Appellant D. Byron 1 аppeals his jury conviction of driving while intoxicated. Byron claims the evidence was insufficient to support the jury’s verdict and his motion for judgment of acquittal at the close of all the evidence should have been granted. For the following reasons, the judgment is reversed.
Background
Byron only challenges the sufficiency of the evidence; he claims that the court should have granted his motion for acquittal. In reviewing this, we are limited to a determination of whether the evidence was sufficient for a reasonable jury to find him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
State v. Rose,
In the early morning hours of July 19, 2005, Officer Brian McClintick was dispatched to the intersection of 36th Street and Frederick Avenue in St. Josеph, Missouri. A 9-1-1 call had been placed around 1:45 a.m. reporting an accident in the area of 36th and Frederick. Officer McClintick had been through the intersection earlier that night at around 12:40 a.m. or 12:50 a.m. and had noticed no accident at that time.
Frederick Avenue was under construction. The officer found that a cаr had gone through several tall traffic cones marking off a construction area and had stopped in the construction area. Part of the passenger-side front wheel was hanging over the edge of the road because there was no shoulder and there was about a two-foot drop off where the shouldеr should have been.
Joshua Rudisill and his fiancé had noticed the accident while driving through the intersection. Rudisill’s fiancé called 9-1-1 while Rudisill went to investigate the vehicle. He found no one inside or near the vehicle. Officer McClintick responded to the 9-1-1 call and spoke with Rudisill at the scene of the accident.
Officer McClintick found a muddy footprint near the vehicle which did not match his or Rudisill’s shoes. Officer McClintick retrieved the vehicle’s registration information from the glove box and determined that the vehicle belonged to Byron.
Officer McClintick radioed in this information and requested that someone go to Byron’s home to speak with him. Officer Aaron Beene responded to the call and went to Byron’s home at around 2:00 a.m.
When the officers asked Byron about the accident, he indicated that he knew nothing about it but said that his father had borrowed the сar. The officers contacted Byron’s father, Donald Sherman, who denied borrowing the car. Byron’s father testified at trial that he had been awakened earlier that night by a call from Byron asking his father to pick him up because he had been in an accident. Byron’s father testified that he picked Byron up at a Food 4 Less located on North Belt Highway approximately one-quarter mile from the accident site. He also said that he and Byron went to inspect the car after he picked Byron up, but concluded that it would have to be towed to be removed from its location. He indicated that at the time he picked Byron up thrоugh the time he took him home, Byron did not appear to be intoxicated. He said he was with his son about twenty minutes altogether. He was not asked either on direct or cross-examination whether Byron had purchased anything at the Food 4 Less or was carrying anything when he was picked up.
After speaking with Byron, Officer MeClintick seized the muddy shoes and placed Byron under arrest for leaving the scene of a motor vehicle accident. He searched Byron and found a set of keys. The officers and Byron returned to the scene of the accident where they took a picture of the muddy footprint Officer MeClintick had found with Officer Beene’s camera. The footprint matched the tread in the muddy shoes they had retrieved from Byron’s home. Officer MeClintick testified that he tried the keys seized from Byron and they started the vehicle.
The officers transported Byron to the law enforcement center where Officer MeClintick performed several field sobriety tests on Byrоn. Byron performed poorly on all sobriety tests. Officer MeClintick then asked Byron to take a breathalyzer test and informed him that if he did not take the test his license would be immediately suspended. Byron refused, stating, “You didn’t see me driving. You didn’t catch me driving.”
Byron was charged by information with driving while intoxicated, in violation of section 577.010 RSMo, 2 and with сareless and imprudent driving, in violation of section 304.012. After a jury trial, Byron was found guilty of driving while intoxicated and not guilty of careless and imprudent driving. Byron was sentenced to four months in jail with suspended execution of sentence; he was placed on probation for two years, ordered to do twenty-five hours of community service, аnd given fifteen days of shock time. He was ordered to go through the Substance Abuse Traffic Offender Program, attend one Alcoholics Anonymous meeting per week while on probation, and have an ignition interlock on his car at all times while on probation. Byron now appeals to this court.
Standard of Review
Our review is limited to a determinаtion of whether there is sufficient evi
Analysis
Byron claims that the evidence was insufficient to establish that he was actually operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated. He claims that, at best, the evidence showed that he had been driving a motor vehicle and had wrecked his car, and that then, thirty minutes to an hour later, he was intoxicated. According to Byron, the evidence was insufficient to link his intoxication to the actual operation of the vehicle.
The case law on this issue is very fact-specific. Generally, when there is a significant interval of time between the time of an accident and the time that the defendant is observed to be intoxicated, the prosecution must offer specific evidence that the defendant was intoxicated at the time the defendant was driving. In
State v. Dodson,
The court concluded that although the State may have shown that the defendant was intoxicated at 9:40 p.m., this did not tend to prove that the defendant was intoxicated forty-five minutes earlier when the accident apрarently occurred.
Id.
The court stated that “the fact [that] a defendant was under the influence of [alcohol] at the time of his arrest, without a showing of more, will not support a finding that he was in that condition when driving a motor vehicle at some earlier time.”
Id.
at 274
(quoting State v. Creighton,
In contrast, in
State v. Johnston,
A different kind of factual scenario was presented in
State v. Lynch,
Here, the evidence at triаl showed that Byron had run his car off the road into the construction area. Byron says all that is shown in this case is that at some time up to sixty minutes or so after the accident, Byron was intoxicated at his home. He had access to alcohol in the interim. He did not admit being intoxicated at any time. He did not say whether he had had аnything to drink since the accident. He did say, “you did not catch me driving.” That statement implies that he was driving; but it is equivocal as to whether it could be considered an admission that he was intoxicated at the time he was driving. He did refuse the test, which may be considered pursuant to section 577.041, 4 but because of the lapse of time and the apparent access to alcohol in the interim, his later refusal of the test could not be regarded as highly probative of the fact that he was intoxicated when he was driving.
The only testimony concerning Byron’s condition immediately after the accident was from Byron’s father. Although the jury was free to disbelieve the father’s testimony that Byron was sober at that time, there is no other testimony as to Byron’s condition after the accident up until the time the officers found him at his home.
See Dodson,
Byron’s accident occurred sometime after 12:40 a.m. and prior to 1:45 a.m. Even if the jury entirely rejected all of the testimony of Byron’s father, as to picking him up at the Food 4 Less, we still have the fact that Byron was not cоntacted by officers at the accident scene, but was contacted at his home at around 2:00 a.m., perhaps as much as an hour and twenty minutes after the accident.
The State focuses on the statements Byron made to the officers. Byron falsely told the officers his father had borrowed the car. Byron told the оfficers he knew nothing about the accident, another statement which was false. And when asked to submit to the breathalyzer test, Byron stated, “You didn’t see me driving. You didn’t catch me driving.” While these statements are consistent with a fear that he would be accused of driving while intoxicated, they do not demonstrate that Byron
actually was
intoxicated whеn he drove the car into the construction area.
See Dodson,
The question is whether a reasonable jury could conclude beyond a reasonable doubt on this evidence that Byron was guilty of driving while intoxicatеd.
See Grim,
Had Byron been found at the scene of the accident relatively soon after the accident occurred, and had there been all the same evidence of intoxication, this would be a different case. But the question here is whether, on these facts, there was a basis for believing it beyond a reasonable doubt. Under existing law, because of the
Notes
. The appellant’s given name was Donald Byron Sherman. Hе changed his name to "D. Byron.”
. All statutory references are to the Revised Statutes of Missouri 2000, unless otherwise indicated.
. This proposition is in accord with the generally recognized principle that it often takes thirty minutes or more for alcohol that is imbibed to enter the bloodstream to such a degree as to produce intoxication. See 2 Donald H. Nichols & Flem K. Whited III, Drinking/Driving Litigation: Criminal and Civil §§ 14.3, 14.27 (2d ed.1998).
. Section 577.041 provides that evidence of the refusal to take a test allowed pursuant to section 577.020 shall be admissible in a proceeding under,
inter alia,
section 577.010.
See State v. Rose,
