Commonwealth v. Lingenfelter

33 Pa. D. & C. 615, 1938 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 171
CourtCambria County Court of Quarter Sessions
DecidedOctober 3, 1938
Docketno. 18
StatusPublished

This text of 33 Pa. D. & C. 615 (Commonwealth v. Lingenfelter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cambria County Court of Quarter Sessions primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Lingenfelter, 33 Pa. D. & C. 615, 1938 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 171 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1938).

Opinion

McKenrick, J.,

The information charges that defendant “did wilfully and maliciously drive a lumber truck . . . over highway route no. 11025, traffic route no. 218, in Croyle Township, and did then and there interfere with the work of the Pennsylvania State Highway Department, by destroying the work that had been already accomplished. This being contrary to the Act of May 9, 1929, P. L. 1702, and the laws of the Commonwealth.”

The Act of May 9,1929, P. L. 1702, is entitled:

“An Act regulating the closing of public highways and providing for the locating, marking and maintenance of detours necessitated by such closing; requiring boroughs, cities and towns to notify the Department of Highways of the creation and discontinuance of certain detours; providing penalties for removing, destroying, defacing signs erected for warning or detour purposes, and for driving on, over or across highways which are closed by the proper persons or authorities, exeept in certain cases”.

Section 1 of the act provides that, “except in the case of emergencies wherein the safety of the public would be [616]*616endangered, no public road or highway in this Commonwealth shall be closed to vehicular traffic, except upon order of the authorities having charge of the maintenance of such highways, nor for a longer period than is necessary for the purpose for which such order is issued”.

Section 2 provides for the creation of a detour where borough, town, or city streets, forming parts or sections of a State Highway, are closed to vehicular traffic.

Section 3 provides that “When any public road or highway shall be closed, as hereinbefore provided, it shall be the duty of the authorities authorizing the closing to immediately designate or lay out a detour, on which they shall erect or cause to be erected and maintained while such detour is in use legible signs . . . It shall also be the duty of the authorities closing the main highway and maintaining the detour to immediately remove all detour signs when the highway originally closed is opened for traffic. ...

“Section 4. Any person who shall wilfully remove, deface, destroy or disregard any barricade, light, danger sign, detour sign, or warning of any other character whatsoever, erected or placed under authority of this act, or who shall drive on, over or across any highway which has been closed by proper authority, shall, upon conviction thereof in a summary proceeding before a magistrate ... be sentenced to pay a fine of . . . Provided, however, That persons who have no outlet due to the closing of a highway may drive on, over or across such highway, with the consent in writing of, and subject to such conditions as may be prescribed by, the authorities responsible for the closing or their agents or contractors, without being subject to the penalties imposed by this section.”

Section 5 provides for the recovery of damages from any person or persons who have damaged the highway by driving on, over, or across the same when it is closed to vehicular traffic, in accordance with the provisions of this act.

[617]*617The testimony here discloses that the employes of the Highway Department were oiling the road in question and a flagman was stationed to warn traiflc. Defendant was driving a truck and was stopped and told to wait and not drive again for 15 minutes. According to the testimony of some of the Commonwealth’s witnesses, defendant, after waiting for some time, proceeded to drive upon a part of the highway which was being oiled. The flagman who first stopped defendant testified: “He stayed there until they had so much chip down and then I told him to go ahead, to watch his step, that they were putting down a special oil and to do what Larimer told him.” And further, “I told him to go ahead and pull on through and in case Mr. Larimer stopped him just to do like anybody else, to stop and watch the oil.” And further, “I just told him to go through and watch the oil and that it was up to him to do what Mr. Larimer wanted him to do.”

Defendant testified that he stopped, as requested, and waited for some time and that “the fellow that flagged me down told me to go ahead.” Defendant further testified that he followed State Highway trucks employed on the road and that he did not drive on the oiled part of the road.

The testimony is rather conflicting as to whether defendant drove on the oiled portion of the road, or whether he drove to the side of the road. We, however, are not concerned so much with the conduct of defendant on the day in question, but rather as to whether the act of assembly invoked in this prosecution covers the offense charged. As we read the act, and it is the only one to which we have been referred as supporting the Commonwealth’s contention, it is an act governing cases in which detours have been laid out and signs erected concerning said detours. The title of the act, which we have quoted in part, relates to the closing of public highways and for the locating, marking, and maintaining of detours necessitated by such closing. The penalties provided in the act are to be imposed where one wilfully removes, defaces, [618]*618destroys, or disregards any barricade, light, danger sign, detour sign, or warning of any other character whatsoever, erected or placed under authority of this act, or who shall drive on, over, or across any highway which has been closed by proper authority. There is no contention here that the road was closed, as roads are closed by the Highway Department, or when detours have been provided. There is no detour provided in this case. It was simply a temporary use of the road by the Highway Department for the purpose of making certain repairs, and the persons permitted to drive thereon were stopped at intervals for periods of 15 minutes or more.

While it is true that section 4 makes it an offense to disregard any warning, it will be noted that the warning is “erected or placed under authority of this act,” and the act is clearly an act regulating the closing of public roads and the laying out of detours. The purpose which the legislature had in mind, as indicated by the title to the act and sections 1, 2, and 3 thereof, makes it clearly an act relating to the relocating, marking, and maintenance of detours necessitated by the closing of a road. In other words, the act is designed to cover cases in which a road is being repaired and, by reason of such repairs, a detour is created and a person disregarding the notice of detour has driven upon the closed highway.

In the proviso of section 4, persons who have no outlet due to the closing of the highway may drive on, over, or across such highway subject to certain conditions, that is, persons would not be able to use the detour provided and, therefore, they may, without being subject to the penalties provided, use the road which is in process of construction or repair.

In a criminal prosecution, which this is, there must be some statutory authority for the prosecution, and where a particular act of assembly is invoked the court must determine the purport of the act and the circumstances arising which would bring defendant’s conduct within the act invoked. We are not indicating by . what [619]

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Bluebook (online)
33 Pa. D. & C. 615, 1938 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-lingenfelter-paqtrsesscambri-1938.