Luther v. State of Oregon

732 P.2d 24, 83 Or. App. 336
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJanuary 28, 1987
DocketC 84-04-31681; CA A34073
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 732 P.2d 24 (Luther v. State of Oregon) 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
Luther v. State of Oregon, 732 P.2d 24, 83 Or. App. 336 (Or. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

*338 RICHARDSON, P. J.

In this post-conviction relief action, ORS 138.510, the trial court set aside petitioner’s conviction for manslaughter in the second degree. The state appeals, and we reverse.

Petitioner’s conviction was affirmed on appeal by this court, State v. Luther, 63 Or App 86, 663 P2d 1261 (1983), and by the Supreme Court on review, 296 Or 1, 672 P2d 691 (1983). A petition for rehearing in the Supreme Court was denied on January 10, 1984.

The homicide resulted from an altercation between petitioner and his nephew, Mark Luther. The nephew received a gunshot wound to his head, and petitioner was indicted for assault in the first degree. Several months later Mark died, and petitioner was indicted by a second grand jury for the crime of murder. The trial jury found him guilty of the lesser included offense of manslaughter in the second degree.

Petitioner and his nephew had separate rooms on the second floor of Gena Luther’s house. Gena was petitioner’s mother and Mark’s grandmother. The rooms were across the hall from each other, but the doors were not directly opposite. The hall was seven feet three inches wide, and the distance from the center of petitioner’s door to the center of Mark’s door was eight feet ten inches.

On the night of the altercation, petitioner had followed Gena into Mark’s room, where an argument and a wrestling match ensued between the two men. After the altercation subsided, petitioner went to his room and got a hand gun. Mark was shot in or near the doorway of his room. The bullet entered the front of his head and traveled upward. Petitioner testified in support of his claim of self-defense or accident that, after he got the gun and went to Mark’s room, they got into a scuffle and the gun went off. He said that he did not have his finger on the trigger.

Gena told the police officers who came to investigate the shooting that she had seen the shooting and that petitioner and Mark were standing in their respective doorways *339 when petitioner lowered his arm and fired a shot. 1 She testified before the first grand jury on the assault charge, but that testimony was not reported. After Mark died, she testified before the second grand jury that she was on her way downstairs and did not see the shooting. Shortly after that grand jury proceeding, but before the trial, she told a deputy district attorney that she did not tell the truth in her testimony before the second grand jury. Following that disclosure, but before trial, the state had Gena subjected to hypnosis. The hypnosis sessions were recorded on video tape. ORS 136.675.

At trial, Gena’s testimony regarding the relative location of petitioner and his nephew when the shot was fired varied. However, she always placed each of the men close to their respective doorways. She also testified that the gun was three feet away from Mark when the shot was fired.

The hypnosis session and Gena’s testimony were a principal focus at the criminal trial. Her testimony was critical to the state’s theory that petitioner intentionally shot the victim. It contradicted petitioner’s trial theory that the gun had unintentionally discharged when Mark grabbed it during a struggle. A defense contention was that Gena’s testimony was at variance with the physical facts and that the police investigator in questioning her during the hypnosis process asked leading questions and caused her to change her testimony from that given the second grand jury.

Petitioner challenged Gena’s testimony by a pretrial motion to exclude it as contrary to physical fact, by direct examination during trial regarding the hypnosis and by a post-verdict motion for a new trial. In the pretrial motion, he contended that the facts of which the state was aware, including the trajectory of the bullet, powder burns around the wound and the location of both men, demonstrated that the testimony Gena would give would be contrary to physical facts established by scientific evidence. He contended in the written motion that the suggestive questioning of Gena during hypnosis caused her to change her testimony to conform to the physical evidence which the state was going to offer. During *340 argument on the pretrial motion, petitioner’s trial counsel requested that the videotape be marked as a defense exhibit “not for the submission to the jury but for the record.” The court agreed, and the prosecutor stated that he had the tape in his office and would bring it down. Trial counsel said that he wished to offer evidence on the question of Gena’s testimony being contrary to physical fact. The court responded that he could do so; however, counsel never did. Denial of the pretrial motion was claimed as error on appeal. We concluded that there was no error. 63 Or App at 93.

During trial, after Gena had testified for the state, she was called as a defense witness. Trial counsel wanted to question her regarding the hypnosis. He asked:

“After that appearance before the Grand Jury, did [the prosecutor] have you put under hypnosis?”

The state objected and, after a conference in chambers, the court ruled:

“Well, my ruling would be that, of course, you would be entitled to inquire as to whether she had been subjected to hypnosis after her appearance at the Grand Jury and to inquire as to whether that changed her recollection of what occurred. I think that’s about as far as we can go. I-I would be unwilling to introduce or to permit any testimony to go in about anything she said or did under hypnosis. * * * All you’re entitled to show is the difference between the story she told before and the story she tells later, but I am not going to permit any evidence to be presented before the jury regarding what occurred during — while the time she was under hypnosis.”

Petitioner’s counsel asked if he could make a record on the issue outside the presence of the jury at a later time. During the discussion in chambers, he had described in detail what had occurred during the hypnosis session as disclosed on the videotape which he had viewed previously. After the case had been submitted to the jury, but before the verdict, defense counsel reiterated his desire to make a record regarding the court’s rulings respecting evidence of hypnosis but indicated that he wished to wait until after the verdict to do so.

One assignment of error on direct appeal was that the court improperly sustained the state’s objection to the examination of Gena regarding hypnosis. We concluded that the *341 claim of error had not been properly preserved, because counsel had not made an offer of proof of the questions he would have asked and the answers Gena would have given. We said:

“Because Gena was not asked, either before the jury or as an offer of proof, whether she knew what happened, we cannot tell whether the court’s ruling, assuming it to have been erroneous, was prejudicial.” 63 Or App at 92.

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Bluebook (online)
732 P.2d 24, 83 Or. App. 336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/luther-v-state-of-oregon-orctapp-1987.