Lead Opinion
This is an appeal from a judgment rendered in the Rocky River Municipal Court. Christopher J. Gallagher, defendant-appellant, appeals his conviction of “hit-and-run,” а violation of Section 335.12 of the Codified Ordinances of the City of North Olmsted. The issues raised in this appeal are, first, whether Section 335.12 applies to a driver who has nоt proximately caused the collision in which his motor vehicle is involved and, second, whether Section 335.12 applies to a driver who lacks actual knowledge that a person has been injured in that collision.
This appeal arises from a collision which occurred on August 5,1980, when a bicycle ridden by twelve-year-old Robert Cleary struck the passenger side of a 1979 Chevy Chevette driven by the twenty-year-old defendant in the intersection of Clague and Lorain Roads. It is undisputed that defendant had proceeded in accordance with a left-turn signal, that Robert Cleary had failed to obey Section 373.15 *415 of the Codified Ordinances of the City of North Olmsted, 1 that Robert Cleary was thrown from his bicycle onto the hood of dеfendant’s vehicle, and that defendant neither exited his vehicle nor identified himself to Robert Cleary. After the collision, one of two witnesses followed defendant and secured his license plate number; both witnesses then accompanied Robert Cleary to the North Olmsted Police Department, where all three made written statеments. Defendant made a written statement to police on August 8,1980. On September 3,1980, police issued him a traffic citation for violation of Section 335.12.
The matter was tried on November 19, 1980. On the same day, the court found defendant guilty, fined him $250, sentenced him to six days’ imprisonment, suspended his driver’s license for three years, and permitted him to drive aftеr thirty days, provided that he complied with the Financial Responsibility Law (R.C. Chapter 4509).
In his timely appeal to this court, defendant-appellant assigns three errors:
“1) The Trial Court erred in finding the Defendant-Appellant guilty of violating a ‘Leaving the Scene of an Accident’ Ordinance, since the Defendant-Appellant was the innocent рarty involved in the incident.
“2) The Trial Court erred in finding the Defendant-Appellant guilty of violating a ‘Leaving the Scene of an Accident’ Ordinance, since the accident оr collision was not ‘due to the driving or operation’ of a motor vehicle by the Defendant-Appellant.
“3) The Trial Court erred when it found the Defendant-Appellant guilty of a violation of Section 335.12 of the Codified Ordinances of the City of North Olmsted for ‘Leaving the Scene of an Accident,’ in the absence of evidence establishing bеyond a reasonable doubt that the Defendant-Appellant knew that a person was injured in the accident.”
These assignments of error are without merit.
Section 335.12 of the Codified Ordinances of the City of North Olmstеd is premised upon R.C. 4549.02. Section 335.12 provides, inter alia:
“In the case of accident to or collision with persons or property upon any of the public streets or highways, due to the driving or operation thereon of any motor vehicle, the person so driving or operating such motor vehicle, having knowledge of such accident or collision, shall immediately stop his motor vehicle at the scene of the accident or collision and shall remain at the scene of such accident or collision until he has given his name and address and, if he is not the owner, the name and address of the owner of such motor vehicle, together with the registered number of such motor vehicle, to any person injured in such accident or collision or to the operator, occupant, owner or attendant of any motor vehiclе damaged in such accident or collision, or to any police officer at the scene of such accident or collision.”
Section 335.12 clearly imposes two duties upon any person encompassed within its provisions: first, that he stop at the scene, and second, that he remain at the scene until he has identified himself to any person injured, to the owner of any property damaged, or to any police officer present. Defendant’s assignments of error are premised upon his assertion that *416 he is not a person encompassed within the provisions of Section 335.12.
In the first assignment of error, defendant asserts that Section 335.12 is inappliсable because he was not at fault. In the second assignment of error, defendant asserts that Section 335.12 is inapplicable because the collision was nоt a “collision * * * due to the driving or operation * * * of any motor vehicle,”
i.e.,
because the collision was due to the operation of a bicycle.
2
We find no merit in defendant’s attempt to limit Section 335.12’s applicability to collisions of which operation of a motor vehicle is the proximate cause. Section 335.12 сlearly applies to collisions of which operation of a motor vehicle is a contributing factor,
i.e.,
to collisions in which motor vehicles are involved. See
Cleveland
v.
Jorski
(1944),
In the third assignment of error, defendant asserts that Section 335.12 is inapplicable because he had no knowledge that Robert Cleary had been injured. The applicability of Section 335.12, however, is clearly dependent upon the driver’s “knowledge of [the] acсident or collision,” not upon his knowledge of personal injury or property damage. See
Cuyahoga Falls
v.
Wuchter
(1972),
The judgment of the Rocky River Municipal Court is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Section 373.15 provides, inter alia:
“It shall be legal to ride a bicycle upon a sidewalk, street or public way, or upon any path set aside for the exclusivе use of bicycles, subject to the following:-
((Jfc ‡ >|C
“(g) No person shall ride a bicycle across or through an intersection when crossing a through street. Such intersections are to be crossed by walking the bicycle across or through the intersection.”
Section 301.20 of the Codified Ordinances of the City of North Olmsted provides that motor vehicle means “every vehicle propelled or drawn by power other than muscular power. * * *”
Concurrence Opinion
concurring. I concur in the judgment but would hold the defendant to a stricter accountability than the majority does.
In my view the relevant ordinance requires a stop and delivery of the specified information after a collision whether or not the driver of a participating vehicle was aware that personal injury was a probable consequence of the collision.
