OPINION
After a jury trial, appellant Eddie Cortez Smith was found guilty and subsequently convicted of criminal vehicular homicide under Minn.Stat. § 609.21 (2012) for causing the death of 93-year-old Edith Schouveller in a motor vehicle accident.
At around 10:25 a.m. on Sunday, March 28, 2010, Schouveller was a passenger in a vehicle traveling westbound on Watson Avenue in Saint Paul. As the vehicle entered the intersection with Milton Street, it was struck on the driver’s side by a Pontiac Bonneville driven by Smith. Two witnesses testified that Smith’s vehicle was traveling at a high rate of speed immediately before the accident. The State’s accident reconstruction expert estimated that Smith’s vehicle was traveling at least 53 mph at the time of the collision. The speed limit on Milton Street was 30 mph. Police took a blood sample from Smith shortly after the collision, and testing showed he had a blood alcohol concentration of 0.11.
Following the collision, Schouveller was conscious but was dazed and bleeding from her scalp. She was transported to Regions Hospital, where doctors concluded that she had life-threatening injuries. In particular, Schouveller had a large laceration of her scalp, a rapid and unstable heart rate, and evidence of a traumatic brain injury. She also had several complex fractures of her cervical spine. Schouveller’s spinal cord was undamaged in the accident, but her physician was concerned that the vertebral fractures were unstable and could shift, damaging the spinal cord and rendering Schouveller a quadriplegic. Because surgery was not an option due to Schouveller’s age and bone condition, doctors fitted her with a stiff cervical collar that had to be worn at all times to keep her from moving her head and disturbing the fractures.
For the next 22 days, from March 29 to April 19, 2010, Schouveller was either hospitalized or in a nursing home. During this time, her mental functioning deteriorated and her body rapidly became “decon-ditioned” due to lack of movement. She was unable to stand or walk, was very weak, and needed assistance to perform the most basic tasks such as sitting, positioning herself in bed, and eating. Although a complete recovery was not out of the question, Schouveller’s physicians were
While hospitalized, Schouveller developed lung problems. X-rays showed fluid in her lungs as well as small areas of associated lung collapse. Evidence presented at trial indicated that Schouveller complained of shortness of breath and that she had a couple of episodes of possible “aspiration,” which occurs when a person inhales fluids, secretions, or other foreign material into the lungs rather than swallowing them. The evidence that Schouvel-ler had episodes of possible aspiration is consistent with the other evidence establishing that Schouveller’s ability to swallow was impaired after the collision. There was also testimony that, although a person can normally expel foreign material and fluids from the airways by coughing, Schouveller’s stiff cervical collar was “very confining” and restricted her coughing mechanics such that “she could have inhaled some secretions.”
On April 12, 2010, during Schouveller’s brief stay in a nursing home, a nurse discovered Schouveller having difficulty breathing and suffering from audible congestion of her airways. She appeared “dusky” and had very low blood oxygen levels. As a result, Schouveller was transported back to the hospital, where doctors diagnosed her with aspiration and pneumonia.
On April 19, 2010, Schouveller experienced acute respiratory failure. Her oxygen levels dropped, she struggled to breathe, and her skin turned pale and blue. Doctors gave her oxygen, but determined that she needed to be intubated and placed on a respirator in order to continue to live. Relying on Schouveller’s living will, which prohibited the use of certain life-saving measures, including respiratory support, if “there [was] no reasonable expectation of [Schouveller] recovering or regaining a meaningful quality of life,” the doctors declined to place her on respiratory support. Schouveller died that evening. There was testimony from Schouveller’s physician that, had Schouveller been intu-bated, she would have continued to live. The treating physician also testified, however, that there was no “guarantee anyone [was] going to live” with the procedure.
In his appeal to our court, we understand Smith to raise three interrelated challenges to his criminal vehicular homicide conviction. He contends that the district court failed to properly instruct the jury on causation, that the State presented insufficient evidence to prove causation, and that the do-not-resuscitate order in Schouveller's living will was a superseding cause of her death. Although interrelated, we will address each of Smith’s challenges in turn.
“A person is guilty of criminal vehicular homicide ... if the person causes ... the death of another as a result of operating a motor vehicle ... while having an alcohol concentration of 0.08 or more.” Minn.Stat. § 609.21, subd. 1(3). Under the plain language of the statute, a defendant is not guilty of vehicular homicide unless he “causes” the victim’s death. Id. In this context, “causes” means that the defendant’s operation of a motor vehicle must be the “proximate cause” of the victim’s death “without the intervention of an efficient independent force in which defendant did not participate or which he could not reasonably have foreseen.” State v. Schaub,
I.
We first address Smith’s argument that the district court erred in instructing the jury on “cause” and “superseding cause.” The instruction in question stated:
A cause is a cause which had a substantial part in bringing about the occurrence at issue. A superseding cause is defined as other effects which comes after the original occurrence and which turns aside the natural sequence of events and produces a result which would not otherwise have followed from the original event.
Smith concedes that the district court’s instruction correctly defined “superseding cause.” Nevertheless, he argues that the instruction was erroneous because it did not explicitly state that a finding of a superseding cause defeats the State’s proof of causation. As a result, Smith argues “the jury could have determined that the do-not-resuscitate order was a superseding cause ... but nonetheless convicted Mr. Smith of homicide.”
Smith did not object to the instruction. In fact, Smith’s counsel told the court, “I think your instruction is fine.” Therefore, our review is for plain error. See State v. Crowsbreast,
We conclude that the district court’s instruction was not erroneous. The trial court has “considerable latitude in selecting the language of jury instructions.” State v. Baird,
II.
We next address Smith’s argument that the State failed to present sufficient evidence to demonstrate a causal chain between the injuries Schouveller sustained in the motor vehicle accident and the pneumonia and aspiration that ulti
When reviewing a sufficiency challenge, we “view the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict and assume that the fact finder rejected any evidence inconsistent with the verdict.” State v. Pendleton,
To the extent that Smith’s argument is that his conduct must be the immediate cause of Schouveller’s death in order for his conviction to be sustained, his argument fails. As we pointed out above, the word “causes” as used in Minn.Stat. § 609.21, subd. 1, means proximate cause. Schaub,
The fact that the immediate medical causes of Schouveller’s death were aspiration with hypoxia and pneumonia does not render the evidence of causation insufficient. A defendant’s actions need not be the immediate cause of death in a criminal vehicular homicide case. See State v. Smith,
The State provided sufficient evidence for the jury to conclude that the aspiration (and resulting pneumonia and hypoxia) that was the immediate cause of Schouvel-ler’s death was, in turn, caused by the injuries directly inflicted by Smith’s conduct. In particular, the jury heard testimony that aspiration occurs when a person inhales fluids, secretions, or other foreign material into the lungs rather than swallowing them. Schouveller’s ability to swallow, however, was impaired as a result of the injuries she received in the accident. The stiff cervical collar she wore to treat her neck fractures also restricted her coughing mechanics, which inhibited her
III.
Having concluded that the evidence is sufficient to prove that Smith proximately caused Schouveller’s death does not end our inquiry. We must still determine whether the do-not-resuscitate order in Schouveller’s living will was a superseding cause of her death. We have held that, “[t]o be a superseding cause, the intervening conduct must be the sole cause of the end result.” Olson,
Smith argues that the do-not-resuscitate order was a superseding cause because Sehouveller would have continued to live had her doctors ordered intubation. The State argues that the evidence was sufficient for the jury to conclude that Schou-veller’s decision to decline medical intervention was not a superseding cause of her death. Moreover, the State urges that, as a matter of law, a do-not-resuscitate order can never be a superseding cause because such orders are always foreseeable and do not actively cause death.
We decline to adopt the State’s argument that a victim’s refusal of medical care may never, as a matter of law, be a superseding cause of death. As we have previously stated, the existence of a superseding cause may be a question of fact for the jury if the evidence is such that reasonable minds could differ on the question. See Regan v. Stromberg,
Because the question of superseding cause was submitted to the jury, our review is limited to determining whether the evidence at trial was sufficient for the jury to find that the do-not-resuscitate order was not a superseding cause of Schouvel-ler’s death. Our careful review of the record satisfies us that the evidence was sufficient. As discussed above, Smith’s operation of his motor vehicle resulted in critical injuries to Sehouveller, which in turn led to serious complications — including the deconditioning of her body, aspiration, hypoxia, pneumonia, and acute respiratory failure — that precipitated the need to intubate and ultimately ended her life. Although there was testimony that intuba
In sum, the district court properly instructed the jury on the issues of causation and superseding causation, and the evidence at trial was sufficient to prove that Smith’s conduct was the proximate cause of Schouveller’s death without the intervention of a superseding cause. Accordingly, we affirm Smith’s conviction.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Smith was also found guilty and convicted of criminal vehicular operation causing substantial bodily harm based on injuries sustained by another passenger in the vehicle Schouveller occupied. There are no issues related to Smith’s criminal vehicular operation conviction before us in this appeal.
