State v. Jensen

417 P.2d 273, 197 Kan. 427, 1966 Kan. LEXIS 403
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 27, 1966
Docket44,265
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 417 P.2d 273 (State v. Jensen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Jensen, 417 P.2d 273, 197 Kan. 427, 1966 Kan. LEXIS 403 (kan 1966).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Fatzek, J.:

The defendant, Alfred L. Jensen, appeals from a conviction of manslaughter in the first degree on an information charging that he feloniously killed John B. McMurray by his cul[429]*429pable negligence, without a design to effect death, while engaged in the perpetration of the misdemeanor of driving his automobile on a public highway while under the influence of intoxicating liquor, under circumstances when such killing would be murder at the common law, in violation of K. S. A. 21-407. The principal question is whether the district court erred in overruling the defendant’s motion to quash the information and discharge the defendant, made at the close of the state’s case.

This story of a young soldier and intoxicating liquor and death on the highway is briefly told. During the course of the day of December 5, 1964, preceding the accident from whence this charge arose, the defendant consumed a quantity of intoxicating liquor in and near the city of Manhattan with various friends, after sleeping only about four hours the night before. Jensen had his last drink at the Centennial Bar in Manhattan and left the tavern shortly before midnight. After a brief stop at the home of a friend to go to the bathroom, he left Manhattan in his automobile, driving west on Highway K-18 toward the Fort Riley Military Reservation approximately ten miles west of Manhattan, where he was stationed. Highway K-18 is a four-lane concrete highway with shoulders adjacent to each outside lane. When Jensen reached the top of Stagg Hill some two or three miles west of Manhattan, he felt "real tired” and kept dozing off, but did not think he was so tired he could not drive; he would "half go to sleep” and then come to with a start and wake up, and he did not remember much of anything from Stagg Hill to the point of impact with McMurray’s highway patrol car some two miles farther west on the highway.

According to the testimony of an eyewitness, the defendant’s driving was erratic from Stagg Hill to the place of the accident; his automobile weaved back and forth across the center line of the two westbound traffic lanes at least three times and the witness testified that when the defendant passed him, he (the defendant) missed his car by only a few inches. The weaving continued to the point of impact. At one point, the defendant’s automobile almost crowded a Volkswagan off the highway. However, throughout his trip to the place of the accident, the defendant was driving approximately 35 to 40 miles per hour.

During that same night and early morning, two troopers of the Kansas Highway Patrol, John B. McMurray and Jay Locy, were in separate patrol cars operating a radar speed check on Highway K-18. Both vehicles were parked on the north shoulder of the [430]*430highway, facing west, with their lights off. Locy’s vehicle was the “radar” car and it was parked two or three hundred feet to the east of McMurray’s vehicle which was the “pick-up” car. The night was very cold and the highway was clear, although it had snowed a day or so prior to the accident.

Immediately prior to the accident, McMurray got out of his car and walked around back to put something in the trunk. About this time, the defendant’s car, astride the center line of the westbound traffic lanes, passed Locy’s vehicle and then veered in a northerly direction toward McMurray’s car, striking the decedent and the rear of his vehicle, pinning him between the defendant’s automobile and the patrol car. On December 9, 1964, McMurray died from the injuries received.

As to the state of intoxication of the defendant, the record discloses the following: By his own testimony, which is summarized in the state’s brief, the defendant consumed during the day preceding the accident about eight beers and four drinks of hard liquor. Witnesses appearing on his behalf testified that he was not intoxicated at the time he left the Centennial Bar and when he began his fateful trip. The physican who took a blood alcohol test, to which the defendant voluntarily submitted, testified that at a time shortly after the accident, the effects of alcohol on the defendant were “slight.” It further appears the defendant struck his face on the steering column at the time of the impact and did not know whether he was knocked momentarily unconscious, but he was disoriented and unsteady immediately thereafter. Jensen testified that he did not know what he had run into “because I never did see any cars parked alongside the road,” and that he got out of his car and did not “know what was happening around me, I didn’t know what I had run into.” These circumstances notwithstanding, witnesses for the state, a patrolman and an eyewitness, testified that in their opinion the behavior of the defendant immediately after the accident was attributed to his intoxication. It should be further noted that, although a blood alcohol test was taken and a laboratory report received by the state, the results thereof were not introduced at the trial by either the prosecution or the defense. Nevertheless, there was sufficient evidence to sustain the jury’s finding that, which inhered in its verdict of guilty, the defendant was engaged in the perpetration of the misdemeanor of driving his automobile while under the influence of intoxicating liquor at the time of the accident in violation of K. S. A. 8-530.

[431]*431The section of the statute (K. S. A. 21-407) under which the defendant was convicted reads:

“The killing of a human being without a design to effect death, by the act, procurement or culpable negligence of another, while such other is engaged in the perpetration or attempt to perpetrate any crime or misdemeanor, not amounting to a felony, in cases when such killing would be murder at the common law, shall be deemed manslaughter in the first degree.” (Emphasis supplied.)

The history of the article of the crimes act dealing with the various kinds of homicide was detailed in State v. Custer, 129 Kan. 381, 383, 282 Pac. 1071, 67 A. L. R. 909. The quoted section was originally enacted in 1855 (Laws 1855, Ch. 48) as a part of the crimes act and was taken bodily from the Missouri statute. It remained in force after Kansas was admitted to the Union and until 1868. In that year it became Section 12 of Chapter 31 of the General Statutes of Kansas and has never been amended.

At the common law all homicides fell into two classes, murder and manslaughter, and if a homicide was not within one of those classes, it was either justifiable or excusable and not considered criminal. In the preparation of the crimes act, the legislature intended to punish all homicides which were not justifiable or excusable, either under the statute or under the common law. All crimes were made statutory, and the legislature did not intend that any killing which would have constituted a criminal homicide under the common law should go unpunished. When the crimes act was adopted, the crime of common-law murder was made statutory and was divided into two categories, murder in the first degree (K. S. A. 21-401), which requires that there be present both premeditation and an intent to kill, and murder in the second degree (K. S. A. 21-402), which requires that there be present an intent to kill, but no premeditation. This division of common-law murder was not exhaustive, for it left out those homicides punishable where neither premeditation nor an intent to kill was required, but where there was required only an intent to do great bodily harm.

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Bluebook (online)
417 P.2d 273, 197 Kan. 427, 1966 Kan. LEXIS 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-jensen-kan-1966.