Grandmother fined $352 for simply honking her horn: 'Is this a joke?'
- Replies 13
To warn someone who was driving out in front of her, one grandmother from Sydney honked her horn to let the driver know she was behind them. But she never expected that she would be the one to pay for the close call.
Alma Smith, a grandmother from Sydney, says she was ticketed for simply using her horn on the road. Credit: Nine.
Back in June, while Alma Smith was making her way to her job at Myer in Roselands, she was driving along Belmore Road in Riverwood when she had the terrifying encounter.
'There were cars parked, and this guy just went “flip” in front of me. I thought I was going to collide with him, so I applied the brakes and the horn,' she recalled in an interview with a news outlet.
A few minutes later, the 85-year-old grandmother was asked to pull over to the side of the road and was given a $352 fine by an officer.
Apparently, a police officer was lurking behind her vehicle, keeping track of how long her horn was blaring. Three seconds of honking is fine, but anything longer is deemed inappropriate.
'He said I had used the horn excessively, unnecessarily, and that's like road rage,' said Ms Smith, adding that what just happened left her completely speechless.
'Are you kidding? I have never heard of that, and I have been on the road driving for over 60 years,' she told the officer.
Speaking to 9News, she said she couldn't believe the situation at the time, thinking: 'Is this a joke? Haven't they got better things to do?'
Ms Smith said she was shocked when the officer handed her a $352 fine. Credit: Nine.
Warwick Smith, Ms Smith's son, called the steep punishment his mother received for simply using her horn an example of 'ridiculous' behaviour by the authorities.
'Someone pulled out on her, and she slammed on the brakes; what do you do? You hit the horn,' he added. 'In a case like that, I felt like it was necessary to blow the horn.'
Attorney Sam Macedone says that he, too, was unaware that the length of the honk could get drivers into trouble and that if what Ms Smith described did happen, she was within her rights to use her horn.
'In this case, I understand she used her horn to warn someone who was cutting across, so she had every right to use her horn. I can't see anywhere in the legislation that indicates you can only give a short beep.'
The fine is being contested by the grandma, but she will have to wait until May of next year to have her day in Bankstown court.
In New South Wales, car horn usage is subject to rules and restrictions. Credit: Getty Images.
When is it appropriate to use your car's horn?
According to the traffic codes and regulations of each Australian state, the only acceptable reasons to sound your horn are to alert other drivers to your location or to shoo away animals from the road; greetings, expressions of anger or annoyance, and demands that others move soon as the light turns green are all prohibited.
If your car is equipped with an anti-theft device or an alcohol interlock device, the horn or similar warning device may also be used as part of that system.
So, members who still drive regularly, please remember that you shouldn't use your horns carelessly, you never know who’s watching, and you could get a fine of several hundred dollars.
We understand that money is quite difficult to come by these days, so we want to avoid having to pay anything additional like a petty fine. Stay safe out there and on the road, everyone!
Alma Smith, a grandmother from Sydney, says she was ticketed for simply using her horn on the road. Credit: Nine.
Back in June, while Alma Smith was making her way to her job at Myer in Roselands, she was driving along Belmore Road in Riverwood when she had the terrifying encounter.
'There were cars parked, and this guy just went “flip” in front of me. I thought I was going to collide with him, so I applied the brakes and the horn,' she recalled in an interview with a news outlet.
A few minutes later, the 85-year-old grandmother was asked to pull over to the side of the road and was given a $352 fine by an officer.
Apparently, a police officer was lurking behind her vehicle, keeping track of how long her horn was blaring. Three seconds of honking is fine, but anything longer is deemed inappropriate.
'He said I had used the horn excessively, unnecessarily, and that's like road rage,' said Ms Smith, adding that what just happened left her completely speechless.
'Are you kidding? I have never heard of that, and I have been on the road driving for over 60 years,' she told the officer.
Speaking to 9News, she said she couldn't believe the situation at the time, thinking: 'Is this a joke? Haven't they got better things to do?'
Ms Smith said she was shocked when the officer handed her a $352 fine. Credit: Nine.
'Someone pulled out on her, and she slammed on the brakes; what do you do? You hit the horn,' he added. 'In a case like that, I felt like it was necessary to blow the horn.'
Attorney Sam Macedone says that he, too, was unaware that the length of the honk could get drivers into trouble and that if what Ms Smith described did happen, she was within her rights to use her horn.
'In this case, I understand she used her horn to warn someone who was cutting across, so she had every right to use her horn. I can't see anywhere in the legislation that indicates you can only give a short beep.'
The fine is being contested by the grandma, but she will have to wait until May of next year to have her day in Bankstown court.
In New South Wales, car horn usage is subject to rules and restrictions. Credit: Getty Images.
When is it appropriate to use your car's horn?
According to the traffic codes and regulations of each Australian state, the only acceptable reasons to sound your horn are to alert other drivers to your location or to shoo away animals from the road; greetings, expressions of anger or annoyance, and demands that others move soon as the light turns green are all prohibited.
If your car is equipped with an anti-theft device or an alcohol interlock device, the horn or similar warning device may also be used as part of that system.
So, members who still drive regularly, please remember that you shouldn't use your horns carelessly, you never know who’s watching, and you could get a fine of several hundred dollars.
We understand that money is quite difficult to come by these days, so we want to avoid having to pay anything additional like a petty fine. Stay safe out there and on the road, everyone!