City of Westlake v. Kaplysh

691 N.E.2d 1074, 118 Ohio App. 3d 18
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 27, 1997
DocketNo. 70872.
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 691 N.E.2d 1074 (City of Westlake v. Kaplysh) 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 Westlake v. Kaplysh, 691 N.E.2d 1074, 118 Ohio App. 3d 18 (Ohio Ct. App. 1997).

Opinions

Per Curiam.

Plaintiff-appellant city of Westlake appeals from an order of the Rocky River Municipal Court granting defendant-appellee William M. Kaplysh’s motion to suppress evidence.

Kaplysh was charged on May 24, 1996, with operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcohol in violation of Westlake Codified Ordinances 333.01(A)(1). Kaplysh was initially stopped for failing to dim his high beam *19 headlights for oncoming traffic. During the stop, the officer discovered defendant had been drinking alcohol. Kaplysh failed field sobriety tests and subsequently refused to take a breath-alcohol test.

Kaplysh pleaded not guilty to the charge of driving under the influence of alcohol. Contending that the traffic stop was unlawful, Kaplysh thereafter filed a motion to suppress evidence. The matter proceeded to a hearing in the municipal court on June 13,1996.

Westlake police officer Thomas Cummings was the sole, witness to testify during the hearing on the motion to suppress. Officer Cummings testified that he was driving a police cruiser on routine patrol at approximately 2:30' a.m. on May 24, 1996. Driving west on Detroit Road, he stopped his car behind another vehicle at a red traffic light at the intersection of Detroit Road and Bradley Road.

Officer Cummings observed a vehicle driven by defendant approaching east on Detroit Road. Defendant’s vehicle approached the intersection with its high beams on and stopped behind another vehicle. After the traffic light changed from red to green, defendant proceeded through the intersection and switched to low beam headlights. The record does not specify the exact time and relative position of the cars. Officer Cummings testified that he observed the bright headlights on defendant’s vehicle for at least a minute and had to squint because of the intensity of the light.

Officer Cummings concluded that defendant violated a Westlake ordinance requiring drivers to dim their headlights when they approach oncoming vehicles. As a result, Officer Cummings turned his vehicle around and stopped defendant. When he spoke with defendant, Officer Cummings noticed a strong odor of alcoholic beverage. Defendant subsequently failed a series of field sobriety tests and was arrested for driving while under the influence.

Defendant argued that the Westlake police did not have sufficient grounds to stop him and that all evidence obtained by the police following the stop should be suppressed. In an order journalized June 18, 1996, the municipal court granted defendant’s motion to suppress.

Westlake timely appeals, raising the following two assignments of error:

“The trial court committed prejudicial error by improperly applying the law to the facts and by failing to uphold the traffic stop upon evidence of a violation of Westlake Code Section 337.14 (O.R.C. 4513.15).
“The trial court committed prejudicial error by granting the defendant’s motion to suppress and failing to sustain the police officer’s reasonable articulable suspicion to effect a traffic stop.”

These assignments are well taken.

*20 Westlake argues that the municipal court improperly granted. defendant’s motion to suppress. Westlake argues that the record shows that Officer Cummings properly stopped defendant for violating Westlake Codified Ordinances 337.14, which provides as follows:

“Whenever a motor vehicle is being operated on a roadway or shoulder adjacent thereto during the times specified in Section 337.02, the driver shall use a distribution of light, or composite beam, directed high enough and of sufficient intensity to reveal persons, vehicles and substantial objects at a safe distance in advance of the vehicle, except that upon approaching an oncoming vehicle, the lights or beams shall be so aimed that the glaring rays are not projected into the eyes of the oncoming driver. (ORC 4513.15)” (Emphasis added.)

Under the circumstances, we are compelled to agree.

It is well established that a police officer may conduct a traffic stop of an individual driving a motor vehicle when the officer has a reasonable suspicion, based on specific and articulable facts, that a criminal violation has occurred. State v. Woods (1993), 86 Ohio App.3d 423, 424-425, 621 N.E.2d 523, 524-525. The officer is not required to prove that the suspect committed an offense beyond a reasonable doubt or even to satisfy the lesser standard of probable cause to believe that defendant violated the law.

It is undisputed that Officer Cummings observed defendant for at least a minute with his high beam headlights illuminated. The case sub judice is distinguishable from Woods for precisely this reason because the defendant in Woods only momentarily engaged her high beam headlights and then resumed driving with her low beam headlights. The court in Woods found that such a momentary use of high beam headlights, particularly while on a curve in the road, was insufficient to justify an investigatory stop.

Unlike Woods, the facts of the case sub judice are sufficient to establish, at a minimum, that the officer had a reasonable suspicion that defendant violated the headlight ordinance. Contrary to defendant’s argument, Woods does not stand for the proposition that a driver sufficiently complies with the headlight ordinance if he ultimately turns off the high beams before passing a vehicle headed in the opposite direction. Rather, a driver violates the ordinance by continuing to use the high beam headlights of his vehicle “upon approaching” such traffic. The ordinance requires the driver to shift to the low beam lights at the latest when the glaring rays project into the eyes of an oncoming driver. In Woods, where the cars were on a curve, the court found that moment to be “at the very instant the approaching car became visible.” From the officer’s perspective in the case at bar, Kaplysh was well past that point when he dimmed his lights. As the officer testified, “I was forced to squint due to the intensity of the bright lights from the oncoming vehicle.” *21 Defendant’s argument that the police cruiser driven by Cummings was not “oncoming” within the meaning of the ordinance, because it stopped at the red light, is unpersuasive. This argument ignores the fact that Officer Cummings’s car, as well as the vehicle in front of his, was moving immediately prior to stopping at the traffic light as defendant approached from the opposite direction. The driver of the vehicle in front of the officer’s would have been exposed to the glare of Kaplysh’s high beam headlights even earlier than was the officer. The officer said (1) he saw the high beams for a period of one to one and one-half minutes, and (2) the red light changed after thirty seconds.

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Bluebook (online)
691 N.E.2d 1074, 118 Ohio App. 3d 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-westlake-v-kaplysh-ohioctapp-1997.