As anyone who has ever written a sentence knows, punctuation is of the utmost importance. And in one Ohio village, English teachers are likely sighing and shaking their heads at a grammar mishap involving the local law on parking regulations.
The Columbus Dispatch reports that the 12th District Court of Appeals overturned a parking violation [PDF] for a woman living in West Jefferson. Shed been convicted in municipal court for leaving her pickup parked on a village street for more than 24 hours.
But she pointed out that the municipal ordinance prohibited any motor vehicle camper, trailer, farm implement and/or non-motorized vehicle from daylong parking.
Her truck, she said, is not a motor vehicle camper. It is a motor vehicle, which wouldve been covered if the law had a comma where it shouldve.
The village argued that it was just a typo and therefore didnt invalidate her violation. The trial court upheld that view, saying that when reading the ordinance in context, it unambiguously applied to motor vehicles and anybody reading [the ordinance] would understand that it is just missing a comma.
Grammar won the day, however, after the court sided with the truck owner.
If the village desires a different reading, it should amend the ordinance and insert a comma, Judge Robert A. Hendrickson wrote.
Oh, snap.