People v. De Casaus

309 P.2d 835, 150 Cal. App. 2d 274, 1957 Cal. App. LEXIS 2160
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 18, 1957
DocketCrim. 5665
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 309 P.2d 835 (People v. De Casaus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. De Casaus, 309 P.2d 835, 150 Cal. App. 2d 274, 1957 Cal. App. LEXIS 2160 (Cal. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

MOORE, P. J.

Appellant was convicted under six counts of involuntary manslaughter. Dissatisfied with the verdict and the sentence, he seeks a reversal of the judgment on the grounds of insufficiency of the evidence, errors in refusing instructions, errors in rulings at the trial and excess of penalty.

Evidence Sufficient

Driving a two-toned 1955 automobile, appellant left his office on North Main Street, Los Angeles, at 8:25 p. m. on September 26, 1955, headed for Imperial Valley. After 8 ¡30, just east of Soto Street on the San Bernardino Freeway going eastward, he cut in front of the witness Jeffrey who was going at 55 miles per hour in the center lane. Having passed a car in the third or inner lane, appellant returned to it and his left front wheel brushed against the center divider. Proceeding rapidly, he swerved into the center lane again to circumvent another ear and when he returned to the third lane he brushed the center divider again. Appellant passed the witness Crook while moving at about 85 miles per hour in the center lane, and passed out of sight, but as Mr. Crook rounded the curve he saw something go over the center divider in much dust and smoke, out of which came a car whose driver fell out dead while still in the westbound side of the boulevard. Mrs. *276 Hallstrom parked on the apron when she observed appellant’s car overtaking her, speeding and swerving. She saw him twice sideswipe a station wagon, and on the second swipe saw him take it “across the divider,” filling the air with smoke, sparks, dust and debris. The station wagon was driven by one Robert Golden. He, his wife and three children were killed.

David Hearn, returning to Los Angeles from Phoenix, entered the freeway at Rosemead. His car was one of the four in the accident. He suffered a broken wrist, injured knee, contusions and bruises. His wife received a broken ankle, a severed tendon, a concussion and cuts on the face; their daughter’s arm was broken, her face and arms cut; their 5-year-old son received a broken arm.

Appellant’s machine came to a standstill 4 feet from the curb on the westbound lane. When the witness Jeffrey arrived, he approached appellant and called to him to stop, as the latter walked away saying he was going to see his brother. He could not explain the blood on his face but merely said: “I don't know how this happened. They stopped suddenly and I had to drive over the divider.” Mr. Jeffrey returned appellant to the officers.

William L. Spackler, age 24, had been driving on the freeway toward Los Angeles when his ivory-colored sedan apparently collided with the Golden car from across the center divider. His body was seen by the witness Crook when it fell from his car. He had died from a 2-inch wound in the neck which severed the jugular vein and carotid artery; a hemorrhage due to rupture of the spleen and liver; also he suffered fractures of the thigh bone and both collar bones, an evulsion of the left ear, five broken ribs, a collapsed lung, a pint of blood in pleural and peritoneal cavities. Near Spackler was the Golden family, except the body of Mrs. Golden which lay on the floor of her station wagon.

Officers Sillings and Miller perceived the accident at 8 -.47 p. m.; parked their patrol car; saw defendant with Jeffrey; looked at the horrible results of the accident; radioed for patrol units and ambulances. When they returned to the spot where they had left appellant, he had departed. He was walking up the shoulder of the eastbound lane, 25 feet away from the paved highway. Officer Miller ordered him to occupy the rear seat in the patrol car. Appellant produced his driver’s licenses of California and New Mexico. The odor of alcohol was prevalent. Sillings was of the opinion that *277 appellant was under the influence of alcohol. He had no brother in that vicinity.

The officers scanned the premises in search of evidence of reckless driving. Officer Agatha found a single skid mark from one wheel, 141 feet long in the third lane going west. It veered slightly to the left. The highway divider, he found, is a raised barrier 6 inches high and 10 feet wide dividing the freeway. Appellant told Agatha he was involved in the accident and pointed to his own machine across the freeway and said he was not sure what caused the accident ; that he had had a couple of drinks at his office prior to leaving.

The proof was that it was not raining; the streets were dry; the weather clear, visibility good. Officer Agatha testified that there were lights enough to illuminate the roadway “so everything can be seen clearly”; that the right rear wheel of Golden’s station wagon was flat and there was expert proof that the break of the tire resulted from external force.

After the officers observed the strong odor of alcohol, they asked appellant to take the sobriety test. He willingly complied, but his responses were unsatisfactory. He pointed out to them his own car and stated that he was on his way to Albuquerque. When asked whether he knew that his automobile was in the westbound side of the freeway, appellant did not know. He said he had left his office; entered the freeway, headed east; followed a group of cars; somebody hit him in the rear; he could not stop but swung to the left.

Officers Winkelman and Weimer visited with appellant and took him to the Angelus Emergency Hospital. He was moving his neck around and rubbing it. He told them he had had two Scotch and Sodas in a bar on Main Street near his office in Los Angeles. They advised him that in view of a definite alcoholic odor on his breath, it might be to his advantage to have a blood alcohol test to determine his blood’s alcoholic content. By reason of the overcrowded condition at the Angelus, they took appellant to the Beverly Hospital. As they drove along; appellant repeated his statement about having imbibed two Scotch and Sodas at a bar on Main Street and remarked that they were at that time two blocks from the bar and would pass it. Officer Winkelman testified that as he spoke they were 7 miles from Main Street, Los Angeles.

*278 At the Beverly Hospital, Dr. Goff removed blood from appellant’s arm at 11:30 p. m. It was analyzed by DeLoss R. Paul, a biochemist, for the presence of ethanol. It contained 0.180 of one per cent ethyl alcohol by weight volume. Mr. Paul testified that when a person’s blood contains above 0.150 per cent alcohol, he is under its influence and could not “operate an automobile as an ordinarily prudent and cautious person.” In cross-examination, he said, by the “time anyone has a definite concentration in the blood, all people will react the same.”

In August 1955 appellant’s reflexes had been normal. On October 25, 1955, one month after the accident, he was treated for back strain and numerous contusions.

Appellant denied practically all the substantial testimony offered by the People; testified that after he had driven onto the freeway, he stayed in the center lane; traveled around 50 or 55 miles per hour; did not drive next to the divider, was in the center lane, the car to his left as he went into the turn turned abruptly in front of appellant, he slammed on his brakes; was hit in the rear and propelled backward.

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Bluebook (online)
309 P.2d 835, 150 Cal. App. 2d 274, 1957 Cal. App. LEXIS 2160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-de-casaus-calctapp-1957.