City of Pensacola v. Jones

23 Fla. Supp. 84

This text of 23 Fla. Supp. 84 (City of Pensacola v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Circuit Court of the 1st Judicial Circuit of Florida, Escambia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Pensacola v. Jones, 23 Fla. Supp. 84 (Fla. Super. Ct. 1964).

Opinion

ERNEST E. MASON, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the municipal court of the city of Pensacola adjudging appellant guilty of speeding in violation of section 32.37 of the code of ordinances of said city, of driving while under the influence of intoxicating beverages in violation of section 20.17 of said code and of failing to stop at stop signs in violation of section 32.47 of said code. The appellant pled guilty to speeding. He was sentenced to pay a fine of $100 and to pay costs on all charges and his driver’s license was suspended for 90 days. He appeals from that portion of the judgment which adjudicated him guilty of running stop signs and driving while intoxicated.

Appellant’s assignments of error, twelve in number, fall into three general classes. First, he says the evidence was insufficient to sustain his conviction of the two last-stated charges, and second, he charges the trial court with partiality in the trial of the case. The third class of assignment of error is the charge that the court below permitted a witness to testify who had been sitting in the courtroom during the progress of the trial.

We hold the last assignment of error not well founded for the reason that the record reflects that the witnesses were not placed under the rule. The appellant did not ask for the rule. Where the rule is not requested, the court does not commit error for not itself placing the witnesses under the rule, unless it is clearly apparent from the record that prejudicial harm was done by allowing a witness to testify who sat in the courtroom while other witnesses were testifying. A careful reading of the testimony of the witness in question does not indicate that it was colored by anything that had been previously testified to, the whole tenor of it being merely corroborative of the prosecution’s testimony as to the appellant’s intoxicated condition. No new element was injected by this witness.

We come now to the series of assignments having to do with the sufficiency of the evidence. Although the appellant was charged with violations of municipal ordinances which are not crimes, they are criminal in character in that the end result may be loss of liberty by incarceration in the municipal jail or, as was the case here, a forfeiture of money by the requirement of the payment of a fine and loss of driving privilege. We, therefore, hold that the burden is upon the prosecution to prove guilt beyond and to the exclusion of reasonable doubt.

[86]*86These offenses were tried by the municipal judge without a jury, as is the practice in this state. The judge sitting as judge and jury is therefore the arbiter both of the law and the facts. In this ease the facts were in dispute, the prosecution witness as to the charge of running stop signs and driving while intoxicated testified that appellant was guilty of both offenses, while the appellant denied his guilt in his testimony. There was no corroborating testimony on the part of either side of the issue as to the charge of running stop signs. There was a corroborative witness on the issue of intoxication of appellant who testified for the prosecution that appellant was under the influence of alcohol to such extent as to make him unfit to drive a motor vehicle.

This record reflects what would ordinarily be a clear case for resolution of disputed issues of fact by the trial judge, and his judgment would in such instance not be disturbed by this court sitting as a reviewing forum. Where there are such disputed issues of fact and the record reflects sufficient competent evidence which, if believed by the trial judge, would sustain a conviction, this court would not substitute its view of the weight of such evidence for that of the trial judge who sat and heard the witnesses and weighed their testimony. Applying this rule to this case we find that as to the charge against appellant of running stop signs, there was sufficient competent evidence to justify the trial court in finding him guilty of such offense, and that as to such offense we find that there was no prejudicial error committed which would justify a reversal of this part of the judgment below. We find that as to this charge, appellant received a fair trial, and we therefore affirm that part of the judgment below which convicts him of such offense.

However, our review of the record herein raises a grave question in our mind as to the impartiality of the court below in its consideration of the issue of appellant’s sobriety or lack of it at the time of his operation of the automobile which he was charged with having driven while intoxicated. There was a direct conflict in the testimony of appellant and that offered by the prosecution on this issue, in the light of which conflict the conduct of the trial court in the resolution of this issue must be considered in determining whether the issue was fairly and impartially decided by him.

In order to determine whether appellant received a fair and impartial trial on the issue of sobriety it is necessary to consider not only the evidence presented by both sides on this issue, but also statements made by the trial judge during the trial. After the prosecution had rested the appellant took the stand to testify. He stated his name and residence in response to his lawyer’s questions. Thereafter followed questions by the lawyer, appel[87]*87lant’s answers thereto, colloquy between appellant’s lawyer and the judge, and statements made by the judge directed to appellant at the end of such colloquy, all of which we set out verbatim as taken from the transcript of the trial, as follows —

Q. And just for your general background, what, quickly, is your line of work?
A. I have a degree in electrical engineering.
THE COURT: The court is not interested in that. We go through this every day down here. We are interested in, only, whether he was intoxicated, whether or not he had a license to drive, whether or not he was in the vicinity and went through these stop signs, whether or not he was speeding and whether or not he was operating his vehicle in a careless and reckless manner. Those are the things involved here.
MR. MITCHELL: We merely offer this to show what sort of man he is. Very briefly, he is a college graduate —■ a graduuate of the University of Florida . . .
THE COURT: Unfortunately, college graduates get drunk like everybody else.
MR. DAVIS: The city will stipulate to all of this.
THE COURT: I will accept the fact that the man is a sterling character, that he is a college graduate and he is a good man.
MR. MITCHELL: And we would like the record to show that he is a bachelor.
THE COURT: And he is a bachelor.
Q. Now Charles, on Baylen Street what was your speed? Say at Baylen and LaRua, as you recall?
A. I would say I was doing closer to 40 than to 50.
MR. MITCHELL: Your Honor, at this time my client pleads guilty to any charge of speeding at Baylen and LaRua. However, his testimony is that he was going closer to 40 than to 50.
(At this point of the proceedings there was a discussion by the judge with the defendant and his counsel concerning am offer to accept a guilty plea to a lesser charge than DWI. This discussion was off-the-record at the instruction of the judge.)
MR.

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23 Fla. Supp. 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-pensacola-v-jones-flacirct1esc-1964.