State v. Adams

641 P.2d 647, 56 Or. App. 303, 1982 Ore. App. LEXIS 2456
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMarch 8, 1982
DocketNo. C 80-04-31381, CA 19590
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 641 P.2d 647 (State v. Adams) 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
State v. Adams, 641 P.2d 647, 56 Or. App. 303, 1982 Ore. App. LEXIS 2456 (Or. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

WARREN, J.

Defendant appeals his conviction for first-degree robbery. He assigns four errors, two of which we discuss: former jeopardy and denial of a motion to suppress evidence on the basis of failure to preserve possibly exculpatory evidence.1 We modify the conviction to second-degree robbery and remand for resentencing.

Defendant was indicted for first-degree robbery of a concession attendant at a movie theatre. The state declined to negotiate a plea, pursuant to the district attorney’s then policy. Defendant appeared with his first counsel ready for trial. The trial court asked counsel if they had negotiated; the state explained why it had not. The court indicated that if defendant agreed to waive a jury and have a bench trial on stipulated facts, the court might find him guilty of the lesser offense of second-degree robbery.

Defense counsel consulted defendant, who agreed to a bench trial on stipulated facts. The court questioned defendant to determine whether his waiver of jury trial was voluntary and knowing. The court later noted that defendant had agreed somewhat reluctantly to waive a jury. The state did not object, but it had no right to. Or Const. Art. I, §11. Defendant stipulated to all facts that the state would have presented to a jury. There was no promise or agreement that the court would find defendant guilty of second-degree robbery. Everyone understood that was likely, but the prosecutor later testified that he still had hoped to sway the court with artful advocacy. He failed.

The court found defendant guilty of second-degree robbery by representing by his conduct that he was armed with what purported to be a dangerous or deadly weapon. ORS 164.405(1)(a).2 Before sentencing, defendant moved, [306]*306by new counsel, to withdraw his stipulation and waiver of jury trial and to vacate the guilty finding. He argued that the stipulated facts trial was the “functional equivalent” of a guilty plea and that he was pressured into accepting it. The state did not object to the motion. The court granted the motion, not on the ground of an involuntary guilty plea but specifically because it recalled defendant’s reluctant waiver of jury trial, and ordered a new trial.

Before the second trial, this time to a jury, defendant moved to dismiss the first-degree robbery charge on former jeopardy, arguing that he could be retried only for robbery in the second degree — the offense found in the bench trial. This motion and the jury trial were presided over by a second judge, who denied the motion and specifically rejected the guilty plea analogy.3 Defendant was convicted of first-degree robbery.

FORMER JEOPARDY

The issue is whether jeopardy had attached in a bench trial on stipulated facts. This is a question of first impression in Oregon. The state argues that it was no different from a bargained guilty plea. When defendant moved to vacate his first conviction, defense counsel did characterize the proceeding as similar to a guilty plea; it appears that the trial court viewed the proceeding as an alternative to plea bargaining. However, the trial judge did not comply with statutory procedure in ORS 135.385 for accepting a guilty plea. He informed defendant only of the consequences of waiving jury trial, not of waiving rights to confront witnesses and against self-incrimination or of the maximum possible sentence. There was no contract between parties or between defendant and judge; there was no more than “indication” and “expectation,” as described by the prosecutor.

[307]*307We decline the state’s invitation to alchemy. A favorable comparison of one aspect of the proceeding is not enough to ignore the differences. It was not a guilty plea situation. It was a bench trial. The doctrine of former jeopardy is applicable to bench trials. ORS 131.505(5) (c) provides:

“A person is ‘prosecuted for an offense’ when he is charged therewith by an accusatory instrument filed in any court of this state or in any court of any political subdivision of this state, and when the action * * * :
<<* * * * *
“(c) Proceeds to the trial stage when a judge is the trier of fact and the first witness is sworn.”

ORS 131.515(3) provides:

“If a person is prosecuted for an offense consisting of different degrees, the conviction or acquittal resulting therefrom is a bar to a later prosecution for the same offense, for any inferior degree of the offense, for an attempt to commit the offense or for an offense necessarily included therein. A finding of guilty of a lesser included offense is an acquittal of the greater inclusive offense, although the judgment of conviction is subsequently reversed or set aside.”

No witnesses were actually sworn here, because the parties stipulated to the facts. Defendant was convicted; the proceeding did not terminate before conviction. See ORS 131.525. Jeopardy attached. See Price v. Georgia, 398 US 323, 331, 90 S Ct 1757, 26 L Ed 2d 300 (1970) (the prohibition, not against being twice punished but being twice put in jeopardy, “is cast in terms of risk or hazard of trial and conviction, not of the ultimate legal consequences”).4

It does not really matter here just when jeopardy attached before conviction, so we need not decide more than that it had attached. See Finch v. United States, 433 US 676, 97 S Ct 2909, 53 L Ed 2d 1048 (1977) (per curiam, Rehnquist, J., and Burger, C.J., dissenting; jeopardy had [308]*308attached in bench trial on stipulated facts before court dismissed information after considering stipulated facts and applicable law but before declaring guilt or innocence).

Under ORS 131.505 and 131.515, defendant was “prosecuted” on the greater charge and found guilty by the court of the lesser included offense of second-degree robbery. By statute, if not by the constitution, that finding was an acquittal of first-degree robbery even though later set aside, because the greater charge was submitted to the fact trier, putting defendant once in jeopardy of conviction for first-degree robbery.

Former jeopardy as to the greater offense is not waived by defendant’s appeal. See State v. Martin, supra n 1, 288 Or at 647; State v. Turner, 247 Or 301, 429 P2d 565 (1967). It was not waived by defendant’s motion to set aside the conviction. The court should have granted defendant’s motion to dismiss the first-degree robbery charge and limited the second trial to a charge no higher than second-degree robbery.

When it granted a new trial, the original trial court noted that the jury could, if inclined, return a verdict for a lesser included offense.

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

Related

State v. Zimmerman
12 P.3d 996 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2000)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
641 P.2d 647, 56 Or. App. 303, 1982 Ore. App. LEXIS 2456, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-adams-orctapp-1982.