State v. Doster

427 P.2d 413, 247 Or. 336, 1967 Ore. LEXIS 482
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 10, 1967
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 427 P.2d 413 (State v. Doster) 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. Doster, 427 P.2d 413, 247 Or. 336, 1967 Ore. LEXIS 482 (Or. 1967).

Opinion

FORT, J.

(Pro Tempore).

The indictment charges the defendant “* * * did unlawfully and feloniously receive and conceal certain stolen property, to-wit, two outboard motors, the personal property of Oregon City Marina, Inc., a cor *338 poration, the said PAUL ZENUS DOSTER. having good reason to believe that the said personal property had theretofore been stolen, * * * Testimony, if believed, established that two men, Bowers and Weissenbnehler, broke and entered the Marina and stole two outboard motors early in the morning. Later that day they phoned defendant and told him they had stolen two outboard motors, and wanted the defendant to see if he could find a buyer for the property. The two thieves testified that they consulted with the defendant prior to the crime, and that he had agreed to undertake to find a buyer for the stolen property. That same afternoon defendant contacted a commercial fisherman whom he knew named Lauritzen, and told him that there were two motors for sale at a very reasonable price which had been obtained by a friend of his in lieu of wages from a bankrupt firm. Defendant was employed as a bartender at a tavern near Portland and he arranged for the property to be brought to the tavern by one of the thieves, and for the prospective purchaser to see the motors there. Mr. Lauritzen agreed to buy them. The motors were then transferred from the car of one of the thieves to Lauritzen’s. One of the two motors was very heavy and the defendant assisted in carrying that motor from the thieves’ car to the buyer’s.

The purchase price of $250 was paid by Lauritzen to Bowers at that time. After the purchaser left with the motors, Bowers paid the defendant $25 for arranging the sale.

The defendant testified he had known Bowers since they had been inmates together at the Oregon State Penitentiary, and that following defendant’s release therefrom, Bowers frequently dropped in at the tavern. *339 Defendant also testified lie knew at the time of the transaction Bowers needed money to take him to Salt Lake City where he was to be tried for robbery. Defendant moved for judgment of acquittal, both at the conclusion of the state’s case and when both sides had rested. The motion was denied. The defendant assigns this ruling as error “* * * since there was no evidence that the defendant was ever in possession of stolen property or that he knew that the motors were stolen.”

As was true in State v. Harris, decided April 26, 1967, 246 Or 617, 427 P2d 107, this ease, too, involves problems arising out of Oregon’s outdated criminal statutes. OBS 165.045 was contained in the 1864 Code of Mathew Deady. It has never been amended, and provides:

“Any person who buys, receives, or conceals or attempts to conceal any stolen money or property, knowing or having good reason to believe that it was stolen, shall be punished upon conviction by imprisonment in the penitentiary for not more than five years, or by imprisonment in the county jail not less than three months nor more than one year, or by a fine of not less than $50 nor more than $500.”

In the general laws relating to theft the last to develop were those concerning the receipt of stolen property. Its origins stem from medieval England and are rooted in the common law crime of larceny. No separate crime or crimes such as is embraced in our statute then existed. The social problems inherent in the buying, receiving or concealing of stolen property were dealt with entirely within the framework of *340 the theory of an accessory after the fact to the crime of larceny. This concept dominated the law well through the Eighteenth Century. The early American law followed the English precedents, both case and statute, and well through the first half of the Nineteenth Century we “* * * were following the English statutes and decisions almost to the letter.”

As recently as 1807 in Massachusetts it was held in Commonwealth v. Andrews in a prosecution for receiving stolen property from another thief that the defendant could not be charged unless the thief had been previously convicted or outlawed. Even if the accessory requested that he be tried first, upon conviction, judgment against him must be suspended until the thief had been convicted.

Finally in 1827 in England the crime itself was made a felony — but “* * * only where the prior crime is felony, and misdemeanor when the prior crime is misdemeanor.” Thus if the larceny were petty, the receiving was also. Then, as today in Oregon, one could not be an accessory after the fact to a misdemeanor.

The Oregon statute adopted in 1864 speaks from that background. Because one cannot be an accessory after the fact to a crime which one has himself committed, we have held that a thief cannot be convicted of receiving property which he himself stole. He *341 can, however, he convicted of concealing it. We so held in State v. Carlton, 233 Or 296, 378 P2d 557 (1963).

In this case the crucial question is whether or not the actions of the defendant are such that it can be said that he “concealed” the motors within the meaning of OES 165.045.

“Concealment of stolen goods does not require actual hiding or secreting; any acts rendering their discovery difficult and preventing identification, or assisting the thief in converting them to his own use, are sufficient.” 76 CJS 10, Receiving Stolen Groods, § 7.

45 Am Jur 386, Receiving Stolen Property, § 3, states:

“* * * the word ‘conceal’ as used in such a statute is not to be given its literal meaning of hiding or secreting, but includes any acts or conduct which assists the thief in converting the property to his own use, or which may prevent or render more difficult its discovery by the owner. * * *”

There was substantial evidence here from which the jury could find that the defendant with knowledge that the motors had been stolen, found a buyer for them, arranged and was present during at least a portion of a meeting between the buyer and the thief, physically participated in the transfer of one motor from the thief’s car to the buyer’s car, and immediately thereafter received $25 from the thief for his services. We think such activity falls within the prohibited area of concealing under ORS 165.045.

*342

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State v. Schindler
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State v. Pickens
487 P.2d 95 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1971)
State v. Morris
465 P.2d 892 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1970)
State v. Upton
167 N.W.2d 625 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1969)
State v. Rogers
434 P.2d 338 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1967)

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Bluebook (online)
427 P.2d 413, 247 Or. 336, 1967 Ore. LEXIS 482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-doster-or-1967.