Andrew Carter appeals from a conviction for felony hit-and-run driving (Veh. Code, § 20001).
Carter, turning left at an intersection, collided with a Simea automobile driven by McKinnon. The right fender of Carter’s Buick was slightly damaged, as was the front bumper of McKinnon’s Simea. Both drivers got out of their cars at the intersection, and Carter helped McKinnon pull the Simea’s bumper away from its wheel so the ear could be moved. McKinnon’s wife and daughter remained inside the ear. McKinnon then moved his car to the side of the intersection, but Carter drove away from the scene without giving McKinnon his name, address, operator’s license number, and vehicle registration number, and without offering to assist the McKinnons in obtaining medical attention. (Veh. Code, § 20003.) Later that evening Carter was arrested on suspicion of hit-and-run driving. He admitted he had been involved in an accident but denied knowing that anyone had been injured.
On appeal, Carter contends the prosecution failed to prove an essential element of the crime with which he was charged— his knowledge, actual or constructive, that personal injury resulted from the accident. He argues that in prosecutions
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under section 20001 of the Vehicle Code for wrongfully leaving the scene of an accident, criminal liability only attaches to a driver “if he actually knew of the injury or if he knew that the accident was of such a nature that one would reasonably anticipate that it resulted in injury to a person.”
(People
v.
Holford,
We think Carter’s appeal is well-taken. Although McKinnon suffered minor neck and shoulder injuries and his wife injured her knee and his daughter injured her left arm, there was no evidence that any of this was known to Carter or that Carter was told about these injuries at the time of the accident. The only evidence on this subject came from Carter, who testified that he asked McKinnon if anyone was hurt and that McKinnon replied “No, I don’t think so.” While the court was not required to accept Carter’s story on this point, nevertheless his testimony was never denied nor was any evidence to the contrary introduced by the prosecution in rebuttal. This conviction, therefore, was not supported by evidence of the defendant’s actual knowledge of personal injury resulting from the accident.
(People
v.
Roberts,
Was the accident such that constructive knowledge of personal injury could properly be attributed to Carter ? Such knowledge may be imputed to the driver of a vehicle where the fact of personal injury is visible and obvious
(People
v.
Blankenship,
Since the evidence was insufficient to prove the defendant’s actual knowledge of personal injury or to attribute constructive knowledge of injury to him, a necessary element to sustain a conviction for felony hit-and-run driving was missing. (G
arabedian
v.
Superior Court,
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But while the evidence was insufficient to support a conviction of felony hit-and-run driving involving personal injury (section 20001), it clearly established a violation of misdemeanor hit-and-run driving involving damage to property (section 20002). As the Supreme Court said in
People
v.
Holford,
If a violation of section 20002 were a lesser offense necessarily included within a charge under section 20001, we could find the defendant guilty of the lesser crime. (Pen. Code, §§ 1181, subd. 6, 1260.) Such inclusion may occur in either of two situations. First, where the statutory elements of the two crimes are so similar that the greater crime cannot be committed without necessarily committing the lesser one.
(In re Hess,
In future prosecutions for felony hit-and-run driving we suggest that whenever the facts so warrant allegations of property damage be routinely included in the accusatory pleading in order to authorize a conviction for the lesser offense of misdemeanor hit-and-run driving in appropriate cases.
The judgment is reversed.
Roth, P. J., and Herndon, J., concurred.
