State v. Jones

108 A.2d 261, 150 Me. 242, 1954 Me. LEXIS 43
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedOctober 13, 1954
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 108 A.2d 261 (State v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Jones, 108 A.2d 261, 150 Me. 242, 1954 Me. LEXIS 43 (Me. 1954).

Opinion

Tirrell, J.

This case is before us on respondent’s exceptions to the failure of the presiding justice at nisi prius to direct a verdict for the defendant for the reason that the State had not established a corpus delicti. The facts as we understand them from a reading of the transcript of testimony are as follows:

The testimony disclosed that on February 2, 1954, at the intersection of Broadway and Masonic Streets, in the City of Rockland, at approximately 5:50 p.m. a motor vehicle was observed off the road with its front end against a tree. A witness testified that he came upon the situation at the above stated time, and as he approached the scene he .observed two cars stopped, one of them being the motor vehicle which has been described as being off the road against a tree. The second motor vehicle was apparently on the road, and before he could reach the scene where this was taking place, the second motor vehicle drove off. The witness testified that when he did reach the scene, after he had been there a moment or two, an individual whom he identified as the respondent, came to the right-hand door of the witness’s car and said something about wishing to be pushed out of the spot he was in so that he could get out into the road. There was other testimony from a police officer, Maurice H. Benner, who testified that in response to a contact made by the witness Perry, he went to the scene of the accident, arriving there at approximately six o’clock, where he found the motor vehicle off the road at the intersection of Broadway and Masonic Streets against a tree. When the officer arrived there was no one at the scene of the accident, and shortly after the officer arrived he testified *244 that he saw a man, later identified as the respondent, coming up the street approximately fifty (50) feet away.

There was no issue raised as to the question of the condition of the respondentias there was sufficient evidence upon which the jury was justified in finding that the respondent was under the influence of intoxicating liquor. The main issue relied upon by the respondent was whether or not he, the respondent, had been operating the car at any time prior to its leaving the road. A further issue was raised as to whether or not extra-judicial admissions made by the respondent, after he appeared on the scene, were properly admitted into evidence for the purpose of proving operation. There is further issue as to the failure of the presiding justice to rule upon a motion for a directed verdict made by the respondent at the close of the State’s case and the granting to the State the right to re-open and introduce additional evidence after the respondent had rested and made his motion. We do not deem it necessary in this particular case to rule upon the issue as to whether or not the presiding justice erred in permitting the State to introduce further evidence after having refused to direct a verdict on motion of the respondent at the time the State first closed its case.

The respondent was charged by virtue of a complaint and warrant issued by the Rockland Municipal Court charging the respondent with illegal operation of an automobile on February 2,1954. The alleged crime as set forth in the complaint is the operation of an automobile on that date, to wit: February 2, 1954, while he, the respondent, was then and there under the influence of intoxicating liquor.

On reading the testimony it appears that the main exception of the respondent is the failure of the presiding justice to direct a verdict in favor of the respondent. The respondent’s first exception relates to the admission óf certain statements alleged to have been made by the respondent in the *245 nature of extra-judicial, admissions or confessions. The respondent objected to their admission on the ground that no proof of corpus delicti had been established by the State up to that time by evidence independent of the respondent’s statements sufficient to create a reasonable probability that a crime had been committed so as to warrant the admission of the respondent’s statements as corroboration of the corpus delicti. This court has ruled very recently on the law relating to this problem and the position of our law is now fairly well established. State v. Robert Levesque, 146 Me. 351. In that case, which was the first in many years, the court reviewed the authorities on the question of when the admission of a respondent became proper evidence in proof of the commission of the crime, and concluded that:

“It is necessary to establish by some proof, independent of extra-judicial statements or confessions, that some portion of the building was burned or ignited in the slightest degree in order to sustain the burden of proof that a respondent is guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.”

The court also indicated that before these admissions were admissible there must be some independent evidence of corpus delicti but did not further indicate the volume or quality of evidence necessary to constitute some evidence. The court clearly indicated that there was no variance upon the issue that the corpus delicti cannot be established by the extra-judicial confession of respondent unsupported by other evidence.

In January 1952 this court undertook to apply the rule in the Levesque case and further evaluate the nature of what constitutes some evidence of a corpus delicti. State v. Hoffses, 147 Me. 221. In the Hoffses case, as in the case at bar, the admissions of the respondent were introduced for the purpose of proving operation of the motor vehicle by the respondent. The first element that the crime of operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating *246 liquor was the issue for determination on the basis of whether there was some independent proof of this essential element. There the court found that the testimony disclosed such evidence although not to the degree of proof beyond a ■reasonable doubt of the corpus delicti, but sufficient to prove that the crime was real and not imaginary. We know the Hoffses case established a measure of some evidence as held in the Levesque case to be such credible evidence as standing alone to create a really substantial belief that a crime had actually been committed.

We adopt the Hoffses case as a substantial finding relative to what constitutes sufficient evidence to warrant the introduction of admissions in a driving-under-the-influence case. It is interesting to consider the elements which were established in the Hoffses case with the elements established in the case at bar. The cases are not similar. In the Hoffses case the overturning of the motor vehicle was observed by a witness looking out-of the window of a house nearby and that witness went to the scene promptly, and when he reached the scene the respondent was standing in front of the truck and within a few feet of it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 A.2d 261, 150 Me. 242, 1954 Me. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-jones-me-1954.