We sustain the motion of Gay wood Burnett for an- appeal from a judgment of conviction of assault and battery with an automobile. The penalty imposed was six months in jail and $2,500 fine.
The Commonwealth proved that the defendant operated an automobile on a Richmond street ■ in a grossly negligent manner and struck Mrs. Oakley Wells at an intersection and seriously injured her. The sufficiency of that evidence to establish guilt prima facie is not questioned.
The defendant’s plea of former jeopardy was denied. The day after the accident, on pleas of guilty, the defendant was convicted in the police court of three offenses .committed at that time, namely, (1) “operating a motor vehicle on a public Ijigh-way while under the influence of intoxicating liquors or narcotic drugs”, (2) “operating a motor vehicle in. a .reckless and improper manner”, and (3) running-a red light. He was fined. $100, $10,. and $1 respectively. These convictions were pleaded in bar of the present prosecution for assault and battery.
*656 It is part of our Bill of Rights that “No person shall, for the same offense, be twice put in jeopardy of his life or limb.” Sec. 13, Kentucky Constitution. The Constitution also declares that a conviction or acquittal of a violation of a municipal ordinance' governing the same offense denounced by a statute is a bar. Sec. 168. The Criminal Code of Practice provides that an acquittal upon a verdict or a conviction shall bar another prosecution for the same offense and that a former conviction or acquittal may be pleaded. Secs. 164, 172, 176, Criminal Code of Practice.
These constitutional and statutory laws perpetuate and make certain a maxim of the common law which has been constantly recognized from a very early period. They not only prohibit a second punishment for the same offense but go further and forbid a second trial for the same offense whether or not the accused was convicted or acquitted in the former trial.
The question before us is whether or not any one of the multiple convictions in the police court bars prosecution for assault and battery as a consequence, of the offense. The appellant particularly urges upon ,us that since to be guilty of assault and battery with an automobile one must have been operating the car in a grossly negligent manner, a conviction on the latter charge is a conviction of the same offense. Many cases have arisen which required the court to determine what is the same offense. Abstract definition is easy. Difficulty often arises in the concrete application.
We have often said that the Commonwealth may not split a single act into two or more separate offenses, and that where a single act or transaction is sufficient to constitute more than one offense and an electiori for prosecution has been made, a conviction or acquittal on that charge is a bar to another prosecution based solely on the same act or transaction. Arnett v. Commonwealth,
The delineation between different grades of the same offense, on the one hand, and distinct and independent offenses growing out of one and the same original transaction, on the other hand, is discussed comprehensively in Hughes v. Commonwealth,
Applying the rule of double jeopardy, of the' definition of “the same offense”, in the present case becomes less difficult by recognizing that the term is not directed to the act but to the case, and that driving an automobile on the street recklessly or while intoxicated is an offense complete in itself and may be, obviously, as it often is, committed without any other offense although such may be a consequence of the unlawful driving. The record of the instant case does not show that striking the pedestrian' entered into the convictions in the police court trials.
In State v. Empey,
The courts of several states have considered the same question. The cases, collected in Annotations,
We are of opinion, therefore, that it was proper to deny the plea of former conviction.
We readily agree with the appellant that the instructions were prejudicially erroneous.
In Senters v. Commonwealth, Ky.,
The defense in this case was that the accused at the time had involuntarily come under the influence of drugs taken to relieve intense pain, and, therefore, was not chargeable with criminal negligence or the consequences thereof. The instructions did not submit his affirmative defense.
The arresting officers testified the defendant was intoxicated at the time, but one of them stated he was “under the influence of dope”, and the other that he could not tell the cause of intoxication. There is no contradiction that the defendant had not been drinking intoxicating: liquor , that day but had been suffering intense pain and taking narcotics for relief. An abscessed tooth had been pulled four days before the accident, but the - pain was ' not relieved. During this period Burnett had gone to Dr. Pope’s hospital several times. The doctor first administered an hypodermic injection “of morphine or something”, and afterward gave him a prescription for.a dozen nembutal capsules or pills. Burnett had never taken such narcotics before and did not know how many he had taken before starting to the hospital on this occasion to obtain relief. He had been up practically all night because of pain in his jaw. He thought he was in condition to run his car and was near the hospital when he struck the pedestrian. The defendant could not clearly remember what did happen. Dr. Blue, County Health Officer, saw the defendant at the jail shortly afterward and found his face badly swollen and him manifestly in great pain. Pie gave him another nembutal capsule. He and Dr. Pope testified that if barbital or nembutal pills or capsules do not produce sleep, it is highly probable a person taking them will get into a state of mind where he does not remember how "many he had taken, and that *658 an excessive dose will produce an intoxicated condition.
Assault and battery is an act committed with a hostile intent, which may be manifested by reckless driving of a vehicle on a public road, the intent being imputed. Roberson’s Ky.Cr.Law, Sec. 1107; Perkins v. Stein,
Of special pertinence is Smith v. Commonwealth, Ky.,
We would not be understood as saying that mere temporary mental aberration resulting from voluntarily taking narcotics is a defense to crime any more than intoxication from alcoholic beverages. Milburn v. Commonwealth,
In the present case, it seems to us that upon another trial. an instruction in substantially this form should be given:
*659 “If the jury shall believe from the evidence that when the defendant’s automobile struck Mrs. Oakley Wells (if you shall believe from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that it did so), the defendant was under the influence of drugs taken under a physician’s prescription to such an extent that he was incapacitated from exercising slight care in operating his automobile, and that he did not know or have reasonable grounds to foresee in taking such drugs that his mental condition would become such as to render him incapable of exercising such care in driving the automobile on the street at the time and place and would thereby endanger the lives and safety of persons thereon, you will find the defendant not guilty.”
The judgment is reversed.
