Morton v. Cincinnati (City)
Morton v. Cincinnati (City)
Opinion of the Court
Epitomized Opinion
Published Only In Ohio Daw Abstract
Morton was convicted in the Mrnicipal Court of Cincinnati for obstructing a certain public highway contrary to the provisions of Sec. 952, Cincinnati Ordinances, which provided in pait: “No person shall obstruct any street . . . on a public highway ... by permitting any .... building to remain upon said highway.” The evidence showed that the plaintiff in error owned a building which he desired to move from one street to another. He applied for a permit to remove it. After procuring the permit he started to
1. When an act which, in itself, would constitute á violation of a city ordinance, is being done under authority of a permit issued by the administrative officers of the city in accordance with the terms of another ordinance, the revocation of such permit, on account of an error in its issuance, will not put the person to whom it was issued in a position to be prosecuted for the violation of the first ordinance.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.