164 S.E. 580 | N.C. | 1932
The defendant was indicted for the murder of Ann Smith, her death resulting from the collision of automobiles on a highway, but he was prosecuted only on a charge of manslaughter. He was convicted of manslaughter and from the judgment pronounced he appealed upon assigned error.
The State's evidence tended to establish the following circumstances. The collision occurred a mile or more from Asheville on the highway between Asheville and Hendersonville. Earle Campbell, Joe McCormick, Miss Plemmons, and Mrs. Smith were in a Plymouth coupe, which had only one seat. McCormick was driving, the deceased at his side, Campbell at her right with the Plemmons girl in his lap. At 10:30 at night they left Asheville going in the direction of Hendersonville — "Just driving around." Their speed was between thirty and thirty-five miles an hour and they were on the right side of the road. They heard the defendant's car, an Oldsmobile, coming from the direction of Hendersonville traveling at the rate of fifty or sixty miles an hour. McCormick turned to the right, the right front wheel of the coupe being off the pavement. The defendant's car struck the coupe at or near the left *71 door, turned it over, and stopped thirty-five steps away. The door flew open, Campbell and the Plemmons girl fell out, and McCormick and the deceased were thrown out. The deceased lived twenty or thirty minutes after the collision.
The paved part of the road is twenty feet in width with a black line in the middle. A wheel of the defendant's car broke down and there was a "scratched mark on the pavement" on the defendant's left side of the black mark.
For the defendant there was evidence tending to show that the facts were as follows. He was returning from Greenville, S.C., to Asheville with his wife and baby. The lights of the coupe were apparently on his side of the road and his car was on the right side of the line. The cars came together; one of the front wheels of the defendant's car came off, the brakes were knocked loose, and the car made a quick swerve to the left, causing the "scratch" on the road. He was not driving more than thirty-five miles an hour; the coupe was running "quite fast." He pulled as far to the right as he could without going into the ditch, and after the impact was unable to stop his car because the brakes had been broken.
There was evidence that McCormick "acted like a man that was drunk," and that he and Campbell had been convicted of a breach of the liquor law; also that the defendant did not seem to be normal.
The common-law definition of involuntary manslaughter includes unintentional homicide resulting from the performance of an unlawful act, from the performance of a lawful act done in a culpably negligent manner, and from the negligent failure to perform a legal duty. S. v. Satterfield,
The case of S. v. Tankersley,
The law of involuntary manslaughter has been applied to cases in which injury or death resulted from the collision of motor vehicles operated in violation of a statute designed to secure personal safety. One of the first is S. v. McIver,
In S. v. Gray,
The case is cited in S. v. Rountree,
The difficulty of attaining perfection in defining "culpable negligence" is apparent, but it is agreed that the words necessarily imply something more than a lack of precaution or the exercise of ordinary care. An instruction to the jury merely in the words of the latter proposition is not sufficient; it should explain wherein the distinction consists. Ordinary negligence is based on the theory that a person charged with negligent conduct should have known the probable consequences of his act; culpable negligence rests on the assumption that he knew the probable consequences but was intentionally, recklessly, or wantonly indifferent to the result. With respect to the breach of a statute enacted in the interest of public safety a basic concept may involve the distinction between the intentional violation of the statute and the negligent failure to observe its provisions. If a person driving a motor vehicle upon a highway intentionally violates the provisions of statutes regulating the operation of motor vehicles upon the public highways of the State and thereby proximately causes personal injury or death he is deemed to be criminally culpable and in the one case is guilty of assault and battery and in the other manslaughter. If he acts in violation of a positive statute and his violation is the direct cause of the injury or death, the intent may be implied, although it is ultimately a matter for the jury to determine under instructions given by the court. Such person would likewise be criminally culpable if he operated a motor vehicle upon a public highway in violation of the statutes and such violation disclosed a reckless disregard of consequences or a heedless indifference to the rights and safety of others and reasonable foresight that injury would probably result. S. v. Agnew,
The statute provides that when one motor vehicle shall meet another on the public highway the driver of each of them shall reasonably turn to the right of the center of the highway so as to pass without interference; that in no event shall the speed exceed forty-five miles an hour; that it shall be unlawful for any person while under the influence of intoxicating liquor to drive any vehicle upon the highways of the State, or for any person to drive a motor vehicle upon the highways recklessly or at a rate of speed greater than is reasonable and proper. N.C. Code, 1931, secs. 2617, 2618, 2621 (44), 2621 (46). A violation of these provisions is a misdemeanor. Section 2599.
After referring to evidence tending to show the defendant's violation of these sections the court gave the following instruction to which the defendant excepted: "The charge is that he was violating one or more of these provisions of the law of North Carolina that were passed for the benefit and protection of the traveling public. To violate any of them is made criminal, and therefore it is culpable or criminal negligence for anyone to violate any of those laws of the highway. Now, in this case if you find from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant was violating either or any of these provisions of law that I have called to your attention at the time of the collision and that such violation of law on his part caused the collision and thereby caused the death of Mrs. Smith, then he would be guilty of manslaughter at least."
The collision occurred on a public highway. If the defendant at that time, in violation of law, was operating his car recklessly, as recklessness is defined at common law or by statute, Laws 1927, chap. 148, sec. 3, Code, 1931, sec. 2621 (45), or was operating his car while under the influence of intoxicating liquor, and ran into the other car and thereby proximately caused the death of one of the occupants, he was guilty of manslaughter at least. But if he exceeded the speed limit, or drove on the wrong side of the marked line, not intentionally or recklessly, but merely through a failure to exercise due care and thereby proximately caused the death he would not be culpably negligent unless in the light of the attendant circumstances his negligent act was likely to result in death or bodily harm. This, as we read the record, is one of the positions taken by the defendant and there are phases of the evidence which tend to support his theory. The court, it is true, informed the jury that the *75 act must be "more than an ordinary matter of neglect, more than an ordinary tort"; but without further explanation the charge was open to the construction that a slightly negligent act might be deemed culpable in the discretion of the jury, or that negligence simpliciter met the test of criminal responsibility. We are of opinion that the defendant is entitled to a
New trial.