Capwell v. State

823 P.2d 1250, 1991 Alas. App. LEXIS 102, 1991 WL 273672
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedDecember 20, 1991
DocketA-3489
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 823 P.2d 1250 (Capwell v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Capwell v. State, 823 P.2d 1250, 1991 Alas. App. LEXIS 102, 1991 WL 273672 (Ala. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

OPINION

Before BRYNER, C.J., and COATS and MANNHEIMER, JJ.

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

Joseph W. Capwell was convicted of criminally negligent homicide, AS 11.41.-130(a), for striking and killing a pedestrian with his car. He appeals both his conviction and his sentence. We affirm Cap- *1252 well’s conviction but remand for resentenc-ing.

On July 11, 1989, around 4 o’clock in the afternoon, Capwell was driving on Seward Meridian Road in Wasilla. Shelley Cleveland was walking along the side of the road, accompanied by her young niece. Capwell’s car, traveling between 35 and 45 miles per hour, struck Cleveland; she was killed almost instantly.

The weather was clear and sunny. Cap-well’s vehicle drifted over the right-hand fog line of the road for no apparent reason. Capwell did not apply his brakes either before or for several seconds after he struck Cleveland. He stopped his car 50 or 60 yards down the road, sat there for several seconds, and then backed up toward the site of the collision. But instead of coming to check on Cleveland’s condition, Capwell climbed out of his car, walked around to the front, and inspected his bumper. He then leaned against the side of his car and lit a cigarette. Capwell did not attempt to help Cleveland, nor did he even look toward her.

Capwell’s defense was that, suffering chest pains, he had been driving to Valley Hospital when the pain distracted him and reduced his control of the vehicle, thus causing the collision. When the State Troopers arrived at the scene, Capwell told one trooper that he was suffering from chest pains. He also told this to the emergency medical technicians who responded to the collision and transported Capwell to Valley Hospital. About an hour and a half after the accident, Capwell spoke with a physician at Valley Hospital and elaborated on these statements: Capwell told the doctor that he had been driving to the hospital at the time of the collision so that he could be examined for chest pains.

Evidence was presented that Capwell in fact suffers from a medical condition that causes him chest pain: costochondritis, an inflammation of the ribs where they join the breastbone.

In an effort to rebut Capwell’s assertion that he had been going to the hospital to be examined for severe chest pains, the prosecution introduced the testimony of two emergency room physicians, Dr. Janet Smalley and Dr. Donald Hudson. Both of these physicians, one working in Palmer and the other in Anchorage, testified that Capwell had come to their emergency medical facilities numerous times. During the year preceding the collision, Capwell made 17 appearances in the Palmer emergency room. Capwell also made 26 visits to the Anchorage emergency room. Each time, Capwell complained of pain — often, pain in his chest, but also dental pain, headaches, and backaches. Each time, Capwell wanted medication, generally morphine, to ease the pain.

Both Dr. Smalley and Dr. Hudson testified that, when a patient accumulates a history like Capwell’s, physicians suspect that the patient is employing the emergency room as a source for narcotics, with pain being the excuse rather than the real reason for the numerous visits. Dr. Smalley sat down with Capwell on two occasions and discussed her concern that he was becoming narcotic dependent and was misusing the emergency room. Dr. Smalley testified that, following these conversations, there were two occasions on which Capwell arrived at the emergency room and peeked into the nurses’ station to see who was the on-duty physician; when he saw that Dr. Smalley was the on-duty physician, Capwell left the hospital without signing in as a patient.

Capwell asserts that the trial court should not have allowed the State to introduce the testimony of the two doctors. Capwell argues that the jury became unfairly prejudiced against him when it heard him referred to as a “drug seeker”, and he asserts that, since there was no testimony that he was using drugs at the time of the collision, the doctors’ testimony could not have been relevant to any issue at the trial.

We conclude that Judge Cutler acted within her proper discretion when she admitted the doctors’ testimony. Capwell’s defense was premised on the argument that he was suffering chest pain at the time of the collision, pain so severe that it distracted him from the road and prevented him from exercising normal control over *1253 his vehicle. The testimony of Dr. Smalley and Dr. Hudson tended to show that, even if Capwell had been driving to the hospital as he asserted, his motivation was to obtain narcotics, not to have a doctor alleviate unexpectedly intense pain. The testimony thus had substantial relevance to a major issue at trial: whether, as Capwell claimed, there was a medical explanation for his failure to notice Cleveland walking along the roadway. Moreover, Judge Cutler could reasonably find that the probative force of this evidence outweighed whatever potential for unfair prejudice it might have.

Capwell contests one other eviden-tiary ruling of the trial court. Judge Cutler allowed the prosecution to introduce evidence that, at the time of the collision, Capwell’s driver’s license was suspended; Capwell’s license had been suspended when he failed to satisfy a judgement entered against him from an earlier traffic accident. The prosecution contended, and Judge Cutler agreed, that, because Cap-well’s license was suspended, it was reasonable to conclude that Capwell’s assertions of chest pain had been fabricated in order to offer the authorities some plausible reason why Capwell was driving.

In the trial court and now on appeal, Capwell asserts that whatever motivation he might have had to explain his act of driving while his license was suspended pales beside his motivation to explain how he had run over and killed a pedestrian. Capwell argues that, if his assertion of chest pain was suspect, it was because of the homicide charge he faced, not the driving with suspended license charge. Moreover, Capwell asserts that this evidence carried great potential for unfair prejudice: the jury could conclude, from the fact that a civil judgement had been entered against him, that Capwell had been at fault in the prior motor vehicle accident.

We agree with Capwell. The State was entitled to introduce evidence of Capwell’s possible motives to lie about experiencing severe chest pain. However, under the circumstances of this case, the motivation provided by the imminent homicide charge far outweighed whatever additional motivation was provided by the suspended status of Capwell’s license. The possibility that evidence of Capwell’s license suspension might unfairly prejudice the jury’s deliberations — that the jury, hearing evidence indicating that Capwell had been at fault in a prior traffic accident, might assume from this that he had probably been negligent in this case — outweighed the minimal incremental probative value of the evidence.

Nevertheless, we are convinced that the admission of this evidence did not have an appreciable effect on the jury’s verdict. Fields v. State, 629 P.2d 46, 51 (Alaska 1981); Love v. State, 457 P.2d 622, 629-631 (Alaska 1969).

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Related

State v. Malloy
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Bluebook (online)
823 P.2d 1250, 1991 Alas. App. LEXIS 102, 1991 WL 273672, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/capwell-v-state-alaskactapp-1991.