Billy Jack Hatfield was convicted in the Cass County Circuit Court of driving while intoxicated (“DWI”), § 577.010, RSMo, and of driving while his driving privilege was revoked, § 302.321, RSMo. He appeals. Although Hatfield does not challenge his conviction for driving while revoked, he argues that the evidence was insufficient to establish beyond a reasonable doubt that he drove his vehicle while intoxicated. We agree, and reverse his DWI conviction.
Factual Background
Deputy Jacob Shanks of the Cass County Sheriffs Department was dispatched to an accident at 814 Ward Road in Raymore at approximately 11:00 a.m. on September 10, 2008. When he arrived at the scene, Deputy Shanks observed a Chevrolet Cá-maro parked in the driveway of a home with a damaged front end, rut marks in a ditch next to the vehicle, a damaged fence
Deputy Shanks transported Hatfield to the Cass County Sheriffs Office and had the vehicle towed and impounded. After arriving at the station, Hatfield refused to perform the standard field sobriety tests. Deputy Shanks also read Hatfield the Missouri Implied Consent Law which required him to provide a sample of his breath, blood, or urine, or otherwise face a one year driver’s license revocation. Hatfield refused to provide the breath sample which Deputy Shanks requested.
Deputy Shanks was the sole witness at trial. The jury found Hatfield guilty of DWI and of driving while revoked. The court had previously found Hatfield to be a prior and persistent offender. It sentenced him to two concurrent sentences of four years’ imprisonment. This appeal follows.
Standard of Review
“Where the appellant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting a conviction, ‘[ajppellate review is limited to a determination of whether there is sufficient evidence from which a reasonable juror could find the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.’ ”
State v. Donahue,
Analysis
In his sole Point Relied On, Hatfield argues that the evidence was insufficient to convict him of driving while intoxicated because the State failed to establish that he was under the influence of alcohol at the time he was operating a motor vehicle. 1 We agree.
As the name of the offense indicates, to support a conviction under § 577.010 the State must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant was (1) driving (2) while (3) intoxicated. Each of these words has significance, and imposes a sep
Here, Hatfield does not dispute that the State’s evidence was sufficient to establish two of these critical facts: (1) that he drove the vehicle at some time before Deputy Shanks arrived; and (2) that he was intoxicated when the deputy arrested him. He argues, however, that no evidence established that he drove the car while he was intoxicated.
The State asserts that there was sufficient circumstantial evidence to infer that Hatfield was impaired while driving. The undisputed testimony of Deputy Shanks established that on September 10, 2008, at approximately 11:00 a.m., he “was dispatched to 814 Ward Road in regard to see a motor vehicle accident.” When arriving at the scene Deputy Shanks “observed a silver vehicle in the driveway” and saw Hatfield “standing outside the vehicle and rut marks in the ditch next to the vehicle.” Deputy Shanks approached Hatfield, who said that “I lost it making the turn.” Hatfield also told Deputy Shanks that his driver’s license was revoked. Deputy Shanks testified that he “detected a strong odor of intoxicating beverage” on Hatfield’s breath; observed that his speech was “slightly slurred,” and his eyes “glassy and watery”; and noticed that “there was a slight sway when [Hatfield] was standing and a little stumbling when he was walking.” Deputy Shanks concluded that Hatfield was intoxicated and placed him under arrest.
Hatfield’s vehicle was towed from the scene while Deputy Shanks transported Hatfield to the Cass County Sheriffs Office. Although Deputy Shanks could not remember where he found the keys to the vehicle, he testified that he located the keys somewhere “on scene.” After arriving at the Sheriffs Office, Hatfield refused to complete the standard field sobriety tests or to provide a breath sample. 3 Deputy Shanks testified that in his opinion Hatfield “was too intoxicated to operate a motor vehicle on September 10, 2008.”
As Hatfield concedes, there was sufficient circumstantial and direct evidence to establish that he was operating the motor vehicle when the accident occurred. Here, there was a single set of rut marks leading through the ditch to the driveway where Deputy Shanks located Hatfield next to a parked car. There were no other vehicles or persons present when Deputy Shanks arrived, nor was there any evidence that other vehicles or persons had previously been present on the scene prior to his arrival. Most importantly, Hatfield told Deputy Shanks that “I lost it making the turn.” Based on this evidence a rational fact-finder could find that Hatfield was operating the vehicle at the time the accident occurred.
Likewise, there was sufficient evidence from which the jury could conclude that Hatfield was intoxicated when Deputy Shanks arrived at the scene, based on Deputy Shanks’ testimony concerning the multiple well-known indicia of intoxication which he personally observed.
See, e.g., State v. England,
However, Hatfield’s mere intoxication near his vehicle, without evidence establishing when he last operated it, is insufficient to support his conviction for driving while intoxicated. Missouri courts have made clear that the State must present evidence
linking in time
the defendant’s intoxication to the operation of a motor vehicle. “ ‘[T]ime is an element of importance’ that the state must prove to sustain its burden to show that a driver drove while intoxicated.”
State v. Wilson,
While we recognize that “[t]he case law on this issue is very fact-specific,”
State v. Byron,
Davis reversed the defendant’s DWI conviction based on the same gap in the evidence that exists here: the lack of evidence establishing a temporal connection between the defendant’s admitted operation of a motor vehicle, and his observed intoxication at the time of arrest.
[T]he State’s evidence established only that Davis drove the vehicle and that he was intoxicated when he was arrested. The State failed to present any evidence as to when Davis began drinking or how much he had to drink. There is nothing in the record to establish the approximate time that Davis was operating the vehicle or the time [the] accident occurred. None of the evidence indicated how much time elapsed between the accident and the arrest.
Davis,
Indeed, the evidence in
Davis
was
stronger
than the evidence here in one material respect. In
Davis,
the defendant admitted that he had not had anything to drink after the accident.
Id.
The Court emphasized, howevei', that “intoxication
Similarly, in
Byron,
We have reached the same result in other factually similar cases.
See, e.g., Wilson,
Deputy Shanks performed only minimal investigation at the scene of the accident, other than placing Hatfield under arrest. 6 Deputy Shanks did not ask Hatfield whether he had driven the vehicle that day or when the accident occurred. He also could not remember if the automobile was running when he arrived at the scene, and could not testify definitively that the vehicle had been driven on that particular day. Further, Deputy Shanks admitted that he did not know when the fence damage and ruts in the ditch were caused, and acknowledged that the ruts could have existed for six months or even one year. Deputy Shanks did not check the hood or passenger compartment of the vehicle to see if it their temperature indicated recent use of the vehicle. He was also unable to recall where he located the keys to the vehicle, even though he considered that an “important” fact. Moreover, Deputy Shanks also failed to canvass the scene in an effort to locate any witnesses to the accident. The identity of the individual who provided the information leading to Deputy Shanks’ dispatch to the scene is unknown, and the record does not reflect any information concerning the circumstances of the accident which the informant may have provided. In sum, it is impossible to determine from the record the approximate time Hatfield last operated the vehicle, and therefore the State failed to temporally connect Hatfield’s intoxication when Deputy Shanks arrived at the scene to his previous operation of the vehicle.
Furthermore, the State did not introduce any evidence establishing whether Hatfield had access to alcohol at or near the scene of the accident.
See State v. Royal,
The State argues that Hatfield’s later refusal to perform field sobriety tests, or submit to a chemical breath test, establishes his consciousness of guilt for driving while intoxicated, and can support the jury’s verdict despite the evidentiary gaps discussed above. We rejected a similar argument in
Byron,
however, reasoning that refusal of a breathalyzer test, and a defendant’s false denials that he had been driving, “could not be regarded as highly probative of the fact that [the defendant] was intoxicated when he was driving,” given the lapse of time between the defendant’s driving and his refusal, and the defendant’s apparent access to alcohol in the interim.
The State also argues that the circumstances of the accident establish Hatfield’s guilt of DWI. But “the manner of a crash does not, on its own, provide sufficient evidence to support a conviction” of DWI.
Varnell,
Although we grant the State all reasonable inferences from the evidence,
State v. Grim,
Conclusion
We reverse the circuit court’s judgment to the extent that it convicted and sentenced Hatfield for driving while intoxicated, § 577.010, RSMo. Our disposition does not affect Hatfield’s conviction or sentence for driving while his driving privilege was revoked, § 302.321, RSMo.
All concur.
Notes
. Hatfield does not challenge his conviction for driving while revoked, or the trial court's finding that he was a prior and persistent offender.
.
See, e.g., State v. Varnell,
. Deputy Shanks Stated that he did not ask Hatfield to complete the field sobriety tests at the scene because "[i]t's a gravel road. Its not necessarily flat and level. It's gravel. We were going to be going to jail — to because of the driving while revoked anyways. I wanted to give him the benefit of the doubt on the flat surface of tile to perform the test, considering half the tests are part of balance.”
.
State v. Varnell,
.
Superseded by statute on other grounds, Cox v. Dir. of Revenue,
State v. Varnell,316 S.W.3d 510 (Mo.App. W.D.2010), which upheld a DWI conviction against a defendant’s contention that “the record is insufficient to create the timeline essential to a showing that his intoxicationwas contemporaneous with operating the vehicle,” id. at 514, is not to the contrary. In Vamell, an investigating officer testified that there were no alcohol containers found in or near defendant’s vehicle, and the evidence indicated that the defendant "did not have access to alcohol and could not have become intoxicated after he wrecked his vehicle,” id. at 515; the defendant "admitted to the deputy that he had been drinking prior to the accident,” id. at 516; evidence was presented concerning the particular circumstances of the single-vehicle accident, id.; the evidence "support[ed] the conclusion, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the interval of time between the defendant's accident and arrest was relatively brief,” id.; and defendant’s blood-alcohol concentration following the accident was more than three times the legal limit. Id. at 517. None of these circumstances exist here.
. According to the State, Deputy Shanks did not conduct the standard field sobriety tests at the scene or conduct further investigation of the accident because Hatfield was well known to the Cass County Sheriff’s Department as being combative with officers. (The circuit court heard testimony concerning Hatfield’s alleged reputation for combativeness outside the presence of the jury, but did not allow its admission at trial.) Even if Deputy Shanks’ failure to conduct further investigation at the scene was understandable, however, this did not relieve the State of its burden of proving each element of the charged offense beyond a reasonable doubt.
.
South Dakota v. Neville,
. While
Vamell
relied, in part, on the circumstances of a single-car accident in finding sufficient evidence to support a DWI conviction, in that case a law enforcement officer examined the accident scene in detail, and concluded that the defendant had "committed a lane violation and crashed into a culvert [on the opposite side of the road,] causing the vehicle to nose into the ground and roll multiple times,” "on a dry road with daylight still remaining.”
