State v. Carter

451 S.W.2d 340, 1970 Mo. LEXIS 1052
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 9, 1970
Docket53874
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 451 S.W.2d 340 (State v. Carter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Carter, 451 S.W.2d 340, 1970 Mo. LEXIS 1052 (Mo. 1970).

Opinion

HIGGINS, Commissioner,

Robert Eugene Carter was convicted by a jury of manslaughter by culpable negligence and his punishment was assessed at imprisonment for one year in the county jail and a fine of $1,500. Pursuant to that verdict and as directed by law, the court sentenced and adjudged Robert Eugene Carter to imprisonment in the county jail for one year and to pay a fine of $1,000. §§ 559.070 and 559.140, V.A.M.S.; Criminal Rules 27.03 and 27.06, V.A.M.R.

On June 25, 1967, Jackie Lee Rhoades, age 24, with his wife and son, drove to the home of his father, Harry Rhoades, for Sunday dinner. The Harry Rhoades home was on Route J, an east-west blacktop road leading west from Highway 63 north of Macon in Macon County, Missouri. The younger Rhoades family started to its home northeast of Macon at approximately 2:45 p. m. Jackie Rhoades was driving eastwardly on Route J at a speed of 40 to 50 miles per hour. He was proceeding in his proper lane of traffic up a “real steep” grade over which the eastbound driver could not see. “Right at the top of the hill” he collided with a westbound automobile traveling in the eastbound side of the road. According to Mrs. Jackie Rhoades, her husband’s health was “all right” immediately prior to the collision.

Marvin J. Richardson was a witness to the collision. He was out “Sunday driving” with his family and, prior to the collision, was driving westerly on Route J at a speed of 40 to 50 miles per hour. He characterized the hill-crest scene for an eastbound motorist as “a long slope — swag with a hillcrest then you drop down into the river bottom.” The crest is “Pretty steep, * * * There’s a swag there, and you can’t see over that hill.” Mr. Richardson first saw defendant’s 1959 Ford, also traveling westerly on Route J, 250 to 350 feet to his rear. He had just noticed the Rhoades car descending a hill west of the hill he was approaching. He next noticed defendant when defendant started to pass him about 150 feet east of the hill crest. At that point he could not see over the hill crest. Mr. Richardson anticipated a collision between defendant and the thus hidden Rhoades automobile and “took to the ditch” on the north side of the road just east of the crest. Defendant was completely in the eastbound (wrong) lane as he passed and, an instant before collision, the Rhoades automobile came over the crest in its eastbound (correct) lane. He went immediately to the Rhoades automobile and noted Mr. Rhoades slumped over the steering wheel. He thought he was dead; he was not breathing and he said nothing. He talked with defendant at the scene and he smelled “kind of like a ‘walking bar,’ ” and when he opened the door he “smelled the bar. * * * I saw a cold can of beer, some ice, and a busted cooler, and some coke.”

Lester Hutton, operator of a funeral home and ambulance service, and former coroner of Macon County for ten years, went to the scene. He had also received specialized training in handling bodies, in injuries and anatomy. He noted Mr. *343 Rhoades on the driver’s side of his automobile “with the major part of his body slumped to the right.” He was dead. He later examined Mr. Rhoades’s body at the funeral home in company with the Macon County coroner, Dr. Miller, deceased at time of trial. “We found that his chest was crushed, and multiple contusions over the trunk, and the head. * * * crushed chest, * * * ribs could be felt — that there was a break in the ribs by your fingers by merely just feeling of the chest, and fractured skull, which again could be felt. * * * One of the vertebra in the neck was crushed, again, you could feel it with your fingers.” In his opinion, the crushed chest or the fractured skull, “probably the fractured skull,” caused the death and it resulted from the collision in which he first observed the body.

Trooper Allen Fitzgerald of the Missouri State Highway Patrol investigated the collision. He arrived at the scene at about 3:30 p. m. He found the Rhoades 1964 Chevrolet headed east wholly in the eastbound lane and sitting “right in the skidmarks” running 63 feet back from the automobile. The skid marks from defendant’s westbound automobile were also in the eastbound lane. “The point of collision was right on the crest of the hill * * * in the eastbound” lane. The usual debris, oil, water, antifreeze, etc., from a collision were present. The trooper examined the scene and stated that a westbound motorist “cannot see a car approaching as it comes up the far side of the hill.” There is a blind spot for the westbound motorist which extends from 1800 feet east of the hill. He also noticed the cold beer, ice, and broken cooler in defendant’s car.

Richard Burnett, an evidence technician with the patrol, at the request of Trooper Fitzgerald, took photographs of the vehicles and the scene. They showed Route J at the collision scene as a rural blacktop road with its center denoted by a broken white line painted on the surface. They also showed that east and westbound automobiles would be hidden from each other as they approached the crest of the hill. Pictures of the vehicles showed each to have sustained violent damage to the left corner and the front.

Appellant’s first point is that this evidence is not sufficient to sustain conviction “in that there was no evidence of culpable negligence and * * * there was no competent evidence of the death of Jackie Lee Rhoades.”

The argument with respect to alleged insufficiency of evidence of culpable negligence is that driving while drinking is not in and of itself culpable negligence, and that “the same could be said of passing at a blind spot on an unmarked road.” The difficulty with appellant’s argument is that it overlooks the thrust of all the evidence available in support of the verdict.

From the evidence, a jury could properly infer that defendant had been drinking; that he was driving too fast for existing conditions and passed the Richardson car on the upward slope of a hill over which he could not see; that while thus on the wrong side of the road, he collided with an automobile approaching from over a blind hill on its proper side of the road; that the center of the road was marked by a white line; and that defendant’s failure to stay on his proper side of the road under these circumstances was wanton, culpably negligent conduct which caused the collision. State v. Mayabb, Mo., 316 S.W.2d 609, 612-613[7,8]; State v. Duncan, Mo., 316 S.W.2d 613, 616-617[4]; State v. Simler, 350 Mo. 646, 167 S.W.2d 376, 383[11]. See also State v. Burchett, Mo., 302 S.W. 2d 9, a submissible case of manslaughter by culpable negligence where defendant passed on a hill in a no-passing zone; State v. Pennick, Mo., 364 S.W.2d 556, a submissi-ble case on defendant’s driving at 70-75 miles per hour across the center line on a viaduct; State v. Morris, Mo., 307 S.W.2d 667, a submissible case on high speed on a “curvy” road; and, from other jurisdictions, note that one who enters the wrong side of the road on an incline so steep he *344 cannot see over is guilty of negligence sufficient to support a conviction of manslaughter, State v. Rice, 58 N.M. 205,

Related

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793 S.W.2d 420 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1990)
State v. Storey
387 S.E.2d 563 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1989)
State v. Bradley
670 S.W.2d 123 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1984)
State v. Harris
670 S.W.2d 73 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1984)
State v. Bextermueller
643 S.W.2d 292 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1982)
State v. Brown
637 S.W.2d 395 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1982)
State v. Nevills
530 S.W.2d 52 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1975)
State v. Ross
507 S.W.2d 348 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1974)
State v. Kays
492 S.W.2d 752 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1973)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
451 S.W.2d 340, 1970 Mo. LEXIS 1052, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-carter-mo-1970.