Commonwealth v. Grimes

38 Pa. D. & C.5th 514
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lycoming County
DecidedJune 5, 2014
DocketNo. CR-1412-2013
StatusPublished

This text of 38 Pa. D. & C.5th 514 (Commonwealth v. Grimes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lycoming County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Grimes, 38 Pa. D. & C.5th 514 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2014).

Opinion

LOVECCHIO, /.,

OPINION AND ORDER

Defendant is charged with one count of DUI (incapable of safely driving), one count of DUI (highest rate) and three summaries. Defendant’s non-jury trial was held on April 23, 2014 and June 2, 2014. Subsequently, the parties have submitted post trial written case authority and argument. The matter is now ripe for a cerdict.

Stuart Shebest first testified on behalf of the Commonwealth at the April 23, 2014 proceeding. He is the nursing home administrator for HCR Manor Care in Sunbury, PA. On June 29, 2013, he was the facility administrator at Williamsport Manor Care located at 300 Leader Drive in Williamsport.

He related that on June 29, 2013, he was working. At about 12:10 noon, staff mentioned to him that there was somebody lying on the parking lot. He went out to the parking lot with them and found defendant lying in the parking lot “obviously quite intoxicated, impaired.” According to Mr. Shebest, defendant “smelled like alcohol, exhibited slurred speech and was obviously not able to stand.”

Defendant spoke briefly with Mr. Shebest. He indicated to Mr. Shebest that he drove there. Upon request, defendant handed his keys over to Mr. Shebest.

Mr. Shebest asked defendant where his car was located and he pointed to a vehicle “that was parked pretty much [517]*517right behind him in the parking area,” approximately four or five feet from where defendant was lying on the parking lot.

Mr. Shebest indicated that June 29 was a Saturday and “a slower day for visitors.” He arrived for work at approximately 9:00 a.m. and left the facility for lunch between 11:45 a.m. and noon. He arrived “back at work at about 12:05 or 12:10 p.m.” He did not see defendant’s vehicle when leaving for lunch or returning. He “came across” defendant in the parking lot sometime around 12:15 to 12:20 p.m.

After speaking briefly with defendant, Mr. Shebest and a staff person assisted him into a wheelchair. They wheeled him over to a patio after which Mr. Shebest instructed one employee to call 911. Police officers and EMS personnel eventually arrived.

Justin Rosboschil next testified on behalf of the Commonwealth. He has been employed by the Pennsylvania State Police as a Trooper for “approximately a year and six months.” He was on duty on June 29, 2013 and was dispatched to Manor Care due to a report of a drunken individual found in the parking lot.

According to Trooper Rosboschil, he was dispatched at approximately 12:45 and arrived on scene at approximately 12:50. He made contact with defendant, who was in a wheelchair under an awning-covered patio. He questioned defendant. Defendant noted that he drove there and admitted to drinking.

Defendant exhibited obvious signs of intoxication. It was difficult to get very long answers from defendant because of his slurred speech and slow response. He [518]*518exhibited a “blank stare” and smelled heavily of alcohol when he spoke.

When Trooper Rosboshcil asked defendant for his license, defendant pulled out his wallet and gave him a credit card. Defendant did not have his license with him. As a result, Trooper Rosboschil needed to identify defendant by running his name and date of birth.

Inside defendant’s vehicle Trooper Rosboschil found an opened bottle of rum, as well as a very large black travel mug which had a “liquid in it, and was believed to be alcohol from the smell.” The bottle of rum was found on the passenger side floor and the travel mug was found in the center console.

After looking inside defendant’s vehicle, Trooper Rosboschil spoke with defendant again. Defendant admitted both that the alcohol in the vehicle was his and that he had drank “before he had driven.” Defendant also admitted that he had been drinking while driving. He admitted consuming “about two quarts of alcohol.”

Trooper Rosboschil administered standard field sobriety tests to defendant, including the walk and turn, and one legged stand test. Defendant “showed pretty much every indication of impairment that the tests are designed to show.” During the one test “EMS or somebody actually had to help” Defendant stand up. On the one legged stand test after being directed to begin the test, defendant just stood there and “didn’t lift any leg.”

The results of the tests indicated that defendant was clearly under the influence of an alcoholic beverage. Trooper Rosboschil testified that he was of the opinion that defendant was under the influence of alcohol to the [519]*519extent he was not able to safely operate a vehicle. He did not, however, transport defendant to the Williamsport Hospital. Instead, EMS transported defendant because Trooper Rosboschil was concerned about the amount of alcohol in defendant’s system.

Trooper Rosboschil followed the ambulance to the Williamsport Hospital. He read the implied consent warnings to defendant. Defendant signed a consent form and blood was drawn from defendant at 2:10 p.m. At the hospital, Trooper Rosboschil again questioned defendant. Defendant’s responses at the hospital were somewhat better. Defendant admitted that he had been drinking prior to driving and that he traveled to Manor Care to visit his mother. Defendant also kept repeating that “he was wrong in doing what he did.”

When the trial resumed on June 2, 2014, Trooper Rosboschil again testified. He explained that defendant did not leave in the ambulance until approximately an hour after he arrived. He indicated that during that time EMS personnel were evaluating and treating defendant, he spoke with Mr. Shebest, he spoke with EMS personnel and he was involved in identifying defendant, who unfortunately did not have proper identification on him.

Ayako Chan-Hosokawa testified as an expert witness on behalf of the Commonwealth. She is employed by NMS Labs in Willow Grove, PA as a forensic toxicologist and she has significant training and professional experience in that field. She testified in detail as to the procedure by which defendant’s blood was tested and that the results of the testing showed that defendant’s blood alcohol concentration level was .408 %.

The Commonwealth also admitted the following [520]*520exhibits into evidence in its case in chief: C-l — Sketch of the parking lot where defendant was located; C-2 — Pennsylvania Department of Transportation Vehicle Record Abstract; C-3 — Penn Dot DL-26, Chemical Testing Warnings; C-4 — Susquehanna Health Whole Blood Alcohol Analysis Chain of Custody Form; C-5 — Curriculum Vitae of Ayako Chan-Hosokawa; C-6 — NMS Chain of Custody — Posting History Report; C-l — NMS Chain of Custody — Sample History Report Work Order No.: 13164368; and C-8 —NMS Lab Toxicology Report issued July 5, 2013.

The Commonwealth rested its case, and defendant requested a demurrer with respect to the charge of driving under the influence with highest rate of alcohol, which the court denied. Defendant did not present any evidence.

Defendant argued that the evidence was insufficient to sustain a conviction on the DUI counts, in large part because the evidence was lacking with respect to defendant operating the vehicle and the time in which defendant may have operated the vehicle. The Commonwealth countered that the evidence was sufficient beyond a reasonable doubt to convict defendant of all of the charges and that any delay in obtaining defendant’s blood for chemical testing beyond two hours was reasonable.

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Related

§ 3802
Pennsylvania § 3802(g)

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Bluebook (online)
38 Pa. D. & C.5th 514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-grimes-pactcompllycomi-2014.