Moon v. State

Beasley, Presiding Judge.

In a bench trial, appellant was found guilty of driving without a license, driving without insurance, and driving under the influence of alcohol in violation of OCGA § 40-6-391 (a). His motion for new trial was denied.

The sole witness at trial was a Georgia State Patrol trooper. He testified that at approximately 11:20 on Christmas night 1992, he received a radio call about a single-car accident on Highway 156. When the trooper arrived at the scene, he found a blue Ford pickup truck in a ditch on the south side of the road, but there was no one in the car. He did find some papers in the truck with appellant’s name, and an empty wine bottle was found next to the driver’s seat.

The officer had gotten a description from the police dispatcher of the driver, which had been given by a witness to the accident. Accordingly, the officer immediately started looking, in the direction towards which he understood the person had started walking, for a white six-foot slim male, in his early thirties, wearing black pants and a black shirt. He did not find him along the road so he went back. After talking to a man at the house closest to the accident, he went to the scene and found defendant, who was in the back seat of a car which had arrived in the interim. He fit the description, was intoxicated, admitted he had been driving, and never said he was not intoxicated when he was driving. Instead, he said, “you didn’t see me driving, and I’m not taking no test.” In the trooper’s opinion, appellant was less safe to drive as a result of his state of intoxication.

1. Appellant enumerates as error the trial court’s admission of his statement that he had been driving the truck, on the ground that the trooper did not read his Miranda rights. Appellant made the incrimi*560nating statement in response to the trooper’s question regarding whether appellant would take a breath test. The admission of the statement was not error, because the question was not reasonably likely to elicit the incriminating response from appellant. See Williams v. State, 178 Ga. App. 581 (10) (344 SE2d 247) (1986).

2. In two enumerations of error, appellant contends that the State failed to prove that he had been in control of a motor vehicle and that he was intoxicated at the time that he was in control of a motor vehicle. “A conviction for driving or being in actual physical control of a moving vehicle while under the influence of intoxicants may be based on circumstantial evidence. The circumstantial evidence need not exclude every hypothesis save that of guilt, but only reasonable hypotheses, so as to justify a finding of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. [Cits.]” Melendy v. State, 202 Ga. App. 638 (1) (415 SE2d 62) (1992).

There is evidence that appellant was driving the car, based on his admission that he was driving. There is also evidence that appellant was intoxicated at the time he encountered the trooper around 11:30 p.m. It is a reasonable inference that a short time passed between the time defendant drove the pickup truck into the ditch and the time the officer found the defendant in the condition described above, given the events. It is also a reasonable inference that defendant did not acquire that condition in the time between his leaving the truck and his return. See Stephens v. State, 127 Ga. App. 416 (193 SE2d 870) (1972) (officer observed defendant forty-five minutes after accident and blood sample taken approximately one hour after accident).

Judgment affirmed.

Pope, C. J., McMurray, P. J., Birdsong, P. J., Andrews, Johnson and Smith, JJ., concur. Cooper and Blackburn, JJ., dissent.