State v. Tarbell

266 N.W. 677, 64 S.D. 330, 1936 S.D. LEXIS 49
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedApril 16, 1936
DocketFile No. 7823.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 266 N.W. 677 (State v. Tarbell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South 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. Tarbell, 266 N.W. 677, 64 S.D. 330, 1936 S.D. LEXIS 49 (S.D. 1936).

Opinions

WARREN, J.

This is an appeal from the circuit court oi Codington -county from a conviction under the provisions of sections 30 (a) and 65 of chapter 251 of the Session Laws of 1929, commonly known as the “hit and run driver” law.

The defendant, one Neil Tarbell, on the evening of February 4. 1935, took his Plymouth sedan automobile from the Hanson garage, in the city of Watertown, at approximately 5 ¡45 p. m. He drove around over some of the unpaved streets of the c-ity, testing the body for rattles, and then drove -to the William Swartz residence. He left the William Swartz residence at 6 p. m., or shortly thereafter, and drove down Sixth Avenue Southeast until he came *331 to Fifth street. He turned north on Fifth street and1 drove as far as Kemp avenue, on which he turned west and drove as far as Broadway, where he turned south for a few feet, and parked in front of the Williamson & Tarbell Drugstore. His car remained in front of the drugstore, and he remained inside until some time after 8 p. m., when the car was removed and placed in the police garage.

At approximately 6:io p. m. on the evening of February 4, 1935; one Jacob Staib was killed while working in or about a manhole located on Fifth street, between Fourth avenue and Fifth avenue. This manhole is situated very near the center of Fifth street, about equidistant from the corner of Fourth avenue and the corner of Fifth avenue. Jacob Staib suffered severe cuts upon the face and scalp, a crushed chest and several broken bones. At the time Jacob Staib was killed there was no one in the immediate vicinity, and no one saw what caused his death. It was just at dusk, and the street lights had not been turned- on. Several persons testified to having heard a crash, and a number of them hurried to the scene. When the authorities arrived1 on the scene, the body of Jacob -Staib was lying some 60 feet no-rth of the manhole. There was broken glass scattered south from the body to a point about 15 or 20 feet north of the manhole. The manhole cover was lying approximately 2 or 3 feet south of the manhole, and the torch that Staib had been working with was lying about 15 or 20 feet north of the manhole. Some witnesses testified to seeing a dark blue sedan with yellow wheels driving up Fifth street at the approximate time of the accident.

Shortly after arriving o-n the scene of the accident, the authorities sent out a call and started an immediate search for a dark blue sedan with yellow wire wheels. The defendant’s car, a dark blue sedan with yellow wire wheels, was found parked in front of the drugstore at about 7:3o p. m. Upon examination, .it was found that there was a deep dent in the left front fender, the front bumper was somewhat out of line on the left side, and the le-ft headlight lens had been broken and the lamp itself bent out of line. Upon being questioned at that time, defendant admitted that he 'had 'been driving along Fifth street in the vicinity of the accident, at the approximate time Staib was killed. He said that he recalled a *332 sound of breaking glass, but was not conscious of having run over something or of having struck anything.

The record and briefs are long and have been prepared with much care, and the briefs have been valuable to the court in preparing its opinion. In this, as well as in other cases where the records are long, it is difficult to keep an opinion within due bounds, and we therefore state, at the outset, that we will refrain from treating all of the approximately 150 assignments of error. We will cover such portions as are controlling and necessary to a decision of the issues of vital importance to the state and defendant.

The state has the laboring oar, and, in a case where the defendant is subject to a sentence of four years’ imprisonment, it seems to us to be too grave a problem for guesswork, and one must go farther than to merely speculate whether or not the defendant was guilty of the offense charged.

We now proceed to consider the sufficiency of the evidence. Counsel, as expected, do not agree upon the act or acts which caused the death of the unfortunate 'Stai'b. The defendant is privileged to urge as many propositions as the record will warrant as to what happened tO' cause the death of Staib. In other words, all of the facts constituting defenses, circumstances, and conduct that are in harmony with innocence. The state contends that the defendant knew that he had struck Staib, or injured some person or property. It then proceeds to theorize briefly that immediately before Staib was killed he was on the north side of the manhole, looking into it with a torch, and that the manhole cover was lying on the south side, that defendant’s car came into' contact with the manhole cover, causing the metallic sound! that several witnesses testified to having heard, and that the next instant the car’s fender or bumper hit Staib on the head as he was bent over facing south; that the wheels of the car then ran over the body, causing the excessive crushing injuries. It further contends that Staib was a large man about 6 feet in height, and weighing about 175 or 180 pounds, that he was wearing a sheepskin lined duck coat, and that he would be at least from 12 to 15 inches through from breast to back, and that Staib was evidently run over while lying face down, and that the jury would be justified in concluding beyond all reasonable doubt that the driver of a car could not surmount such *333 an object on the smoothly paved street without being conscious that he was driving over something far more ponderous than a “light bulb,” and that the defendant therefore knew that he had struck and run over a human being, and that he failed to- stop after having done so. If the state be correct as to what took place, and the jury so found, it leaves unaccounted for the broken lens which the state stressed as an important part in the trial by showing that the pieces of lens found north of the manhole were the same as the lens in the defendant’s car, and that the left lamp was materially bent. We take it that the 'headlight of the car must have been considerably over and above the upper portion of the defendant’s body, which under the state’s statement was about 15 inches above the surface of the pavement. It therefore does not seem reasonable that Staib’s body could have come in contact with the headlight on defendant’s machine and the fender which it claimed had been dented by the impact. Therefore prejudice resulted when the state emphasized the broken glass, which it claimed was from the defendant’s headlight. The defendant accounts for the broken headlight, that it could have been possible that the Aeroil fire gun, which was quite large, about 7% inches in diameter, and some 27 inches high, and weighing about 21 pounds, could have struck the fender and broken the lens. There is testimony to the effect that the body was discovered some 60 feet north of the manhole, and that the broken glass was only observed close to the body, and still other evidence that the tank was found some 15 to 20 feet north of the manhole, and that there was glass from there to the place where the body was found. Taking the state’s theory for granted, that the man was lying face downward, it is compatible with innocence to believe that the defendant’s car may have hit some portion of the tank without even striking Staib'. The state attempted to show that there was some hair and human flesh in a crevice of the fender.

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Related

State v. Minkel
230 N.W.2d 233 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1975)
State v. Flake
165 N.W.2d 55 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1969)
State v. Nelson
165 N.W.2d 55 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1969)
State v. Flack
89 N.W.2d 30 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1958)
State v. Neiman
12 N.W.2d 374 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1943)
State v. Till
299 N.W. 454 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1941)
Staib v. Tarbell
273 N.W. 652 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
266 N.W. 677, 64 S.D. 330, 1936 S.D. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-tarbell-sd-1936.