a231035 Precedential We affirm Processed

State of Minnesota v. Robert Daniel Neumiller

Minnesota Court of Appeals · Filed May 13, 2024

Opinion text

This opinion is nonprecedential except as provided by
Minn. R. Civ. App. P. 136.01, subd. 1(c).

STATE OF MINNESOTA
IN COURT OF APPEALS
A23-1035

State of Minnesota,
Respondent,

vs.

Robert Daniel Neumiller,
Appellant.

Filed May 13, 2024
Affirmed
Larkin, Judge
Dissenting, Ross, Judge

Stearns County District Court
File No. 73-CR-20-7833

Keith Ellison, Attorney General, Ed Stockmeyer, Assistant Attorney General, St. Paul,
Minnesota; and

Janelle Prokopec Kendall, Stearns County Attorney, Kyle Triggs, Assistant County
Attorney, St. Cloud, Minnesota (for respondent)

Barry S. Edwards, Max A. Keller, Keller Law Offices, Minneapolis, Minnesota (for
appellant)

Considered and decided by Bjorkman, Presiding Judge; Ross, Judge; and Larkin,

Judge.

NONPRECEDENTIAL OPINION

LARKIN, Judge

Appellant challenges his conviction of criminal vehicular homicide, arguing that the

evidence was insufficient to sustain the conviction. We affirm.
FACTS

Respondent State of Minnesota charged appellant Robert Daniel Neumiller with

criminal vehicular homicide and careless driving. Neumiller waived his right to a jury trial.

The parties stipulated to the victim’s cause of death: multiple blunt force injuries sustained

during a collision between vehicles driven by Neumiller and the victim.

At the ensuing bench trial, the district court heard the testimony of several witnesses

and received evidence that included a squad-camera video recording of the collision and

an audio recording of a conversation between a state trooper and Neumiller after the

collision. Neumiller did not testify.

The district court’s posttrial findings of fact indicate that, on July 12, 2019, at

approximately 10:00 a.m., Neumiller was driving a Toyota SUV westbound on Interstate

94 (I-94) and exited the freeway at the intersection of I-94 and Highway 23 (the

intersection). He was the only person in the vehicle, and he was familiar with the

intersection because he had traveled through it many times. The weather was clear.

The exit ramp from I-94 to Highway 23 has two lanes, and each has a stop sign at

its intersection with Highway 23. The left lane of the exit ramp is for traffic turning left

onto Highway 23 or proceeding straight through the intersection. The right lane is for

traffic turning right onto Highway 23. Highway 23 is a divided highway in the area of the

exit ramp, with two lanes of traffic on each side of the median. To reach the median from

the left lane of the exit ramp, a vehicle must cross two lanes of traffic approaching from

the left on Highway 23 at highway speeds.

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After Neumiller exited I-94, he positioned his vehicle in the left lane of the exit

ramp to Highway 23, behind two vehicles that were stopped at the stop sign for that lane.

Neumiller’s vehicle was more than two car lengths from the stop sign. Once the first of

the two stopped vehicles drove away from the stop sign and into the intersection,

Neumiller’s vehicle did not move for approximately four seconds. And Neumiller’s

vehicle remained stationary as the second vehicle drove past the stop sign and into the

intersection. Once Neumiller started to move his vehicle, he did not stop at the stop sign

governing his lane. Instead, Neumiller drove from his original stationary position on the

exit ramp into its intersection with Highway 23.

As Neumiller drove past the stop sign and into the intersection, the victim’s vehicle

was approaching from the left on Highway 23. The victim was driving a small SUV in the

right lane of Highway 23. Neumiller pulled out in front of the victim’s vehicle, and the

victim’s vehicle veered to the left. The front passenger’s side corner of the victim’s vehicle

hit the driver’s door area and front quarter panel of Neumiller’s vehicle. Neumiller’s

vehicle did not appear to brake or slow down until after the collision.

A state trooper was parked in a squad car approximately 720 feet away from the

intersection and witnessed the collision. The trooper activated the recording feature of his

squad camera, which enabled recording of the previous 60 seconds and captured the

collision on video. The trooper immediately approached the vehicles and found Neumiller

unconscious. The victim was conscious, but she died at a hospital later that day from blunt

force injuries sustained in the collision.

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When law enforcement interviewed Neumiller, he did not remember the crash. He

acknowledged that he was familiar with the intersection because he drove through it “at

least once to probably [five] times a day depending on the day.” Although some evidence

suggested that Neumiller may have been using his cell phone, the district court found that

the state “did not prove beyond a reasonable doubt that [he] was indeed using his phone at

the time of, or immediately before, the collision.”

The district court found Neumiller guilty as charged. Specifically, it found that the

state proved that Neumiller caused the victim’s death by operating a motor vehicle in a

grossly negligent manner. The district court sentenced Neumiller to 48 months in prison

and stayed execution of that sentence for five years.

Neumiller appeals.

DECISION

Neumiller challenges his conviction of criminal vehicular homicide, arguing that

the evidence presented at trial was insufficient to sustain the district court’s finding of guilt.

When considering a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence, we view the record in a

light most favorable to the conviction and will not disturb the verdict if the fact-finder,

“acting with due regard for the presumption of innocence and the requirement of proof

beyond a reasonable doubt, could have reasonably concluded that the defendant was guilty

of the charged offense.” State v. Dorn, 887 N.W.2d 826, 830 (Minn. 2016). “This standard

applies to both bench trials and jury trials.” Id.

Neumiller was convicted under Minn. Stat. § 609.2112, subd. 1(a)(1) (2018), which

provides that “a person is guilty of criminal vehicular homicide . . . if the person causes the

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death of a human being . . . as a result of operating a motor vehicle[] in a grossly negligent

manner.” Neumiller contends that the evidence was insufficient to prove that his driving

conduct was grossly negligent.

Minnesota has long recognized that the difference between ordinary and gross

negligence is one of degree:

[‘]Gross negligence is substantially and appreciably higher in
magnitude than ordinary negligence. It is materially more
want of care than constitutes simple inadvertence. It is an act
or omission respecting legal duty of an aggravated character as
distinguished from a mere failure to exercise ordinary care. It
is very great negligence, or the absence of slight diligence, or
the want of even scant care. It amounts to indifference to
present legal duty, and to utter forgetfulness of legal
obligations so far as other persons may be affected. It is a
heedless and palpable violation of legal duty respecting the
rights of others. The element of culpability which
characterizes all negligence is in gross negligence magnified to
a high degree as compared with that present in ordinary
negligence. Gross negligence is a manifestly smaller amount
of watchfulness and circumspection than the circumstances
require of a person of ordinary prudence.[’]

State v. Bolsinger, 21 N.W.2d 480, 485 (Minn. 1946) (quoting Altman v. Aronson,

121 N.E. 505, 506 (Mass. 1919)); see State v. Al-Naseer, 690 N.W.2d 744, 752 (Minn.

2005) (recognizing that Bolsinger “adopted” the Altman definition of gross negligence).

The dispute here regards whether Neumiller’s conduct constituted gross negligence

as defined in Bolsinger. As to that issue, the district court found:

[Neumiller], who had traveled through that intersection
multiple times a week, knowingly failed to come to a complete
stop behind the stop sign and instead drove through the
intersection right in front of an oncoming vehicle. [He] failed
to observe the stop sign and the white stop bar painted on the
roadway. He failed to check, and even failed to slow, even

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slightly, for cross traffic that was traveling at highway speeds
and that had the right of way. [Neumiller’s] conduct
demonstrated a total obliviousness of the intersection and the
SUV carrying [the victim].

[Neumiller’s] conduct showed a degree of ‘inattention
to the road’ sufficient to meet the gross negligence standard.
[His] absence of slight diligence, or the want of even scant
care, amounts to an indifference to a present legal duty, and to
utter forgetfulness of legal obligations so far as other persons
may be affected.

The [c]ourt finds that based upon the evidence
presented, the [s]tate has proven beyond a reasonable doubt
that [Neumiller’s] driving conduct constituted gross
negligence, and that by operating a motor vehicle in a grossly
negligent manner, [he] caused the [victim’s death].

In sum, the district court concluded that Neumiller’s driving conduct was grossly

negligent because, despite his familiarity with the intersection, his knowledge of the stop

sign, and his knowledge that he would cross two lanes of traffic coming from the left at

highway speeds, he completely disregarded his legal obligation to stop at the stop line

before entering the intersection.

Minnesota’s traffic code dictates that every driver “shall stop at a stop sign or at a

clearly marked stop line before entering the intersection.” Minn. Stat. § 169.30(b) (2018).

The preposition “at” in this statute means “a particular place or position.” State v. Gibson,

945 N.W.2d 855, 858 (Minn. 2020) (emphasis omitted) (quotation omitted).

Consequently, “[a] stop line and a stop sign are signals that specify the precise place,

location, or position where a driver must stop a vehicle . . . .” Id. The supreme court has

rejected any interpretation that would permit vehicles to stop “near the position of a stop

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sign or clearly marked stop line” because this type of “nebulous stopping area” contradicts

the plain meaning of the preposition “at.” Id.

It is undisputed that Neumiller failed to stop at the stop sign or stop line. In doing

so, he also violated another statute that requires a driver to stop and yield before entering a

through highway. See Minn. Stat. § 169.20, subd. 3(a) (2018) (“The driver of a vehicle

shall stop as required by this chapter at the entrance to a through highway and shall yield

the right-of-way to other vehicles which have entered the intersection from the through

highway or which are approaching so closely on the through highway as to constitute an

immediate hazard, but the driver having so yielded may proceed, and the drivers of all other

vehicles approaching the intersection on the through highway shall yield the right-of-way

to the vehicles so proceeding into or across the through highway.”). Moreover, the record

indicates that he was inattentive.

Although a failure to stop and yield could constitute mere negligence under other

circumstances, given the totality of the circumstances here—including Neumiller’s

familiarity with the intersection and knowledge of the stop sign—we discern no basis to

overturn the district court’s determination that Neumiller’s driving conduct rose to the level

of gross negligence. As the state argues, “stopping well before the stop signals and then

passing into the intersection without stopping at either of them was illegal and contributed

substantially to his gross negligence.”

None of Neumiller’s arguments persuades us otherwise. He first argues that “there

is neither evidence of egregious driving conduct nor of negligence” and that the “basis for

a finding of gross negligence boils down to one piece of evidence: the four seconds at the

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stop sign” when his vehicle did not move. As to those four seconds, the district court found

that “[d]ue to the long pause of [Neumiller’s] vehicle on the exit ramp before proceeding

forward when there were no vehicles immediately in front of him, it is clear to this [c]ourt

that [he] was distracted.” Neumiller argues that “[t]his is the totality of the evidence

supporting the finding of gross negligence” and that “four seconds of distraction while

driving does not amount to gross negligence.” That argument ignores the other

circumstances supporting the finding of gross negligence, including Neumiller’s

familiarity with the intersection, his knowledge of the stop sign, and his failure to stop or

even slow down at the stop sign before entering the intersection from his position two car

lengths behind the stop sign. In sum, the district court’s finding of gross negligence was

not based only on “four seconds of distraction.”

Next, Neumiller argues that, even if he was distracted for four seconds while

stopped on the exit ramp, “there is no evidence that he was distracted when he entered the

intersection.” Even if such evidence of distraction was lacking, other circumstances

supported a finding of gross negligence, such as Neumiller’s knowing failure to come to a

complete stop behind the stop sign and his act of driving into a highway intersection in

front of the victim’s oncoming vehicle.

Finally, Neumiller argues that we should apply heightened scrutiny when reviewing

his sufficiency challenge because it is based on circumstantial evidence. If the state relies

on circumstantial evidence to prove an element of an offense, this court applies a

heightened standard of review. See State v. Harris, 895 N.W.2d 592, 601-03 (Minn. 2017);

State v. Al-Naseer, 788 N.W.2d 469, 471 (Minn. 2010) (stating that “heightened scrutiny

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applies to any disputed element of the conviction that is based on circumstantial

evidence”). “In cases relying on circumstantial evidence, we can affirm a verdict only if

the circumstances proved are consistent with the hypotheses that the accused is guilty and

inconsistent with any rational hypothesis of innocence.” State v. Kissner, 541 N.W.2d 317,

321 (Minn. App. 1995), rev. denied (Minn. Feb. 9, 1996).

Neumiller argues that although “the fact of the accident is directly established [by

the video recording], the finding that [Neumiller] was ‘distracted’ must be inferred from

[the] circumstances.” Neumiller hypothesizes that he “was not distracted” and “drove

safely.” He argues that because he “stopped lawfully at the intersection” and “fulfilled his

legal duty to stop,” it is reasonable to infer that he stopped behind the two vehicles in front

of him “to observe approaching traffic.”

The flaw in Neumiller’s argument is that he did not stop lawfully at the intersection

and he did not fulfill his legal duty to stop. See Gibson, 945 N.W.2d at 858 (“A stop line

and a stop sign are signals that specify the precise place, location, or position where a driver

must stop a vehicle . . . .”). Thus, his proposed inference is not reasonable, and his

hypothesis of innocence is not rational.

Neumiller further argues that even if his stop two car lengths behind the stop sign

violated the law, caselaw holds that “this minimal violation does not give rise to any

presumption of gross negligence.” That argument is unavailing because the district court

did not apply a presumption of gross negligence; nor do we.

Neumiller doubles down on his claim that he drove safely, arguing that his

hypothesis of innocence “is actually the most plausible: [he] drove safely and [the victim]

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drove incautiously and crashed into him when he otherwise would have cleared the

intersection exactly as he intended.” Neumiller asserts that the victim caused the accident,

noting that she had her cruise control set at 66 mph even though the speed limit was 65

mph and the “advisory” speed limit was 55 mph. He notes that the victim’s vehicle was

cresting a hill, at an intersection “flagged for safety issue[s],” and “drifted out of the lane

[Neumiller] would have cleared first . . . and into the one he would reach later without so

much as tapping her brakes.” Neumiller argues that the victim “moved her car (for

whatever reason) into the space he was moving to occupy,” that “she did not brake,” and

that “[s]he also did not signal her lane change, which might, at least, have given [Neumiller]

some indication that a potential impact would be at a different place than it would have

been when he started into the intersection.”

As support for his claim that he is innocent because the victim caused the accident,

Neumiller cites cases stating that the “[c]ontributory negligence of the victim may be

considered only insofar as it tends to show that defendant was not negligent or that his acts

did not constitute the proximate cause.” State v. Schaub, 44 N.W.2d 61, 66 (Minn. 1950).

The victim’s driving conduct does not show that Neumiller’s driving conduct was not

negligent. Nor does it show that Neumiller’s acts were not a substantial factor in causing

the victim’s death. See State v. Smith, 835 N.W.2d 1, 4 (Minn. 2013) (“In order to prove

proximate cause, the [s]tate must show that the defendant’s acts were a substantial factor

in causing the death.”). We therefore do not consider the alleged contributory negligence

of the victim, and we reject Neumiller’s contention that his conviction should be reversed

because he entered the highway “safely” and the victim “caused the accident.”

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Admittedly, the line between negligence and gross negligence in the context of

criminal vehicular homicide is not clear. And this state’s jurisprudence regarding gross

negligence in that context does not establish a precise formula for determining whether

conduct constitutes gross negligence. But we are influenced by the Minnesota Supreme

Court’s determination of gross negligence in State v. Boldra, 195 N.W.2d 578, 579 (Minn.

1972). The Boldra court affirmed a finding of gross negligence where the “defendant

ignored a highway stop sign and drove his automobile into an intersection,” at a speed of

50 miles per hour, “causing an accident which resulted in the deaths of two people.” Boldra

supports the district court’s determination that Neumiller’s conduct crossed the line

separating negligence from gross negligence. Thus, the evidence was sufficient to establish

that Neumiller’s conduct constituted gross negligence, as that standard has been described

and applied in caselaw. We therefore do not disturb the district court’s finding of guilt or

Neumiller’s resulting conviction.

Affirmed.

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ROSS, Judge (dissenting)

I believe that a driver’s failing to re-stop his car immediately at a stop sign before

entering an intersection after having stopped and waited two car lengths away from the

stop sign constitutes only careless driving but not the substantially more culpable behavior

of grossly negligent driving. I therefore respectfully dissent from the majority’s decision

to affirm Robert Neumiller’s conviction of criminal vehicular homicide.

Ordinary negligence and gross negligence involve significantly different, not

slightly different, levels of culpability. For almost 80 years, Minnesota has incorporated a

definition of “gross negligence” sharply graver than ordinary negligence. See State v.

Bolsinger, 21 N.W.2d 480, 485 (Minn. 1946) (adopting gross negligence definition). Gross

negligence “is very great negligence.” State v. Al-Naseer, 690 N.W.2d 744, 752 (Minn.

2005) (quoting Bolsinger, 21 N.W.2d at 485). It is “substantially and appreciably higher in

magnitude.” Id. It concerns behavior that demonstrates the lack of “even scant care.” Id. It

involves a degree of culpability “magnified to a high degree as compared with” that of

ordinary negligence. Id. We have said that gross negligence requires “the presence of some

egregious driving conduct coupled with other evidence of negligence.” State v. Miller, 471

N.W.2d 380, 384 (Minn. App. 1991). Put simply, gross negligence involves conduct that

is far more blameworthy than ordinary negligence.

Neumiller’s blameworthy conduct was entering an intersection controlled by a stop

sign without stopping to yield to cross-moving traffic. As the district court found,

Neumiller proceeded from his stopped position about two car lengths away from the stop

sign and then “failed to come to a complete stop behind the stop sign.” This type of

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violation is generally treated as careless driving, which is “operat[ing] . . . carelessly or

heedlessly in disregard of the rights of others, or in a manner that endangers or is likely to

endanger any property or any person.” Minn. Stat. § 169.13, subd. 2 (2018). And “[i]n the

context of careless driving, carelessness is synonymous with ordinary negligence.”

Al-Naseer, 690 N.W.2d at 752. For example, the supreme court has held that evidence

proving that a driver “made [only] a rolling stop at [a] stop sign,” accelerated to 20 miles

per hour over the speed limit, and then partly veered out of his lane was sufficient to convict

the driver of careless driving. State v. Dille, 258 N.W.2d 565, 570 (Minn. 1977). We

likewise have affirmed a conviction of careless driving when the accused “ran two stop

signs.” State v. Teske, 390 N.W.2d 388, 390–91 (Minn. App. 1986). Consistent with these

cases and others, I believe that running a stop sign, without additional dangerous driving

behavior, is merely careless driving.

By contrast, running a stop sign in a particularly hazardous manner so as to

considerably raise the danger caused by the violation can support a finding that the driver’s

actions are much more blameworthy, meeting the higher standard of gross negligence. For

example, in State v. Boldra, the supreme court held that evidence that the driver killed two

people in a collision after he “ignored a highway stop sign and drove his automobile into

an intersection” of a through highway “without stopping, at a speed of 50 miles an hour or

more,” supported a conviction of criminal negligence resulting in death. State v. Boldra,

195 N.W.2d 578, 579 (Minn. 1972). We have similarly recognized that racing into an

intersection in complete disregard of a stop sign is grossly negligent driving. We did so in

a well-reasoned, unpublished opinion involving a minivan that entered an intersection also

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at about 50 miles per hour, ignoring both a warning sign of an impending stop and the stop

sign itself, and collided with a school bus. State v. Del Cid, No. A08-2266, 2010 WL

2813324, at *4–5 (Minn. App. July 20, 2010), rev. denied (Minn. Sept. 29, 2010). We

reasoned that this circumstance supported the jury’s finding that the driver “drove the

minivan in a grossly negligent fashion.” Id. at *5. The Del Cid reasoning appropriately

applies the settled standard of gross negligence. See Dynamic Air, Inc. v. Bloch, 502

N.W.2d 796, 800–01 (Minn. App. 1993) (observing that unpublished opinions, although

not precedential, may offer persuasive reasoning).

This case is clearly similar to the violating-a-stop-sign cases, involving ordinary

negligence, and clearly dissimilar to the violating-a-stop-sign-at-a-dangerous-speed cases,

demonstrating gross negligence. Unlike the drivers in the gross-negligence cases,

Neumiller simply failed to obey a stop sign while moving at a comparatively slow speed.

He undisputedly had stopped his car behind two others at the stop sign at the end of the

ramp exiting Interstate 94. He then waited there, still, for those cars to proceed through the

intersection. After they moved on and he remained stationary for about four seconds longer,

he began forward, pulling into the intersection without again stopping when he reached the

stop sign. He entered the intersection apparently without having noticed the car on

Highway 23 headed into his path. The state offered no evidence that Neumiller accelerated

recklessly or engaged in any other perilous driving behavior. Without question, his failure

to re-stop at the stop sign to watch for and yield to crossing traffic was driving heedlessly

in a manner “that endanger[ed] or [was] likely to endanger [another] person.” Minn. Stat.

§ 169.13, subd. 2. Neumiller’s conduct precisely meets the careless-driving statute,

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consistent with our caselaw involving the same conduct. And careless driving is ordinary

negligence, not gross negligence.

It is true that Neumiller’s careless driving had a tragic end, causing the death of

another motorist. But we must consider only the driving conduct itself, not the resulting

harm, as “the result . . . play[s no] role” in determining “whether the conduct constitutes

gross negligence.” Al-Naseer, 690 N.W.2d at 752 n.4. Neumiller’s driving conduct bears

no earmark of gross negligence.

The majority relies on the fact that Neumiller had previously driven through and

was familiar with the intersection to support catapulting the ordinary-negligence

misdemeanor up to a gross-negligence felony. This reliance is misplaced, because the

proper focus on the actus reus element involves the driver’s conduct. Id. at 752 (“To

determine whether a defendant engaged in gross negligence or ordinary negligence, the

defendant’s conduct must be examined.” (Emphasis added.)). The majority does not (and

cannot) say that Neumiller’s familiarity with the intersection made his conduct of

improperly entering it more dangerous than if he had encountered the intersection for the

first time. It is possible that a driver’s familiarity with some uniquely dangerous feature of

an intersection might inform him to be more cautious than a newcomer and that this

knowledge might bear on a mens rea assessment to determine whether, for example, a

driver was “aware of and consciously disregard[ed] a substantial and unjustifiable risk.”

See Minn. Stat. § 169.13, subd. 1 (2018) (defining mens rea of “reckless driving”). But the

state offered no mens rea evidence that Neumiller consciously disregarded any risk, let

alone a risk associated with a distinctly dangerous feature of the intersection. Entering the

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intersection without re-stopping would constitute ordinary negligence for every driver

regardless of familiarity. And despite the district court’s conclusory statement that

Neumiller’s driving demonstrated the absence of even scant care, this is just not so under

the uncontroverted evidence. The record established that he had in fact stopped at the end

of the exit ramp, albeit two car lengths short of the stop sign, and that when he finally

proceeded, he did so at an ordinary pace. That evidence, without more, is insufficient to

elevate Neumiller’s conduct from negligence to gross negligence.

I do not disregard the notion that whether a defendant’s conduct constitutes gross

negligence is a question for the fact-finder. See Al-Naseer, 690 N.W.2d at 751. But our

deference to the fact-finder is not absolute; a finding of fact is not immune from judicial

review because it is our duty to determine whether, as a matter of law, the evidence is

sufficient to support the finding of guilt based on a proper construction and application of

the controlling criminal statute. See State v. Dorn, 887 N.W.2d 826, 830 (Minn. 2016). The

supreme court has not hesitated to overturn a jury’s gross-negligence finding in a civil case

after highlighting the substantial difference between ordinary negligence and gross

negligence and concluding that “there [was] nothing to lift [that] case out of ordinary

negligence and into the class of gross negligence.” Dakins v. Black, 261 N.W. 870, 873

(Minn. 1935). We should not be overly deferential here, where the trial evidence was

insufficient for the district court to find that Neumiller’s conduct constitutes gross

negligence. Because the state proved only ordinary negligence with no evidence of

egregious driving conduct, I believe we ought to reverse and remand the case for the district

court to enter a conviction on the lesser offense of careless driving.

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