dissenting.
I cannot agree with the majority that the conviction in this case should be reversed.
The appellant was charged by warrant with operating a motor vehicle upon the public highway of Knox County while under the influence of an intoxicant. Following appeal from conviction for reckless driving in General Sessions Court and a trial de novo, the defendant was again found guilty of reckless driving; the trial judge dismissing the D.U.I. charge and allowing a motion to amend the warrant to charge that offense. This action is assigned as error.
An amendment of a warrant charging a misdemeanor may, under limited circumstances, be amended so long as the amendment does not change the nature of the offense or add a new offense. See Murff v. State, 221 Tenn. Ill, 425 S.W.2d 286 (1967).
A warrant serves the same purpose or office, if the defendant elects to waive grand jury investigation of the charge(s) against him, as would an indictment or presentment. It should set out with reasonable clarity the offense charged either by name or so that it can be clearly inferred. T.C.A. § 40-708. It is axiomatic that basic due process requires one to be put on notice of just what he is accused of in order that he may defend himself. Wisconsin v. Constantineau, 400 U.S. 433, 91 S.Ct. 507, 27 L.Ed.2d 515 (1971). When the defendant was made aware that he was accused of operating, upon a public thoroughfare, a motor vehicle while under the influence of an intoxicant at a certain time and place, he was, in my view, fully apprised that he was alleged to have been operating the vehicle in a reckless manner.
I would hold as a matter of law and fact that any person who undertakes to drive a *221motor vehicle while drunk is acting in a wanton and grossly negligent manner amounting to reckless driving. It does not matter that one who undertakes to operate a vehicle while under the influence of an intoxicant is not involved in an accident, or even that he appears to operate the vehicle in a careful and prudent fashion. The mere fact that he is drunk renders him unfit to drive or to be in control of a motor vehicle. “Driving while drunk is an act malum in se, highly criminal, fraught with danger and evinces such entire want of care and indifference to results as to constitute wanton negligence.” Rice Bros. Auto Co. v. Ely, 27 Tenn.App. 81, 178 S.W.2d 88 (1943).
I would accordingly hold that every charge of operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated embodies within it the offense of reckless driving. I submit that while one may be guilty of reckless driving while sober, one cannot drive a motor vehicle while drunk without being reckless.
I do not find it was necessary for the trial judge to amend the warrant since reckless driving was proved in the trial for D.U.I. I would affirm the conviction for the lesser included offense or reckless driving.
I do not find the analogy the majority makes with the facts in this case and those in Wright v. State, 549 S.W.2d 682 (Tenn.1977), insupportive of the result I would reach. In Wright the Supreme Court agreed with the position I urged in this Court in dissent that is essentially the same as I now again set forth. Until Wright our Court had insisted that shoplifting was a separate and distinct offense from that of larceny. I had insisted, alone, that it was a lesser included offense. This was the same position I had urged upon a majority of this Court in respect to the joy riding statute, i. e., that a limited taking of an automobile could factually be a lesser included offense of larceny. See Spencer v. State, 501 S.W.2d 799 (Tenn.1973).
Now it is recognized beyond cavil (because the Supreme Court has so held) that one may be charged with stealing an automobile and, if the facts support such a finding, be found guilty of joy riding only. Or, of taking merchandise from a store and be guilty of either larceny or shoplifting, depending again upon the facts.
To hold that one cannot be guilty of reckless driving who has been charged with D.U.I. only may, if binding on the trial courts, create a number of serious problems. Two immediately occur to me.
It is sometime quite difficult to prove that one was under the influence of an intoxicant. Scientific tests are not, as in this case, always available and often witnesses are mistaken as to the conclusions made. For example, a motorist might, in a grossly negligent manner, drive an automobile through a school zone and injure children in a crosswalk. Due to a head injury and a strong odor of alcohol from a broken bottle, the driver might give every appearance of being drunk and be arrested for D.U.I. even though at trial he proves himself to have been a complete abstainer from alcoholic beverages. He has still committed a serious offense in operating his automobile in a reckless manner. Under the majority holding he could not be punished for this violation.
In all of the jurisdictions of the State with which I am familiar with the practice of criminal law, it is the frequent disposition of a D.U.I. case for the prosecution to announce that, subject to the approval of the court, the charge is being reduced to reckless driving on a plea of guilty. This method of disposing of these cases in which, for lack of adequate proof or in furtherance of some diversionary program for traffic offenders, the State and the lower courts deem it advisable to recognize reckless driving as a lesser included offense of D.U.I. will, it seems to me, be made improper by the majority’s holding.
In summary, we deal here, as we did in Wright and Spencer, with reason and logic based on fact rather than legal principal as such. Just as factually it is now recognized where there is probable cause to believe one has stolen an automobile, he may, under the facts, only be guilty of joy riding, or that one believed to have committed larceny in the taking of merchandise from a store may *222only be guilty of shoplifting. Factually, one who gives an appearance of having operated a motor vehicle while drunk may be found instead to have been guilty of reckless driving.
It is facts, not just law, that must guide. Thus, one accused of reckless driving by operating a motor vehicle at a speed of more than one hundred miles per hour might be acquitted of that charge but found guilty of violating T.C.A. § 59-852, establishing the maximum speed limit in the State, because the fact of speeding was included in the purported reckless driving. The law directs: “The defendant may also be found guilty of any offense the commission of which is necessarily included in that with which he is charged.” T.C.A. § 40-2520.
Wright and Spencer have made clear that the word “necessarily” does not mean that it is indispensible that the lesser offense must always be included in the commission of a greater offense since it is obvious that one can commit larceny without joy riding or taking merchandise from a store. There are many ways to commit larceny. Taking an automobile from its parking place or a chain saw from a retail store store may, or may not, be two.
There are many ways to commit the offense of reckless driving. Driving while drunk is one. See Rice Bros. Auto Co. v. Ely, supra. Although there was probable cause to believe the defendant in this case had, while under the influence of an intoxicant, engaged in the reckless conduct charged, the facts did not support this.
However, in this case the defendant, by his own admission, drove his automobile at an excessive rate of speed under slick and hazardous road conditions resulting in an accident. I cannot say that the trier of fact was not justified in finding that this amounted to reckless driving.
For the reasons set out above, I respectfully dissent.