People v. Hoaglin

247 N.W. 141, 262 Mich. 162, 1933 Mich. LEXIS 847
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 2, 1933
DocketDocket Nos. 157, 158, Calendar Nos. 36,266, 36,267.
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 247 N.W. 141 (People v. Hoaglin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Hoaglin, 247 N.W. 141, 262 Mich. 162, 1933 Mich. LEXIS 847 (Mich. 1933).

Opinion

*165 Butzel, J.

Defendant Enretta Hoaglin was charged with being the driver of a car involved in an accident resulting in injury and death to Charles Kreger, and with knowingly and wilfully failing to render him reasonable assistance, including the carrying of the deceased to a physician or surgeon for medical and surgical treatment, it being apparent that such treatment was necessary. Defendant Sam Daleo was charged with procuring, aiding, abetting, etc., in the commission of the crime, as defined in 1 Comp. Laws 1929, § 1722.

Upon the evening of October 6, 1931, defendant Hoaglin, 21 years of age, and in the 11th grade of the Albion high school, met a friend, Weltha Gettys, who was anxious to visit an injured brother at the Gettys home some distance from Albion. Miss Gettys made the acquaintance of one Jim Thompson as he was seated in the car of defendant Sam Daleo, and the latter agreed to transport the girls to the Gettys home in the country. Shortly after they started for their destination, Euretta was permitted to drive the car, Daleo seating himself beside her, while Miss Gettys and Thompson occupied the rear seat. Euretta drove the car at a rate between 10 and 15 miles an hour. At a point on the Duck Lake road about five miles from Albion, the car struck Kreger, who was walking in a northerly direction near the center of the hard-surfaced road. The car was brought to a stop and Daleo and Thompson went back to where Kreger was lying. Euretta remained seated in the car, and Miss Gettys stood outside, near the rear door. There were no eyewitnesses to the accident except the defendants and their companions. They testified that they stopped for some time, Weltha stating that it was from five to six minutes, and Euretta claiming it was “for *166 ages. ’ ’ A farmer living nearby stated he heard the crash, and that about 10 minutes elapsed before he heard the car start up again.

Daleo testified that after he and Thompson examined Kreger’s body, as it lay in the highway, they carried it to the side of the road; that Thompson felt the injured man’s wrist and detected no pulse; and that Daleo bent down and put his ear close to the body, but found no signs of life. They concluded that Kreger was dead, and left him lying at the side of the road with his head turned towards the gravel. The car itself was damaged and showed that there had been a very severe impact. The glass in the headlights was broken, and large dents appeared in the radiator and mud guards.

A hasty consultation was held by the occupants of the car, with the result that they determined to leave the scene of the accident as rapidly as the car would take them. They drove to the G-ettys home and then to Eaton Rapids, where Daleo ’phoned his father for assistance, as they were having difficulty with the car. Daleo’s father and brother drove to Eaton Rapids and towed the car back to Albion. Daleo made an effort to hide the car until it was repaired, and the girls were cautioned to keep quiet about the entire affair. If asked about the damage to the car, they were to attribute it to a collision with a truck near Dimondale.

The following morning the body was found, and an investigation followed'-immediately. The coroner testified that the body showed very severe injuries, including a fracture of the occipital bone of the skull. Sufficient facts were discovered to reveal the participants in the accident. An officer went to the school Euretta attended and brought her to the police station, where she voluntarily made and *167 signed a statement giving her version of the accident. Thompson disappeared immediately after the accident, and Daleo testified that he did not know where he had gone. Thompson was an acquaintance of Daleo, and conversed with him in. the Italian language immediately after the accident.

Defendant Hoaglin was charged with the offense set forth in the information, which also charged Daleo with being the owner of the car and being then and there present at the time of the accident and having then and there procured, counseled, aided, and abetted defendant Hoaglin in the commission of the offense.

Numerous errors are claimed; many of them do not even merit discussion. The court properly admitted defendant Hoaglin’s signed statement, made the day following the accident. He instructed the jury that, before giving it any consideration, they should determine that it was voluntary and not tainted with fraud, deceit, compulsion, etc. Defendant makes no claim that it had been obtained by actual coercion or fraud. She contends, however, that she should have had the benefit of counsel or friends at her side when she made and signed the statement. Her claim is insufficient to show either fraud or coercion. The statement was properly admitted, its value to be determined by the jury. People v. Barker, 60 Mich. 277 (1 Am. St. Rep. 501); People v. Swetland, 77 Mich. 53, 60; People v. Biossat, 206 Mich. 334; People v. Johnson, 215 Mich. 221; People v. Treichel, 229 Mich. 303; People v. Greeson, 230 Mich. 124.

There was no abuse of discretion by the court in its refusal to continue the case over the term on the motion of defendants, citing their inability to subpoena Thompson as a witness. Nine days elapsed *168 after the motion was made before the trial began. The affidavit annexed to the motion did not show what efforts had been made to locate the witness or what he would swear to were he present. Court Rule No. 36 (1931) was not complied with. People v. Eamaus, 207 Mich. 442; People v. Burby, 218 Mich. 46; People v. Fillian, 243 Mich. 28. The correctness of the court’s decision is further shown by Daleo’s own testimony that Thompson disappeared immediately after the accident and that hé did not know what had become of him. The court also properly denied a continuance based on defendant’s claim that unfavorable publicity necessitated a delay until public excitement had died down. No proof was offered by defendant to substantiate this claim.

The judge charged the jury that it would be necessary to convict defendant Hoaglin in order to find defendant Daleo guilty. Inasmuch as 1 Comp. Laws 1929, § 4722, applies to drivers only, the instruction was correct, as Miss Hoaglin was the only possible principal, and Daleo was charged with aiding and abetting. State v. McFarland, 158 Wash. 652 (291 Pac. 719). There is ample testimony to show that Daleo not only aided and abetted in everything that was done, but also that he took an active part in directing the actions of the parties after the accident.

It is further claimed that defendants were not guilty of any offense because they could not render reasonable assistance to Kreger, who was dead, and it would have been futile to take him to a physician or surgeon for medical and surgical treatment, inasmuch as it was apparent that such treatment was unnecessary.

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Bluebook (online)
247 N.W. 141, 262 Mich. 162, 1933 Mich. LEXIS 847, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hoaglin-mich-1933.