Thе defendant was tried and convicted, under G. L. c. 90, § 24(2)(a), of leaving the scene of an accident after causing property damage. 1 At trial, in opposition to the defendant’s motiоn for a required finding of not guilty, the Commonwealth proceeded successfully on the theory that a conviction under that statute does not require proof that the accident in question *698 caused property damage. On appeal, the Commonwealth presses the same claim. 2 We disagree, and reverse the conviction.
Facts.
Viewed in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, see
Commonwealth
v.
Latimore,
Duggan hеlped the defendant into his apartment and met the defendant’s wife. The defendant’s wife asked Duggan to drive a female relative of the defendant back to the accident scеne, and Duggan did so. When Duggan and the woman arrived back at the accident scene, emergency vehicles from the Weymouth police and fire departments were there. Weymouth police Officer Scott Ficarra drove the woman back to the defendant’s apartment and there encountered the defendant, who again admitted that he was operating the vehicle when the accident occurred.
Discussion.
“To support a conviction on the charge of knowingly leaving the scene of an accident involving property damage, the Commonwealth must present legally sufficient evidence for a reasonable fact finder to conclude the defendant operated the motor vehicle at the timе of the accident resulting in property damage.”
Commonwealth
v. Platt,
The Commonwealth points to the disjunctive “or” appearing in the third element recited above, arguing that it need only prove that a collision occurred and that if a collision occurred, there need be no proof that the collision caused any damage to another vehicle or property. 3 4 The argument is at odds with both the languagе and the purpose of the statute.
“Before the enactment of the statute in substantially[
4
] its present form by St. 1916, c. 290, there was no specific reference to collision cases. St. 1913, c.-123, provided a penalty for an operator of an automobile ‘who knowingly goes away without stopping and making himself known after causing injury to any person or property.’ ”
Commonwealth
v.
McMenimon,
In Commonwealth v. McMenimon, the court rejected the argument that the statute requires proof that the defendant who knew that his automobile had collided with the person or property of anothеr also knew that the collision had caused injury. “Naturally interpreted ... the provisions in regard to ‘knowingly colliding with’ and ‘[knowingly] causing injury to,’ being stated disjunctively, describe alternative grounds for a conviction and not two elements of a crime both of which must be *700 proved to support a conviction.” Id. at 469. Rejecting the possibility that the alternatives might instead be “knowingly ‘causing injury’ by ‘colliding’ and knowingly ‘causing injury’ ‘otherwise,’ ” the court explained that “if this meaning had been intended it would have been unnecessary to refer specifically to injury caused by collision as distinguished from injury caused otherwise.” Ibid. Under McMenimon, it is unnecessary in a case involving collision to'prove that the defendant knew that the collision caused injury, so long as there is proof that the defendant knew of the collision. That is not to say, hоwever, that it is unnecessary to establish that injury occurred (whether known or unknown to the defendant); it is plain from the quoted language that the court understood the statute to refer specifically to injury caused by collision, and not collision that did not cause any injury.
Moreover, we note that the Commonwealth’s proffered construction would render the word “otherwise” superfluous, contrary to a fundamental principle of statutory construction. See
Commonwealth
v.
Millican,
Finally, we note that the broader purpose of the statute was the subject of commentary on the eаrlier version of it, in
Commonwealth
v.
Horsfall,
It is of course conceivable that in some cases, the nature of the collision might alone sufficе to support a rational inference that damage inevitably resulted, as perhaps where the object struck by the vehicle is relatively fragile or malleable in comparison to the vehicle, or where the evidence of the collision itself reveals that it occurred at a high rate of speed. But some objects are relatively impervious to damage from low speed vehicular impact (a granite rock face comes to mind), and we need not speculate on inferences that may be supported in cаses other than the one before us. In any event, we believe it imposes very little burden on the Commonwealth in most cases to present evidence that a collision has caused damage to property of another. In the present case, the Commonwealth has conceded that there was no proof of damage to the telephone pole struck by the defendant’s car, or to any other property of another.
In sum, based on the language of the statute, its purpose, and its construction in McMenimon, we reach the unremarkable conclusion that, to support a conviction for leaving the scene of an accident causing property damage, the Commonwealth must prove that the accident caused property damage.
Judgment reversed.
Verdict set aside.
Judgment for the defendant.
Notes
The defendant was also convicted of negligent operation of a motor vehicle under G. L. c. 90, § 24(2)(a), but does not challenge that conviction on appeal.
The Commonwealth concedes that the evidence presented at trial (which included photographs of the accident scene) did not estаblish that the accident caused damage to any property other than the defendant’s own vehicle.
General Laws c. 90, § 24(2)(a) reads, in pertinent part, as follows:
“[W]hoever without stopping and making known his name, residence and the register number of his motor vehicle goes away after knowingly colliding with or otherwise causing injury to any other vehicle or property . . . shall be punished by a fine of not less than twenty dollars nor more than two hundred dollars or by imprisonment for not less than two weeks nor more than two years, or both.”
The only change has been the addition of the word “register.”
At the very least, the word “otherwise” creates an ambiguity, and under the principle of lenity, the defendant is entitled to the benefit of that ambiguity.
Commonwealth
v.
Cahill,
