State v. Ingle

392 P.2d 442, 64 Wash. 2d 491, 1964 Wash. LEXIS 360
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMay 21, 1964
Docket36806
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 392 P.2d 442 (State v. Ingle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington 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. Ingle, 392 P.2d 442, 64 Wash. 2d 491, 1964 Wash. LEXIS 360 (Wash. 1964).

Opinion

Ott, C. J.

May 15, 1962, at approximately 10 a.m., Mary Louise Ingle went to Trudy’s Tavern in King County, where she met her friend Kay Guis, and engaged in drinking beer until noon. Thereafter, they drove to the Derby Tavern and resumed drinking beer. Shortly after noon, they were joined at the bar by Forrest L. Vertz and Herbert Tubb, whom they had met at Trudy’s Tavern that morning. The four drank beer together until approximately 4 p.m., when Mrs. Ingle and Forrest Vertz left the tavern, with a six-pack of beer, and drove away in Mr. Vertz’ green Chevrolet pickup truck.

At approximately 4:30 p.m., Larry Druxman noticed that the green Chevrolet pickup truck was being driven in a weaving manner from one side of the road to the other, as he followed behind it in his Volkswagen. When he attempted to pass, he noticed that a woman was driving, whom he later identified to be Mary Louise Ingle. She accelerated the truck and swerved onto the right-hand shoulder of the highway, striking and instantly killing Michael J. Cummings, and Wade C. Mussulman, who were walking on the shoulder of the road.

Mr. Druxman followed the truck and wrote down the license number. He thereafter lost sight of the vehicle when it turned off the main highway.

Miss Leola Heath, who was driving her automobile several car lengths behind the death truck, saw it strike the guard rail at a high rate of speed, bound away from the rail, and proceed down the highway. She stopped her automobile beside the bodies of the dead youths.

Shortly after the killing, Mrs. Marian Platt and Donald L. Ross noticed the weaving manner in which the green Chevrolet truck was being driven, as it approached them from the opposite direction, and that a woman was driving. *493 Mrs. Millie Neisinger also observed the erratic driving, and identified Mrs. Ingle as the driver of the truck.

Approximately 4% miles from the scene of the accident, Thomas Bunnell, an attendent at the Davis Mobil Service Station, saw Mrs. Ingle drive onto the service station grounds and, as he approached the passenger side of the truck, the man passenger said: “ ‘Call the cops, we just hit two kids up on the highway.’ ” Mr. Bunnell called as requested. He testified that both Mrs. Ingle and the passenger were intoxicated; that the radiator of the truck had been damaged, and that the right front fender was bent back so that the passenger could not open the door.

Mrs. Ingle and Mr. Vertz were arrested and taken to a State Patrol station. Mrs. Ingle’s Breathalyzer test recorded .15 plus “percent of blood alcohol by weight.”

Mary Louise Ingle was charged in two counts with the crime of negligent homicide, committed while operating a motor vehicle in a reckless manner and under the influence of or affected by the use of intoxicating liquor, (1) for the killing of Michael J. Cummings, aged 16, and (2) for the killing of Wade C. Mussulman, aged 16. She was charged in count 3 with failing to stop and render assistance, and in count 4 with operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated.

Forrest L. Vertz was charged with aiding and abetting Mary Louise Ingle in the commission of the offenses charged.

At the trial of Mrs. Ingle (the defendants' were tried separately), the state’s evidence was substantially as above outlined. In his opening statement to the jury, her attorney said: “ . . . our defense is that Mary Louise Ingle was not driving that car at the time of the accident.”

Although two defense witnesses testified that Mr. Vertz was driving the truck as they left the Derby Tavern, the defense offered no evidence relative to the person who was driving the truck at the time of the killing. The scene of the killing was some four tenths of a mile from the tavern. Mrs. Ingle testified, but she did not refute the testimony of Larry Druxman or that of any other witness for the state who identified her as the driver of the death truck.

*494 From the judgment and sentence entered upon the verdict of guilty, Mrs. Ingle has appealed.

Milton G. Heiman, her trial counsel, died subsequent to the trial of the cause, and the appeal has been perfected by her present attorney.

Appellant asserts that she was prejudicially limited by the trial court in the cross-examination of several witnesses. In this regard, the record discloses that the rulings of the trial court were predicated upon a series of repetitive questions propounded by the then counsel for appellant, and by misstatements of the evidence upon which inquiry was being made.

Limitation of the scope of cross-examination of witnesses in the orderly trial of criminal cases is within the discretion of the trial court. Its determination in this regard will not be disturbed, in the absence of a showing of a manifest abuse of discretion. State v. Robinson, 61 Wn. (2d) 107, 109, 377 P. (2d) 248 (1962), and cases cited.

At the trial, counsel for appellant made no offer of proof relative to any matters he expected to establish by further cross-examination; nor did he indicate in what manner his client’s cause was prejudiced by the alleged limitation.

This assignment of error is without merit.

Appellant contends that the trial court, in its rulings on objections, and in colloquies with counsel, did “impair the influence and destroy the usefulness of counsel so as to infringe appellant’s right to due process of law.”

After the jury had been selected, the court, in its general instructions, said in part:

“Now, I don’t think I told all of you, but it will bear repeating, the case is really divided into two areas; one, are questions of fact, and others are questions of law. On the questions of fact, you gentlemen are the sole determiners. I have nothing to do with questions of fact. That is entirely up to you.

“If at any time I indicate in any way, one way or the other, on a question of fact, you are to disregard totally *495 anything I say. I have nothing to do with it. That is your sphere. . . .

“From time to time I anticipate, and it generally occurs, there may be colloquy between counsel and the Court, and sometimes between counsel and counsel. If there is, somebody is going to be hurt, but that colloquy you are to disregard. That is colloquy between the three of us, or two of us, and has nothing to do with the facts or the evidence or the law. That is between us and you are to disregard it. I know you will hear it, but that is not part of the evidence.”

One instance of alleged misconduct relied upon by appellant occurred as follows: Miss Leola Heath, an airplane stewardess, testified that she witnessed the accident on the day in question, and that she tried to follow the green truck. In this regard, she said:

“Q. (By Mr. Hoff) Just tell us, if you would, Miss Heath, what you saw. A. Well, I saw a pickup truck drive off the highway, hit the railing, follow the railing for some distance, and then back onto the highway, and then departed at a high rate of speed. Q. Did you see this pickup strike anything other than the railing? A. No. Q. Which way were you traveling with relation to the pickup? Were you going the same way, or the other way? A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
392 P.2d 442, 64 Wash. 2d 491, 1964 Wash. LEXIS 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-ingle-wash-1964.