Savoy v. Miller

346 Or. App. 134
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedDecember 31, 2025
DocketA176626
StatusPublished

This text of 346 Or. App. 134 (Savoy v. Miller) 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
Savoy v. Miller, 346 Or. App. 134 (Or. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

134 December 31, 2025 No. 1134

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF OREGON

ROBERT GODEAUZ SAVOY, Petitioner-Appellant, v. Jamie MILLER, Superintendent, Snake River Correctional Institution, Defendant-Respondent. Malheur County Circuit Court 19CV19835; A176626

J. Burdette Pratt, Senior Judge. Argued and submitted December 4, 2023. Margaret Huntington argued the cause for appellant. Also on the reply brief was O’Connor Weber LLC. On the opening brief were Lindsey Burrows and O’Connor Weber LLC. Christopher A. Perdue, Assistant Attorney General, argued the cause for respondent. Also on the brief were Ellen F. Rosenblum, Attorney General, and Benjamin Gutman, Solicitor General. Before Ortega, Presiding Judge, and Lagesen, Chief Judge, and Powers, Judge. LAGESEN, C. J. Reversed and remanded for entry of judgment granting the petition. Cite as 346 Or App 134 (2025) 135 136 Savoy v. Miller

LAGESEN, C. J. This is a post-conviction case in which petitioner challenges his convictions in a bench trial for forcible rape and other sexual offenses on the ground that his trial lawyers’ rep- resentation did not meet minimal constitutional standards. The charges against petitioner and his co-defendant Weekly, students at Western Oregon University, arose from sexual conduct with another student, H. Petitioner and Weekly were tried jointly, with Geiger and Mitchell representing petitioner and Lillegard representing Weekly. The trial was by-and-large a credibility contest, and the trial court’s ver- dict rested largely on its credibility determinations. At issue is whether petitioner’s rights to the ade- quate assistance of counsel under Article I, section 11, of the Oregon Constitution, and the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution were violated when (1) Geiger and Mitchell did not seek to recuse the trial judge after the trial judge informed them that he did not trust Geiger and then, based on their view that the local jury pool would be inherently biased against petitioner because of his race, Geiger and Mitchell advised petitioner to waive his right to a jury trial before the same trial judge; and (2) Geiger failed to withdraw after the trial judge expressed his dis- trust of Geiger. We conclude that counsel’s decision not to move to recuse the trial judge was not the product of reason- able professional skill and judgment because that decision was based on a fundamental misunderstanding of the law. We further conclude that counsel’s deficient performance tended to affect the outcome of the proceeding because, on this record, there is more than a mere possibility that a dif- ferent trial judge would have resolved the credibility con- test underlying this dispute differently. Because petitioner is entitled to post-conviction relief on this ground, we do not address the other three grounds for relief raised by peti- tioner on appeal. I. STANDARD OF REVIEW “We review a post-conviction court’s denial of relief for legal error, accepting the post-conviction court’s implicit and explicit factual findings if there is evidence to support Cite as 346 Or App 134 (2025) 137

them.” Monfore v. Persson, 296 Or App 625, 632, 439 P3d 519 (2019). II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDUAL BACKGROUND We state the relevant facts in a manner consistent with our standard of review. Before doing so, however, we clarify how we are accounting for the express credibility findings made by the post-conviction court. This case was tried entirely on a paper record; no witness testified on the stand before the post-conviction court. Although the court thus had no demeanor evidence to consider, the court made express credibility findings based on the paper record before it. In particular, it found the dec- larations and deposition testimony from petitioner’s trial lawyers to be credible. It found the testimony of Lillegard not credible, especially to the extent that Lillegard testified that Geiger and Mitchell “struggled” in presenting petition- er’s case. The court found the declarations from petitioner and his mother “to be generally credible regarding their rec- ollection of events,” but noted that, in the event of a conflict between their testimony and that of Geiger and Mitchell, it credited Geiger and Mitchell. It found that petitioner and his mother were “not credible to the extent that they suggest that Petitioner was forced or coerced into waiving his right to a jury trial.” It also found that petitioner was “not credible regarding his testimony [in one of his declarations] that he waived his right to a jury trial ‘shortly before trial.’ ” Ordinarily, we consider ourselves bound by a post- conviction court’s credibility findings. See Newmann v. Highberger, 330 Or App 229, 234, 543 P3d 127, rev den, 372 Or 588 (2024). The standard rationale for deferring to the credibility findings of a trial-level tribunal is that, as between an appellate court and a trial court, the trial-level tribunal is best equipped to assess credibility because of its ability to observe the demeanor of witnesses during their testimony. In re Schenck, 318 Or 402, 420-21, 870 P2d 185, cert den, 513 US 871 (1994). Here, as noted, the post-conviction case was tried entirely on a paper record, so the post-conviction court’s credibility findings necessarily did not hinge on demeanor observations. And, having reviewed the paper record on 138 Savoy v. Miller

which the post-conviction court necessarily relied, we reject as unsupported the court’s finding that petitioner’s testi- mony that he waived his jury trial right “shortly before trial” was not credible. No party disputes that petitioner waived his jury trial right on January 11, 2016, 19 days before the start of his trial. At the time, the charges against petitioner had been pending against him since March 2015. Given that timeframe, the record discloses no basis to discredit petition- er’s perception that he waived jury shortly before trial; under the circumstances petitioner was in, his perception of time was objectively reasonable. For similar reasons, we also reject the post- conviction court’s findings that petitioner and his mother were not credible “to the extent” their declarations suggested that petitioner was coerced into waiving his jury trial right. Neither petitioner nor his mother asserted that petitioner was coerced into waiving his right to a jury trial. Rather, each simply explained the circumstances that petitioner confronted at the time his lawyers advised him to waive jury and explained the pressure they felt from the difficult position that his lawyers’ advice put petitioner in, in view of the trial judge’s express distrust of Geiger. We also reject the post-conviction court’s determination that Lillegard was not credible in his opinion that Geiger and Mitchell struggled in presenting petitioner’s case. Although the post-conviction court was not required to give weight to that opinion in its own review of the paper record of petitioner’s criminal trial—the relevance of such opinion testimony is minimal at most—Lillegard’s articulated perception of counsel’s perfor- mance is not so at odds with the paper record to allow for a finding that his opinion on the matter is not credible. We turn to the facts. A. Underlying Criminal Proceedings As mentioned, petitioner and Weekly were charged with multiple sex offenses after both engaged in sexual acts with the victim, H, after a night of drinking in May 2014. Weekly filmed some of the conduct. Petitioner and his co-defendant are both Black; H is White. All three were stu- dents at Western Oregon University at the time. Cite as 346 Or App 134 (2025) 139

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Ungar v. Sarafite
376 U.S. 575 (Supreme Court, 1964)
Strickland v. Washington
466 U.S. 668 (Supreme Court, 1984)
In Re Complaint as to the Conduct of Schenck
870 P.2d 185 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1994)
Green v. Franke
350 P.3d 188 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2015)
Pena-Rodriguez v. Colorado
580 U.S. 206 (Supreme Court, 2017)
Johnson v. Premo
399 P.3d 431 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2017)
Capital One Auto Fin. Inc. v. Dep't of Revenue
423 P.3d 80 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2018)
State v. Langley
424 P.3d 688 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2018)
Monfore v. Persson
439 P.3d 519 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2019)
In re Marriage of Schwartz and Battini
440 P.3d 92 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2019)
State v. Garza
865 P.2d 463 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1993)
Lizarraga-Regalado v. Premo
390 P.3d 1079 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2017)
Cartrette v. Nooth
395 P.3d 627 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2017)
State v. Savoy
412 P.3d 1206 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2017)
Newmann v. Highberger
543 P.3d 172 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2024)
Davis v. Kelly
461 P.3d 1043 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2020)
McDonnell v. Premo
483 P.3d 640 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2021)
Jaynes v. Cain
511 P.3d 58 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2022)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
346 Or. App. 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/savoy-v-miller-orctapp-2025.