State v. Simler

167 S.W.2d 376, 350 Mo. 646, 1943 Mo. LEXIS 392
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 4, 1943
DocketNo. 38077.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 167 S.W.2d 376 (State v. Simler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Simler, 167 S.W.2d 376, 350 Mo. 646, 1943 Mo. LEXIS 392 (Mo. 1943).

Opinion

*648 ELLISON, J.

— The appellant was convicted of manslaughter by culpable negligence in driving an automobile which collided with another driven by Samuel H. Roberts, on State Highway No. 11 about 13 miles west of Kirksville, on June 11, 1941, about 5:30 p. m. The punishment assessed by the jury was six months' imprisonment in the county jail. Both cars were badly damaged and Roberts died in a hospital in Kirksville that night about 2 a. m. There was no living eyewitness to the collision except the appellant, who stood on a demurrer to the State’s evidence. The evidence was all circumstantial. Appellant contends there was no substantial showing that he was culpably .negligent, and none that Roberts died as a result of the collision. It was the State’s theory that appellant was under the influence of intoxicants, and that he was driving at an excessive speed on the left side of the road. To give a correct understanding of the case we must state the facts in detail.

On the issue of intoxication. The appellant had been serving on a jury at Kirksville. Between 11 and 12 o’clock that morning he purchased and drank three glasses of 5% beer at the Cedar bar in Kirksville, and bought for $1 a bottle of apricot brandy which he. took with him. During the noon hour he drove deputy sheriff Shelby Allred about 7 miles west of Kirksville to see the Chariton River, which was out of banks. Witness Allred said that on the going trip appellant took one “swallow” of the brandy, and did the same thing once on the return trip. They were at the river about ten minutes and got back to Kirksville about 1 p. m. Nothing in appellant’s actions indicated he had been drinking — he didn’t act drunk. There was no evidence as to whether appellant ate a noon meal before or after the Chariton River trip. That afternoon about 3 o’clock he came to the home of Walker Simmons on Highway 11, about 17 miles west of Kirksville. There he met Russell Wilkins. They drove in *649 appellant’s ear to the New Boston some 12 or 14 miles further south and purchased four bottles of beer of which each man drank one, the other two bottles being taken back to the Walker Simmons’ place, at which they arrived about 4 o’clock. Bernard Simmons joined them there and the three men drank the remaining two bottles of beer.

Wilkins did not see or hear anything of the bottle of brandy; Bernard Simmons was not interrogated about it; and neither was asked whether appellant was drunk or sober. But O. H. Kanan, a State trooper stationed at Kirksville, testified he called on appellant at the hospital shortly after 6 p. m., which would be a little more than 30 minutes after the collision. Appellant was in bed and had just come from the operating room where stitches had been made in a gash on his left arm and his eye had been bandaged. Appellant asked “Who is this?” Kanan told him, and appellant looked up and said “How are you, Kanan?” Then the witness inquired how he felt and was answered, “Not very good.” Next Kanan asked how much he had to drink, and appellant replied, “Too much.” He did not say when, but according to the foregoing testimony the last drinking the appellant did was about an hour and a half before the collision. The evidence does not show whether the beer purchased at New Boston was 5% or 3.2%, nor whether it was in quart or pint bottles; nor as to the quantity and strength of the brandy and what became of it, except two swallows. It also appears that during the period covered by the above narration, appellant drove 14 miles to the Chariton River and back; 16 miles from Kirksville to the Walker Simmpns place, and about 25 miles to New Boston and back.

Now as to the issue of excessive speed. After returning to the Walker Simmons place about 4 o’clock, appellant remained there until a short time before 5:30. He and Bernard Simmons were going fishing at the Chariton River, some 7 miles east on Highway 11. This required some preparation, such as getting fishing tackle' and dress-up clothes into which witness Simmons intended to change later. Simmons also maintained a repair garage on the place, and appellant had him examine a bent fender on his car, which he wanted Simmons to fix later. Simmons examined the underside of the car and noticed it and the whole car were clean and free from mud.

Appellant started out first and drove from the garage something like 100 yards over the private driveway to Highway 11 before witness Simmons had got his own ear turned around. When he reached the Highway appellant’s car was out of sight. But the road was hilly, and full of curves. Leo Wilkins was at the Walker Simmons place when appellant and Bernard Simmons left, and said appellant started about two minutes ahead. Capt. Ramsey from Jefferson City, of the State Highway Patrol, measured the distances along the Highway between places pointed out to him, the day *650 before the trial, by the speedometer on his automobile. He testified it was 1.3 miles from the Simmons place to Allen Cook’s home, and 3 miles further to the point of collision, making 4.3 miles in all. But sheriff Love, who was with Capt. Ramsey on that occasion, and Lavaughn Cook, son of Allen Cook, and Bernard Simmons, said the whole distance was only 3 miles. Sheriff Love had lived in that country all his life, and the other two lived on the road. We take it that Capt. Ramsey was mistaken, and that the three other witnesses gave the correct distance.

.At any rate, the neighbor Allen Cook said he saw Simmons pass with another car immediately preceding; but he could not estimate their speeds. His son Lavaughn Cook gave what he called a guess that the car preceding Bernard Simmons’ car was running awfully fast — between 80 and 85 miles per hour, but at the end of the State’s case the court struck out this testimony. Bernard Simmons estimated it took him 4 or 5 minutes to traverse the distance. When he reached the scene of the collision the steam was pouring out of the radiators of the two automobiles. This is the only evidence as to excessive speed save the physical evidences, such as the violence of the collision, marks on the roadway, etc. Carl Noel, nearest neighbor of the deceased, who lived about 160 yards back from Highway 11 and about % mile east of the scene of the collision, saw a car pass at supper time, that he thought was the deceased’s. He estimated its speed at 35 miles per hour.

Next, we review the facts more nearly concerning the collision. The deceased was returning from Kirksville with stock feed and groceries. He was traveling generally west facing the afternoon sun, which set that day at 7:26 p. m., of which fact we take judicial notice. The road was straight and practically level for about 50 yards before reaching a moderate curve to the southwest where the road was slightly up-grade. The collision occurred a short distance after the deceased’s car had entered the curve. The direction of travel and the upward inclination of the road would make the sun shine through the driver’s side of the windshield. It was shinning that afternoon and would blind a westbound motorist more or less, according to the testimony of witnesses Bernard Simmons, Sherman Eitel and State Patrolman O. H. Kanan; though one State’s witness, Cecil Parmley, who was traveling west and arrived at the scene of the accident before the parties had been taken away, said the sun did not interfere with his driving.

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Bluebook (online)
167 S.W.2d 376, 350 Mo. 646, 1943 Mo. LEXIS 392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-simler-mo-1943.