OPINION
Case Summary
John Whitaker appeals his conviction for reckless homicide, a Class C felony. We reverse.
Issue
The dispositive issue is whether there is sufficient evidence to sustain Whitaker’s conviction. 1
Facts
The evidence most favorable to the conviction reveals that on the morning of August 22, 2001, Whitaker traveled south in his tanker truck on State Road 57 in Gibson County, a two-lane highway. He followed two to four car lengths behind a car driven by Kim Cox and traveled at around sixty miles per hour, which was five miles per hour above the speed limit. At approximately 8:00 a.m., Cox began braking and signaled that she was going to turn left onto County Road 950 East. Whitaker did not attempt to apply his brakes or otherwise evade Cox until almost the pre
The State charged Whitaker with reckless homicide. After a jury trial conducted on February 25-27, 2002, Whitaker was convicted as charged. He now appeals.
Analysis
We acknowledge our traditionally deferential standard of review when considering questions of the sufficiency of the evidence to support a conviction. In reviewing a sufficiency claim, we neither reweigh the evidence nor assess the credibility of the witnesses.
Love v. State,
Indiana Code Section 35-42-1-5 provides that “[a] person who recklessly kills another human being commits reckless homicide, a class C felony.” “A person engages in conduct ‘recklessly’ if he engages in the conduct in plain, conscious, and unjustifiable disregard of harm that might result and the disregard involves a substantial deviation from acceptable standards of conduct.” Ind.Code § 35-41-2-2. “Proof that an accident arose out of the inadvertence, lack of attention, forgetfulness or thoughtfulness of the driver of a vehicle, or from an error of judgment on his part, will not support a charge of reckless homicide.”
Beeman v. State,
It is helpful to review some of the cases that have addressed the evidence necessary to sustain a conviction for reckless homicide arising out of a motor vehicle collision. The following are examples of cases where the fact patterns were held sufficient to sustain a reckless homicide conviction:
Nichols v. State,
On the other hand, the following cases held the facts were insufficient to support a reckless homicide conviction:
DeVaney v. State,
From these cases, we discern the following: relatively slight deviations from the traffic code, even if they technically rise to the level of “reckless driving,” do not necessarily support a reckless homicide conviction if someone is subsequently killed. Some gross deviations from the traffic code, however, may under certain circumstances be such a substantial departure from acceptable standards of conduct that they will support a reckless homicide conviction, such as ignoring traffic signals at a high rate of speed, driving on a dark road at night without headlights, or intentionally crossing the centerline without a legitimate reason for doing so. Speed may support a reckless homicide conviction, but only greatly excessive speeds, such as twenty or more miles per hour over the posted speed limit, or where inclement weather and poor road conditions render higher speeds greatly unreasonable.
The State urges that this case is analogous to
Gibbs
and
Hergenrother,
the driving without headlights and crossing the centerline to greet a friend cases, respectively. In those cases, the defendants’ reckless homicide convictions stemmed from conduct prohibited by the traffic code. Specifically, it is a Class C infraction to drive without headlights at night or to improperly cross over from the right half of a roadway into oncoming traffic.
See
I.C. §§ 9-21-7-2, 9-21-7-13, 9-21-8-2, 9-21-8-49. It is also a Class B or C infraction to drive in excess of posted speed limits and a Class C infraction to “follow another vehicle more closely than is reasonable and prudent, having due regard for the speed of both vehicles, the
There is a significant difference, however, between the traffic code violations in Gibbs and Hergenrother and the alleged traffic code violations in this case. First, viewing the evidence regarding Whitaker’s speed in the light most favorable to the State, he was traveling approximately five miles per hour above the posted speed limit. However, the evidence also demonstrated that the two vehicles behind Whitaker were also traveling at about the same speed, and one witness expressly agreed that the flow of traffic was about sixty miles per hour. Thus, even if Whitaker was violating the traffic code by speeding, he also was traveling at the same speed as other motorists, making it clear that he was not substantially deviating from acceptable driving standards.
The State places more emphasis on Whitaker’s allegedly following Cox’s car at an unsafe distance. The only evidence as to how closely Whitaker was following Cox was his own testimony that he could not remember the precise distance, but that it could have two, three, or four car lengths. Tr. p. 491. However, whether one vehicle is too closely following behind another is a much more subjective and difficult question to answer than whether one is driving at night without lights or purposely crossing the center line for no legally valid reason. There is no precise definition of what constitutes a “reasonable and prudent” following distance, which as defined by the statute requires instantaneous and ever-changing mental calculations as to the speed of both vehicles, the time interval between them, and the condition of the highway. By contrast, driving without headlights at night or intentionally crossing a center line for no good reason readily appear to be inherently dangerous, no matter the circumstances, and it is unnecessary to resort to mental calculations weighing several factors to reach that conclusion. 3
“ ‘There is no rule, other than that relating to the exercise of reasonable care, which prescribes a distance that must be maintained between vehicles while running along the highway.’ ”
Toenges v. Walter,
The State posits that the fact Whitaker failed to take any action to stop or evade Cox’s car after she applied her brakes and signaled to turn is, in itself, evidence of his recklessness. Whitaker claimed at trial that he simply failed to notice that Cox was stopped until it was far too late for him to stop or avoid her car. This, however, would be evidence of inadvertence or lack of attention; in other words, negligence, not recklessness.
See Beeman,
Our reversal of Whitaker’s conviction is consistent with our state’s chosen policy regarding the criminalization of fatal traffic collisions. Our General Assembly has deemed that neither “negligent homicide” nor “vehicular homicide” is a crime in Indiana, as they are in some states. Additionally, in 1977 the General Assembly modified the involuntary manslaughter statute. Previously, one could be convicted of involuntary manslaughter if one caused a death while committing “an offense”; this language permitted homicide convictions for deaths arising out of traffic collisions where it was proved that the defendant intentionally violated some provision of the traffic code.
See Napier v. State,
The evidence is insufficient to sustain Whitaker’s conviction for reckless homicide. We reverse.
Reversed.
Notes
. Our reversal on this issue makes it unnecessary to address Whitaker’s claims of instructional error.
.None of these infractions standing alone amount to "reckless driving” as defined by Indiana Code Section 9-21-8-52(a), although driving "at such an unreasonably high rate of speed” as to endanger the safety or property of others may qualify as such. Obviously, however, this entails more than simply exceeding the posted speed limit; otherwise, every person caught speeding would be guilty of a Class B misdemeanor, not a Class B or C infraction as provided in Indiana Code Section 9-21-5-13.
. It should be noted that the defendant in
Hergenrother
admitted to intentionally crossing the center line.
. There is a precise definition of a minimum following distance for one motor truck or tractor-trailer following behind another motor truck or tractor-trailer. See I.C. § 9-21-8-15.
. “Reckless driving” itself is a Class B misdemeanor. See I.C. § 9-21-8-52.
