United States v. Seeger

2 M.J. 249, 1976 CMR LEXIS 778
CourtU S Air Force Court of Military Review
DecidedJuly 29, 1976
DocketACM S24363 (recon.)
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2 M.J. 249 (United States v. Seeger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U S Air Force Court of Military Review primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Seeger, 2 M.J. 249, 1976 CMR LEXIS 778 (usafctmilrev 1976).

Opinion

DECISION UPON RECONSIDERATION

FORAY, Judge:

Upon original review of the record of trial in this case, this Court, by its decision dated 12 April 1976, affirmed the approved findings of guilty and the sentence. Subsequent thereto, appellate defense counsel filed a Motion for Reconsideration based on the ground, raised now for the first time, [250]*250that the evidence introduced at the trial failed to establish the accused’s guilt of the offense of leaving the scene of an accident without making his identity known (Charge IV and its specification). We found the Motion for Reconsideration to be not timely filed within the ten days allowed under Rule 19b of the Courts of Military Review Rules of Practice and Procedure.1 However, since the Motion was filed within the thirty-day period established under Rule 19a of these rules, we have decided on our own motion to reconsider our prior decision.

In order to fully understand the import of appellate defense counsel’s recent claim, a recitation of the pertinent facts is necessary.

On 11 November 1975, at approximately 1345 hours, the accused was driving his privately owned vehicle on Tachikawa Air Base, Japan. Riding with him as passengers were an Airman Lieb and an unidentified airman. While driving on one of the roadways on the installation, the accused turned his vehicle sharply in order to enter a parking area. During the turning maneuver the vehicle tipped to one side, fell over, and slid on its side along the pavement for a short distance. Several airmen who were in the vicinity of the parking area at the time went to the vehicle, righted it, and helped the accused and his passengers dismount from the vehicle. The accused then resumed driving his vehicle along the parking area to a parking place hear his assigned quarters, a distance of approximately three hundred yards from the scene of the accident. There, he parked the vehicle and, shortly thereafter, walked with Airman Lieb, who had been slightly injured, to a nearby bus stop where they intended to take a bus to the base hospital. While at the bus stop, the accused was apprehended by a security policeman detailed to investigate the traffic incident. The police investigation showed there was no property damaged as a result of the incident other than the accused’s vehicle.

Upon these facts the accused was convicted of wrongfully and unlawfully leaving the scene of an accident without making his identity known. The gist of appellate defense counsel’s contention is that this evidence is insufficient to sustain the finding of guilty of that offense. Necessarily included in this claim is the question of whether the driver of a vehicle involved in an accident, who leaves the scene of the accident without making his identity known, has committed an offense in violation of Article 134, Code, 10 U.S.C. § 934, where the only damage caused in the accident was to the driver’s property and the only injury is incurred by the driver or a passenger in his vehicle.

Generally, any duty imposed upon a driver of a vehicle involved in an accident or collision causing property damage or personal injury to another is primarily determined by statute.2 The terms of the statutes among the different jurisdictions are varied.3 In the main, they require motorists who are involved in accidents or collisions and who know property damage or personal injury has been sustained thereby to others, whether or not attributable to the motorists’ fault, to stop and identify themselves and, in some jurisdictions, to render aid or assistance to injured parties as is reasonable and necessary. In addition, some of the statutes require motorists to report their involvement in such accidents or collisions to the police or other authorities. These statutes are principally aimed at an indifferent class of motorists known as “hit and run drivers” and enjoin, under threat of substantial punishment, the negligent and heedless motorists from fleeing scenes of accidents before their identities [251]*251are made known in order to evade the civil or criminal liabilities that may attach therefrom. See 7 Am.Jur.2d, Automobiles and Highway Traffic, Section 246; 3 Wharton Criminal Law, Hit and Run Driving, Section 1003; 61A C.J.S. Motor Vehicles § 674(2)a; Oden v. District of Columbia, 65 App.D.C. 50, 79 F.2d 175 (1935); United States v. Thiel, 18 C.M.R. 934 (A.F.B.R. 1955).

Of the many provisions included in the hit and run statutes, one which is substantially similar in application among the jurisdictions is that dealing with the requirement imposed on a motorist to comply with such statute when involved in an accident resulting in property damage only. Similarities among the provisions of certain statutes as to when that requirement is imposed were discussed by the Supreme Court of New Jersey in State of New Jersey v. Patterson, 47 N.J. 450, 221 A.2d 526 (1966). There, the Court considered the appeal of a defendant who had been convicted by a lower court of the offense of leaving the scene of an accident without making his identity known. The defendant had struck a tree growing alongside a roadway causing extensive damage to his vehicle and “trivial” damage to the tree consisting of loosened bark which would grow back. He left the scene of that accident without making his identity known and was arrested a short time later. Based on those facts he was charged with the offense of which he was ultimately convicted.

In that case, the Supreme Court of New Jersey was confronted with the question of whether Section 4-129, New Jersey Statutes Annotated, Title 39, the hit and run statute, applied where no personal injury was incurred nor any property damage caused other than to the defendant’s vehicle. The Court stated that in many other jurisdictions the question had been “put to rest” by the explicit terms of their respective statutes. By way of illustration, the Court then compared the pertinent provisions of the hit and run laws of the District of Columbia, Delaware, Vermont, and Pennsylvania. The Code of the District of Columbia provided that an operator of a vehicle who caused “substantial damage” with his vehicle to the property or vehicle of another shall be subject to a punishment of a fine or imprisonment for failing to stop and identify himself. District of Columbia Code, 1961 Edition, Title 40, Section 609(a). The Delaware Code did not make a vehicle operator criminally liable for leaving the scene of an accident if the resultant damage was to “the property of the driver only.” Delaware Code Annotated, 1964 Edition, Title 21, Section 4201. In Vermont the law required a driver to stop and identify himself at the scene of an accident if there was damage to property other than “the vehicle then under his control.” Vermont Statutes Annotated, 1959 Edition, Title 23, Section 1004. One provision of the Pennsylvania statute was, seemingly, to the contrary. It appeared to impose an obligation on a vehicle operator who struck an unattended vehicle or property to locate and notify the owner “regardless of the amount of damage done to such unattended vehicle or property.” Pennsylvania Statutes Annotated, 1960 Edition, Title 75, Section 1027(d).

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2 M.J. 249, 1976 CMR LEXIS 778, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-seeger-usafctmilrev-1976.