State v. Lyon

230 N.W. 1, 59 N.D. 374, 1930 N.D. LEXIS 152
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 31, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 230 N.W. 1 (State v. Lyon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota 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. Lyon, 230 N.W. 1, 59 N.D. 374, 1930 N.D. LEXIS 152 (N.D. 1930).

Opinion

*376 Bube, J.

Tbe defendant was convicted of reckless driving. A motion for new trial was denied, and be appeals from tbe judgment and from tbe order denying a new trial.

Tbe defendant says tbe evidence is insufficient to justify tbe verdict.

Tbe record shows tbe defendant was an independent salesman, taking orders for Chevrolet cars handled by tbe Reuter Motor Company, of Garrison, North Dakota. On June 2, 1929, K., with bis wife and children, and with M., with bis wife and children, was in an Oldsmobile car, that bad bub caps painted red. About 9 p. m. be was driving north on highway # 6. Six or seven miles 'south of Minot, be overtook and passed a Ford car, and a Chevrolet coach, which “was barely coaching' along.” It was a new car, carried no license plate, and the spare bad a cover on which there was some printing. M. said the inscription was “Renter Motor Company, Garrison, North Dakota.” The Ford passed the Chevrolet, and then the driver of the Chevrolet speeded up and overtook the Ford and K. The latter started crowding over to “his own side of the road.” The driver of the Chevrolet sounded no horn, and in passing E?s car struck it on the left front wheel and fender driving the Oldsmobile across the road into the ditch, against a telephone pole, and speeded on. The Oldsmobile was wrecked. Some of its passengers were rendered unconscious and seriously injured. K. did not notice how many were in the Chevrolet. The driver of the Ford car came up, and took some of the injured into Minot. In Minot a search was made for a Chevrolet car corresponding to the one involved. About 2 a. m. they found on the streets of Minot a Chevrolet car practically new, with no license plate, with a right rear fender “smashed clean back like he had hooked something,” with streaks of red paint — not fresh paint— smeared on the right rear wheel and carrying a spare with a cover on which was printed “Reuter Motor Company, Garrison, North Dakota.” This Chevrolet car was removed to a garage and next morning was claimed by the defendant, who came to the police station in search of his car.

One Slocum, the driver of the Ford car, testified: That this Chevrolet was the only car from Garrison ahead of him that he saw; that it was quite dark and he saw it when his lights struck it; that it was a new car, with no license plate; there was a cover on the spare tire, with the inscription — “Reuter Motor Company of Garrison, North Dakota;” the *377 Chevrolet passed bim on highway No. 6 south of Minot, and “it turned sharp in in front” of him so as to crowd him out so he “steered kind of into the ditch and got away;” that it then slowed down to about ten miles an hour; he then passed the Chevrolet, and the Chevrolet again passed him and slowed down, repeating the same tactics; apparently trying to hold him back; he saw two in the front seat of this car and if there were any in the back seat they were not sitting up; when the Chevrolet came up to the Oldsmobile car the latter “pulled over to the right side of the road, and the Chevrolet speeded up and come right around it and when they got about even they turned right around — to the front — he cut right in front of the Oldsmobile;” he saw the Chevrolet strike the Oldsmobile and drive it into the ditch and speed on; he stopped and took some of the occupants of the Oldsmobile to Minot; nest morning he saw the same Chevrolet in the Citizens' Garage in Minot (the car claimed by the defendant) ; he examined it and found the right rear fender bent and the hub cap damaged and with red paint on it which was not put on by any manufacturer but looked as if it had “rubbed so hard on the other one that it had scraped it off,” he heard the defendant say he drove over that road and “it wasn’t him” who hit the other car.

One N., police sergeant in Minot, testified that on the morning of the third of June the defendant came looking for his car, and that he and one Stanley had a conversation with the defendant; that defendant said he came from Garrison the evening before; that something had happened to his fender and the hub cap on the right rear wheel and that this was caused by “some party was driving ahead of him on the road, going north towards Minot, and that they were driving right square in the middle of the road, and would’nt give him the road, and in passing them he knocked his fender on this car.” That “he said he stopped and bawled them out and said why they did not give him the road, why they did not give somebody else a chance or something to that effect;” that there was another man with the defendant and both stated “they had bumped against another car.”

Stanley testified this conversation took place between 7:30 and 8 o’clock in the morning and he could not remember what the man said; that at the preliminary examination he testified that there was “red paint on the hub cap and a little green paint on the edge of the fender *378 of the defendant’s car when he saw it that morning and he could tell from the injury to the hub cap of the defendant’s car that it was hit from the front.”

K. testified he was present when the defendant had the conversation with the police sergeant and jieard the defendant say that after bumping the car “he stopped and got off the car and told him (the driver of the other car) what was he doing on the wrong side of the road,” and “bawled the fellow out and what was he doing on the wrong side of the road.”

M. who was with K. in the Oldsmobile testified: He saw two men in the Chevrolet, if there were more he did not see them; that K. swung over to the right to let the car pass; that he saw red paint on the Chevrolet in Minot; he knew this was the car that hit them; he heard the conversation with the police sergeant and that the defendant made the statement about stopping and “bawling out” the other fellow.

Mrs. A. testified she was in the defendant’s car from Garrison to Minot; that they left Garrison “around eight-thirty or nine o’clock;” that there were four of them in the car; that the defendant and one Sorenson occupied the front seat, and she and one Taylor the back seat; that when from one to ten miles from Minot the defendant’s car struck a car in which there were women and children; that she saw this car “swerve to the right side of the road and then straight on again,” that it had lights and she heard screams from the occupants; that the defendant “passed a Ford car immediately prior to this accident;” that it was dark when this happened; that the defendant and his company got into Minot at dark; “it had been dark before we reached Minot.” Later she said “it was very dark.”

The defendant says that some time in the evening of June 2d he took a new Chevrolet car from the garage of the Reuter Motor Company of Garrison, North Dakota, without leave from the company; that between 6 :30 and 7 in the evening he, together with S. and T. left Garrison and drove around here and there hunting gophers; that they had a 22 rifle with them for hunting gophers, but they did not take it back with them because someone must have taken it; that they were “out for an airing” and some one suggested to go to Minot, he said: “Well, there is á party that T know, he and his wife they live in Garrison, and I could name them, and I could have had them here, I drove up behind *379

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Related

State v. Olmstead
261 N.W.2d 880 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1978)
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32 N.W.2d 398 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1948)
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13 N.W.2d 290 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1944)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
230 N.W. 1, 59 N.D. 374, 1930 N.D. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lyon-nd-1930.