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Municipal offense

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In Wisconsin, a municipal offense or ordinance offense or civil offense or noncriminal offense or municipal infraction or infraction is the infringement of a city ordinance.[1]

A municipal offense is not a crime.[2][3]

As of 1989, the Montana Code provided that:

7-1-4150. Municipal infractions — civil offense. (1) A municipal infraction is a civil offense punishable by a civil penalty of not more than $300 for each violation or if the infraction is a repeat offense, a civil penalty not to exceed $500 for each repeat violation.
(2) A municipality may by ordinance provide that a violation of an ordinance is a municipal infraction.
(3) (a) A municipality may by ordinance provide that a criminal offense under state law that is punishable only by a fine is a municipal infraction.
(b) Statutory surcharges must be imposed, as provided in 3-1-317(1)(a), 3-1-318(1), and 46-18-236(6)(a), on municipal infractions that are criminal offenses under state law, and the amounts must be distributed as provided in those sections.
(c) A person may not be proceeded against for the same act or omission to act under both a municipal infraction ordinance and the corresponding state law criminal offense on which the municipal infraction ordinance is based.
(4) An officer who is authorized by a municipality to enforce a municipal code or regulation may issue a civil citation to a person who commits a municipal infraction. The citation may be served by personal service, by certified mail addressed to the defendant at the defendant's last-known mailing address, return receipt requested, or by publication, as provided in Rule 4D(5). M. R. Civ. P. A copy of the citation must be retained by the issuing officer and one copy must be sent to the clerk of the municipal or city court. The citation must serve as notification that a municipal infraction has been committed and must contain the following information:
(a) the name and address of the defendant;
(b) the name or description of the infraction attested to by the officer issuing the citation;
(c) the location and time of the infraction;
(d) the amount of civil penalty to be assessed or the alternate relief sought, or both; ::(e) the manner, location, and time in which the penalty may be paid;
(f) the time and place of court appearance; and
(g) the penalty for failure to appear in court.[4]

See also the Iowa Code Annotated, West Pub Co, 1994, vol 17, p 75.

References

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  • Karen Kay Kirst-Ashman and Grafton H Hull Jr. Generalist Practice with Organizations and Communities. Cengage Learning. 2011. Page 481.
  • DWI Charge Reduction Study: System descriptions. U.S. Department of Transportation, National Highway Traffic Administration. 1986. Page 21.
  • Charles P Nemeth. Criminal Law. Second Edition. CRC Press. 2011. Page 52.
  • Municipal ordinance FAQs.
  1. ^ See all references
  2. ^ West's Southern Reporter. West Publishing Company. 1997. Para 9-11 at p 1215. Para 630 at p 101
  3. ^ LSA-RS 14:7; State v Wilcoxon 26, 126 (La App 2d Cir 06/22/194), 639 So 2d 385, 390, writ denied, 94-1961 (La 12?16/94), 648 So 2d 386; State v Ladner 619 So 2d 1144 (La App 1st Cir 1993), writ denied; State v Martin 694 So 2d 1209, 29,352, 29,433 (La App 2 Cir 5/13/97)
  4. ^ Montana Code Annotated. Montana Legislative Council. 1989. Volume 2. Pages 20 and 21.