City of Cincinnati v. Wright

67 N.E.2d 358, 77 Ohio App. 261, 47 Ohio Law. Abs. 89, 33 Ohio Op. 23, 1945 Ohio App. LEXIS 560
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 15, 1945
Docket6546
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 67 N.E.2d 358 (City of Cincinnati v. Wright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Cincinnati v. Wright, 67 N.E.2d 358, 77 Ohio App. 261, 47 Ohio Law. Abs. 89, 33 Ohio Op. 23, 1945 Ohio App. LEXIS 560 (Ohio Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

*91 OPINION

By MATTHEWS, J.

The appellee was convicted of violating a.municipal ordinance, requiring operators of motor vehicles to yield the right of way to pedestrians lawfully crossing the roadway within crosswalks. (Section 74-75 of the Code of Ordinances of the City of Cincinnati.) The penalty for such violation was a fine of not more than $50.00 for a first offense. (Section 74-140, Code of Ordinances.) By another section of the same ordinance it was provided that upon conviction the court might “in addition to and independent of all other penalties provided in this chapter, prohibit such person from operating or driving a motor vehicle for a period of not to exceed one (1) year.” (Section 74-142 of the Code of Ordinances.)

The appellee was fined $25.00 and prohibited from operating an automobile for 30 days.

At the trial the appellee demanded that he be accorded a trial by jury. This demand was refused.

The appellee appealed from his conviction to the Common Pleas Court, which reversed the judgment and remanded the cause to the Municipal Court for further proceedings. The City of Cincinnati appealed from that judgment of reversal to this Court:

The sole question presented is, whether the Municipal Court erred in refusing the demand for a trial by jury.

As the use of the public highways has relation to the public safety, that ground alone is sufficient to bring their use within the regulatory power of the state in the exercise of its police power; and the granting of licenses to competent operators of motor vehicles and the withholding of licenses from incompetents, and the suspension or revocation of those granted to such as are thereafter found to be incompetent is a well recognized method of the exercise of such regulatory power. This power is stated in 5 Am. Jur., 591, as follows:

“The right to operate motor vehicles in public places is not a natural and unrestrained right, but a privilege subject to reasonable regulations in the interest of the public under the police power of the state. The police power has been exercised in many states by requiring chauffeurs and other op *92 erators of motor vehicles to obtain a license as a' condition precedent to such operation.”

And, at page 593:

“The statutes regulating the granting of operators’' licenses or drivers’ permits usually provide for their revocation. It is competent for the legislature to prescribe the conditions under which the privilege of opérating an automobile on the public highways may be exercised.”

This regulatory power, like all other phases of the police power, is legislative and administrative, and when properly exercised presents no occasion for the exercise of the judicial power. It is said in 33 Am. Jur., 391, that:

“The offense of violating a legislative enactment by engaging in a business without a license is not one as to which there is a constitutional- right to trial by jury. Accordingly, the legislature may confer on justices of the peace final jurisdiction to hear and determine without a jury, prosecutions for conducting a business without a license. It is also to be observed that the legislature may delegate to an administrative board or official the right to revoke a license.”

Permits may be granted, withheld or revoked, and valuable property destroyed by administrative officers, and it is only when this great power is abused that constitutional guaranties are violated and recourse to the courts permitted for redress of the injury. We quote from 12 Am. Jur., 325:

“A hearing of -a judicial nature is not essential where the state is engaged in the exercise of the police power. — Judicial proceedings are not necessary to a revocation of 'a license to practive medicine or the license of a architect.”

That this power exists in Ohio and is exercised through administrative officers is not challenged. The instances of its exercise are too numerous to justify specification. 8 O. Jur. 306, et seq.

It was in the exercise of this power that the General Assembly enacted §6296-18b, which authorizes the registrar of motor vehicles, whenever he has good cause to believe that *93 a licensed operator is incompetent or otherwise not qualified to be licensed to require him, upon five days’ notice to submit to an examination, and, if upon such examination he is found to be incompetent, he may suspend or revoke the license. From this order, an appeal to the courts is provided, but no provision for trial by jury before the registrar or the court is made; and the courts are expressly prohibited by §6296-34 GC, from interfering with the registrar in any way other than as provided by the statutes.

It is clear, therefore, that where the sole issue is whether a license should be granted, revoked or suspended, there is no right to have that issue submitted to a jury.

Now has a right, to trial by jury been conferred when the suspension of the license is made by a court upon conviction of a violation of a law or ordinance relating to reckless driving, when the right to trial by jury of the offense charged does not exist?

Authority is conferred by §6296-30 GC, upon all courts of record having jurisdiction to hear and determine charges of operating a motor vehicle in violation of laws or ordinances relating to reckless operation, upon conviction “In addition to or independent of, all other penalties provided by law, to suspend or revoke the license of the convicted person. Nothing is said in this section about trial by jury. The only place where it is mentioned is in §6296-16 GC. That section, so far as pertinent here, confers county-wide jurisdiction upon all courts of record to hear and determine cases arising under the provisions of the Drivers’ License Law, and as to the form of the prosecution provides that: “Such actions shall be commenced by the filing of an affidavit' and the right of trial by jury as provided by law shall be preserved, but indictments shall not be required in misdemeanor cases arising hereunder.”

It should be observed here that the appellee was not charged with a violation of any provision of the Drivers’ License Law, or any other law for that matter. He was charged with violating a municipal ordinance which would seem to make inapplicable this provision of §6296-16 GC.

But assuming that the prosecution is of the kind mentioned in the section, we must still inquire whether it entitles the appellee to a trial in this case where the maximum punishment was $50.00.

*94 *93 Sec. 6296-16 GC, does not create or bestow a right to trial by jury. All it does is to preserve such right as then existed. *94 We must look elsewhere to find the cases in which such right existed at that time. And we look in vain for any constitutional or statutory provision conferring the right to trial by jury where the sole issue is the revocation of a license.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 N.E.2d 358, 77 Ohio App. 261, 47 Ohio Law. Abs. 89, 33 Ohio Op. 23, 1945 Ohio App. LEXIS 560, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-cincinnati-v-wright-ohioctapp-1945.