Barry v. State

1962 OK CR 25, 369 P.2d 652, 1962 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 313
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 28, 1962
DocketA-13085
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1962 OK CR 25 (Barry v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barry v. State, 1962 OK CR 25, 369 P.2d 652, 1962 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 313 (Okla. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

BRETT, Judge.

This is an appeal by Clarence Barry, Jr., plaintiff in error, defendant below. He was charged by information in the district court of Tulsa County, Oklahoma with the crime of having feloniously taken the life of Diana Arlene Slater on February 4, 1961, while engaged in the commission of a misdemean- or, in that he drove his automobile in a reckless and wanton manner at a speed in excess of SO miles an hour, through a stop sign into the automobile in which the said Diana Arlene Slater was riding, thereby inflicting upon her mortal wounds.

Defendant was tried before a jury, convicted of first degree manslaughter (21 O.S. 1961 §§ 711-715) and his punishment fixed at four years in the state penitentiary. Judgment and sentence was entered accordingly, from which this appeal has been perfected.

Briefly, this tragedy occurred at the intersection of Knoxville Street, running north and south, and Fifteenth Street, running east and west, in the city of Tulsa. Fifteenth Street, it seems, is a. through street, .and Knoxville is a stop-sign street.

The decedent, Miss Slater, was a passenger in a Pontiac car driven by Robert Angel, proceeding in a westerly direction on Fifteenth Street, a four-lane thoroughfare with .a sixteen-foot median. The defendant, driving a Chevrolet car, was proceeding in a northerly direction, on Knoxville. The record discloses that there was nothing to obstruct the view of north-bound traffic of the intersection of Knoxville and Fifteenth Street, and nothing to obstruct the view of the reflectorized stop sign at the southeast corner of the intersection. These facts were amply supported by photographic exhibits.

Riding in the car with the defendant were Don Boyer and Wayne Hunter. They had left the Sheridan Lanes Bowling Alley located at Twenty-first Street and Sheridan shortly before 11 P.M. They were followed almost immediately by John Frownfelter and Glen Woodrow Cummings, who were also driving a Chevrolet car. The latter boys were pursuing the car driven by the defendant, in what developed was a circuitous route to the point of the collision. The record shows that at first Frownfelter and Cummings lost sight of the defendant’s car, then picked it up and gave chase. They made numerous turns and drove at excessive speeds, the one to get away, and the other to catch up. At times they would be close, and at other times a considerable distance apart. Cummings estimated their speeds from 50 to 65 miles per hour.

When defendant Barry went into the Fifteenth Street intersection at .Knoxville, Cummings testified that Barry was driving in excess of fifty miles an hour, and that he did not observe defendant’s brake-lights go on. This is corroborated by the circumstances that in a signed statement, acknowledged before a notary public and which on cross-examination Barry said was true, he said:

“I was right on top of the stop sign before I could stop. I was looking in the mirror at the time and when I flashed back it was too late. We had been running through the residential sections and I wasn’t sure where we were because I wasn’t watching for street numbers. We came up on the stop sign and I couldn’t stop.”

He further said that the other Chevrolet was approximately half a block behind him, “at the same time I seen the stop sign, right *656 at the intersection”, and the next thing he knew the collision occurred.

In his signed statement Barry said he was going at least SO miles an hour.

After the collision, measurements disclosed that the defendant’s car travelled 153 feet 2 inches after the impact. The evidence further shows the decedent Diana Arlene Slater’s body was found on the pavement 81 feet from the point of the collision. The dead body of her associate, Mr. Angel, was 100 feet 5 inches from the point of impact. The Pontiac car in which the decedents were riding travelled 76 feet from the point of collision.

The defendant admitted he had had two bottles of beer, but whether he did or not is of little or no consequence, since his own statement and the State’s other evidence conclusively establish the fact that he was driving in a negligent manner, and at an excessive speed under the conditions, and ran the stop sign. (47 O.S.19S1 § 121.6). These admissions and the resulting deaths and the other evidence bring him within the definition of the manslaughter statute, fixing the punishment at not less than four years.

These were the facts produced by the State and admitted by the defendant’s notarized statement, upon which the jury predicated its verdict. The evidence was entirely sufficient to support the verdict and the jury was the sole judge of the weight and credibility of the witnesses. Sadler v. State, 84 Okl.Cr. 97, 179 P.2d 479. Hence no problem of the insufficiency of the evidence is presented. In fact, under this record the defendant is exceedingly fortunate to have escaped with the minimum penalty.

This record conclusively shows that this was a needless killing, caused by a game of “ditch ’em”, a sort of American high-school Russian roulette, played with automobiles defined by law as a dangerous instrument, which when operated in reckless disregard at an excessive speed and with complete indifference to the safety of others on the highway, may be far more destructive of human life than the idiocy of Russian roulette. Russian -roulette confines such idiotic delight to the lone participant, while “ditch ’em” extends the cold and inescapable arms of death to embrace the innocent and unsuspecting. Those who engage in such hazardous and deadly pastime deserve little leniency, whether or not fatalities result. Automobiles are now so numerous that even the most careful operation of them is some times fraught with danger. Society should not countenance their use as loaded dice in a game of chance played with death, especially where the lives of others may be the stakes, and the players derive only a vicarious thrill in the process. The leniency manifested by the jury in this case can only be the result of several factors — the forthrightness and disposition to tell the truth manifested by this defendant; the defendant’s prior good work record; its sympathy for this 21-year old young man, the living victim of his own foolhardiness, and because of the fact that he was well represented by counsel.

The defendant’s first contention is that the trial court erred in not giving his requested instructions numbered from 1 to 10 inclusive.

We have examined the instructions given by the trial court and it is our opinion that they constitute a substantial statement of the law applicable to the facts herein established by the state and admitted by the defendant’s own testimony. As the attorney general states in his brief, the defendant’s testimony established no defense but clearly put the finger of guilt upon him. The trial court’s .instructions in this case follow the law, in that they were based on the charge in the information, the defense and the testimony at the trial, and not upon questions unsupported in the evidence. Whisenhunt v. State, Okl.Cr., 279 P.2d 366, Wing v. State, Okl.Cr., 280 P.2d 740. Counsel for the defendant in their zeal, sought through strained interpretation of the facts to create a defense by way of ten requested instructions which the trial court correctly rejected. They involved such intervening causes as distracting defendant’s attention to the

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Related

Johnson v. State
1988 OK CR 242 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1988)
Fowler v. State
1973 OK CR 304 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1973)
Wahlgreen v. State
1971 OK CR 234 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1971)

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Bluebook (online)
1962 OK CR 25, 369 P.2d 652, 1962 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barry-v-state-oklacrimapp-1962.