186 Ind. 292 | Ind. | 1917
Appellant prosecutes this appeal from a judgment in favor of appellee for $125 on account of damage to his motorcycle. On April 29, 1915, appellee left his motorcycle standing at the north curb line, between Sixth and Seventh streets on Main street in the city of Evansville, which is alleged to be one of the principal business thoroughfares, and most congested by travel, in said city. ' Appellant, as the complaint alleges, on said date did carelessly and negligently leave one of its wagons or moving vans with a span of horses harnessed thereto without being hitched, chained, tied or fastened, and unattended, near Eighth street and on the north side near the curb line of said Main street, in violation of §9 of a certain ordinance then and there in force in said city, which ordinance is entitled: 1
“An Ordinance to regulate the use of streets and highways by vehicles, to regulate traffic and travel thereon, and imposing penalties for the violation thereof.”
Section 9, in so far at it is material here, reads as follows:
“No horse shall be left unattended in any street or highway unless securely fastened, or unless the wheels of the vehicle to which it is harnessed are*294 securely tied, fastened or chained, and the vehicle is of sufficient weight to prevent it being dragged at a dangerous speed with the wheels so secured.”
Section 13 fixes the penalty at not less than $5 nor more than $25 for each offense. The complaint further alleges that without appellee’s fault the horses became greatly frightened and ran away, causing said wagon to run against and over the motorcycle to its damage.
The only error assigned and not waived is the overruling of appellant’s motion for a new trial. Under this assignment the only points made by appellant challenge the validity of the ordinance. Appellant asserts that the ordinance is void for the reason that it is indefinite, vague and uncertain; that the phrases “securely fastened”, “securely tied, fastened or chained”, “of sufficient weight to prevent it being dragged”, and “at a dangerous speed,” are not technical phrases having a peculiar and appropriate meaning in law, and are to be taken in their plain, ordinary and usual sense; that they are all comparative terms, without definition or standard of comparison fixed by the ordinance.
An ordinance against the sale of “small ware” on the streets without further definition was upheld. So an ordinance prohibiting driving or riding an animal on the street “faster than an ordinary trot”. So “An ordinance ' providing that no occupant of land abutting on a private way shall suffer any filth to remain on that part of the way adjoining his land is not open to objection of indefiniteness because it does not fix a time beyond which it shall not be allowed to remain. So an ordinance directed against the game of ‘policy’ is not void for uncertainty because it does not set out the particular facts which constitute the game. So an ordinance declaring it an offense to ‘conduct a house of ill fame in an indecent manner’ was sustained as sufficient, without specification of the various acts of indecency.” McQuillin, Mun. Ordinances §20; 2 McQuillin, Mun. Corp. (5th ed.) §651.
In the case of Shea v. City of Muncie (1896), 148 Ind. 14, 20, 46 N. E. 138, an objection to an ordinance, as in this case, was made on the ground that it was too “uncertain and indefinite”. The court said: “It is insisted that the ordinance, or some ordinance, should have first defined and prescribed the boundaries of the residence portion of said city. We do not decide that that might not have been properly done. The only difference between that course and the course pursued is, that the question of fact involved as to the true boundaries of such residence portion of said city was
From these observations we conclude that the ordinance in question is not void for uncertainty. Judgment affirmed.
Note.—Reported in 116 N. E. 50. Municipal corporations, ordinances, certainty, 34 Am. Dec. 635.