298 N.W. 50 | Minn. | 1941
The record shows that on Fourteenth street near Fourth avenue south, in Minneapolis, at about six o'clock in the evening of January 10, 1941, a police officer found defendant drunk and placed him under arrest. The next morning in the municipal court he pleaded guilty to being drunk and paid his fine. It also appears that a short time before the police officer arrested defendant, he, defendant, had entered his car, parked at the curb in front of his residence, to drive it to a parking lot in the same block. In moving the car from the curb defendant collided with a car driven by the complaining witness. She summoned the police.
The sole ground of the appeal is that defendant's plea of guilty to the charge of being drunk is a bar to this prosecution on the charge of driving a vehicle when under the influence of intoxicating liquor. The ordinance under which defendant was arrested and sentenced the morning of January 11, 1941, reads:
"Any person who shall be found in a state of open or notorious drunkenness or intoxication, in any street or public place within the limits of the city of Minneapolis, shall on conviction * * * be liable to * * * punishment * * *" *336
The ordinance which defendant was charged with violating by the complaint filed January 13, 1941, was the street traffic regulation ordinance passed April 8, 1938, providing:
"It is unlawful and punishable as provided in subdivision 'D' of this section for any person who is an habitual user of narcotic drugs, or any person who is under the influence of intoxicating liquors or narcotic drugs to drive any vehicle within this city."
It is apparent that these ordinances denounce different offenses. Public safety in respect to the use of the streets is obviously the chief purpose of the ordinance of 1938. The first mentioned ordinance, in about the same language, has been in force since the city was organized and is to promote and preserve common decency. We think a violation of one is a distinct offense from that of a violation of the other. Had defendant been arrested drunk, seated in his car but not driving it, he could not have been convicted under the ordinance of 1938. We think our own decisions determine that the plea of former jeopardy was properly disposed of. State v. Fredlund,
"The holding of the California Supreme Court has always been and now is that, unless the accused could have been legally convicted of the offense with which he is charged in the second complaint or information under the first one, the plea of former jeopardy, former conviction, or acquittal is not available."
The only authority tending to sustain defendant is State v. McLaughlin,
The conviction is affirmed.