Territory v. Oshiro

39 Haw. 303
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 13, 1952
DocketNO. 2824.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 39 Haw. 303 (Territory v. Oshiro) 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 v. Oshiro, 39 Haw. 303 (haw 1952).

Opinion

OPINION OP THE COURT BX

STAINBACK, J.

Defendant, plaintiff in error, was convicted by a jury in the circuit court of the first judicial circuit for the offense of driving an automobile while under the influence of intoxicating liquor; he was sentenced to imprisonment in the city and county jail for a period of thirty days and to pay a fine of five hundred dollars. His license was automatically revoked for a period of one year under section 7323, Revised Laws of Hawaii 1945.

There is no dispute as to the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the conviction but the defendant claims error on the ground that the sentence was “excessive and disproportionate for the offense committed” and asks the court to *304 exercise its power to reduce the sentence under the provisions of section 9564, Revised Laws of Hawaii 1945, which provides: “* * * In case of a conviction and sentence in a criminal case, if in its [the supreme court’s] opinion the sentence is illegal or excessive it may correct the sentence to correspond with the verdict or finding or reduce the same, as the case may be. * * *”

It appears that defendant on Saturday, December 19, 1949, visited a friend who lived in Kaimuki, driving there sometime before eight o’clock p.m.; that, according to his testimony, after spending some forty minutes indulging in some two or three highballs, defendant left with his friend, driving his automobile towards town; near Thomas Square on Beretania Street he made a left turn into Piikoi Street for the purpose of having refreshments at a restaurant located near King Street on Piikoi Street; as defendant attempted to make a right turn into the driveway next to the restaurant he collided with a parked car owned by the complaining witness. The damage was not great and no one was injured. Defendant was taken to the emergency hospital and on examination by a physician was pronounced drunk. An analysis of his urine was found to contain 2.5 milligrams per cc. or .25 per cent of alcohol content.

Defendant was convicted on two previous occasions for failing to make a boulevard stop and had been fined twenty-five dollars on each occasion. Otherwise his. record had been good.

There was no evidence prior to the sentence in the instant case to show anything regarding the defendant’s financial status.

Counsel calls attention to a large number of local cases involving driving while under the influence of intoxicating liquor and states that only four individuals thus charged had drawn jail sentences and makes a very insistent argument that no jail sentence should be imposed in the present *305 case. He quotes from the case of Territory v. Kunimoto, 37 Haw. 591, to the effect that “The legislature thus impliedly recognizes varying degrees of guilt or culpability for the offense and gives a trial judge a wide latitude in determining not only appropriate punishment for the protection of society and reformation of the offender, but also whether those interests would be better served by suspending the sentence thereof. However, the entire matter is one for the exercise of judicial discretion. But a trial judge in so doing must act upon the evidence and be governed by it. To inflict arbitrarily a punishment of greater severity than warranted by the evidence would amount to an abuse of discretion, constituting a judicial error of a highly prejudicial nature which fortunately may be rectified in the appellate court.” (Emphasis added.)

We agree with the foregoing statement of the law that the action of the trial judge, with its wide latitude in determining appropriate punishment for the protection of society and reformation of the offender, should not be disturbed unless it clearly appears from the evidence that there has been an abuse of the judge’s discretion. The Kunimoto case was one of heedless and reckless driving; it was first tried in the district court and then appealed to the circuit court. The sentence of the trial judge Avas one year’s imprisonment; this court reversed the trial judge’s sentence and imposed the original sentence as fixed by the district magistrate which, unfortunately, did not include a jail sentence.

In the case of Territory v. Chong, 36 Haw. 537, there was involved the taking of a right of way of another vehicle Avhere the defendant was sentenced to a year’s imprisonment. As in the Kunimoto case, the court said that this case stated no high degree of culpability and no inordinate rate of speed, etc., and that the defendant himself sustained the only personal injury, that there was no “extraordinary *306 or flagrant violation of the law warranting the severe measure of punishment imposed by the trial judge, nor do the interests of justice require it as an example for others.”

From the last quotation and from the decision in the case of Territory v. Kunimoto, supra, counsel for the defendant makes the argument “That the deterrent theory of criminal punishment with reference to driving while under the influence of intoxicating liquor is not followed in this jurisdiction * * *." We do not so interpret these decisions, but the purpose of punishment is, as stated, for the trial judge to impose “appropriate punishment for the protection of society and reformation of the offender.” (Territory v. Kunimoto, supra, p. 596.)

The imposition of punishment for crimes is twofold. In olden days some commentators said threefold, setting forth vengeance or retribution as one motivating force, but we believe the modern criminologists limit themselves to two purposes, (1) the prevention of future crime by the defendant through education, reformation or detention, and (2) the deterrence of others (as well as the defendant) from committing such crime for fear of similar punishment ; of the two the latter probably is the more important. Unless this was so, one could never justify capital punishment because capital punishment certainly does not reform the individual executed and the individual can be prevented from future crime by adequate safekeeping, so the only purpose in capital punishment is to deter others. This reasoning, that is, the prevention of others doing likewise, is much more powerful in the case of drunken and reckless drivers than in the case of murder, for giving jail sentences to drunken and reckless drivers will save far more lives than hanging murderers.

When one considers that deaths by motor vehicles have exceeded the casualties in all the nation’s wars and that deaths from traffic accidents last year alone exceeded the *307 deaths for a similar period during the war in Korea, the importance of improving the driving of even a portion of drivers of motor vehicles in order to save more lives is evident.

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Related

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43 Haw. 333 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1959)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 Haw. 303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/territory-v-oshiro-haw-1952.