171 A.2d 201 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1961
In his appeal from a conviction of evading responsibility, the defendant claims that the court erred as a matter of law in concluding that he violated the applicable statute, §
There is no dispute about the facts, which are as follows: On January 1, 1961, an automobile operated by Theresa O. Garrity and carrying as passengers her husband, Earl Garrity, on the right front seat, and her two children on the back seat, was stopped on Center Street in Manchester preparatory to making a left turn into Proctor Road and was struck in the rear by a car operated by the defendant. The force of the collision pushed the Garrity car more than a car length forward. The side of the defendant's car hit the rear bumper of the Garrity car a glancing blow, the defendant's car ending up in a snowbank with its rear end protruding into the traveled portion of the street. There was no direct testimony as to damage to the Garrity car. The Garrity children were thrown to the floor and were crying and screaming; Earl Garrity was thrown against the dashboard; Mrs. Garrity in reply to her husband's question said she was not injured. She did not leave the car and stayed with the children because they were frightened. Garrity got out of the car and went over to, and spoke to, the defendant and his passenger, ascertaining that they were not injured. After some conversation between Garrity and the defendant, the details of which Garrity could not remember, Garrity helped the defendant move his car out of the snowbank, and the defendant then drove off without rendering any assistance, and without giving any information *319 or making any inquiries. As he drove off, Garrity noted his registration number and reported the matter to the police.
The statute with the violation of which the defendant is charged is §
Under the clear language of this statute, the following requirements are necessary to sustain a conviction: The defendant must have been knowingly involved in an accident, and the accident must have involved injury to some other person or damage to *320
property. If these requirements are met, the person who caused the accident must stop, render assistance and give the specified information to the person injured or to the owner of the property damaged. These requirements have formed the basic part of the evading responsibility statute from the time of its first enactment in 1917. Public Acts 1917, No. 333, § 20. Injury to the operator of the vehicle causing the accident or damage to his vehicle is immaterial, because the statute requires the information to be given by the operator to the owner of the damaged vehicle. In construing a statute, every part thereof must be presumed to have a purpose and be so construed as to achieve such purpose, and every word and provision must be given a meaning wherever possible. Blanos v.Kulesva,
There is no question that the defendant was knowingly involved in an accident. The only question therefore is whether the accident caused injury to the occupants of the Garrity car or to the passenger in the defendant's car or damage to the Garrity car. As to personal injuries, there is no evidence that Garrity was injured, nor the passenger in the defendant's car; Mrs. Garrity testified that she was not injured and that she stayed with the children because they were frightened. There is nothing in the testimony of any witness from which personal injury could be reasonably inferred. As to damage to the Garrity car, the only evidence was that the side of the defendant's car struck the *321 rear bumper and taillight of the Garrity car a glancing blow and must have hit the rear end because there was paint on the rear end; there was no evidence that the taillight, bumper or rear end were damaged nor that the paint was from the defendant's car, nor anything in the testimony from which any damage to the Garrity car could be reasonably inferred. The state failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt the guilt of the defendant.
There is error, the judgment is set aside and the case is remanded with direction to render judgment that the defendant is not guilty and ordering that he be discharged.
In this opinion KOSICKI and DEARINGTON, Js., concurred.