State v. Berchtold

357 P.2d 183, 11 Utah 2d 208, 1960 Utah LEXIS 242
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 21, 1960
Docket9265
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 357 P.2d 183 (State v. Berchtold) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Berchtold, 357 P.2d 183, 11 Utah 2d 208, 1960 Utah LEXIS 242 (Utah 1960).

Opinion

WADE, Justice.

Defendant, Joseph Berchtold, appeals from a conviction by a jury of negligent homicide, 1 an indictable misdemeanor. Defendant was charged with the death of Nora Jean Christiansen by driving his car in reckless disregard for her safety as his passenger.

*211 On April IS, 1959, defendant drove his 1959 two-door Chevrolet sedan with his friend, Joseph Van Forrest, from Brigham City, their home town, through Logan in Cache Valley north to Smithfield, then several miles west to Newton, and while doing so crossed the Bear River bridge. There they picked up Nora, Forrest’s girl friend, and started their return trip to Smithfield, where Nora had arranged a blind date for defendant. It was then about 8:30 and after dark. The return road runs generally in an easterly direction over the river bridge. The hard surface is from 22 to 23 feet wide with shoulders on the side, a borrow pit, then the boundary line fence. The bridge is only 17 feet wide with one-way traffic warning signs. About 200 feet east of the bridge the road makes a gradual curve to the northeast for 600 or 700 feet. Near the center of the curve a road takes off to the south. At the junction of these two roads one traffic lane turns east and another turns west with a three-pointed island in between them and the curve in the east-west road.

Defendant testified that at Nora’s suggestion, that they would have to hurry, he increased his speed. He did not look at the speedometer, but he testified that he was not driving fast, at most 45 to 55 miles per hour. His guests had their heads down low looking at a badge as they approached the bridge. There he brightened his lights to see which way the road went, and noticed the curve. As he turned with the curve he noticed he was in gravel and could feel the car skidding, but not too bad,, turned his wheel and possibly hit his brakes,, and it seemed like he “locked” the car sideways off the road. His lights turned around and suddenly flipped into the air and the car hit some trees and a power pole, and the next thing he remembered was that the car was stopped.

Defendant was alone in the car when it stopped. He found Nora lying on the side of the shoulder badly hurt and crying, and Forrest was unconscious near a tree. After trying to assist Nora he flagged some passing cars and soon an ambulance arrived and took Nora and Forrest to the hospital. Before the ambulance left four officers arrived who carefully inspected the road, the ground, the defendant’s wrecked car, took a statement from defendant and eventually sent him to the hospital. Two- of these officers were state highway patrolmen, and they made extensive measurements and carefully observed the condition and markings on the road and took extensive notes, thereof.

That evening and the next day defendant was questioned many times, and he made a written statement about the accident. The officers testified that defendant estimated his speed at 70 miles per hour, the written statement says 65 miles per hour, and defendant testified he was not exceeding 45 *212 to SS miles per hour and that he gave the 70 miles per hour as his top speed because they acted like he had been driving awfully fast.

A curve in the road commenced about 200 feet east of the bridge, about 630 feet east of the bridge the right wheels of defendant’s car left two parallel tire marks. Each mark was two inches wide and they were eight inches apart. The outside mark started 20 inches before the other and was four and one-half feet north of the south edge of the hard surface. It went 57 feet and 10 inches when it left the hard surface, and the inside tire mark went 77 feet, 6 inches to where it left the hard surface.

The radius of the curve of the inside mark, while it ran parallel with the outside tire mark for 55 feet, was 1,134 feet as compared with the radius of the curve of the road of 717 feet, which accounts for the car leaving the road. The State produced expert opinion from these facts that the car was traveling at a minimum of 110 miles per hour when it left the road. After the car left the road it went 80 feet partially sideways with the right side in front. The front wheels were partially on the shoulder and the .rear wheels in the borrow pit. There the right side of the car struck a clump of trees and 53 feet further the right side struck another clump of trees and lost the right door, and two feet further, sheared off a utility pole. At that point the car swung around so that the front end faced toward the south away from the road and continued 67 feet, still going partially sideways, and came to rest with the front end through the boundary line fence and the rear end in the borrow pit some 15 feet south of the edge of the hard surface. This was about 886 feet from the bridge, 260 feet from where the tire marks started and about 680 feet from the beginning of the curve.

The right side of the car was badly damaged, the right front tire was down. There was a deep perpendicular dent behind the front end of the front bumper, the -right door was pulled off and the body behind badly damaged. The right tail fin was mutilated and there was a deep perpendicular dent in the body where the right end of the rear bumper had been with the bumper bent back away from the body of the car.

Only three of defendant’s many contentions require consideration: (1) The court erroneously refused to instruct the jury as requested. (2) Inadmissible evidence was received. (3) The evidence is insufficient to support the verdict.

(1) We find no substantial difference between an instruction given and the requested instruction which the court refused. The ideas expressed in .the two instructions are the same. The proposed instruction emphasizes the difference between *213 ordinary negligence and reckless disregard more than the one given, but we find no prejudicial error was committed.

(2) Defendant contends that the expert testimony of Dr. Wood, a physicist from Utah State University, was erroneously received. He made measurements, took weights and made driving tests with defendant’s car after it had been repaired. There was a showing that with no repairs made to the engine, the car would travel more than 120 miles per hour. On these facts and the testimony of the investigating officers of the tire marks left on the hard surface before the outside marks left the road Dr. Wood, by using a formula, concluded that the minimum speed of the car when it made the marks was 110 miles per hour. As basis for his formula he used SS feet of inside tire mark which had a 1,134 foot radius to a curve to the left with tire marks only two inches wide made by a more than four inch wide tire, while the inside or the left side tire left no tire marks whatever.

The outside tire mark was traced to the rear right wheel, with the front wheel tire mark eight inches inside. Normally the front wheel tire mark would be outside of the rear wheel mark on a curve with a radius of 1,134 feet about one-half inch and would travel eight inches inside only if the curve radius was only 78 feet, and not 1,134 feet.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
357 P.2d 183, 11 Utah 2d 208, 1960 Utah LEXIS 242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-berchtold-utah-1960.