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State v. Dugee

Supreme Court of Vermont. January Term, 1929
Feb 6, 1929
144 A. 689 (Vt. 1929)

Opinion

Opinion filed February 6, 1929.

Criminal Law — Flight of Respondent — Matters which Jury May Consider in Connection with Flight — Automobiles — Acts 1925, No. 70, §§ 70, 72 — Effect on Respondent's Criminal Responsibility of Cooperation by Another — Evidence — Presumption of Innocence as Evidence — Judicial Notice.

1. Evidence tending to show flight of a respondent immediately after commission of alleged offense with which he stands charged, and for which he is on trial, is admissible, and, unexplained, tends to show guilt.

2. It is proper for jury to consider extent of respondent's flight after commission of alleged offense, together with actions and doings of respondent tending to characterize it, including his resistance of known officers in attempting his arrest and in avoiding same.

3. In prosecution under Acts 1925, No. 70, §§ 70, 72, for operating a motor vehicle on a public highway with number plates attached that were not lawfully assigned to such vehicle, where respondent and another man occupied automobile, and after pursuit by officers for some distance, took flight therefrom at same time in opposite directions, held that criminal responsibility of respondent was not lessened by cooperation with him of such other person in operating automobile in violation of statutes on which prosecution was based.

4. In such prosecution, failure of trial court to instruct jury that presumption of innocence is a piece of evidence to be weighed by them in respondent's favor on all material questions in determining question of his guilt, held error.

5. Court takes judicial notice of county in which town is located.

INFORMATION for violation of Acts 1925, No. 70, §§ 70, 72, for operating an automobile on a public highway with number plates not lawfully assigned to such vehicle. Plea, not guilty. Trial by jury in Orleans County municipal court, Frank C. Williams, Municipal Judge, presiding. Verdict guilty, judgment on verdict, and sentence thereon. Reversed and remanded.

James B. Campbell for the respondent.

James Brownlee, State's attorney, for the State.

Present: WATSON, C.J., POWERS, SLACK, MOULTON, and CHASE, JJ.


This is on information by the State's attorney of Orleans County, charging that the respondent "In Westmore" in said county, on the 11th day of December, 1927, "did operate a motor vehicle" in and on the public highway, "to which was attached number plates that were not assigned to said motor vehicle by the Commissioner of Motor Vehicles, contrary to the form of the statute," etc. The plea was one of "Not Guilty," and a trial by jury was had in the Orleans County municipal court, resulting in a verdict of guilty. Judgment was rendered on verdict.

By section 70, No. 70, Acts of 1925, "Every motor vehicle operated on any highway, shall have displayed in a conspicuous place, at the front and rear, the proper number plates furnished by the Secretary of State, showing the number assigned to such vehicle by said secretary." And by section 72 (among other things), "A person shall not operate a motor vehicle to which number plates are attached that were not assigned to such vehicle by said secretary."

WATSON, C.J.

Evidence was introduced by the prosecution in its opening case. When the State rested, the respondent moved that he be discharged "because there was no evidence to go to the jury to substantiate the offense charged, or to prove it in any legal way." The motion was overruled and exception allowed. Thereupon, respondent also rested his case.

Evidence introduced by the prosecution tended to show that on December 11 the Marmon touring car on which were number plates ("No. 65-814, Vermont") attached that were not assigned to it by the Secretary of State, with two men in it, was pursued by three officers in a patrol car for a distance of two or three miles on a highway in the town of Westmore in said Orleans County, when the driver of the Marmon car evidently lost control and the car left the highway and went over the bank; that it was then dark, but the patrol car had headlights and was running very close to the Marmon car; that the officers saw two men leave the latter car, one on each side of it, and start running from it in opposite directions, one away from the road toward the end of the swamp; that officer Phelps, having a flash-light, pursued this man on foot about 1/4 of a mile through the swamp and overtook him; that just before Phelps reached the man he was pursuing, the latter came to a thicket of cedar which was hard to get through, and Phelps was so close to him that he stopped, turned around and faced Phelps who flashed his flash-light upon him and saw that it was Dugee, the respondent, whom he knew; that officer Phelps called for the man to put up his hands, but instead of doing so the man started for Phelps and said, "No, you put up your hands"; that Phelps grabbed the man and discovered that he had a knife in a sheath under his arm; that as a result of the scuffle then and there had between them, the man escaped the officer, taking the latter's flash-light with him; that officer Phelps is positive that the respondent is the same man that he saw leaving the Marmon car and running toward and into the swamp, and whom he (Phelps) then pursued and overtook in the swamp, all as above stated.

There was other evidence tending to show respondent's identity. But it is argued in his behalf that there was no evidence tending to show that he was the person who was then operating the Marmon car, as distinguished from the other man who took flight from that car at the same time in the opposite direction and who was neither captured nor recognized by any of said officers. It is too well settled to need further discussion, that evidence tending to show flight of a respondent immediately after the commission of the alleged offense with which he stands charged and for which he is on trial, is admissible, and unexplained, tends to show guilt; and as the probative force of such evidence may be materially varied or wholly taken away by evidence of the attending circumstances, it is proper for a jury to consider testimony of the extent of the flight, together with the actions and doings of the respondent, tending to characterize it, including his resistance of known officers in attempting his arrest, and in avoiding the same. State v. Shaw, 73 Vt. 149, 50 A. 863; State v. Chase, 68 Vt. 405, 35 A. 336. Assuming, but not deciding, that on the evidence the other man who took flight from the Marmon touring car at the same time, cooperated with the respondent in operating that car in violation of the statutes on which this prosecution is based, yet the criminal responsibility of the respondent is not lessened by such cooperation. State v. Ceresa, 92 Vt. 190, 102 A. 1040.

The court charged the jury touching the presumption of innocence as follows: "In the first place, the respondent comes in here with the presumption of innocence, which follows him all through the trial. That is, he is presumed to be innocent until the evidence convinces you beyond a reasonable doubt that he is guilty, and the burden is upon the State to convince you beyond a reasonable doubt of his guilt."

The court then went on to instruct the jury as to the meaning of reasonable doubt, but not otherwise nor again in the charge is that presumption mentioned. Nowhere in the charge are the jury informed that this presumption is in itself a piece of evidence to be considered by them in respondent's favor in arriving at their verdict.

The court charged in part as follows: "It is claimed on the part of the State that the number plates on the car in question were wrong number plates, that is, number plates had been placed upon that car which had no right to be there, and I don't understand that there is any question about that. I don't understand that the respondent denies that, so that you start out with the proposition that there were wrong number plates on that car; that that car was operated by somebody with wrong plates, so that you are now to decide by the test whether that this Herbert Dugee operated that car at that time with wrong number plates, and in considering that, you are to take all the evidence in the case, and the evidence as it has been produced by the State. The respondent has produced no evidence. He is not obliged to take the stand in a criminal case * * * * * The law requires that so that in considering this case, you take only the evidence which has been produced here, and take the circumstances." Exception was saved by respondent's attorney, to what the court said "about the matter of number plates, saying that he did not understand that the respondent denied the State's evidence, * * because I (attorney) say that the plea of not guilty and the presumption of innocence is sufficient denial of each and every material allegation and important fact in the case, so that part of the court's charge is prejudicial to the respondent."

Again the court in its charge said: "There is one piece of evidence which is important for you to consider as bearing upon the identity of this man, although the testimony would indicate to you that the respondent's position is that he was not there, although there was no evidence in the case to substantiate that position." Exception was saved to this last assertion negativing any "evidence in the case to substantiate that position," the respondent's attorney saying that the presumption of innocence was evidence to be considered in that respect in favor of respondent.

The two last named exceptions must be sustained. In this case, as in State v. Marston, 82 Vt. 250, 72 A. 1075, the court failed to inform the jury that the presumption of innocence is itself a piece of evidence to be weighed in respondent's favor on all material questions in determining the question of his guilt. To the same effect is State v. Clark, 83 Vt. 305, 75 A. 534, Ann. Cas. 1912A, 261, and State v. Hall, 96 Vt. 379, 119 A. 884.

The only other exception which needs now to be noticed, relates to the jurisdiction. The evidence, as before observed, showed the locus to have been in Westmore, of which the Court takes judicial notice as being in Orleans County. This exception, therefore, is not sustained.

Judgment reversed, and cause remanded.

CHASE, J., having resigned, took no part in this decision.


Summaries of

State v. Dugee

Supreme Court of Vermont. January Term, 1929
Feb 6, 1929
144 A. 689 (Vt. 1929)
Case details for

State v. Dugee

Case Details

Full title:STATE v. HERBERT DUGEE

Court:Supreme Court of Vermont. January Term, 1929

Date published: Feb 6, 1929

Citations

144 A. 689 (Vt. 1929)
144 A. 689

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