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Commonwealth v. McCready11/29/2000
Worcester.
September 18, 2000.
Evidence, Hospital record, Intoxication. Motor Vehicle, Operating under the influence, Operating to endanger.
Complaint received and sworn to in the Westborough Division of the District Court Department on May 15, 1998.
The case was tried before Thomas F. Sullivan, Jr., J.
Upon jury trial in District Court, the defendant John McCready was convicted of operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating liquor, G. L. c. 90, ? 24(1)(a)(1) ("OUI"), and of operating a vehicle recklessly so as to endanger, G. L. c. 90, ? 24(2)(a). On the present appeal, the defendant does not dispute there was sufficient evidence to convict, but he argues the judge erred in admitting a portion of the record at the hospital indicating he was intoxicated when involved in the motor accident, and, had this record evidence been disallowed, the jury might have brought in a verdict of acquittal. We hold that the judge did not err (and, although the point becomes immaterial, we doubt the jury would have found for the defendant if they had been kept unaware of the hospital record, for all the other evidence tending to prove the defendant's condition was pretty solid).
For the first time on appeal the defendant also notes a question about his being sentenced on the OUI offense as a second offender.
The case in outline (to be viewed with intendments favoring the Commonwealth) was as follows. The defendant in his 1992 Oldsmobile Toronado was driving north on Lyman Street in Northborough on the way to his house in Marlborough. Before the intersection of Lyman and Bartlett Streets, in an illuminated, thirty-five m.p.h. speed area well known to the defendant, his vehicle went out of control and ran off the road, struck a guardrail, descended into a ditch or embankment, and collided with a concrete portion of a water main aqueduct; it halted 142 feet past the intersection. The front part of the car was crushed. The time was 9:30 P.M. The defendant managed to lift himself from the wreck and to walk to the house nearby of Jean Stone, an acquaintance.
Arriving at the scene on radio call, Officer Joseph Galvin of the Northborough police observed the extensive damage to the car and searched for but found no skid marks on the road or other evidence of braking. At Stone's house, Galvin spoke with the defendant and at close approach to him noted a strong smell of alcohol on his breath, eyes glassy and bloodshot, and speech slurred. Galvin did not run any physical field sobriety test because the defendant had suffered injuries; on verbal testing (recitations of alphabet), the defendant did rather poorly. The defendant said he had had two alcoholic drinks, one at 3:30 P.M. (not otherwise described) and the other at 7:30 P.M. (whiskey mixed with water and ice in a ten-ounce glass); it appeared he had not had a substantial meal in the course of the day. Galvin's total assessment was that the defendant "wasn't flat down drunk but he was under the influence."
For the defendant, Stone and the defendant's wife (who appeared at Stone's house after a phone call) testified that the defendant seemed to them sober in looks and action. The defendant protested he was sober and not at fault; he said his brakes had simply failed when applied. There was some evidence that the car had stalled several times in the few months before the accident, but no proof of prior actual failure of brakes.
Turning to the issue of the hospital record, the defendant reached the Marlborough Hospital by ambulance about 10:55 P.M. and we have by exhibit the usual detailed hospital record, from intake to discharge, sh
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