Dennie v. People

66 V.I. 143, 2017 V.I. LEXIS 71
CourtSuperior Court of The Virgin Islands
DecidedMay 17, 2017
DocketCase No. SX-14-MV-672
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 66 V.I. 143 (Dennie v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of The Virgin Islands primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dennie v. People, 66 V.I. 143, 2017 V.I. LEXIS 71 (visuper 2017).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

(May 17, 2017)

THIS MATTER is in the Appellate Division on review from the Magistrate Division. Petitioner, Kelvin B. Dennie, appeals his negligent [146]*146driving conviction. For the reasons stated below, the Magistrate Court’s decision will be affirmed.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Just before noon on January 11, 2014, a 2006 white Toyota Sequoia and a 1998 white Ford van collided on David Oliver Drive in Estate Union and Mt. Washington on St. Croix. Both vehicles had damage on the passenger side consistent with each sideswiping the other while travelling in opposite directions. Lorraine Benjamin-Matthew was driving the Toyota going west. Kelvin B. Dennie was driving the van going east. Dennie is a taxi driver. He had just dropped off a passenger, Andrews,2 in the Union and Mt. Washington area and was driving further up David Oliver Drive to turn around and head back into Christiansted town. Matthew, who lives in the Mt. Washington area, had just turned right onto David Oliver Drive when she observed a van coming towards her, but driving “in the middle of the road.” (Trial Tr. 6:25-7:1, Feb. 27, 2014.) Matthew “swerve[d] to the left” and waived at the driver with her right hand to get his attention. (Feb. 27, 2014 Trial Tr. 7:3.) The driver “had their [sic] head down,” she recalled, and did not respond to her hand signals. Id. at 7:8. Matthew moved as far to the left as she could. If she “had gone completely off the road, [she] would have gone straight into ... garbage bins” out in front of a house. Id. at 7:14-15. The van then “sideswiped” Matthew’s car. Id. at 7:17.

Matthew stopped her car and got out. Dennie stopped too. Whether he was already stopped when the vehicles collided, or stopped a few moments after impact, was disputed at trial. Dennie too got out of his van, looked at Matthew and examined both cars, and then turned to go back to his van. Matthew asked him, “where are you going? You just caused an accident. We have to call the police.” Id. at 7:24-25. Dennie gave a cryptic response, “today for me, tomorrow for you,” id. at 8-1-2, which baffled Matthew.3 He then began “ranting and raving” that it was she who was not watching where she was going. Matthew said that Dennie told her she [147]*147“came around the corner speeding.” Id. at 9:9-10. But Matthew said she dismissed Dennie’s remark, explaining:

I live in this area. I know the road. You cannot come around that corner speeding. Right before you get to the right to make to David Oliver Drive, there’s a bad road. Okay? The road is real bad. So you have to drive slow because right as you turn the right for David Oliver Road, it’s a high and low. So you go from a bumpy to a high. So if you’re coming speeding, you’re going to cause damage to your car, first of all because you’re leaving from the bumpy road to the smooth road to make a road. So it’s impossible. You cannot speed on that road.

Id. at 9:11-21.

Someone phoned 9-1-1 because Virgin Islands Police Officer Samantha Smith was dispatched to the scene. Upon arriving, she observed tracks in the grass on southern side of the road where Matthew’s car went off the road approximately two feet into the grass. The car continued back onto the road, either before the collision occurred or afterward — the testimony is unclear. Both vehicles were on the road when Officer Smith arrived. Officer Smith measured the road to be fifteen feet wide. The report she prepared after the accident stated that the van was eight feet, ten inches away from the northern side of the road. However, after viewing a photograph from the scene, Smith admitted that she made a mistake. Dennie’s van had to have been eight feet, ten inches away from the southern side of the road, otherwise he would have been “covering most of the road with his van.” (Trial Tr. 15:18 (Feb. 28, 2014).)

Smith took statements from Matthew, Dennie, and Andrew. She determined that Dennie drove negligently by failing to stay as far left as possible. She issued Dennie a citation, number 199103, swore to it under oath on February 13, 2014, and filed it with the Superior Court that day. Dennie was charged with one count of negligent driving in violation of section 503 of title 20 of the Virgin Islands Code.

The Clerk’s Office opened a new case, docketed the complaint, and assigned the case at random to a Superior Court magistrate. The Magistrate Court held a bench trial on February 27 and 28, 2014.4 The People called [148]*148Matthew and Smith to testify and moved into evidence three photographs of the scene, which Matthew had taken shortly after the police had arrived. After hearing the testimony and reviewing the evidence, the Magistrate Court found Dennie guilty of negligent driving and sentenced him to pay a $75.00 fine and court costs in the same amount. The Magistrate Court did not immediately reduce the conviction and sentence to writing, however. In fact, three years passed before the court issued a written judgment.

In the interim, Dennie filed for review. He filed a notice of petition for review on March 7, 2014, as amended on March 10, 2014. He also requested transcripts of the bench trial, which were submitted on April 15, 2014. The same day, April 15th, Dennie filed his brief on review. Five months later, the Court issued an order, noting that Dennie’s review was not before the Appellate Division yet “[b]ecause the Magistrate Court ha[d] not entered a written judgment.” (Order 1 n.1, entered Sept. 8, 2014). The Court nevertheless gave the People an extension of time to file their responsive brief. “Superior Court Rule 322.1 (i)(G)(ii) directs that the Appellate Court ‘shall resolve the . . . review on the record and the arguments submitted by the petitioner,’ ” the Court explained, “if the respondent fails to file a reply brief.” Id. (quoting SUPER. Ct. R. 322.l(i)(G)(ii)). Since the Court could not “proceed to address the merits” until a judgment was entered, id. at 2 n.1, the Court exercised its discretion to allow the People additional time to respond. The People did not respond.

On January 4, 2016, Dennie filed a motion asking the Court to decide his review on the record, notwithstanding that the Magistrate Court had not reduced its oral ruling to writing. Again, the People did not respond. Dennie’s motion was rendered moot once the Magistrate Court memorialized its decision in a written Judgment and Sentence dated March 20, 2017. The Clerk’s Office entered the Judgment the next day.

II. JURISDICTION AND STANDARD OF REVIEW

“The Magistrate Division of the Superior Court has exclusive jurisdiction over all traffic offenses, except felony traffic offenses.” [149]*1494 V.I.C. § 124(b). “All appeals from the Magistrate Division . . . must be filed in the Superior Court.” Id. § 125. The Appellate Division of the Superior Court was established to hear the appeals from the Magistrate Division. Dennie filed for review on March 7, 2014. However, his review was not deemed filed until March 21, 2017, the date when the Magistrate Court’s Judgment and Sentence was entered. See SUPER. Ct. R.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 V.I. 143, 2017 V.I. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dennie-v-people-visuper-2017.