State v. Cartwright

20 P.3d 223, 173 Or. App. 59, 2001 Ore. App. LEXIS 331
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMarch 14, 2001
Docket97 CR 1088; CA A101495
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 20 P.3d 223 (State v. Cartwright) 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. Cartwright, 20 P.3d 223, 173 Or. App. 59, 2001 Ore. App. LEXIS 331 (Or. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

*61 LINDER, J.

Defendant appeals from a judgment of conviction on eight counts of harassment, ORS 166.065, and two counts of criminal trespass in the second degree, ORS 164.245 (1997). The primary issue presented is whether defendant was entitled, either before or during trial, to inspect a nonparty’s “privileged” audiotape recordings for possible inconsistent prior statements of the victim-witnesses. Defendant also challenges the trial court’s jury instruction on the meaning of “intimate parts” for purposes of the harassment statute. We affirm.

Defendant was employed as general manager of Southern Curry Ambulance Association, Inc. (SCAA). In the fall of 1997, an SCAA employee complained to SCAA that defendant had sexually harassed her. Other employees later made similar complaints. As part of an internal investigation and in anticipation of civil litigation, officials of SCAA interviewed several employees, asking them questions about defendant’s conduct. SCAA officials recorded those interviews on audiotape. Later, defendant was criminally charged with multiple counts of harassment and criminal trespass, allegedly committed against several SCAA employees. Through a combination of subpoenas duces tecum and motions to compel, defendant sought to have the taped interviews produced both prior to trial and during trial so that he could inspect them for possible inconsistent statements that might impeach the potential victim-witnesses. In each instance, the trial court declined to order SCAA to release the tape recordings to defendant.

The trial court’s rulings in that regard are the target of defendant’s first argument. On appeal, in a single assignment of error, defendant challenges the trial court’s rulings on his various procedural efforts to obtain and review the tape recordings. 1 He argues that he was entitled to the tape *62 recordings under the compulsory process guarantees of the state and federal constitutions, notwithstanding SCAA’s status as a nonparty to the proceedings and its assertion that the information sought was “privileged as work-product material.” The state responds that, to trigger either the state or the federal constitutional guarantee, defendant was required to show that the contents of the tape recordings were both material and favorable to him and that he failed to do so.* 2

To put the issue in its proper perspective, we begin by describing in some detail the precise procedural devices that defendant used to seek access to the tape recordings, the procedural timing of those efforts, and the trial court’s rulings in response to each. Several weeks before trial was scheduled to begin, defendant served a subpoena duces tecum (the first subpoena) on SCAA, directing it to produce the tape recordings made in the course of its investigation. 3 SCAA entered a special appearance and moved to quash the first subpoena on the grounds that defendant had no authority to obtain discovery from a nonparty in a criminal case and the information sought was “privileged as work-product material.” Relying on ORS 136.580, Article I, section 11, of the Oregon Constitution, and the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution, defendant responded to SCAA’s *63 motion by filing a motion to compel production of the tape recordings. 4 Defendant attached to that motion to compel an affidavit of a former SCAA official who was involved in investigating the SCAA employees’ allegations that they were sexually harassed by defendant. In the affidavit, the former official stated only that he had recorded statements of “many of the complaining witnesses” and had turned the tape recordings over to another SCAA official. The affidavit contained no representations as to the nature or scope of SCAA’s investigation or the substance of the statements made by the witnesses.

The trial court granted SCAA’s motion to quash and issued a letter opinion explaining its ruling in detail. The court found, as SCAA had argued, that the tape recordings “were made by corporate officials for corporate purposes” and “to protect themselves from current or future claims by employees.” 5 Also, the trial court determined that defendant was using the subpoena duces tecum to seek pretrial “discovery” from a nonparty. On that point, the court specifically found that the tape recordings were not in the state’s possession or control and had never been provided to the district attorney’s office. The trial court further found that defendant *64 made no showing that “the alleged victims would testify any differently at trial than they did during their corporate interviews.” Concluding that a criminal defendant has no statutory or constitutional right to compel “discovery” from non-parties, the trial court quashed the first subpoena.

Defendant then served SCAA with another subpoena duces tecum (the second subpoena) and filed another motion to compel, again seeking to have SCAA appear and produce the tape recordings. 6 SCAA again moved to quash. The matter was heard by a different judge from the one who had quashed the first subpoena. As before, the trial court granted SCAA’s motion to quash and issued a letter opinion explaining its ruling. Apparently relying on the earlier ruling, the trial court “assumed” the facts to be that the state was prosecuting defendant for harassment of the alleged victims, that SCAA had interviewed the alleged victims in anticipation of civil litigation, that tape recordings were made of those interviews, and that the state had not reviewed those tape recordings and did not have them in its possession. The trial court quashed the second subpoena, concluding that defendant’s constitutional rights to production did not “override the privilege of a non-party.” The trial court also denied defendant’s motion to compel production of the recordings, similarly reasoning that a person not a party to a criminal case is not subject to a motion to compel.

Defendant made one more procedural effort to obtain access to the tape recordings, this time during trial. After the first victim-witness testified on direct examination, defendant on cross-examination asked her if she had been interviewed by SCAA about the sexual touching that was the subject of the witness’s direct testimony and if that interview had been tape-recorded. When she answered affirmatively, defense counsel orally moved that the trial court order SCAA to “produce” the tape recordings, advising the trial court that defendant was relying on the same arguments that he had advanced in support of the subpoenas duces tecum.

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Related

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State v. Cartwright
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State v. Bassine
71 P.3d 72 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2003)
Dunwoody v. Handskill Corp.
60 P.3d 1135 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2003)
State v. Willis
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State v. Callender
47 P.3d 514 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2002)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 P.3d 223, 173 Or. App. 59, 2001 Ore. App. LEXIS 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cartwright-orctapp-2001.