State v. Noyes

Decision Date07 May 1940
Citation13 A.2d 187,111 Vt. 178
PartiesSTATE v. EARL NOYES
CourtVermont Supreme Court

February Term, 1940.

INFORMATION for breach of the peace. Plea of not guilty. Trial by jury by Rutland Municipal Court, Christopher A Webber, Judge. Verdict and judgment of guilty, respondent excepted. The opinion states the case.

Exceptions overruled.

James E. Bigelow for the respondent.

Robert T. Stafford, City Grand Juror of the City of Rutland for the State.

Present: MOULTON, C. J., SHERBURNE, BUTTLES, STURTEVANT and JEFFORDS, JJ.

OPINION
MOULTON

This respondent was charged with having committed a breach of the peace "by threatening, assaulting and striking with his motor vehicle another person, to-wit: one Joe LaPine." The jury found him guilty, and judgment was entered upon the verdict. The cause is here upon his exceptions.

The affair took place on Park Street in the City of Rutland near the north gate of the premises of the Rutland Agricultural Association, upon which the annual fair was then being held. The fence enclosing the fair grounds abuts upon the highway, but there is a space between the fence and the surfaced roadway which, with the knowledge and consent of the mayor of the city, had been set aside as a parking area for the use of the officials of the association. LaPine was an employee of the association and was stationed at the place for the purpose of directing the parking of automobiles, but he was not a member of the city police and had no legal authority to control the movements of motor vehicles. The testimony as to what happened was conflicting, but it was open to the jury to find that the respondent drove his car off the surfaced part of the street, and was about to enter a vacant space in the parking area when LaPine stepped in front of his car and stopped him. Upon inquiry from the respondent LaPine informed him that he was under orders from the mayor to reserve that space for the officials of the fair. The respondent pungently expressed his disdain of the mayor, said that, being a heavy taxpayer, he was going in there regardless of his orders, told LaPine to get out of the way or he would run over him, and at once put his car in motion. LaPine jumped aside, but too late, for he was struck and injured to an extent requiring medical attention.

The trial judge charged as follows: "If you find that the respondent deliberately drove there and into Joe LaPine as the State's evidence shows, and which the respondent denies, I charge you that as a matter of law this would amount to breach of peace, if you believe the State's evidence. That showed that after some altercation the respondent said he was going in there and if he did not get out of the way he would run into him. If you find that he deliberately drove into him, beyond a reasonable doubt, then he committed a breach of the peace and I so charge you. But it would not be necessary for you, to find that he committed breach of peace, to find that the respondent struck Joe LaPine because there is also a charge that he threatened him and you will bear in mind that there was evidence tending to show there was an argument between them. If you find there was such a threat or argument, beyond a reasonable doubt then you should consider whether that amounted to a breach of peace." An...

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