¶ 1. The State charged defendant with one count of grossly negligent operation of a motor vehicle, with serious injury resulting, as a result of his falling asleep while driving and causing an accident. 23 V.S.A. § 1091(b). Defendant successfully moved to dismiss under V.R.Cr.P. 12(d), and the State appealed. The district court found that defendant’s admission that he felt drowsy and had fallen asleep “a couple of times” while driving shortly before his accident was not, as a matter of law, sufficient evidence of gross negligence as required by statute. We disagree, and reverse and remand.
¶ 2. The evidence upon which the district court relied is as follows: At around 4:30 a.m. on the morning of August 1, 2005, defendant set out from Westford, Vermont on his way to Rutland, where he planned to be at work by 6:30 a.m. On Route 7 in Salisbury, he fell asleep at the wheel of his moving vehicle. He traveled across the oncoming lane of traffic and collided with another vehicle, resulting in substantial injuries to the other driver. Defendant was awakened only by the impact of the crash. Later, he told the investigating officer that he had been feeling drowsy during his commute. He also stated: “I nodded off a couple of times, I usually do and I wake myself back up but that morning I didn’t.”
¶ 3. The State charged defendant with one count of grossly negligent operation with serious injury resulting pursuant to 23 V.S.A. § 1091(b). Defendant moved to dismiss, contending that the State could not make out a prima facie case of gross negligence. V.R.Cr.P. 12(d). The trial court found that despite being a “close case” involving “something more than mere falling asleep,” defendant was correct. In reaching this conclusion the district court relied on two eases from other jurisdictions,
Clancy v. State,
¶ 4. We review questions of law de novo.
State v. Damon,
¶ 5. We are not the first court to note the difficulty in demarcating the bounds of degrees of negligence. Under our statutes, gross negligence is “conduct which involvefs] a gross deviation from the care that a reasonable person would have exercised in that situation.” 23 V.S.A. § 1091(b)(2). Negligence is a breach of the duty to exercise ordinary care.
Id.
§ 1091(a)(2). In distinguishing the two, we have said that gross negligence “amounts to a failure to exercise even a slight degree of care,” and that it requires more than “an error in judgment, momentary inattention, or loss of presence of mind.”
Peck v. Gluck,
¶ 6. There are some guideposts in cases of this type. As the trial court held, falling asleep at the wheel does not, in and of itself, constitute gross negligence. On the other hand, when a driver is on sufficient notice as to the danger of falling asleep but nevertheless continues to drive, the driver’s subsequent failure to stay awake may be grossly negligent. To continue to drive in these circumstances marks a disregard for the risk of injury to such a degree so as to constitute “a gross deviation from the standard of care that a reasonable person would have exercised in [defendant’s] situation.” 23 V.S.A. § 1091(b)(2).
¶ 7. Supreme courts that have addressed the issue of sleeping drivers have reached these conclusions uniformly. The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts rejected a per se rule that falling asleep while driving, without more, was grossly negligent in favor of a failure-to-heed-warnings standard. Thus it held: “It is possible that sleep may sometimes overtake its victim unawares and we think that it would be going too far to say that falling asleep without more is evidence of gross negligence.”
Flynn v. Hurley,
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¶ 8. Even the cases upon which the trial court relied reach the same conclusion. See
Hargrove,
¶ 9. The instant case presents sufficient evidence that defendant disregarded clear warnings that he was likely to fall asleep; indeed, he permitted himself to doze off “a couple of times” before his accident. This was plainly more than “momentary inattention.”
Peck,
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
Defendant has cited two additional cases in his brief,
Kaplan v. Kaplan,
