MEDIA CONTACT
Maurice A . Thompson
(614) 340-9817
Legal Center to
High Court:
Traffic Cameras
Unconstitutional in Ohio
Toledo's
enforcement scheme for enforcing traffic camera
infractions violates Ohio Constitution
infractions violates Ohio Constitution
Columbus, OH - The 1851 Center for Constitutional Law
today submitted to the Ohio Supreme Court its brief in Walker v. City of
Toledo asserting that the City of Toledo's method of fining drivers under
its automated traffic camera violates the judicial article of the Ohio
Constitution.
Joining the 1851 Center on the Brief are 21 State
Representatives and eight State Senators.
The 1851 Center's brief argues Section 4, Article I of the Ohio Constitution requires that Ohioans' rights and liabilities must be determined by elected judges unless the General Assembly has created statutory authority for something less than a judge. This means that the City is required to use municipal judges to enforce the camera violations, rather than the administrative hearing officers that all cities currently use. However, these cities' agreements with private camera corporations require the use of administrative hearing officers.
The 1851 Center's brief argues Section 4, Article I of the Ohio Constitution requires that Ohioans' rights and liabilities must be determined by elected judges unless the General Assembly has created statutory authority for something less than a judge. This means that the City is required to use municipal judges to enforce the camera violations, rather than the administrative hearing officers that all cities currently use. However, these cities' agreements with private camera corporations require the use of administrative hearing officers.
"While the issue in this case may sound like a mere
procedural hang-up, we are confident that if we succeed, traffic camera
violations will essentially become impossibly expensive and untenable for Ohio
cities to enforce. If we win, these cameras will quickly disappear from Ohio,"
said Maurice Thompson, Executive Director of the 1851 Center for Constitutional
Law.
The 1851 Center's brief asserts the following:
·
Through the Ohio Constitution, citizens vested
judicial power in the courts only. And Ohio cities' hearing officers exercise
"judicial power" when they determine whether Ohio drivers are liable
for the violation.
·
While the Ohio Constitution permits the Ohio
General Assembly to create additional judicial power, legislators have never
created blanket authority for cities, or traffic-camera specific authority.
Instead, they have indicated that all such violations must run through
municipal courts.
·
The City of Toledo, like other Ohio cities,
cannot create judicial power through local ordinances.
·
"Administrative" traffic camera
enforcement violates Ohioans' right to defend themselves before an elected
judge, as well as their due process right to judicial oversight before
deprivation of their vehicles.
"At the end of the day, Due Process means that you
get to see a judge before government takes your money or your car," said
Thompson. "Through these camera agreements, Ohio's local governments are
essentially selling to private corporations the right to fine their citizens
and take their vehicles. We believe that it's time to end this practice."
The General Assembly has taken no action to enable
administrative enforcement, but has instead maintained a longstanding statute
requiring that municipal courts must field cases related to municipal
ordinances, unless parking-related. This means that the City is required to use
municipal judges rather than administrative hearing officers.
The municipalities maintain that constitutional
"home rule" authority lends them the power to create judicial
authorities such as the hearing officers. However the Ohio Supreme Court has
rejected such a claim four times between 1925 and 1959, stating that only the
General Assembly can create additional judicial officers, and violations of
city ordinances must be handled in municipal courts. The Appellate Court was
also unconvinced.
The Brief explains that if Ohio's high court gives a pass
to municipalities, it will be turning upside down the Ohio Constitution's
requirement that Ohioans have access to an actual judge before being deprived
of their property. Toledo exacts a $120 fine, and seizes or immobilizes the
vehicles of those who do not or cannot pay.
Joining the 1851 Center's Brief is a bipartisan coalition
of legislators, including State Senators Seitz, Schaffer, Jordan, Jones,
Uecker, Patton, and Ecklund; and State Representatives Mallory, Adams, Maag,
Becker, Lynch, Boose, Conditt, Perales, Hacket, Blair, Adams, Stautberg,
Rosenberger, Dovilla, Blessing, Patmon, Beck, Reece, Hall, Derickson, and
Barnes.
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