ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT
John (Jack) F. Crawford
Indianapolis, Indiana
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
Steve Carter
Attorney General of Indiana
Grant H. Carlton
Deputy Attorney General
Indianapolis, Indiana
__________________________________________________________________
IN THE
SUPREME COURT OF INDIANA
__________________________________________________________________
LANNY ABNEY, )
)
Appellant (Defendant Below), ) Indiana Supreme Court
) Cause No. 49S02-0204-CR-255
v. )
) Indiana Court of Appeals
STATE OF INDIANA, ) Cause No. 49A02-0103-CR-160
)
Appellee (Plaintiff Below). )
__________________________________________________________________
APPEAL FROM THE MARION SUPERIOR COURT
The Honorable Cale J. Bradford, Judge
Cause No. 49G03-9909-CF-164322
__________________________________________________________________
ON PETITION FOR TRANSFER
__________________________________________________________________
April 26, 2002
BOEHM, Justice.
After his car struck a bicyclist, Lanny Abney was convicted of several crimes,
including operating a vehicle with .10% or more blood alcohol content causing death.
The trial court instructed the jury that if the State proved that
Abneys driving conduct was a contributing cause of the accident the requisite causation
would be established. Although an earlier Court of Appeals decision had approved
that standard of causation, we agree with the Court of Appeals in this
case that the statute requires that the defendants driving be proven to be
a proximate cause of the accident, not merely a contributing cause. We
grant transfer, reverse the convictions, and remand for a new trial.
At about 2:30 a.m. on July 9, 1999, Abney headed home from an
Indianapolis tavern. As he drove west on Rockville Road toward Danville, his
car struck the body of Jon Heffernan, who was bicycling home from work.
Abney drove on despite a shattered windshield, a caved-in roof, and a
deployed airbag. Danville police spotted Abney navigating with his head out the
drivers side window and, after a brief pursuit, pulled him over into a
residential driveway. Abney appeared intoxicated and admitted having hit something with his
car, but claimed not to know what it was. Abney later submitted
to a blood test that revealed a .21% blood alcohol content. Meanwhile,
Heffernan was pronounced dead at the scene and an autopsy later revealed he
died from a broken neck.
Abney was charged with (1) operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated causing death,
(2) operating a vehicle with .10% or more blood alcohol content causing death,
and (3) leaving the scene of an accident resulting in death, all Class
C felonies. The first two offenses required that Abneys driving cause Heffernans
death, while the third count required that the accident result in Heffernans
death. Thus the focus of Abneys trial was whether or not he
caused Heffernans death. At trial, Abney contended it was possible that another
vehicle had struck Heffernan first, and thrown Heffernan into Abneys car. To
that end, Abney tendered a proposed jury instruction that stated: If you find
that the defendants conduct caused the accident that produced the death of the
victim, the State has proven the element of causation. However, if you
find that someone elses conduct caused the accident, you should find the defendant
not guilty . . . .
The trial court refused Abneys tendered instruction and instead gave the jury the
following instruction:
To prove the offense of operating while intoxicated causing death as charged in
counts 1 and 2 of the information, the State must prove beyond a
reasonable doubt the element of causation.
In determining whether the defendant caused the death of the victim, you should
focus upon the driving conduct of the defendant and not speculation on whether
the defendant could have avoided the accident had he been sober.
If you find that the Defendants driving conduct was a contributing cause to
the accident that produced the death of the victim, the State has proven
the element of causation.
The jury found Abney guilty on all three counts. Abney also pleaded
guilty to an enhancement based upon a prior, unrelated conviction for operating a
vehicle while intoxicated. The trial court sentenced Abney to twenty years imprisonment.
On appeal, Abney argued that the trial court erred by instructing the jury
that the State needed to prove only that Abney was a contributing cause
of Heffernans death, rather than a substantial, proximate or legal cause.
Abney
v. State, 758 N.E.2d 72 (Ind. Ct. App. 2001). The Court of
Appeals agreed, holding that a substantial cause is required . . . and
the jury instructions should so advise. Id. at 76. The court
also found that Abney was prejudiced by the erroneous instruction and therefore reversed
the convictions and remanded for a new trial. The State petitioned this
Court for transfer, contending that the Court of Appeals opinion conflicts with another
Court of Appeals decision, Stephenson v. State, 648 N.E.2d 395 (Ind. Ct. App.
1995), and that the Court of Appeals misinterpreted this Courts opinion in Micinski
v. State, 487 N.E.2d 150 (Ind. 1986).
Causation
Indiana Code section 9-30-5-1(a) states: A person who operates a motor vehicle with
at least ten-hundredths percent (0.10%) by weight of alcohol in the persons blood
commits a Class C misdemeanor. Section 9-30-5-5 states that a person who
violates section 9-30-5-1 commits a Class C felony if the crime results in
the death of another person. In
Micinski v. State, 487 N.E.2d 150,
154 (Ind. 1986), this Court held that to prove a violation of these
statutes, the State must show that: (1) the defendant drove while intoxicated; and
(2) that act resulted in injury to another person. Micinski rejected the
contention that the statute required the State to demonstrate that the defendants intoxicationnot
his operation of the vehicledirectly and proximately caused the resulting injury, finding that
it placed too great an emphasis on the intoxication and invited speculation as
to whether the driver could have prevented the accident if sober. Id.
at 153-54. Micinski went on to address the proof of causation required
to sustain a conviction under the statute:
There is, of course, a need to show causation; in the typical case
a showing that the driver ran into the victim would suffice. .
. . .
This is not to say that a drunk driver who hits a child
who has run out from between two parked cars is not entitled to
ask a jury to find him not guilty because there is reasonable doubt
whether he caused the collision.
Id. at 154.
In
Stephenson v. State, 648 N.E.2d 395 (Ind. Ct. App. 1995), trans. denied,
the defendant tendered an instruction, similar to Abneys, that would have required the
State to prove that his operation of a vehicle while intoxicated caused the
motor vehicle accident which resulted in the death of another person. Id.
at 396. That panel of the Court of Appeals referred to Micinskis
statements on causation and held that [t]he causation element recognized by Micinski refers
to something akin to a contributing cause. Id. Presumably the trial
court in this case relied on Stephenson in instructing the jury.
The Court of Appeals panel in this case distinguished Stephenson and took the
view that Micinskis analogy of the intoxicated driver who strikes the suddenly appearing
child demonstrates that more than a contributing cause was required. Abney, 758
N.E.2d at 75. The Court of Appeals concluded that the State must
prove the defendants operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated was a substantial cause
of the resulting death, not a mere contributing cause. Id. at 76.
We think the Court of Appeals approach in this case more closely reflects
what is required to sustain a conviction under section 9-30-5-5. As we
stated in
Micinski, [a]nalysis of this statute should focus on the drivers acts
. . . . If the drivers conduct caused the injury, he
commits the crime; if someone elses conduct caused the injury, he is not
guilty. 487 N.E.2d at 154. This is simply a short-handed way
of stating the well-settled rule that the State must prove the defendants conduct
was a proximate cause of the victims injury or death. Boswell v.
State, 250 Ind. 607, 609, 238 N.E.2d 283, 285 (1968) (citing, inter alia,
Dunville v. State, 188 Ind. 373, 379, 123 N.E. 689, 691 (1919)); Warner
v. State, 577 N.E.2d 267, 270 (Ind. Ct. App. 1991). This was
the basis for Abneys defense that, although his vehicle struck Heffernans body, the
evidence tended to show that another vehicle struck Heffernan first and threw Heffernan
into Abneys vehicle. If the trier of fact accepts Abneys scenario, Abneys
driving may not have been a proximate cause of Heffernans death.
A contributing cause is a factor thatthough not the primary causeplays a part
in producing a result. Blacks Law Dictionary 212 (7th ed. 1999).
If the States view were correct, and proof that Abneys conduct was a
contributing cause all that is necessary, the driver in the hypothetical posed in
Micinski could have been convicted. Applying the States reasoning here, all the
State would need to prove was that Heffernan did not die until after
Abneys vehicle struck him, and that Abneys vehicle striking Heffernan played some part
in Heffernans death. Yet if the jury concluded that Heffernan was unexpectedly
hurled in front of Abneys car, Abney would be indistinguishable from the driver
striking the darting child.
Abneys tendered instruction used the word caused, which is the language from
Micinski.
Refusal to give Abneys instruction, and instructing as to the lesser standard
of contributing cause was error. We do not agree with the dissent
that Micinski stands for requiring a lesser level of causation than Abneys tendered
instruction. The tendered instruction quoted from Micinski. Nor do we intend
to resurrect the Higginbotham standard that Micinski rejected. Higginbotham suggested that the
State must prove a causal link between the intoxication and the injury.
We did not agree with that argument in Micinski, nor do we now.
Our concern here is the causal link between the driving conduct and
the injury, and the requirement that the State prove that Abneys driving was
more than a contributing cause of Heffernans death.
We agree with the Court of Appeals that Abney was prejudiced by the
error as to the first two counts. We note that the instruction
on causation did not explicitly refer to the final count, leaving the scene
of an accident resulting in death. However, the jury was instructed that,
to prove that offense, the State must show the accident caused Heffernans death.
Because the jury was again required to apply a standard of causation,
the erroneous instruction prejudiced Abney as to that conviction as well.
Lockhart
v. State, 609 N.E.2d 1093, 1101 (Ind. 1993).
Conclusion
We reverse Abneys convictions and remand for a new trial.
SHEPARD, C.J., and DICKSON and RUCKER, JJ., concur.
SULLIVAN, J., dissents with separate opinion.
Attorney for Appellant
John Crawford
Indianapolis, IN
Attorneys for Appellee
Steve Carter
Attorney General of Indiana
Grant Carlton
Deputy Attorney General
Indianapolis, IN
IN THE
INDIANA SUPREME COURT
LANNY ABNEY,
Appellant (Defendant below),
v.
STATE OF INDIANA,
Appellee (Plaintiff below).
)
) Supreme Court No.
) 49S02-0204-CR-255
)
)
) Court of Appeals No.
) 49A02-0103-CR-160
)
)
)
APPEAL FROM THE MARION SUPERIOR COURT
The Honorable Cale J. Bradford, Judge
Cause No. 49G03-9909-CF-164322
ON PETITION TO TRANSFER
April 26, 2002
SULLIVAN, Justice, dissenting.
I respectfully dissent. I think the instruction used by the trial court
here (and approved by the Court of Appeals in Stephenson v. State, 648
N.E.2d 395 (Ind. Ct. App. 1995), trans. denied), is faithful to this courts
directives in Micinski v. State, 487 N.E.2d 150 (Ind. 1986).
Micinski reversed a conviction for leaving the scene of an accident involving personal
injury on grounds that the defendant was entitled to an instruction to the
effect that he needed to have knowledge that there was an injury accident.
487 N.E.2d at 152. That holding which drew two dissents
is not at issue in todays case. Micinski then went on
to address defendants claim that the evidence was insufficient on the element of
causation to support his conviction on two counts of driving under the influence
causing bodily injury. On this issue, our court unanimously rejected defendants claim,
saying:
The [defendant urges and the] Court [of Appeals] agreed and held:
To convict under this statute, the state must prove b
eyond a reasonable doubt
that the defendant (1) operated a vehicle (2) while intoxicated, and (3) that
the intoxication did directly and proximately cause serious bodily injury.
In effect, this construction of the statute leads the jury to ask a
but-for kind of question: Is it the driver's intoxication that caused him
to hit the victim? We conclude that this is not what
the legi
slature intended. The statute creates a crime--driving while intoxicated--and adds higher
penalties if the commission of this offense results in serious injury or the
death of another person. There is, of course, a need to show
causation; in the typical case a showing that the driver ran into the
victim would suffice. We find nothing in the statute to indicate that
the General Assembly intended to require that the State prove a causal link
between the driver's intoxication and the fact that injury resulted from his driving.
487 N.E.2d at 153 (citation omitted). It seems to me clear from
this language that
Micinski sets the bar for proving causation at a level
lower than that required by the majority today. Support for my reading
of Micinski comes, I think, from the fact that Micinski explicitly disapproved Higginbotham
v. State in which the Court of Appeals held:
Based upon these circumstances we hold defendant was harmed by the lack of
instruction on causation. The instruction did trace the wording of the statute
as far as the results in language. It also spoke in terms
of loss of normal control of one's faculties caused by use of alcohol.
Ho
wever, the instruction did not require the jury to find, in order
to convict defendant, that the death was caused by or a consequence of
the operation of a vehicle with loss of normal control of faculties because
of intoxication.
427 N.E.2d 896, 900 (Ind. Ct. App. 1981). It seems to me
that the majority today resu
rrects the Higginbotham standard that Micinski rejected.
It is true, as the majority says, that
Micinski goes on to discuss
the hypothetical of the child darting into the street and says that a
defendant is entitled to ask a jury to find him not guilty because
there is reasonable doubt whether he caused the collision. 487 N.E.2d at
154. I think the substantial causation language used by the trial court
handles this hypothetical adequately if I hit a child darting into the
street, my driving is not a substantial cause of the accident. This
was the explicit holding of Stephenson, a case in which we unanimously denied
transfer.
I would affirm the judgment of the trial court.