Baranovich v. Brockamp

379 P.3d 702, 279 Or. App. 52, 2016 Ore. App. LEXIS 788
CourtWashington County Circuit Court, Oregon
DecidedJune 22, 2016
DocketC112479CV; A154323
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 379 P.3d 702 (Baranovich v. Brockamp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington County Circuit Court, Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baranovich v. Brockamp, 379 P.3d 702, 279 Or. App. 52, 2016 Ore. App. LEXIS 788 (Or. Super. Ct. 2016).

Opinion

SERCOMBE, P. J.

Defendant appeals a judgment vacating petitioner’s convictions and granting her a new trial. Defendant assigns error to the post-conviction court’s determination that petitioner’s trial counsel provided her with constitutionally deficient legal representation by failing to object to hearsay evidence identifying petitioner as the perpetrator of the burglary with which she had been charged and in failing to object to hearsay evidence commenting on petitioner’s character. As explained below, we affirm the judgment of the post-conviction court.

Our “review of a post-conviction court’s determinations is not open-ended. We review such proceedings for errors of law.” Green v. Franke, 357 Or 301, 312, 350 P3d 188 (2015). “In doing so, however, we are bound by the post-convictions court’s findings of fact if they are supported by evidence in the record.” Richardson v. Belleque, 277 Or App 615, 617, 373 P3d 1113 (2016). “If the post-conviction court failed to make findings of fact on all the issues — and there is evidence from which such facts could be decided more than one way — we will presume that the facts were decided consistently with the post-conviction court’s conclusions of law.” Green, 357 Or at 312.

Here, in the underlying criminal proceedings, petitioner was charged with first-degree burglary, first-degree aggravated theft, and first-degree theft stemming from a burglary and theft at a home owned by Rosabal. During the trial to the court, Kanifolsky, a neighbor of Rosabal’s, testified that, on the day of the burglary, he noticed a red car drive by the house and that the woman in the passenger seat of the car was slightly familiar to him. Because Rosabal was not home at the time, Kanifolsky checked on the house and discovered that the door was unlocked and some furniture drawers had been opened. Rosabal, along with two other residents of the house, Alvarez and Fletcher, later returned to the house. Kanifolsky testified that he and Alvarez discussed the possible identify of the woman he had seen riding by in the red car. Alvarez showed Kanifolsky a number of pictures of petitioner on his cell phone. Kanifolsky testified [54]*54that he informed Alvarez, based on the pictures, that petitioner may have been the woman in the red car.

Alvarez testified at trial that he knew petitioner before the burglary and had spent time with her on a couple of occasions. On one such occasion, petitioner came to the house and Alvarez gave her a tour that included all the rooms and closets in the house. According to Alvarez, on the day of the burglary, his room was a mess, and his laptop and many items of clothing were missing. He testified that, after the burglary, Kanifolsky had identified petitioner as the perpetrator of the burglary:

“[THE STATE]: Okay. Sometime after this crime had been committed, did you and some other people get together and try to figure out who the perpetrators were?
“[ALVAREZ]: Yes.
“ [THE STATE]: And how did you go about doing that?
“[ALVAREZ]: Well, after the police left and everything, I was talking to [Kanifolsky], our next-door neighbor, and he * * * started telling me, T think I know who she is. I think she’s Russian.’ He’s Russian, too. Or Ukrainian, she said. And he goes, ‘Her name is Irina.’
“And so I started thinking. Irina. Irina. Irina. Irina. And I go — boom, I got on my phone, and I looked her up on [social media], because at the time she was on my [social media account], one of my friends still.
“I showed him and he goes, ‘Yep, that’s her.’”

Petitioner’s trial counsel did not object to that testimony.

Rosabal testified that he had met petitioner once, eight to 11 months before the burglary, when she had been at the house with Alvarez. According to Rosabal, immediately after the burglary, he went to petitioner’s house, intending to ask her to return his property. Petitioner was not home, but Rosabal saw petitioner’s brother. Rosabal testified, without objection from either side, that petitioner’s brother told Rosabal that petitioner “was a really bad person, and he hopes she gets in trouble, and she does a lot of things like this.” There was also testimony from law enforcement that the area around the window where the burglar or burglars entered the house had been examined and dusted for [55]*55fingerprints. There were fingerprints taken from the windowsill and a window screen, and fingerprints on the screen matched petitioner’s.

In her petition for post-conviction relief, petitioner claimed, among other things, that her trial counsel failed to exercise reasonable professional skill and judgment in failing to object to (1) the hearsay evidence from Alvarez that Kanifolsky had identified petitioner as the perpetrator of the burglary and (2) the hearsay evidence from Rosabal that petitioner’s brother had said she “was a really bad person, and he hopes she gets in trouble, and she does a lot of things like this.” After a post-conviction trial at which it received exhibits from the parties and a declaration from petitioner’s trial counsel, the court granted post-conviction relief on those two grounds and, accordingly, entered a judgment vacating petitioner’s convictions and remanding the case for a new trial. In a letter opinion, the court explained that petitioner’s trial counsel had provided petitioner with inadequate assistance in failing to object to the admission of the hearsay evidence in question, and that the counsel’s inadequate performance “had a tendency to affect the result” of the trial.

With respect to the hearsay identification of petitioner as the perpetrator of the burglary with which she was charged, the post-conviction court explained that

“the failure had a tendency to affect the result. Surely, the fingerprints are a difficult obstacle to overcome in any event. Still, there is a reasonable possibility that the judge would not be convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that petitioner did not leave the print on the previous occasion when she was at the residence. It is a stretch but not impossibility. Like the carpet in The Big Lebowski, the placement of petitioner in the area at the time of the burglary really ties the state’s case together. Without credible on-the-scene identification evidence, there is a small but not insubstantial chance of acquittal. Therefore, I must conclude that admitting that evidence had a tendency to affect the result of the trial.”

As to the failure to object to the hearsay evidence commenting on petitioner’s character, the court determined that the “testimony was harmful to petitioner.” Noting that “any [56]*56trial judge would appreciate the significance of” testimony from “petitioner’s own brother that she is a chronic thief who needs punishment,” the court concluded that each of trial counsel’s errors alone, “and certainly in combination, had a tendency to affect the result and justify post-conviction relief’ under the Oregon Constitution.

ORS 138.530

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
379 P.3d 702, 279 Or. App. 52, 2016 Ore. App. LEXIS 788, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baranovich-v-brockamp-orccwashington-2016.