State v. Gilboy

857 S.W.2d 884, 1993 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 264
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 21, 1993
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 857 S.W.2d 884 (State v. Gilboy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Gilboy, 857 S.W.2d 884, 1993 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 264 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

OPINION

WHITE, Judge.

This is a direct appeal from the Haywood County Criminal Court pursuant to Rule 3, Tennessee Rules of Appellate Procedure. The appellant, John Gilboy, was acquitted *886 of three counts of vehicular homicide, but convicted of three counts of the lesser included offense of reckless driving. He contests the court’s denial of his motion for judgment of acquittal on two counts of reckless driving. He further challenges the denial of probation and the sentence imposed by the court. We agree with the appellant that the evidence in this case cannot sustain convictions for three separate offenses of reckless driving. Therefore, we reverse the convictions on two of those offenses. Accordingly, we modify the sentence imposed and remand for correction of the judgment.

John Gilboy, a tractor trailer driver from New Jersey, was driving a tanker filled with combustible materials en route to Haywood Chemical Company, Brownsville, Tennessee, on June 19, 1990. At the intersection of a CSX railroad track and Dupree Street in Brownsville, Gilboy collided with a train. A tremendous explosion occurred and three railroad conductors aboard the train died of respiratory arrest due to smoke inhalation and lack of oxygen.

On September 4, 1990, the Haywood County Grand Jury returned two indictments against Gilboy. The first, indictment 1683, charged Gilboy with (1) failing to stop at a railroad crossing in violation of Tennessee Code Annotated Section 55-8-147; (2) possessing an intoxicating beverage while driving or operating a commercial vehicle in violation of federal regulations; (3) failing to stop at a railroad grade crossing when a signal is warning of a train approaching in violation of Tennessee Code Annotated Section 55-8-145; and, (4) possessing more than one driver license while operating a commercial vehicle in violation of Tennessee Code Annotated Section 55-50-401. All four counts were alleged to have occurred on the same day in June, 1990, arising out of the same conduct. The second indictment, 1684, also charged four separate counts occurring on the same day and arising out of the same conduct. Three of those counts alleged vehicular homicide in violation of Tennessee Code Annotated Section 39-13-209. The fourth alleged reckless driving, a violation of Tennessee Code Annotated Section 55-10-205. Before trial, the court consolidated counts one and three of indictment 1683 with indictment 1684 for trial. The remaining counts of indictment 1683, two and four, were severed for separate trial. Thus, the state proceeded to trial against Gilboy on six separate charges. 1

After a very thorough and well-tried trial, 2 at which nineteen witnesses, including Gilboy, testified, the court remanded count one of indictment 1683 to the General Sessions Court. Thereafter, the court charged the jury as to the offenses and included the substantive law of vehicular homicide, and of criminally negligent homicide and reckless driving as lesser included offenses. 3 The jury deliberated and announced the verdicts to the court as follows:

Foreman: With regard to Indictment 1683?
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We find the defendant guilty.
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Of Count Three....
On Indictment 1684 ... we, the jury, find him not guilty.
The Court: All right. With regard to all three counts of vehicular homicide — is that correct?
Foreman: Then we — then on number two—
The Court: All right, the lesser includ-ed_ The criminal negligent homicide, the lesser included offense?
Foreman: We find him not guilty....
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But on the reckless driving—
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*887 we find him guilty.
The Court: In all three counts — is that correct?
Foreman: Yes.

The court then restated and the jury confirmed the verdicts. At a separate sentencing hearing, the court imposed the Five Hundred Dollar fine set by the jury and the maximum six month sentence on each count of reckless driving and a fifty dollar fine and the maximum thirty day sentence on the failure to stop count. He ordered the sentences served concurrently. In addition to his attack on the three separate reckless driving convictions, Gilboy challenges the denial of probation.

I. The Convictions

Reckless driving in Tennessee is driving a vehicle in “willful or wanton disregard for the safety of persons or property.” Tenn.Code Ann. § 55-10-205(a) (1988 Repl.). The statute’s purpose is to punish the act of driving when that driving disregards the safety of persons or property. Thus, an act of driving which disregards the safety of several distinct persons or properties still constitutes one offense of reckless driving under our statute.

It is clear from the evidence and the indictment that the state sought to punish .Gilboy for one identifiable act, the act of driving his truck into the path of an oncoming train. Yet on the record before us, he stands convicted of three separate offenses, all for the same single act. The double jeopardy clause of the state and federal constitutions will not allow such a result. U.S. Const, amend. V, Tenn. Const, art. 1, § 10.

The double jeopardy clause prohibits multiple convictions or prosecutions for identical offenses. Before multiple convictions can stand, it must be clear that the offenses supporting the convictions are “wholly separate and distinct.” State v. Goins, 705 S.W.2d 648, 650 (Tenn.1986).

For several years Tennessee courts held that only one homicide conviction could be sustained when deaths result from one automobile accident. The rationale behind those rulings was initially a result of the form of criminal pleading, Kannon v. State, 78 Tenn. 386 (1882); Womack v. State, 47 Tenn. 508 (1870), but eventually was based on the fiction of a single criminal intent. Smith v. State, 159 Tenn. 674, 21 S.W.2d 400 (1929). The Smith single-transaction, single-intent theory was discarded by our Supreme Court in State v. Irvin. There the court held that the proper focus was on the elements of the given offense rather than on the “fictional ‘intent’ of the accused.” State v. Irvin, 603 S.W.2d 121, 123 (Tenn.1980).

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Bluebook (online)
857 S.W.2d 884, 1993 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gilboy-tenncrimapp-1993.