved in
ordering the removal of the vehicle as well as those persons
removing, towing, and storing the vehicle.
(3) It is the intent of the Legislature in the adoption of
subdivision (g) to promote the safety of the general public by
requiring towing companies to unconditionally release a vehicle that
is not lawfully in their possession, thereby avoiding the likelihood
of dangerous and violent confrontation and physical injury to vehicle
owners and towing operators, the stranding of vehicle owners and
their passengers at a dangerous time and location, and impeding
expedited vehicle recovery, without wasting law enforcement's limited
resources.
(p) The remedies, sanctions, restrictions, and procedures provided
in this section are not exclusive and are in addition to other
remedies, sanctions, restrictions, or procedures that may be provided
in other provisions of law, including, but not limited to, those
that are provided in Sections 12110 and 34660.
(q) A vehicle removed and stored pursuant to this section shall be
released by the law enforcement agency, impounding agency, or person
in possession of the vehicle, or any person acting on behalf of
them, to the legal owner or the legal owner's agent upon presentation
of the assignment, as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 7500.1
of the Business and Professions Code; a release from the one
responsible governmental agency, only if required by the agency; a
government-issued photographic identification card; and any one of
the following as determined by the legal owner or the legal owner's
agent: a certificate of repossession for the vehicle, a security
agreement for the vehicle, or title, whether paper or electronic,
showing proof of legal ownership for the vehicle. Any documents
presented may be originals, photocopies, or facsimile copies, or may
be transmitted electronically. The storage facility shall not require
any documents to be notarized. The storage facility may require the
agent of the legal owner to produce a photocopy or facsimile copy of
its repossession agency license or registration issued pursuant to
Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 7500) of Division 3 of the
Business and Professions Code, or to demonstrate, to the satisfaction
of the storage facility, that the agent is exempt from licensure
pursuant to Section 7500.2 or 7500.3 of the Business and Professions
Code.