City of Cleveland v. Tisdale, 89877 (6-9-2008)
This text of 2008 Ohio 2807 (City of Cleveland v. Tisdale, 89877 (6-9-2008)) 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.
Opinion
{¶ 1} Appellant, Venis Tisdale, appeals his conviction in the Cleveland Municipal Court for speeding. For the reasons stated herein, we vacate the decision of the trial court and discharge appellant.
{¶ 2} On April 2, 2007, Tisdale was charged with speeding in violation of Cleveland Codified Ordinance Section 433.03. Tisdale entered a plea of not guilty, and the case proceeded to trial on April 26, 2007.
{¶ 3} At trial, Officer LaWayne Smith of the Cleveland Police Department testified that on April 2, 2007, he pulled Tisdale over for speeding. Officer Smith had been monitoring traffic at East 105th Street and Parklane Avenue with his Genesis radar unit. He was stationed at a turnaround adjacent to Parklane Avenue, and was parked facing northbound in order to monitor southbound traffic, which would have poor ability to see him. Officer Smith testified that he tracked Tisdale, who was driving southbound, driving at a speed of 43 m.p.h. in a 25 m.p.h. speed zone. The officer stated he "locked him on my Genesis, got a visual look at him, pulled him over, [and] gave him a citation for doing 43 in a 25." He further testified that he was certified to use the radar system, that the radar system was in the front of his vehicle, and that he was monitoring vehicles coming toward him. Tisdale testified that he was driving 25 miles per hour. The trial court found Tisdale guilty and sentenced him to a fine of $75 and court costs.
{¶ 4} Tisdale has appealed the judgment of conviction and has raised five assignments of error for our review. We begin by addressing Tisdale's fifth *Page 3 assignment of error because it is dispositive of the matter. This assignment of error challenges the sufficiency of the evidence and provides in pertinent part that "no foundation was laid as to the accuracy of the officer's `Genesis Radar Unit,' the radar unit the police officer had testified that he had in his vehicle to monitor traffic with."
{¶ 5} When reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence, we must examine the evidence in the light most favorable to the city and determine whether that evidence could have convinced any rational trier of fact that the essential elements of the crime had been proved beyond a reasonable doubt. See State v. Jenks (1991),
{¶ 6} Tisdale argues that the city failed in the trial court to properly lay the foundation for the radar device's accuracy and reliability, and therefore, there was insufficient evidence to convict him of speeding. His assignment of error is well taken.
{¶ 7} The time again has come for Ohio courts to review the requirements to prove a case of speeding based on the reading of a speed measuring device. It has been 50 years since the Ohio Supreme Court last addressed the issue.
{¶ 8} In East Cleveland v. Ferell (1958),
{¶ 9} The Ohio Supreme Court recognized that the same conclusion had been reached by other courts of last resort in the United States. The court cited the New Jersey case of State v. Dantonio (N.J. 1955), 18 N.J. 570,
*Page 5"Under the Uniform Rules of Evidence, already approved by the American Bar Association at its 1953 meeting, judicial notice `shall be taken without request by a party * * * of such specific facts and propositions of generalized knowledge as are so universally known that they cannot reasonably be the subject of dispute.' Radar speed meters are now in this category. Why should the time of experts be wasted and the expenses of litigation be increased by compelling such men to appear in court after court telling the same truths over and over? While it is agreed that every reasonable doubt about the accuracy of new developments should promptly be resolved against them in the absence of expert evidence, there is no longer any such doubt concerning radar.
Rather, the applicable maxim should now be, `What the world generally knows a court of justice may be assumed to know.'" (Emphasis added.)
Dantonio, supra at 579; Gerdes, supra at 356.
{¶ 10} Following this line of reasoning, the Ohio Supreme Court held in Ferell, that "readings of a radar speed meter may be accepted in evidence * * * without the necessity of offering expert testimony as to the scientific principles underlying them." Ferrell,
{¶ 11} In Ferell, the device in use was a stationary radar device operating on the "Doppler effect." Ferell set the admissibility requirements until new technology changed that standard. As stated inState v. Wilcox (1974),
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2008 Ohio 2807, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-cleveland-v-tisdale-89877-6-9-2008-ohioctapp-2008.