Hoover v. Blackmore

87 N.E.2d 477, 54 Ohio Law. Abs. 177, 1949 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 270
CourtCity of Dayton Municipal Court
DecidedApril 12, 1949
DocketNo. 87235
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 87 N.E.2d 477 (Hoover v. Blackmore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering City of Dayton Municipal Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoover v. Blackmore, 87 N.E.2d 477, 54 Ohio Law. Abs. 177, 1949 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 270 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1949).

Opinion

[178]*178OPINION

By McBRIDE, J:

This action is a civil suit involving a motor vehicle accident which took place March 22, 1947 at the intersection of the Taylorsburg-Englewood Road with the Wenger Road in Montgomery County, Ohio. The plaintiff, Nevin G. Hoover, was operating his vehicle in a northerly direction at a time when the defendant, Otha Blackmore, was approaching the same intersection in a westerly direction on the Wenger Road. Visibility was good that day, however, the view of the drivers of each other was obstructed. The plaintiff alleged in his petition that there was a stop sign located on the corner, controlling traffic approaching on Wenger Road and that the defendant failed to stop before entering the intersection. The evidence clearly establishes that this stop sign had been erected on a post which was subsequently knocked over to an angle which made it impossible for the sign to be seen by anyone approaching the intersection.

Both vehicles entered the intersection at substantially the same instant, the plaintiff travelling at about 35 miles per hour and the defendant, on the right, at about 25 miles per hour. Since neither appear to have been guilty of any lack or ordinary care, the only question is whether or not the defendant had the right of way at this intersection. This must be determined by the motor vehicle statute enacted by the General Code of Ohio.

Sec. 6307-40 GC provides:

“Excepting where otherwise provided the operator of a vehicle * * * shall yield the right-of-way at an intersection to a vehicle * * * approaching from the right.”

Under this section, the defendant, whose vehicle approached from the right, had the right-of-way, unless he was required to stop before entering the intersection as a result of a stop sign erected by the county engineer.

Sec. 6307-7 (formerly §6310-32 GC) provides:

[179]*179“(a) The provisions of this act shall not be deemed to prevent local authorities with respect to streets and highways under their jurisdiction and within the reasonable exercise of the police power from—
1. Regulating the stopping * * * of vehicles * * *
* * * * * * * * *
6. Designating any highway as a through highway and requiring that all vehicles * * * stop before entering or crossing the same or designating any intersection as a stop intersection and requiring all vehicles * * * to stop at one or more entrances to such intersection;
(b) No ordinances or regulations enacted under subdivisions 4, 5, 6, 7 and 9 of this section shall be effective until signs giving notice of such local traffic regulations are posted upon or at the entrances to the highway or part thereof affected as may be most appropriate.”

Under this section, three conditions exist before local traffic signs are legally effective:

(1) The ordinance or regulation of the “local authorities” must be regularly adopted by the legislative body of the community. Albrecht Grocery Company v. Overfield, 32 Oh Ap 512 (1929).

(2) The regulation must be within the reasonable exercise of the police power of such legislative body (§6307-2 GC), and

(3) Appropriate signs giving notice of such regulations must be posted at the entrances to the part of parts of the highway affected. Bartlett v. McDonald, 59 Oh Ap 85.

In the Albrecht case, the council of the city of Akron had not, at the time of the accident, established Cedar Street as a main thoroughfare; at least, no claim was so made, and no ordinance was offered by the plaintiff in error to establish that fact. (P 517) In that case, the Court said:

“The lawmaking power is vested in legislative bodies and in a few appointive boards, but not yet in the police departments of her many cities. * * * The council of the city of Akron not having passed the ordinance so authorized to be passed, it is quite immaterial whether the police department erected the signs claimed by the plaintiff in error to have been erected, * * *. Signs so erected do not have any legal affect whatever, and no one is required to pay any attention to them.” Albrecht v. Overfield, 32 Oh Ap (518) 512. (1929). (The sweep[180]*180ing effect of this statement was modified in 1935 in Cook v. Hunter, which is discussed later in this decision.)

A somewhat similar decision was rendered by Judge Crawford on January 17, 1948, in Case No. 95317 in the Common Pleas Court of Montgomery County, Ohio, involving the intersection at Broadway and Oxford Avenue in Dayton, Ohio.

The issue in the instant case is therefore reduced to the question as to whether or not the Commissioners of Montgomery County, Ohio, adopted any resolution regarding the intersection in question.

A deputy from the County Engineers Office testified that he was in charge of a book, kept by him of all traffic signs erected in Montgomery County by the Engineer’s Office. He testified that two stop signs were erected on Wenger Road at this intersection on the 24th of September, 1937; that these two signs and several hundred additional signs were erected for the safety and convenience of the public, without any resolution from the county commissioners. He stated that over approximately the past 15 years, five or six signs were authorized by the county authorities, but that the two in question were not included in such resolutions. No ordinance or resolution involving this particular intersection was offered at the trial.

The testimony reveals that about five years ago, the county engineer, apparently at the request of the commissioners, made a survey of all existing signs and needed traffic controls in the county. Since that time, a record has been maintained by the engineer of all signs that have been erected, however, few such controls have ever been approved by the commission.

Sec. 6307-2 GC defines “local authority” as every county, municipal and other local board or body having authority to adopt local police regulations under the constitution and laws of this state. The Attorney General has given an opinion that the term “local authorities” includes boards of county commissioners. The county engineer has no power to establish police regulations. The right to do so on behalf of a county resides only with the county commissioners.

We find from the evidence that no ordinance or regulation controlling this intersection was ever adopted and that the stop sign at the intersection involved in this case was of no legal significance. The defendant did not violate any lawful police regulation when he failed to stop.

Effect of Unauthorized Stop Sign

Since the particular stop sign at the intersection was defaced [181]*181and so bent to the ground that it was not visible, it is unnecessary to decide the effect of a visible, appropriate sign in this case, however, in the interest of public safety it is necessary to observe that the strong words used in the Albrecht case were modified in 1935 by the same Court of Appeals. Such “courtesy” signs cannot be flagrantly disregarded. In Cook v. Hunter, 52 Oh Ap 354, 6 O. O. 382 (1935), the Court of Appeals of Summit County said:

“We are now constrained to assert that this quoted language—

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 N.E.2d 477, 54 Ohio Law. Abs. 177, 1949 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoover-v-blackmore-ohmunictdayton-1949.