State v. Chilson

182 P.3d 241, 219 Or. App. 136, 2008 Ore. App. LEXIS 426
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedApril 2, 2008
Docket057202; A131682
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 182 P.3d 241 (State v. Chilson) 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. Chilson, 182 P.3d 241, 219 Or. App. 136, 2008 Ore. App. LEXIS 426 (Or. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

*138 SCHUMAN, P. J.

After the trial court denied defendant’s motion to suppress evidence, rejecting her argument that the evidence derived from an unlawful stop, she entered a conditional guilty plea to driving under the influence of intoxicants (DUII), ORS 813.010, reserving her right to appeal the denial of the motion. ORS 135.335(3). She renews her argument on appeal. In particular, she argues that, because it was impossible under the circumstances for her to comply with the statute that served as the basis of the stop, the statute could not be applied against her, and the stop was therefore unlawful. We reject that argument and affirm.

The relevant facts are uncontested. Seaside City Police Officer Cook saw defendant pull out of a restaurant parking lot and turn left onto a street (Avenue F) heading westbound. Defendant continued in that direction as she approached the intersection of Avenue F and Roosevelt Drive. The distance between the restaurant parking lot exit and the intersection was less than 100 feet. Defendant did not activate her turn signal until after she stopped at the intersection, at which point she signaled to turn right and began to do so. Before completing the turn, however, she noticed oncoming traffic and reversed direction for a short distance, returning to Avenue F. She then activated her left turn signal and turned right.

Although he observed all of that driving activity, the officer (according to his own testimony) decided to stop defendant based solely on his belief that her first turn from Avenue F was a violation of ORS 811.335(1), which provides, in part:

“A person commits the offense of making an unlawful or unsignaled turn if the person is operating a vehicle upon a highway and the person turns the vehicle right or left when:
«Hi * * * *
“(b) The person fails to give an appropriate signal continuously during not less than the last 100 feet traveled by the vehicle before turning.”

After stopping defendant, the officer determined that she was intoxicated and arrested her for DUII.

*139 Defendant filed a pretrial motion to suppress evidence obtained by the officer after the assertedly unlawful traffic stop. She acknowledged that she did not activate her signal at a point that was 100 feet or more from the intersection, but she contended that her noncompliance with the statute could not possibly be unlawful — in effect, that she was exempt from enforcement of the statute — because, given the distance between the parking lot exit and the intersection, compliance was impossible. The trial court rejected that argument.

On appeal, as she did at trial, defendant reasons as follows: To comply with the Oregon Constitution, an officer who stops a person for a traffic infraction must have probable cause to believe that the person has committed the infraction. Probable cause has two components: the officer must subjectively believe that the violation has occurred, and that belief must be objectively reasonable. State v. Matthews, 320 Or 398, 403, 884 P2d 1224 (1994). Although the officer here had the necessary subjective belief, it was not (according to defendant) objectively reasonable; defendant’s act was not an infraction because no law can require a person to perform an impossible act. Thus, the stop was not lawful, and all of the evidence of defendant’s intoxication must be suppressed because it derived from that unlawful stop.

In response, the state maintains that, under Matthews, an officer’s subjective belief that an infraction has occurred can be — and, in this case, was — objectively reasonable, even if no infraction actually occurred. Id. at 401, 404. As has the Supreme Court in Matthews, we have recognized that an “officer’s belief may be objectively reasonable even if it turns out to be incorrect.” State v. Tiffin, 202 Or App 199, 203, 121 P3d 9 (2005). However, “an officer’s subjective belief that a traffic infraction occurred is objectively reasonable if, and only if, the facts as the officer perceived them actually satisfy the elements of a traffic infraction.” Id. at 204. In other words, probable cause may be based on a mistake of fact, but not a mistake of law. Id.; see also State v. Hart, 85 Or App 174, 176-77, 735 P2d 1283 (1987) (no probable cause where officer incorrectly believed that a vehicle had committed a traffic offense by turning at a malfunctioning traffic signal). If, as defendant argues, the facts as the officer perceived *140 them did not “satisfy the elements of a traffic infraction,” his subjective belief that they did was not objectively reasonable. However, as we explain below, the facts as the officer perceived them did “satisfy the elements” of ORS 811.335(l)(b).

If this were a jurisdiction where we could construe a statute so as to avoid the plainly absurd results of a literal interpretation that the legislature could not possibly have intended — that is, every other jurisdiction in the United States — the outcome of this case would be a simple and straightforward affirmance. A literal reading of ORS 811.335(l)(b) leads to absurd results. For example, a person whose driveway enters a one-way street that ends at a “T” intersection 50 feet away would be unable lawfully to leave home by automobile. That observation would compel the conclusion that the legislature obviously intended the statute to mean that a person must signal not less than 100 feet before turning unless the person enters the roadway at a point less than 100 feet before an intersection, in which case the person must activate the signal as soon as the person enters the roadway. Under that common-sense interpretation of ORS 811.335(l)(b), the officer’s belief would have been objectively correct (because defendant did not start to signal until she actually reached the intersection), the stop would have been lawful, and the motion properly would have been denied.

Not here. The legislature and the Supreme Court have foreclosed that option. ORS 174.010 (“In the construction of a statute, the office of the judge is simply to ascertain and declare what is, * * * not to insert what has been omitted[.]”); State v. Vasquez-Rubio, 323 Or 275,282, 917 P2d 494 (1996) (“absurd result” maxim inapplicable when text of statute is unambiguous); PGE v. Bureau of Labor and Industries,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
182 P.3d 241, 219 Or. App. 136, 2008 Ore. App. LEXIS 426, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-chilson-orctapp-2008.