580 N.E.2d 61 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1990
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[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *768
This matter involves eight consolidated appeals. Defendants-appellants are dump truck drivers who were stopped in Clark County, Ohio, by State Highway Trooper R.L. Alexander. The stops resulted in nine "overweight" citations being issued to defendants-appellants. After charges were brought in the Springfield Municipal Court, appellants entered their pleas and were subsequently found guilty of operating overloaded vehicles on improved public highways in violation of R.C.
Appellants were charged in Springfield Municipal Court with violating the provisions of R.C.
Breeding and Lansing pled not guilty to the charges; their bond payments were subsequently forfeited.
Jack and Richard Myers pled no contest to the charges. They also filed motions to suppress evidence. After a hearing, the trial court overruled their motions and found them guilty. Jack Myers was fined $200.20 and was required to pay court costs. Richard Myers was fined $221 and was also required to pay court costs.
The remaining appellants, Salmons, Scandrick, Albert Suerdick, and Steven Suerdick, pleaded not guilty to the charges brought against them. They also filed motions to suppress evidence, which were overruled. After a trial to the court, all four appellants were found guilty. Each received a fine (which included court costs), a five-day jail sentence, and a one-year license suspension. (Albert Suerdick was sentenced on both charges against him.) The trial court stayed the execution of appellants' jail sentences and license suspensions pending appeal.
All eight appellants have appealed from the separate judgments of the trial court. Their appeals have been consolidated.
"The trial court erred in overruling appellants' motions to suppress evidence because the stopping of the Appellants violated their rights under the
Because appellants' cases are fact-sensitive, we will first outline the statutes and case law applicable to this assignment of error, and then analyze each case, individually, on its facts.
As noted above, Trooper Alexander stopped appellants' dump trucks for various reasons. However, each of the reasons he articulated falls within two separate categories: (1) to check the vehicles for weight violations; or (2) to administer safety inspections. Two statutes are relevant.
The first statute, R.C.
"Any police officer having reason to believe that the weight of a vehicle and its load is unlawful may require the driver of said vehicle to stop and submit *770 to a weighing of it by means of a compact, self-contained, portable, sealed scale specially adapted to determine the wheel loads of vehicles on highways * * *. Any vehicle stopped in accordance with this section may be held by the police officer for a reasonable time only to accomplish the weighing as prescribed by this section."
The "reason to believe" standard of R.C.
"* * * there is `no ready test for determining reasonableness other than by balancing the need to search [or seize] against the invasion which the search [or seizure] entails.' * * * And in justifying the particular intrusion the police officer must be able to point to specific and articulable facts which, taken together with rational inferences from those facts, reasonably warrant that intrusion."
Therefore, in order for a police officer to stop a vehicle and check its weight, the officer must have some reasonable and articulable suspicion that "the weight of [the] vehicle and its load is unlawful."
The second statute, R.C.
"When directed by any state highway patrolman, the operator of any motor vehicle shall stop and submit such motor vehicle to an inspection and such tests as are necessary to determine whether it is unsafe or not equipped as required by law, or that its equipment is not in proper adjustment or repair, or in violation of the equipment provisions of Chapter 4513. of the Revised Code."
Courts have limited the power of police officers to stop vehicles and inspect such vehicles under the authority of R.C.
Therefore, in order for a police officer to stop a vehicle at random to conduct a safety inspection, the police officer must have some articulable and reasonable suspicion that the vehicle or its equipment is either unsafe, not in proper adjustment, or is in violation of law.
In either situation, where a vehicle is stopped and detained, whether it be for a weight check or for a safety inspection, there must be some evidence in the record that the police officer had an articulable and reasonable suspicion that the vehicle was in violation of law. The evidence must be more than a conclusory statement on the part of the officer that he or she suspected the vehicle to be "overweight" or "unsafe." The officer must articulate why he or she suspected that the vehicle was overweight or unsafe.
Once a police officer has made a legitimate and constitutional stop of a vehicle, the driver and the vehicle may be detained only for as long as the officer continues to have a reasonable suspicion that there has been a violation of law. SeeState v. Chatton (1984),
However, if circumstances attending an otherwise proper stop should give rise to a reasonable suspicion of some other illegal activity, different from the suspected illegal activity that triggered the stop, then the vehicle and the driver may be detained for as long as that new articulable and reasonable suspicion continues, even if the officer is satisfied that the suspicion that justified the stop initially has dissipated.
We will now consider each case, individually, on its facts.
We conclude that Alexander's stop of Jack Myers' vehicle met the requirements of the
We conclude that Alexander's stop of Richard Myers was constitutional. Alexander articulated his reasonable suspicion (for stopping Myers) at the hearing on Myers' motion to suppress. Alexander testified that he initially stopped Myers to check the vehicle's weight, and once he had stopped Myers, he noticed that there were some safety defects as well. Myers was stopped for legitimate purposes and was cited accordingly. Again, there was nothing in the record to indicate that Myers was detained for an inordinate length of time.
In this particular case, Alexander articulated a reasonable suspicion for making the stop of Salmons' truck: "bulging tires." We conclude that because "bulging tires" would at least trigger a reasonable suspicion that the tires were dangerously underinflated, Alexander had a reasonable basis to stop Salmons' vehicle for a safety inspection.4 Moreover, because Alexander observed the load on Salmons' vehicle after having made a legitimate stop, it was also not inappropriate to have called in the scales to check the vehicle's weight. Alexander's stop of Salmons, as well as his subsequent detention of Salmons, was not unconstitutional.
We conclude that while Alexander's initial reason for stopping Suerdick on January 7, 1988, was legitimate, i.e., to make a safety inspection because of balding tires, there is insufficient evidence in the record to justify *774 the weighing of Suerdick's vehicle. Even though Alexander testified that he observed the "tire pressure" on the vehicle and believed the vehicle to be overweight, he did not articulate a reasonable basis for his conclusions. There is no evidence that Alexander observed an overload in the bed of the truck or that he saw bulging tires. Consequently, Alexander showed no basis for determining "tire pressure," nor did he show any basis for concluding that Suerdick's truck was overweight. Accordingly, Suerdick's continued detention while the portable scales were brought in and his truck was weighed was unconstitutional.
Suerdick was stopped a second time by Alexander on March 3, 1988, at Interstate 675 and Interstate 70. Alexander testified that the reason for this stop was "tire pressure and safety inspection." After the stop, Alexander observed Suerdick's load and then concluded that the vehicle was overweight. The scales were called in and Suerdick's vehicle was weighed. The truck was found to be overweight and Suerdick was cited.
We conclude that the initial reason for stopping Suerdick was insufficient. Alexander testified in a conclusory manner that the reason Suerdick was stopped was because of "tire pressure and safety inspection." Alexander gave no real basis for his conclusion that Suerdick's vehicle required a safety inspection. As with the other stop, Alexander provided no basis for any conclusion he might have drawn concerning tire pressure. Accordingly, without Alexander having had a reasonable and articulable suspicion that Suerdick's truck was unsafe, there was no legitimate basis for having stopped Suerdick to conduct a safety inspection.
As noted above, where a police officer testifies that the sole reasons for making a stop are "tire pressure" and "safety inspection," without any further explanation of the basis for the stop, the stop is unconstitutional.
"In Springfield Municipal Court case Nos. 88-TR 559, 513, 1911, 4572 and 2950, the trial court erred in failing to direct a verdict in favor of appellants."
Essentially, appellants argue that because the state failed to establish a prima facie case on the charges of violating R.C.
In the cases of Jack and Richard Myers, the records indicate that both appellants pleaded no contest and were subsequently found guilty and sentenced. There is no showing that the trial court erred in failing to grant them directed verdicts.
The Second Assignment of Error is overruled as it applies to appellants Breeding, Lansing, Jack Myers, and Richard Myers.
In four of the cases before us, to which this assignment of error is applicable, the prosecution failed to introduce any evidence as to spacing between the axles on the offending dump trucks. In Scandrick's case, Steve Suerdick's case, and both of Albert Suerdick's cases, the record is devoid of any evidence relating to axle spacing. Accordingly, in those cases, the state failed to prove an essential element of the crime charged, and the appellants' Second Assignment of Error is sustained. *776
However, pursuant to State v. Gribble, supra, the prosecution was still required to prove that the scale used to weigh Salmons' vehicle was sealed by appropriate state officials. At trial, the prosecution offered as evidence certified copies of affidavits from the Ohio Department of Agriculture indicating that the scales used by the State Highway Patrol had been accurately calibrated within the limits set forth by the National Bureau of Standards and the Ohio Revised Code. All the scales had been tested and sealed within one year of Salmons' citation. Trooper Alexander testified that the scales referred to in the affidavits offered as evidence included the scale used to weigh Salmons' vehicle, as well as the scales used to weigh the other appellants' vehicles. The trial court admitted the affidavits into evidence.
Upon this record, we conclude that the prosecution met its burden with regard to the element proving that the scales were properly sealed by state officials.5
The Second Assignment of Error is overruled as it applies to Salmons.
The Second Assignment of Error is sustained in the cases of Scandrick, Steve Suerdick, and Albert Suerdick (both cases).
"The trial court (Judge Nevius) erred in imposing a driver's license suspension of one year as a portion of the sentence."
Appellants contend that because the penalty provisions of the Revised Code relating to R.C.
The Third Assignment of Error is sustained as to Salmons, Scandrick, Albert Suerdick, and Steve Suerdick.
Salmons' Third Assignment of Error having been sustained, that part of the judgment in his case providing for a one-year driver's license suspension will be reversed; the judgment in Salmons' case will be affirmed in all other respects.
All of Scandrick's, Albert Suerdick's, and Steve Suerdick's assignments of error having been sustained, the judgments of the trial court in their cases will be reversed, and they will be ordered discharged.
Judgment accordingly.
WILSON and BROGAN, JJ., concur.