Nemecek v. Taylor

423 P.3d 123, 292 Or. App. 58
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMay 31, 2018
DocketA159420
StatusPublished

This text of 423 P.3d 123 (Nemecek v. Taylor) 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
Nemecek v. Taylor, 423 P.3d 123, 292 Or. App. 58 (Or. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

TOOKEY, J.

*125*60Petitioner appeals a post-conviction court's judgment denying him relief from his convictions of first-degree rape, ORS 163.375, and first-degree sexual abuse, ORS 163.427. Petitioner sought post-conviction relief, contending that his trial counsel's failure to ensure that the jury was correctly instructed on his affirmative defense deprived him of his right to adequate and effective assistance of counsel guaranteed by Article I, section 11, of the Oregon Constitution, and the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution. The post-conviction court denied relief, concluding that, although petitioner's trial counsel was constitutionally inadequate, that inadequacy did not prejudice petitioner. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

BACKGROUND

At petitioner's criminal trial, the state adduced the following evidence. Petitioner and the victim shared an apartment with their respective children and another adult, Aguilar. On the evening of the events giving rise to petitioner's convictions, the victim's children and petitioner's child were not in the apartment that they shared. Following a night out with her friends, the victim, who had been drinking, called her roommate Aguilar around 3:00 or 4:00 a.m. and asked for Aguilar's help getting into the apartment from the complex's parking lot. Aguilar helped the victim into the apartment, where the victim-fully clothed-immediately fell asleep on top of her bed. Subsequently, Aguilar went to sleep on her bed, which was adjacent to the victim's bed.

At approximately 4:00 a.m., Aguilar woke up and heard the victim moaning. Aguilar saw that petitioner was on top of the victim. Petitioner left the room a few minutes later. Aguilar became upset that the victim and petitioner had had sex while she was in the room. Aguilar asked the victim whether she was going to work, which began at 6:00 a.m. When the victim did not respond, Aguilar attempted to wake the victim by shaking her. After a few minutes, the victim awoke and Aguilar asked why petitioner had been in the bedroom and on top of the victim. The victim was unsure of what Aguilar was talking about, and then the victim realized that her body was exposed and she "felt as if *61[she] * * * had had relations." At that point, the victim called the police, and when the police arrived, she told them that she had been raped. Following a medical examination, DNA found in the victim's cervix and vagina matched petitioner's DNA.

In his defense at trial, petitioner contended that, although the victim was intoxicated, she had not been physically helpless when they had had consensual sex. Petitioner testified that he had been asleep when the victim came to his room, called his name, and invited him to follow her to her bedroom, and that, petitioner had then followed the victim into her bedroom where he and the victim had sex. Petitioner testified that the victim did not give him any indication that she did not consent.

Consistent with that theory of defense, in his closing argument, petitioner's trial counsel argued:

"The Court's going to read an instruction to you that talks about an affirmative defense. And that is that [petitioner] didn't know that [the victim] was asleep, didn't know that she was not really with it, not tracking, not there; didn't know. * * *.
"* * * * *
"The evidence doesn't establish guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, doesn't establish that he had any knowledge that [the victim] was incapable of giving consent, especially when to his mind and to his understanding and experience of that moment she was initiating it, she was participating in it. She just wasn't talking. She didn't say anything except to groan and push him away."

The trial court then orally instructed the jury, in pertinent part, as follows:

"A person is considered not capable of consenting to a sexual act if that person is physically helpless. Physically helpless; a person is unconscious or for any other reason is physically unable to communicate unwillingness to an act. In any prosecution for a sexual offense in which the victim's lack of consent is based solely on the victim's incapacity to consent because the victim *126is physically helpless, it is an affirmative defense for [petitioner] to prove that at the time of the alleged offense [petitioner] did not know of *62the facts or condition responsible for the victim's incapacity to consent.
"[Petitioner] has raised the affirmative defense ignorance or mistake to the charge of rape in the first degree and sexual abuse in the first degree. If [petitioner] proves this affirmative defense, then [petitioner] is not guilty of the charge of rape in the first degree and sexual abuse in the first degree. To establish the affirmative defense ignorance or mistake [petitioner] must prove by a preponderance of the evidence the following:
"Preponderance of the evidence means the greater weight of the evidence. It is such evidence that when weighed with that opposed to it has more convincing force and is more probably true or accurate."

Petitioner's trial counsel did not object or take exception to the trial court's oral instructions. A jury convicted petitioner of first-degree rape and first-degree sexual abuse.

Subsequently, petitioner's trial counsel moved for a new trial, contending, among other points, that the court had read the jury an "incomplete instruction" on petitioner's affirmative defense. Petitioner's trial counsel averred that he had submitted jury instructions relating to his defense, but that the court had omitted part of the requested instruction. The requested instruction stated:

"[Petitioner] has raised the affirmative defense of ignorance or mistake to the charges of Rape in the First Degree and Sexual Abuse in the First Degree. If [petitioner] proves this affirmative defense, then [petitioner] is not guilty of the charges of Rape in the First Degree and Sexual Abuse in the First Degree.
"To establish the affirmative defense of Ignorance or Mistake, [petitioner] must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that, at the time of the alleged offenses, [petitioner] did not know of the facts or conditions responsible for the victim's incapacity to consent."

The trial court denied petitioner's motion for a new trial, explaining that "[t]he error was harmless" because it had "read the instruction given to it by the defense attorney, the jury was given the correct instruction in writing, [and] the *63jury was informed that the burden[ ] w[as] on the state to prove all of the elements beyond a reasonable doubt[.]"

Petitioner appealed his judgment of conviction. We affirmed petitioner's convictions without opinion, and the Oregon Supreme Court denied review. State v. Nemecek

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Bluebook (online)
423 P.3d 123, 292 Or. App. 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nemecek-v-taylor-orctapp-2018.