Approved
6/14/04
ASSAULT BY AUTO OR VESSEL
(SERIOUS BODILY INJURY, WITH DRUNK DRIVING
OR REFUSAL)
(N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1c)
The defendant (Name) is charged
in count _____ with the crime of assault by
auto [or vessel]. The indictment alleges:
(READ APPROPRIATE COUNT OF INDICTMENT)
The statute upon which this
charge is based provides:
A person is guilty of assault by auto [or
vessel] when the person drives a vehicle [or
vessel] recklessly and causes...serious
bodily injury...to another.
In order for you to find the
defendant guilty of this crime, the State
must prove the following elements beyond a
reasonable doubt:
1. That defendant was driving a
vehicle [or vessel];
2. That defendant caused serious
bodily injury to (name victim); and
3. That defendant caused such
serious bodily injury by driving the vehicle
[or vessel] recklessly.
Bodily injury is defined as
physical pain, illness or any impairment of
physical condition.
Serious bodily injury is defined as bodily
injury which creates a substantial risk of
death or which causes serious, permanent
disfigurement, or protracted loss or
impairment of the function of any bodily
member or organ.
In order to find that defendant
caused (victim's) injury, you must find that
(victim) would not have been injured but for
defendant's conduct.
A person acts recklessly when (he/she)
consciously disregards a substantial and
unjustifiable risk that serious bodily
injury will result from (his/her) conduct.
The risk must be of such a nature and degree
that, considering the nature and purpose of
the defendant's conduct and the
circumstances known to (him/her), disregard
of the risk involves a gross deviation from
the standard of conduct that a reasonable
person would observe in the defendant's
situation.
In other words, in order for you
to find the defendant drove a vehicle [or
vessel] recklessly, the State must prove
beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant
was aware that (he/she) was operating a
vehicle [or vessel] in such a manner or
under such circumstances as to create a
substantial and unjustifiable risk of
serious bodily injury to another. The State
must also prove beyond a reasonable doubt
that the defendant consciously disregarded
this risk and that the disregard of the risk
was a gross deviation from the way a
reasonable person would have conducted
(himself/herself) in the situation.
In determining whether the State has proven
beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant
acted recklessly, defendant’s unawareness of
a risk, due to self-induced intoxication,
is immaterial.
In other words, you may find that the State
has proven recklessness beyond a reasonable
doubt even though the defendant was unaware
of a risk of which he/she would have been
aware were he/she not intoxicated.
Recklessness is a condition of the mind that
cannot be seen and that can often be
determined only from inferences from
conduct, words, or acts. It is not necessary
for the State to produce a witness to
testify that the defendant stated that
(he/she) acted with a particular state of
mind. It is within your power to find that
proof of recklessness has been furnished
beyond a reasonable doubt by inferences that
may arise from the nature of the acts and
circumstances surrounding the conduct in
question.
[WHERE A VIOLATION OF THE MOTOR VEHICLE
STATUTES
IS ALLEGED, ADD THE FOLLOWING]
The State alleges that the defendant's
conduct involved [a] violation[s] of the
motor vehicle laws of this State.
Specifically, it is alleged that the
defendant [list motor vehicle violations
alleged and their elements]. It may be
necessary for you to determine whether
defendant operated a vehicle while in
violation of New Jersey's drunk driving law
[and/or that defendant thereafter refused to
submit to a breathalyzer examination as
required by New Jersey law], as I will
explain shortly. [Charge where
appropriate: However, with that one
possible exception, whether defendant is
guilty or not of a motor vehicle offense
will be determined by an appropriate court.
In other words, it is not your job to decide
whether defendant is guilty or not guilty of
any motor vehicle offense other than drunk
driving (and/or refusal).] In any
event, you may consider the evidence that
(he/she) committed [a] motor vehicle
offense[s] in deciding whether (he/she) was
reckless.
[CHARGE IN ALL CASES]
In conclusion, the three elements of the
crime of assault by auto [or vessel] are:
1. That the defendant was driving a
vehicle [or vessel];
2. That the defendant caused serious
bodily injury to (name victim); and
3. That the defendant caused such
serious bodily injury by driving the vehicle
[or vessel] recklessly.
If you are satisfied that the State has
proven each and every one of these elements
beyond a reasonable doubt, then you must
find the defendant guilty of assault by auto
[or vessel]. However, if the State has
failed to prove any element beyond a
reasonable doubt, then you must find the
defendant not guilty of assault by auto [or
vessel].
If, and only if, you find the defendant
guilty of the crime charged beyond a
reasonable doubt, you must proceed to
determine whether the State has also proven
beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant
operated the auto [or vessel] while in
violation of New Jersey’s drunk driving law
[or that defendant thereafter refused to
submit to a breathalyzer examination as
required by New Jersey law].
In order for you to find that the defendant
violated the drunk driving law, the State
must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that
the defendant operated a motor vehicle [or
vessel] while under the influence of
intoxicating liquor, narcotic,
hallucinogenic or habit-producing drug, or
operated a motor vehicle with a blood
alcohol concentration of 0.08% or more by
weight of alcohol in (his/her) blood.
[CHARGE WHERE AND TO THE EXTENT APPROPRIATE]
If, and only if, you find the defendant
guilty of the crime charged beyond a
reasonable doubt, and you also decide that
the State has proven beyond a reasonable
doubt that the defendant operated the auto
[or vessel] while in violation of New
Jersey's drunk driving law [or that
defendant thereafter refused to submit to a
breathalyzer examination as required by New
Jersey law], you must also proceed to
determine whether the State has further
proven beyond a reasonable doubt that
the defendant did so while on any school
property used for school purposes which was
owned by or leased to any elementary or
secondary school or school board, or within
1,000 feet of such property.
[OR]
the defendant did so while driving through a
school crossing, if the municipality, by
ordinance or resolution, had designated the
school crossing as such. A “school
crossing” means that portion of a highway
where school children are required to cross
the highway in the vicinity of a school.
[OR]
the defendant did so while driving through a
school crossing knowing that juveniles were
present, if the municipality had not
designated the school crossing as such by
ordinance or resolution. A “school
crossing” means that portion of a highway
where school children are required to cross
the highway in the vicinity of a school.
It is no defense to a prosecution under the
statute that the defendant was unaware that
the prohibited conduct took place while on
or within 1,000 feet of any school property
[OR while driving through a school
crossing that has been designated as such by
municipal ordinance or resolution]. Nor is
it a defense in such a case that no
juveniles were present on the school
property [OR crossing zone] at the
time of the offense, or that the school was
not in session.
[CHARGE IF APPLICABLE]
The additional element of operating a
vehicle [or vessel] in violation of the
drunk driving law through a school crossing
that has not been designated
as such by municipal ordinance or resolution
can only be found where there is proof
beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant
knew that juveniles were present at the
time. A person acts knowingly with respect
to the nature of (his/her) conduct or the
attendant circumstances if a person is aware
that (his/her) conduct is of that nature, or
that such circumstances exist, or a person
is aware of a high probability of their
existence. A person acts knowingly with
respect to a result of (his/her) conduct if
a person is aware that it is practically
certain that (his/her) conduct will cause
such a result. One is said to act knowingly
if one acts with knowledge, if one acts
consciously, if (he/she) comprehends
(his/her) acts.
Knowledge, like recklessness, is a condition
of the mind that cannot be seen and that can
often be determined only from inferences
from conduct, word, or acts. As I told you
before, it is not necessary for the State to
produce a witness to testify that the
defendant stated that (he/she) acted with a
particular state of mind. It is within your
power to find that proof of knowledge has
been furnished beyond a reasonable doubt by
inferences that may arise from the nature of
the acts and circumstances surrounding the
conduct in question.
Record your additional finding(s) in the
place(s) provided on your verdict sheet.
There is no legal
distinction between intoxication
resulting from alcohol use and that
resulting from drug use. Cannel,
New Jersey Criminal Code Annotated,
Comment 2 to N.J.S.A. 2C:2-8
(Gann 2004) (citing State v.
Sette, 259 N.J. Super.
156, 173-74 (App. Div. 1992),
certif. denied, 130 N.J.
597 (1992); State v. Green,
318 N.J. Super. 361, 370
(App. Div. 1999), aff’d o.b.,
163 N.J. 140 (2001).
N.J.S.A. 2C:2-8b.
For the exact statutory definition
of self-induced intoxication, please
see the full text of N.J.S.A.
2C:2-8b.
1971 Code Commentary to
N.J.S.A. 2C:2-8 as reproduced in
Cannel, supra, Comment to
N.J.S.A. 2C:2-8.