Appellant's question, whether "an intersection formed by an undivided roadway and a divided roadway" constitutes one or "two intersections for the purposes of traffic light ordinances and statutes," may be stated more realistically as follows: Washington boulevard, running north and south in downtown Detroit, consists of two roadways separated by a parkway 53 feet wide. The east roadway is exclusively for northbound, the west roadway exclusively for southbound, traffic. A westbound motorist on Grand River approaching Washington boulevard from the east is confronted by four automatic traffic lights, two on the east curbs of the east roadway, and two on the west curbs of the west roadway. If as he enters the east roadway the lights are green, but before he enters the west roadway, the lights have changed to red, must he stop in the area on Grand River between the ends of the parkway in Washington boulevard and wait for the lights to turn green again, or may he proceed across the west roadway notwithstanding the red lights, provided no automobile traffic is coming down such roadway from the north?
In considering this appeal, we do not stress the *Page 369 fact, not shown by the record, that there are sidewalks on both the east and the west sides of the parkway, as well as down its center. We shall consider the case as if there were no such sidewalks.
While it is true that the statute quoted in Mr. Justice NORTH'S opinion (1 Comp. Laws 1929, § 4700, subds. (b), (c), as last amended by Act No. 318, Pub. Acts 1939 [Comp. Laws Supp. 1940, § 4700, Stat. Ann. 1941 Cum. Supp. § 9.1568]) requires vehicular traffic facing a yellow or red light to stop "before entering the nearest crosswalk" at the intersection, it could hardly be contended that the absence of a crosswalk would authorize the driver of a vehicle facing a yellow or red light to drive into an intersection as if the light were green. In a case where there is no crosswalk defined (1 Comp. Laws 1929, § 4693, subd. (p-1), as last amended by Act No. 318, Pub. Acts 1939 [Comp. Laws Supp. 1940, § 4693, Stat. Ann. 1941 Cum. Supp. § 9.1561]) as
"(a) That part of a roadway at an intersection included within the connections of the lateral lines of the sidewalks on opposite sides of the highway measured from the curbs, or in the absence of curbs from the edges of the traversable highway;
"(b) Any portion of a highway at an intersection or elsewhere distinctly indicated for pedestrian crossing by lines or other markings on the surface;"
the very farthest a motorist confronted by a yellow or red traffic light would, as a matter of common sense and common law, have a right to proceed would be "the prolongation of the lateral curb lines or, if none, then the lateral boundary lines" (1 Comp. Laws 1929, § 4693, subd. [p], as amended by Act No. 318, Pub. Acts 1939) of the cross street. See discussion of this problem, which occurs in outlying and undeveloped districts of cities and towns, in Opinions of the Attorney General, 1939-1940, pp. 271, 272. *Page 370 Thus, even if Justice NORTH'S observation, "that rarely is there a sidewalk along the sides of islands in boulevards," were applicable to the islands in Washington boulevard (and the map filed by counsel in this court does not disclose that there is one), nevertheless a motorist would not be authorized to infer, from its absence, a liberty to disregard yellow or red traffic signals plainly visible and intended to govern traffic moving in his direction. The absence of a crosswalk might authorize him to infer that there would be no pedestrian cross traffic for which he should allow room, but, after driving his vehicle even with the edge of the cross street, he would be obliged to stop, in obedience to the light.
Justice NORTH'S argument that "there is no obvious reason why one crossing a boulevard, after having entered the intersection in compliance with traffic signals, should stop in the central portion of the boulevard if there is no approaching cross traffic," meaning, no doubt, no approaching vehicular cross traffic, amounts to this, that inasmuch as the purpose of yellow and red traffic lights is to protect vehicular traffic on the cross street, when there is no such traffic, the motorist facing such signals ought to be allowed to disregard them. Such a construction ignores the manifest legislative intent to impose an unconditional mandate to stop, independent of the necessity for such stop, corroborated by the common understanding of citizens of this State ever since the introduction of traffic signals; it also assumes that the only purpose of a traffic light is to protect vehicular cross traffic. Traffic signals serve the equally important purpose of protecting pedestrian cross traffic, whether crossing on the near or the far side of the cross street, relatively to the vehicular traffic stopped and governed *Page 371 by such signals. The victim of defendant in the case at bar was a member of the pedestrian cross traffic on the far side of Washington boulevard, relatively to defendant, and the traffic signals facing defendant, which he deliberately disobeyed, were meant for the protection of decedent as well as possible vehicular cross traffic.
When decedent entered the pavement of Grand River avenue, the light being with him, he had a right to assume that he could cross safely. This right was qualified, of course, by a duty to look to his left, to see if any traffic had already entered the intersection on the yellow. It would be reasonable to require him to look as far as the east line of the west lane of Washington boulevard (a distance of 50 feet), but to require him to look as far as the east line of the east lane thereof (a distance of 153 feet), and, having seen an automobile, then to require him to assume that it would proceed heedlessly toward him and run him down instead of stopping opposite the parkway when the light for it became red, would be requiring such pedestrian to assume the unreasonable, and would, therefore, be itself unreasonable as a rule of conduct.
As Justice NORTH points out, "where the line or dividing area of the boulevard is narrow, stopping in the center area might be decidedly hazardous." No such case, however, is presented by this record. Obviously, the parkway or other dividing area ought to be wide enough to accommodate a vehicle in safety before the law should require its driver, upon change of traffic light, to stop opposite such area. In the case at bar, the area was wide enough to accommodate at least three vehicles of ordinary length in a row. *Page 372
Justice NORTH enumerates three grounds for distinguishing the four cases cited by counsel supporting the prosecution from the case at bar:
1. "None of them involved crossing an intersection controlled by a traffic light or other changing traffic signals."
2. "None of them involved the striking of a pedestrian after the motor vehicle had crossed the intersection, as in the instant case."
3. "Instead, each of the four cases * * * arose from a collision of motor vehicles where one or both of such vehicles were traveling upon a boulevard or divided way."
The second and third grounds of distinction are equally applicable to the two cases, cited by counsel and relied on by Justice NORTH, supporting defendant; hence they may both be disregarded as factors affecting decision herein. The first ground of distinction is equally applicable to Kienlen v.Holt, 106 Cal.App. 135 (288 P. 866). This leaves only one case, Schmidt v. City Ice Fuel Co., 60 Ohio App. 29 (19 N.E. [2d] 514), indistinguishable from the case at bar on the ground that traffic lights were involved, supporting defendant.
A case from a foreign jurisdiction, especially when decided only by an inferior tribunal thereof, has controlling force when cited to this court only by virtue of its appeal to reason and public policy. In rendering its decision, the court of appeals for Hamilton county, Ohio, did not cite any authority either judicial or statutory for its conclusion that the streets in question constituted a single intersection, but only observed, parenthetically, that the crossing of Liberty street (the undivided road) and Central Parkway (the divided road) "is an intersection of two streets within the meaning of both municipal and State laws." Research into the statute *Page 373 law of Ohio has failed to disclose any legislative enactment of that State (prior to 1941, when it adopted the uniform traffic law, Ohio General Code, §§ 6307-1 — 6307-11, defining "intersection" in § 6307-2) in force at the time that case was decided or at any previous time, giving a definition of the termintersection. Other terms of significance in the regulation of traffic had been defined by statute prior to 1941 (see Ohio General Code, § 6290), but not intersection. The Ohio Appeals decision appears, therefore, to rest at least in part upon a misconception of the law of the State of Ohio, — a fact which certainly does not give it strength when it is cited as an authority to this court.
Stronger and more persuasive authority, and supporting the proposition that the crossing of a divided highway by an undivided one forms two separate intersections, is to be found in a line of cases decided by the supreme court of errors of Connecticut. Mathis v. Bzdula, 122 Conn. 202 (188 A. 264);Beck v. Sosnowitz, 125 Conn. 553 (7 Atl. [2d] 389); Wilson v. M. M. Transportation Co., 125 Conn. 36 (3 Atl. [2d] 309).
In Mathis v. Bzdula, supra, it was held that where two roads came together in the shape of a Y, and in the center of the area of their confluence there was a small circular grass plot, there were in effect three separate intersections. Where the layout was identical, except that the grass plot was triangular instead of circular in shape, it was again held that there were three separate intersections in Beck v. Sosnowitz, supra. In Connecticut, there is no statutory definition of intersection, and the supreme court of errors had already given a common-law definition of the term as meaning the space common to both of the intersecting highways in Neumann v. Apter, 95 Conn. 695 (112 A. 350, 21 A.L.R. 970). In applying this definition to the unusual geometry *Page 374 involved in the Mathis and Beck Cases, the court stated that regard must be had to the course which traffic passing in the various directions through the crossing may normally be expected to take. The concept that emerges from these two decisions is a realistic one: it emphasizes that the intersection which is of importance to the law is the crossing of lines of travel (dynamic) rather than a mathematical formula arrived at by deduction from the ordinary physical properties of regularly laid out streets (static). In this sense, the intersection of Washington boulevard and Grand River avenue is not one but two, since there are two separate areas in which lines of traffic cross, separated by another area (the portion of Grand River lying between the parkways) which, like any street not within an intersection, is used for lines of travel parallel to each other, but not intersecting each other. The Michigan statutory definition of intersection, though couched in mathematical terms ("The area embraced within the prolongation of the lateral curb lines or, if none, then the lateral boundary lines of two or more highways which join one another at an angle, whether or not one such highway crosses the other"), ought to be read in the light of the realistic approach indicated by the common-law decisions, such as those of Connecticut, just cited.
The facts of Wilson v. M. M. Transportation Co., supra, are, in all material particulars (including the presence of traffic lights), as similar to those of the case at bar as could be desired. Plaintiff was driving north on Lafayette street, an undivided highway which crossed Railroad avenue, a highway divided, not by a parkway, but, by an elevated railroad embankment. Lafayette street went through the embankment beneath a viaduct, beneath which *Page 375 there was a traffic light. Plaintiff passed this light when it was green, but it changed to red before he emerged from beneath the viaduct into the north lane of Railroad avenue, where he collided with defendant's truck. Connecticut statutes gave the right of way to traffic favored with a green light upon entering the intersection; consequently, the determination as to which party had the right of way depended upon the answer to the question, "What is the correct definition of the limits of this intersection?" The court said:
"The court charged that `the intersection * * * is that space which lies between the curb lines of the two streets projected,' and proceeded to indicate on the map in evidence what this area was. What the court indicated is not clear from the record, but it may be inferred that it was the space common to Lafayette street and the north roadway. We, therefore, accept as correct the plaintiff's statement in his brief that the court `confined this definition to the area north of the railroad abutment.' Error is assigned as to the charge upon this point, and the plaintiff argues broadly that upon the undisputed facts already recited, the north and south roadways together with the underpass constituted a single street, and that therefore so much of all three as was common to Lafayette street comprised the intersection. He suggests that a contrary rule when applied to the many streets in the State `divided by so-called esplanades' would `defeat the very purpose of traffic regulation 75c,' and that `the railroad abutment in this case is nothing more than one form of esplanade.' Viewed in the light of the recent statement of this court that the mere presence of an open circular area at the junction of two roads `in effect created separate highways' (Mathis v. Bzdula, 122 Conn. 202, 205 [188 A. 264]) and of the completeness with which the 64-foot thick solid structure *Page 376 isolated one roadway from the other in the present case, the plaintiff's argument is not convincing. * * *
"There is no error."
We think that the statement of law in the Wilson Case is far preferable, as a matter of public policy, and evidences much more study and reflection, as a matter of preparation, than theSchmidt Case. Indeed, the decision of the Wilson Case is stronger than that we are required to make if we affirm the conviction in the case at bar, because in that case the motorist proceeding north on Lafayette street, after passing the traffic signal governing the stream of traffic of which he was a part, had no way of knowing, for a distance of 22 feet after passing such signal and before emerging into North Railroad avenue, whether the color of the light had changed against him. In that case it did change, yet, though he could not know such fact, he was held responsible therefor by the supreme court of errors, which had to content itself with a criticism of the peculiar placing of the signal (in the middle of the island) as a departure from the legislative purpose. Wilson v. M. M.Transportation Co., supra. In the case at bar, there was no such hardship upon defendant motorist. The light governing him was conveniently placed on the far side (relatively to him) of Washington boulevard, where he could observe without difficulty its every change. He chose to disregard its unequivocal command. He should be prepared to take the consequences.
The California Appeals decisions are well distinguished fromBartlett v. Hammond, 76 Col. 171 (230 P. 109), on the ground that the California statute defined the termintersection as the area embraced within the prolongation of the property lines of the streets involved. Kienlen v. Holt,supra. *Page 377 Obviously, there are no property lines along the sides of islands in boulevards, and the definition referred to would require the conclusion that the intersection of a divided road by an undivided one be regarded as single rather than double. The Michigan statute, which refers to curb lines, practically spells out the result contended for by the people in the case at bar, because the islands in Washington boulevard are bounded by curbs.
In the last analysis, the eminent requirement of the law is that motorists and pedestrians alike abide by the dictates of reason and common sense in their use of the highways. The latter, in the case presented by this record, call unequivocally for affirmance.
In his brief defendant quotes from the following ordinance of the city of Detroit (No. 115-D, § 17):
"The operator of a vehicle intending to turn to the left within an intersection of divided or undivided roadways, shall yield the right of way to any vehicle approaching from the opposite direction which is within the intersection or so close thereto as to constitute an immediate hazard, but said operator having so yielded and having given a signal as required by this ordinance, may make such left turn and the operators of all other vehicles approaching the intersection from said opposite direction shall yield the right of way to the vehicle making the left turn: Provided, That at an intersection at which a traffic signal is located, an operator intending to make a left turn shall permit vehicles bound straight through in the opposite direction to pass through the intersection before making the turn, and that when such left turn is intended from a divided roadway it shall be completed only when the green signal permits movement through the intersection of the highway being entered." *Page 378
Careful consideration of this ordinance, especially the proviso, leads to the conclusion that, in its municipal legislation, the common council of the city of Detroit treats the crossing of a divided by an undivided street as two intersections rather than one. The use of the word intersection in the singular in the phrase "intersection of divided or undivided roadways" does not militate against this conclusion, when it is remembered that there the word is used in a generic rather than a quantitative sense. More important than verbal considerations is the practical requirement imposed by the ordinance. According to the proviso, this is seen to be as follows: If defendant Silver had been driving north in the east lane of Washington boulevard approaching the intersection thereof with Grand River, and had commenced the execution of a left turn while the green light was facing Washington boulevard traffic, he would have had to stop in the area between the islands and await the changing of the traffic light before he could have legally entered the west lane of the boulevard in order to cross it to proceed further on Grand River. The necessity for such precaution is self-evident. Can it be argued that such necessity is any less obvious when, instead of approaching the intersection of the east lane of Washington boulevard and Grand River upon the former from the south, and turning left onto Grand River, one approaches the same intersection on Grand River from the east, and simply proceeds through on a favorable light, but observes a change of light before entering the west lane of the boulevard? In either case, does not elemental safety require that the motorist await a green light facing Grand River traffic before attempting to enter and cross the west lane of the boulevard? That the common council has expressly answered the question in *Page 379 the left-turn situation but has not done so in the straight-through situation is no justification for invoking the principle expressio unius exclusio alterius. Rather is it to be presumed that, since the latter situation is so much more obvious than the former, that the common council thought legislation on the subject unnecessary.
We do not share Justice NORTH'S feeling that the four cases cited for the people are distinguishable. The absence of traffic signals therein does not derogate from the fact that in each of them the court was called upon to answer, and did answer, the very question raised herein, namely: Where an undivided way crosses a divided one, how many intersections are formed? If the answer is two for the purposes of other rules of traffic law, is there any reason why it should be different for the purpose of the rule involved in the case at bar? We perceive none.
In Bartlett v. Hammond, supra, where a north-south divided roadway was crossed by an east-west undivided roadway, the plaintiff motorist, westbound on the latter roadway, turned left into the west (southbound) lane of the divided road, and struck defendant's vehicle, plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence since he had not kept to the right of the center of the intersection of the medial line of the west lane of the boulevard and the medial line of the undivided road. Plaintiff argued that the double crossing was only one intersection, and that the medial line of the boulevard ought to be taken as a line bisecting the island in its center. The court overruled this contention, and held that for the purposes of the traffic rule involved, there were two intersections, and each lane of the boulevard was to be treated as a separate street with its own medial line. *Page 380
The other three cases, McCombs v. Ellsberry and Fellis,337 Mo. 491 (85 S.W. [2d] 135), Heintz v. Schenck, 176 Wis. 562 (196 N.W. 610), and Geyer v. Milwaukee Electric Ry. LightCo., 230 Wis. 347 (284 N.W. 1), are all cases of the following factual pattern. A divided roadway, or boulevard, was crossed by an undivided street. One of the motorists would enter the intersection formed by one of the lanes of the boulevard and the undivided street and, proceeding on the undivided street, would then enter the intersection formed by the other lane of the boulevard and the street on which he was driving, where he would collide with a vehicle driven into the latter intersection from the other lane of the boulevard. Invariably the latter vehicle would be the first to enter the second intersection, but the driver first mentioned would contend that the two intersections were in law but one, so that, in consequence, it was he who had entered the intersection first and had the right of way. Invariably, too, this contention was overruled, and the configuration declared to be two separate intersections. The very fact that there were no traffic lights involved in these cited cases makes them stronger authority for affirming the instant case.
We are in accord with the opinion of the attorney general (Opinions of the Attorney General, 1939-1940, pp. 271, 272) wherein the question was discussed, and the ruling was:
"Notwithstanding the absence of crosswalks or clearly visible lines, the section in question makes it the duty of vehicular traffic facing the signal to stop before entering the intersection and to remain standing until green or `go' is shown. To construe the section under consideration otherwise would be to nullify the purpose of the legislation and continue a hazard to traffic which existed prior to its enactment *Page 381 and constituted one of the reasons, if not the sole reason, for the legislation as expressed in the subsection under consideration."
The judgment of conviction should be affirmed.
WIEST, J., took no part in this decision.