Territory of Hawaii v. Kunimoto

37 Haw. 591
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 17, 1947
DocketNO. 2645.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 37 Haw. 591 (Territory of Hawaii v. Kunimoto) 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
Territory of Hawaii v. Kunimoto, 37 Haw. 591 (haw 1947).

Opinions

*592 OPINION OF THE COURT BY

LE BARON, J.

(Peters, J., concurring.)

Under the charge of operating a motor vehicle Avhile under the influence of intoxicating liquor in violation of section 1261 of Revised Ordinances of Honolulu 1942, the defendant Avas tried and found guilty in the district court of Honolulu and thereupon sentenced to a fine of twenty-five dollars and revocation of his driving license. He appealed to the circuit court Avherein he Avas charged Avith the same offense and, in order to meet the proof, Avith the additional one of carel ess and heedless driving in a manner likely to endanger the person and property of a certain named individual, contrary to the provisions of section 11701 of Revised Luavs of HaAvaii 1945, the two charges being joined in one complaint as counts I and II, respectively, and the offenses arising out of the same facts and circumstances. Before pleading he moved that count II be stricken. On denial of his motion, pleas of not guilty Avere entered. After trial by jury he Avas acquitted under count I but convicted under count II. Pursuant to the verdict, the trial judge pronounced the defendant guilty as charged under count II, sentenced him to jail for one year and suspension of driving license for a like period.

The assignments of error all deal Avith count II and pertain to the entry of it as an additional charge, the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict of guilt and the excessiveness of the sentence.

The first assignment of error to be considered specifies that the trial court erred in denying the defendant’s motion to strike count II on the ground that the appeal from the district court after a conviction of an offense precludéd *593 the additional charging of a different offense in the circuit court.

In our opinion this ground of error is untenable. The appeal taken by the defendant to the circuit court was not upon points of law nor did it seek appellate review of any proceedings in the district court. On the contrary, the appeal was a general one from a lower to a higher trial court of concurrent jurisdiction. It operated to transfer the Territory’s criminal cause of action itself to the circuit court and placed that tribunal in the same position as would obtain before arraignment had the cause then originated in the circuit court, requiring the proceedings therein to be de novo, inclusive of trial, as if no action had been instituted in the district court. (Jardin v. Madeiros, 9 Haw. 503; Associated Repair Works v. Rogers, 22 Haw. 91; Matsumoto v. Toraichi, 30 Haw. 468.) Such being the operation of the defendant’s appeal and resultant position of the circuit court, that court on entertaining the cause, was authorized by statute (R. L. H. 1945, § 10799) to allow in one information or complaint the joining of several charges of different and distinct offenses for the same act or transaction. No question of unauthorized joinder under the statute having been raised by the defendant either below or on appeal, the two charges in separate counts are deemed to have been properly joined in one complaint consistent with the provisions of section 10799, supra, the offenses concededlv being related misdemeanors and arising out of the same act or transaction of driving an automobile on a public highway. It follows therefrom that the alleged error assigned to the entry of the additional charge upon the ground stated is devoid of merit.

The second assignment of error to be considered runs to the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict of guilt under the charge of careless and heedless driving. *594 On scanning the record there is found undisputed evidence tending to prove that the defendant drove his automobile at a fast rate of speed upon a public highway, collided with the left rear fender of another automobile proceeding in the same direction on the right side of the highway and in passing it sideswiped its left front fender; that the defendant did not know his automobile had struck the other, continued driving without stopping and attempted through devious course to evade pursuit by the driver of the automobile which he had struck. In addition, there is disclosed in the record a conflict in the evidence which pertains to a prior drinking by the defendant of intoxicating liquor sufficient to slow his physical reactions and impair his mental facultiés at_ the time of collision, but not to render him under the influence contemplated in section 1261, supra. The undisputed evidence is that he was found to be intoxicated at his home shortly after he had driven there and been informed that a police officer had been called to investigate the collision. Opposed to the reasonable inference to be drawn therefrom that he was in a comparable state of intoxication at the time of collision is the defense testimony that the defendant subsequently .drank intoxicating liquor in his home and only became drunk there while waiting for the police officer to arrive. Although, this conflict apparently created a reasonable doubt in the mind of the jury as to intoxication at the time of driving, the extent of drunkenness at the time of arrest would have warranted the jury in finding not only that the defendant previously had been drinking intoxicating liquor but that the effects of such drinking accounted for his apparent failure to perceive and be aware of the jolt which naturally would be transmitted to him from the impact of his automobile against the other. This evidence, together with reasonable inference drawn from *595 it, as well as the warranted findings therefrom, transcends 'proof of a mere mistake of judgment in traffic, or mere negligence in causing a collision, as contended by the defendant. It rather demonstrates the existence of a wanton disregard, superimposed by the effects of a voluntary consumption of alcohol, for the safety of the occupant and property relative to the other automobile at time of collision as well as a manner of driving not only likely to endanger, but actually endangering, such person and property within the purview of the statute. Hence it is substantia] and competent evidence, sufficient as a matter of law to sustain the verdict of guilt.

The last assignment to be considered specifies error to the imposition of sentence in imprisoning the defendant and suspending his driving license for a year on the ground that the punishment, although within legal limits, is excessive and disproportionate to the offense as committed by the defendant.

The legislature in providing penalties for the violation of section 11701, supra., does not contemplate a fixed punishment, but merely limits the extent. Within the prescribed limits are a vast number of possible penalties of fines, imprisonment and suspension or revocation of driving license, which may be invoked either separately or in conjunction with each other. They range from a nominal punishment up to and including the maximum of a fine of one thousand dollars, imprisonment for one year and a year’s suspension or revocation of driving license. (R. L. H.

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37 Haw. 591, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/territory-of-hawaii-v-kunimoto-haw-1947.