When there is an economic dispute, it is illegal to protect rights by blocking traffic. If the circumstances are serious and affect social order, it may even constitute a crime. Traffic jams caused by economic disputes violate the law on public security administration punishment. Public security organs can have jurisdiction over public security cases, so they can report to the police for handling.
Economic disputes, also known as economic disputes, refer to social disputes between equal subjects with economic rights and obligations as their content. There are two kinds of economic disputes: one is economic contract disputes. Such as sales contract disputes, construction project contract disputes, technical contract disputes, etc. ; The second is economic infringement disputes. Such as intellectual property rights (such as patents and trademarks) infringement disputes, ownership infringement disputes and management rights infringement disputes.
In the market economy, contract is a legal and universal form for equal market participants to establish trading relations and carry out trading behaviors in pursuit of economic goals. Therefore, contract disputes are the main part of economic disputes.
Therefore, economic disputes and traffic jams are civil torts, which hinder the right of way of the parties and also belong to public security violations. If the circumstances are serious, they shall be detained for not less than five days but not more than ten days, and may also be fined not more than 500 yuan.
Legal basis:
People's Republic of China (PRC) Public Security Administration Punishment Law
Article 23
One of the following acts, a warning or a fine of two hundred yuan; If the circumstances are serious, they shall be detained for more than five days and less than ten days, and may be fined up to five hundred yuan:
(1) Disrupting the order of organs, organizations, enterprises and institutions, resulting in work, production, business, medical treatment, teaching and scientific research not being carried out normally, but causing no serious losses;
(2) disturbing the order of stations, ports, docks, airports, shopping malls, parks, exhibition halls or other public places;
(3) disturbing the order on buses, trams, trains, ships, aircraft or other public transport;
(four) illegal interception or forced boarding, boarding motor vehicles, ships, aircraft and other means of transportation, affecting the normal running of vehicles;
(5) disturbing the election order conducted according to law.