196 P. 1015 | Utah | 1921
Appellant was convicted in the district court of Salt Lake county of the crime of involuntary manslaughter and sentenced to imprisonment for a period of one year in the county jail. The homicide was the result of an automobile accident alleged in the information to have been caused by the defendant operating his automobile in a negligent and careless manner. Appellant’s counsel in their brief filed in the case state the material elements of the charge as follows:
“The gist of the charge is that the defendant was guilty ot the commission of a lawful act which might produce death, without due caution and circumspection. The information charges three specific acts of dereliction on the part of the defendant, in that defendant operated a motor vehicle upon the public highway:*623 Firstly, without observing the course that said automobile was taking to see if the said course was obstructed or about to be obstructed by any persons or other obstacles, so as to endanger the life and limb of persons being then and there upon said public highway; secondly, that defendant operated said automobile at a high and dangerous rate of speed upon said public highway, to wit, at a rate of speed in excess of 25 miles per hour; and, thirdly, that defendant did not have said automobile under proper, safe and immediate control.”
Appellant entered a plea of not guilty. Tbe case was tried to a jury and resulted in a conviction. Judgment was entered accordingly, from which, judgment defendant appeals. The errors assigned and relied on will be stated in the course of the opinion.
There is substantial evidence in the record tending to show that on the afternoon of December 1, 1919, the defendant, accompanied by a Mr. Walker and his sister, was driving a Hudson automobile in a southerly direction on State street, in Salt Lake county, between Salt Lake City and the town of Midvale. The defendant and the two persons accompanying him occupied the front seat. It was growing dark, but, according to the testimony of Mr. Walker, a witness for defendant, one could see along State street for a distance of a mile, and defendant himself testified he could see quite a ways ahead. At a point approximately 600 feet south of the intersection of Union avenue and State street, and opposite the home of one Alonzo McCleary, defendant’s automobile, running along and upon the west side of the pavement of State street, struck and instantly killed one Le Roy Anderson, a small boy of about nine years of age. The evidence further shows that the boy’s father, O. C. Anderson, lived at or near the intersection of State ^street and what is known as Center street, in the town of Midvale; that he was employed at the United States Smelter, and on the evening in question returned home from his work a little before 5 o ’clock; that shortly afterwards he left his home in an automobile to go to the residence of one Peterson, who lived about a half mile distant, near the scene of the accident. It is presumed that the boy attempted to follow' his father, which accounts for his being at the place where the accident occurred.
The foregoing are the material features of the evidence. Defendant moved for a directed verdict on the alleged grounds that the evidence failed to show that defendant was driving his ear at a dangerous or excessive rate of speed, or that he failed to observe the course he was taking so as to avoid a collision, or that he did not have his car under proper, safe, and immediate control. The motion was denied.
Whether or not the defendant’s car was running at a dangerous or excessive rate of speed was a question exclusively for the jury under the facts of the instant ease.’ The witness O. C. Anderson, after duly qualifying as to his competency to express an opinion, testified that in his
The same may be said concerning the question as to whether defendant kept a proper lookout and observed the course his automobile was taking so as to avoid collision. The testimony is uncontradicted that it was light enough to see objects on the street for a considerable distance ahead.
Whether or not the defendant had his machine under safe, proper, and immediate control is a matter of little or no consequence in the instant case. If he did have it
The trial court did no err in denying the motion for
O. C. Anderson, testifying for the state, after describing the accident, was asked by the state’s attorney: “Did you hear any warning?” This wás-objected to by defendant’s counsel as being irrelevant, immaterial, and not within the issues raised by the information. The objection was overruled, and the witness answered: “No.” This is relied on as error to reverse the judgment. It is alleged in the information that
During the course of the trial the state’s attorney, referring to the wagon loaded with brush, asked the state’s witness, a Mr. Long, if the “occasion of the wagon going north was remarked at the time.” The witness, over defendant’s objection, was permitted to answer: “Yes; we were remarking about it when it went back. ’ ’ The ruling of the court is assigned as error. It appears from the evidence that the wagon referred to after passing defendant’s automobile and traveling north 600 or 800 feet at the request of defendant, returned to the scene of the accident. The witnesses Long and McCleary both testified that they, with one But-terfield, were together near the point where the collision
Earl Richardson who drove the wagon to which reference has been made, sworn as a witness for the defendant, in answer to a question propounded by defendant’s counsel, testified that he had no recollection of seeing an automobile pass
Finally, appellant contends that the court erred in refusing to grant his motion in arrest of judgment. The motion alleges that the information does not state facts sufficient to constitute a public offense; that it does not charge any specific act of commission or omission which caused the death of' Le Roy Anderson, or which constitutes the doing of an act without due caution and circumspection.
In addition to alleging that the automobile was driven negligently, recklessly, wantonly, willfully, and unlawfully, as heretofore stated, the information charges that the automobile was so driven by defendant “without observing the course the said automobile was takin,g to see if the said course was obstructed or about to be obstructed by any persons or other obstacles, so as to endanger the life and limb of persons being then and there upon said public highway as aforesaid,
It is difficult to see bow tbe facts and circumstances relied on by the state could be more clearly and specifically stated than they are in the information in the present ease. That the information states facts sufficient to constitute a public offense there can be no serious question. Not
Involuntary manslaughter is committed when the homicide occurs “in the commission of an unlawful act not amounting' to a felony, or in the commission of a lawful act which might produce death, in an unlawful manner, or without due caution and circumspection.” Comp. Laws Utah 1917, § 8027, subd. 2.
Further comment upon this feature of the case would be an unnecessary consumption of time and space. The motion in arrest of judgment tvas properly denied.
Many authorities have been cited by both appellant and^ respondent in support of their respective contentions. Such as are at all pertinent will no doubt be noted by the official reporter. We have deemed it unnecessary to cite-them in, the body of the opinion.
As far as the writer is informed, there has thus far never been a conviction in the state of Utah followed by punish-’ ment for the billing of a human being in an automobile accident, notwithstanding scores of people have been thus killed, and, no .doubt, many of them because of gross and inexcusable negligence. As long as the owners of automobiles can protect themselves by insurance against the consequences of their own, or their drivers’, negligence, just so long, we may rest assured, mere civil remedies will have little or no effect in preventing the almost daily occurrence of these unfortunate accidents with their direful results. A rigid enforcement of the criminal law in such cases where criminal negligence can be established seems to be the most effectual remedy that can be adopted.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.