State v. Tabigne

966 P.2d 608, 88 Haw. 296
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 2, 1998
Docket20377
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 966 P.2d 608 (State v. Tabigne) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii 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. Tabigne, 966 P.2d 608, 88 Haw. 296 (haw 1998).

Opinion

LEVINSON, Justice.

The defendant-appellant Rommel Tabigne appeals from his conviction of and sentence for one count of negligent homicide in the third degree, in violation of Hawai'i Revised Statutes (HRS) § 707-704 (1993). 1 On ap *298 peal, Tabigne argues that the circuit court erred in instructing the jury as to various traffic code provisions because: (1) jurors may not consider the traffic code in determining whether a defendant is criminally negligent; (2) the circuit court failed to instruct the jury, pursuant to Hawaii Rules of Evidence (HRE) 306 (1993), 2 that it must find the basic facts underlying any inference that the traffic laws had been violated beyond a reasonable doubt; (3) the circuit court failed to instruct the jury that it was required to find a causal connection between the traffic code violation and the accident before considering the traffic code sections; (4) the traffic code instructions amounted to improper judicial comment on the evidence, inasmuch as (a) the circuit court failed to instruct the jury that it should consider any traffic code violations “in light of the defense theories which were presented, mechanical failure or defective freeway design,” and (b) the “sheer number of uncharged offenses” may have caused the jury to infer guilt; and (5) the defense was not given proper notice of the prosecution’s intent to rely on these traffic violations. We hold that the trier of fact may consider statutes, including traffic code sections, in determining the standard of care in criminal negligence cases. However, we agree with Tabigne that the circuit court erred in the manner in which it delivered its instructions regarding the traffic code. Accordingly, we vacate Tabigne’s conviction and sentence and remand for a new trial. In light of this disposition, we need not address Tabigne’s remaining arguments.

I. BACKGROUND

Tabigne was charged by a complaint filed on June 28,1996, with one count of negligent homicide in the third degree, in violation of HRS § 707-704, see supra note 1, and one count of driving without no-fault insurance, in violation of HRS § 431:100-104 (1993). 3 Tabigne was tried only on the former charge. The record does not indicate what disposition was made of the latter, and the matter is not addressed by the parties on appeal.

At trial, the parties stipulated, inter alia, that: (1) on March 3, 1995, a Toyota Camry operated by Tabigne collided with an Isuzu pickup truck operated by Gary Murai on the H-2 freeway near the Meheula Parkway overpass; and (2) as a result of the collision, Murai sustained serious injuries leading to his death at the scene.

The prosecution qualified Honolulu Police Department (HPD) Officer Russell K. Komo-da as an expert in “traffic investigation.” Officer Komoda testified that he was dispatched to the scene soon after the accident. There, he observed “yaw marks on the roadway, the asphaltic shoulder, and onto the grass” leading to where Tabigne’s vehicle was discovered. Officer Komoda explained that

[y]aw marks [are] made by a tire of a vehicle. The wheel itself is rolling, but the tires are slipping which is different from when you have a skid mark. Because in skid marks the wheels do not move, but *299 the ear is still going. So you lay a different kind of tread pattern or markings on the roadway.

Yaw marks could be created by “[a] car going in a turn too fast so the tires aren’t holding the road anymore.” Such marks also indicate that the driver was not applying the brakes.

Officer Komoda further testified that, on the northbound section of the H-2 freeway approaching the Meheula Parkway overpass, there is an incline with a slight curve to the right. On cross-examination, Officer Komo-da confirmed that, for some distance south of the Meheula Parkway overpass, there is a concrete barrier separating the northbound and southbound portions of the H-2 freeway designed to prevent collisions. The barrier ends just north of the overpass, at which point only a “grassy media[n]” separates the two sides of the highway. In the middle of the grassy median there is a drainage ditch. The median is sloped downward on both sides, and offers poor traction because of the grass. The shoulder on the left side of the freeway abutting the median is too narrow for an automobile to pull onto and still be completely out of the way of traffic without tipping into the ditch.

The prosecution also qualified HPD Officer Theodore Chong as an expert “accident re-eonstructionist.” Officer Chong testified that, based on his evaluation of the evidence gathered by the investigating officers, he believed that Tabigne “over-steered by pulling his steering wheel towards the left causing the vehicle to yaw, rotate in a yaw and slid[e] across the grass hitting the drain and gutter.” He estimated that Tabigne had been driving at fifty-seven miles per hour at the time of the accident.

Mark Inouye testified that he was driving southbound on the H-2 freeway behind a white pickup truck at the time of the accident. As the pickup truck approached the overpass, “a ear suddenly came through the media[n] strip through the bushes ... and collided with the pickup truck. The car was airborne, and it was sideways.” After the crash, Inouye pulled over and saw a man climb out of the car that had crossed the median strip. He noticed that the man had a “fist full of long hair in his hand,” which appeared to match the hair of the female passenger who he was able to observe inside the car.

Mary Lou Agdinaoay testified that she was Tabigne’s girlfriend and was sitting in the passenger seat of his Camry at the time of the accident. She further testified that, at about the time that Tabigne had driven under the Meheula Parkway overpass, he had moved the auto into the left lane. As he did so, the vehicle had begun to shake from side to side. She denied that she had been fighting with Tabigne or that he had grabbed her hair.

Newton Kanno testified that he was driving his car on the off ramp heading toward Mililani Town at the time of the accident. He observed Tabigne’s car pass in the “extreme left lane” at a “high rate of speed.” Kanno estimated that the speed at which the vehicle was traveling was seventy miles per hour. He noticed that the auto’s brake lights were not illuminated. He observed the vehicle traverse the median strip and collide with a southbound truck. On cross-examination, Kanno admitted having advised a police officer at the scene that the “the blue car ... moved slowly across the grass before impact.” (Officer Komoda similarly testified that, when he spoke with Kanno by telephone on June 9, 1996, Kanno had stated that Ta-bigne’s auto was “going the speed limit.”)

During the settlement of jury instructions, Tabigne objected to the prosecution’s proposed instructions that derived from provisions of the Statewide Traffic Code, HRS ch. 291C:

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Bluebook (online)
966 P.2d 608, 88 Haw. 296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-tabigne-haw-1998.