State v. Copeland

306 P.3d 610, 353 Or. 816, 2013 WL 3864325, 2013 Ore. LEXIS 492
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 25, 2013
DocketCC 090647486; CA A143210; SC S060370
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 306 P.3d 610 (State v. Copeland) 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. Copeland, 306 P.3d 610, 353 Or. 816, 2013 WL 3864325, 2013 Ore. LEXIS 492 (Or. 2013).

Opinion

*818 BREWER, J.

In this punitive contempt proceeding for violation of a Family Abuse Prevention Act (FAPA) restraining order, defendant challenges the admission in evidence of a deputy sheriff’s certificate of service of the restraining order. Defendant asserts that admission of the certificate of service violated his confrontation right under Article I, section 11, of the Oregon Constitution, because the state did not establish that the declarant was unavailable to testify. Defendant also asserts that the document was “testimonial” evidence that was inadmissible under the confrontation clause of the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution. The trial court concluded that the certificate was admissible despite defendant’s constitutional objections, and, after defendant appealed from his ensuing conviction, the Court of Appeals affirmed. State v. Copeland, 247 Or App 362, 270 P3d 313 (2011).

As explained below, we conclude that the out-of-court declaration made by the deputy sheriff who issued the certificate of service in the underlying FAPA proceeding here was not “witness” evidence that triggered defendant’s confrontation right under Article I, section 11, because the certificate was an official record whose content was confined to a matter that the deputy sheriff was bound by an administrative duty to report, and it did not include investigative or gratuitous facts or opinions. In addition, we conclude that the certificate was not testimonial evidence under the Sixth Amendment. Therefore, we affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals and the judgment of the circuit court.

I. BACKGROUND

The pertinent facts, summarized from the Court of Appeals opinion, are few and undisputed. Defendant’s then-wife, S, obtained a restraining order that prohibited defendant from coming within 150 feet of her home and other locations that she frequented, including the Savoy Tavern, where she worked. Id. at 364. The next day, Deputy Sheriff Schweitzer certified by written proof of service that he had personally served defendant with the restraining order that day. Several weeks later, S was working at the Savoy *819 Tavern and noticed that defendant was seated at the bar of a restaurant across the street. She called the police. The responding officers determined that defendant was within 150 feet of the tavern and arrested him for violating the restraining order. Id. at 365.

The state charged defendant with punitive contempt under ORS chapter 33 for violating the restraining order. 1 The charging instrument alleged, in part, that defendant, “having received notice of [the restraining order] did * * * willfully enter * * * [and] remain at the area 150 feet from the Savoy Tavern” in violation of the restraining order. Id. (emphasis omitted; brackets and omissions in original). At trial, the state offered the certificate of service as evidence that defendant had notice of the restraining order. Defendant objected, arguing that admission of the certificate of service without allowing him to confront Schweitzer violated his state and federal constitutional confrontation rights. The state responded that the document was admissible under the official records hearsay exception, OEC 803(8), and therefore was not subject to the confrontation protections of Article I, section 11. As to the federal constitution, the state asserted that the certificate of service was not “testimonial” and thus defendant’s Sixth Amendment confrontation right was not triggered. The trial court agreed with the state and admitted the evidence. Ultimately, the trial court found defendant in contempt of court and imposed punitive sanctions.

Defendant appealed, renewing his constitutional objections to the admission of the certificate of service. In a written opinion, the Court of Appeals affirmed. First, the court rejected defendant’s federal constitutional argument, citing its prior decision in State v. Tryon, 242 Or App 51, 59, 255 P3d 498 (2011), where it had held that the admission of a return of service of a restraining order did not violate the defendant’s right to confrontation under the Sixth Amendment, because the evidence was not testimonial. Copeland, 247 Or App at 364 n 1. Turning to the Oregon Constitution, the court concluded that, even though the confrontation *820 guarantee in Article I, section 11, generally precludes the admission of hearsay evidence “unless the state establishes that (a) the declarant is unavailable to testify and (b) the statements bear ‘adequate indicia of reliability,’” id. at 366 (quoting State v. Campbell, 299 Or 633, 648, 705 P2d 694 (1985)), that guarantee does not apply to “certain ‘historical exceptions’ corresponding to types of hearsay that ‘the framers of the Oregon Constitution would have understood * * * to have constituted an exception to the confrontation rights guarantee.’” Id. at 367 (quoting State v. William, 199 Or App 191, 197, 110 P3d 1114, rev den, 339 Or 406 (2005)).

The court then noted that, in this case, defendant had acknowledged that some official records fall under an “historical exception” to the confrontation right, and that defendant had argued only that, in the context of official records, the historical exception pertained solely to proof of “collateral” matters. Id. at 366. Thus, the court concluded that “[t]he inquiry in this case reduces to whether the submission of a public record to establish an essential- — -as opposed to ‘collateral’ — fact in a criminal proceeding falls within such an ‘historical exception’ to confrontation.” Id. at 367. Relying on its own prior case law, the court concluded that the official records exception to the state confrontation right applied equally to the proof of “essential” facts as it did to “collateral” facts. Id. at 369. In a concurring opinion, Judge Sercombe stated that he was “not sure that the analysis in William continues to be correct” in light of State v. Birchfield, 342 Or 624, 157 P3d 216 (2007), where this court held that the admission of a criminalist’s laboratory report without either requiring the state to produce the criminalist at trial to testify or demonstrating that the criminalist was “unavailable” violated Article I, section 11. Copeland, 247 Or App at 370-71 (Sercombe, J., concurring).

On review, defendant does not dispute that the certificate of service was a qualifying official record under OEC 803(8). That rule provides, in part, that the following are excepted from the rule against hearsay, even though the declarant is available as a witness:

“Records, reports, statements or data compilations, in any form, of public offices or agencies, setting forth:
*821 “(a) The activities of the office or agency;

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Bluebook (online)
306 P.3d 610, 353 Or. 816, 2013 WL 3864325, 2013 Ore. LEXIS 492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-copeland-or-2013.