Ashley v. Hoyt

912 P.2d 393, 139 Or. App. 385, 1996 Ore. App. LEXIS 250
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedFebruary 28, 1996
Docket94C-11348-2 CA A86454
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 912 P.2d 393 (Ashley v. Hoyt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ashley v. Hoyt, 912 P.2d 393, 139 Or. App. 385, 1996 Ore. App. LEXIS 250 (Or. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

*387 HASELTON, J.

Petitioner appeals from a judgment denying post-conviction relief. ORS 138.510 et seq. She contends that, at her criminal trial, she was “denied her constitutional right to testify” in her own defense, and that defense counsel’s refusal to allow her to testify constituted inadequate assistance of counsel. We reverse and remand.

In 1994, petitioner was convicted of solicitation to commit murder, ORS 163.115; ORS 161.435, attempted murder, ORS 163.115; ORS 161.405, solicitation to commit kidnapping in the first degree, ORS 163.235; ORS 161.435, and attempted kidnapping in the first degree, ORS 163.235; ORS 161.405. The state charged petitioner with hiring Duran, a friend of her estranged husband, to kidnap and kill her husband’s live-in girlfriend, Dowell. Duran, who testified that he had “scammed” petitioner by taking her money while pretending to participate in the murder for hire scheme, was the state’s principal witness. He testified that petitioner approached him and offered him $2,000 to kidnap and kill Dowell. As part of the alleged scheme, after Duran kidnapped Dowell, he was to force her to call several parties, including Dowell’s sister, the husband’s landlord, and the Children’s Services Division. During those coerced conversations, Dowell was to read from “scripts” that petitioner had written, which would implicate the husband in wrongdoing, including drug possession, and “explain” Dowell’s sudden disappearance. Duran identified two pages in petitioner’s handwriting as the alleged “scripts.” For example, the alleged “script” for the call to Children’s Services Division read:

“Her [Dowell’s] name__License # SSN #
“I am giving you information on [husband]. He does drugs, not watching kid. I had to leave because I’m get[ting] married and I don’t want anything [to] happen to Jeramy and Kassy with the drugs or partys [sic] at [address] in McMinnville. [Husband] works at Wal-Mart in Mac because he got fired for Zupans [sic] for drugs.”

Duran further testified that, through a bizarre and convoluted scheme involving a decoy kidnapping in which a blond *388 friend of Duran’s impersonated Dowell, he tricked petitioner into believing that he and an accomplice had kidnapped and killed Dowell. He collected part payment of $700 from petitioner and later told petitioner’s husband and Dowell about the plot.

The defense attacked Duran’s credibility through several witnesses, including police officers, who testified that Duran had a reputation for being untruthful. However, petitioner did not testify in her own defense. As described below, although petitioner unequivocally told her lawyer that she wanted to testify, defense counsel made a “unilateral decision” not to “allow” her to do so. Consequently, the defense offered no alternative explanation for the origin or purpose of the alleged “scripts.” In closing argument, the prosecution highlighted the “scripts” as circumstantial corroboration of Duran’s account. Petitioner was convicted and sentenced to 53 months imprisonment. 1 She did not take a direct appeal from her conviction.

Petitioner seeks post-conviction relief on two grounds. First, she alleges that she “was denied due process and equal protection of law under the state and federal constitutions in that she was denied her constitutional right to testify.” Second, petitioner asserts that she was denied effective assistance of counsel under the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution, and under Article I, section 11, of the Oregon Constitution, in that “[djefense counsel denied petitioner her right to testify,” and “[d]efense counsel improperly advised, or failed to advise, petitioner regarding her testimony, her right to testify, the need for her testimony and the effects of her failure to testify.” 2

In support of those claims, petitioner submitted an affidavit in which her trial counsel stated, in part:

*389 “The defendant [i.e., petitioner] had previously been in a very serious accident which resulted in memory deficiencies and significant physical injuries. She also had no experience in the criminal justice system. As a result of those issues, she totally relied upon [counsel] for decision-making in her defense.
“On the second day of trial during the defense case, I called [defense investigator], I did not do very well in examining him and I was somewhat off balance after he finished his testimony and the Court took the afternoon break. * * * [At break], I talked with [petitioner] in the hallway about the trial.
“[Petitioner] was emotionally upset and crying. She was extremely distressed that things were not going well and she was concerned that she was going to be convicted. She, at that time, told me that she wanted to take the witness stand and testify.
“I made a unilateral decision that [petitioner] would not be testifying. I did not give her the option to testify. I told her, “No, I don’t want you to testify’ I gave her the reasons why I would not be calling her and referred to a handwritten note that she had allegedly produced that was somewhat incriminating. Regardless of that excuse to her, I had decided that I was not going to call her to the witness stand even if she wanted to testify.
“I did not tell [petitioner] that she had a Constitutional right to testify. After I told her that she was not going to testify, she walked away and did not give any verbal consent.
* * ‡ *
“At the time that I told her I would not allow her to testify, I thought that I was making a valid trial strategy decision. I later learned that that is not a trial strategy decision that the attorney can make and that the client must make that decision. I learned that later [in] the evening of November 3, 1993.
* *
“It is my opinion that [petitioner] did not freely, voluntarily and knowingly waive her constitutional right to testify!.]”

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Bluebook (online)
912 P.2d 393, 139 Or. App. 385, 1996 Ore. App. LEXIS 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ashley-v-hoyt-orctapp-1996.