State v. Commedore

391 P.2d 605, 237 Or. 348, 1964 Ore. LEXIS 352
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 22, 1964
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 391 P.2d 605 (State v. Commedore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Commedore, 391 P.2d 605, 237 Or. 348, 1964 Ore. LEXIS 352 (Or. 1964).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by the defendant from a judgment of the circuit court which found him guilty of the crime of attempted burglary not in a dwelling house. The judgment of guilt, which was based upon a jury’s verdict, imposed a sentence.

The defendant-appellant presents these two assignments of error:

(1) “The Court erred in failing to direct a verdict of acquittal at the close of the State’s case in chief. * *
(2) “The Court erred in giving the jury the following instruction: * * * voluntary intoxication, to be available as a defense, must result in a diseased condition of the mind, delirium tremens, or some other form of insanity. * * *”

A restaurant known as Tad’s Chicken & Dumplings occupies a two-story structure near Troutdale in east Multnomah County. The state claims that on February 23, 1963, the defendant and two companions attempted to burglarize the establishment. The upper floor of the restaurant structure faces upon the thoroughfare. The opposite side faces upon Sandy River. [350]*350The upper floor houses the restaurant. The ground occupied by the structure slopes sharply from the highway down to the river level. Some living quarters were built , into the lower part of the building, but-they remained unoccupied. Apart from the living quarters, the first or basement part -of the building remained unfinished. Its posts, beams and the sloping ground were open to view by those who descended to the river level.

A short distance from Tad’s Chicken & Dumplings another restaurant offered itself for patronage. Those were the only business enterprises in the immediate area. Tad’s Chicken & Dumplings opens for business in'mid-afternoon and closes about 2:30 a.m.

The state claims that the defendant -and two of his companions, Thomas Calhoun and Joseph Washington, planned to burglarize Tad’s place February 23, at about 3 a.m. and that they planned to enter it by forcing open a door or window in the basement part of the structure.

The defendant lived on lower Multnomah Street in Portland. In the evening of February 23 a police ear containing several officers was parked near the defendant’s living quarters and, according to one of the officers, the latter saw a car -stop near the defendant’s home at 11:45 p.m. whereupon the defendant entered the car. When the ear proceeded on its way, the police car followed it until it finally came to Tad’s Chicken & Dumplings where it stopped. The police car went about a quarter of a mile further. Shortly one of the officers drove in a private car near the car in which the defendant had been a passenger and which was-parked at Tad’s Chicken & Dumplings; he observed, so.he swore, that it was then unoccupied.

[351]*351One of the officers presently approached on foot Tad’s place. He was on the opposite side of the stream less than 50. feet from -the basement part of Tad’s. As a witness that' officer swore that he could plainly hear voices coming from the basement area of Tad’s. He also swore that he heard noises that sounded like efforts to pry something loose and other sounds that seemed to be, made by tools that were tapping or hammering. Then a car with bright headlights drove upon the restaurant grounds and stopped there. At that juncture the sounds ended. Before long Calhoun and Washington came to their car. The defendant was already -seated in it. At that time the police placed all three under arrest. When the police looked into the car that the three men occupied, they noticed in it tools that-could .be used to force open windows and doors. They Also found in the car a gun and a pair of gloves. ‘When the officers went under the restaurant into the basement area they found several burglar tools such as a crowbar and screwdrivers.

Upon: inspecting the basement -area, the police found upon a door and a window frame fresh marks Avhich one of them described in this way: “Avhat we call a jimmy mark or a crowbar mark.” One of the officers testified'thát :one of the tools found in, -the oar occupied by the three men corresponded precisely in Avidth with a mark that had been made upon the door. The folloAving are his words:

“A, Well, on the edge of the jamb were marks that this particular bar exactly fit into. The marks were fresh. -There were loose splinters where they had be.en broke loose and were still hanging, and 'in the door itself, on the door was the impression, a deep impréssion on the door which the back side of the crowbar fit into.' . :. .
[352]*352“Q I see.
“A And when the door was closed with the initial — to the point in the jamb on the casing at the point and held there, the door closed and then pushed back as if there was pressure on it — it exactly fit in. * * *
# * *
“A Other than the fact that it, as close as a person can see, exactly fit. We measured the back part of the bar. I did, myself, at the time measure the back part of the bar, and measured the impressions, and they all coincided, and the bend in the bar when the door — it fit in with the impressions in the door, the amount of the bend, when it was placed there.
“Q Isn’t it a fair statement to say that all you noticed is that that instrument, Exhibit No. 2, is of the size and dimension that could have made the marks ?
“A Yes, that’s right.
“Q You have no way of saying that that —
“A No.
“Q — instrument did make the marks ?
“A No; physically and dimension-wise, and in its contour fit.”

Mrs. Olga Cummins, owner of the restaurant, gave testimony about the marks on the door and windows that was similar to that of the police officers.

One of the officers noticed in the defendant’s hair “a fairly large accumulation of cobwebs.” He also noticed mud upon the defendant’s shoes. The officer took the cobwebs into his possession, placed them in [353]*353an envelope and they are now before us as an exhibit. As a witness the defendant testified:

“Q How did you get the cobwebs in your hair, Mr. Commedore?
“A I don’t know.”

Shortly after the arrests had been made, the defendant spoke to the police officers and acknowledged his criminal activity. One of the officers transcribed on a typewriter the defendant’s statements and then read them to him. The defendant admitted the accuracy of the statements, but declared that he preferred not to sign them. The trial judge, after conducting an inquiry into the voluntary character of the purported confession, ruled in favor of its admissibility. In our belief the ruling was correct.

ORS 136.540 (1) states:

“Nor is a confession only sufficient to warrant his conviction without some other proof that the crime has been committed.”

We believe that the record contains adequate substantial evidence apart from the confession showing the commission of the crime by the defendant. The first assignment of error lacks merit.

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Related

State v. Oliver
509 P.2d 41 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1973)
Padel v. Narits
430 P.2d 1002 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1967)

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Bluebook (online)
391 P.2d 605, 237 Or. 348, 1964 Ore. LEXIS 352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-commedore-or-1964.