State v. George

455 P.2d 609, 253 Or. 458, 1969 Ore. LEXIS 474
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 11, 1969
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 455 P.2d 609 (State v. George) 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. George, 455 P.2d 609, 253 Or. 458, 1969 Ore. LEXIS 474 (Or. 1969).

Opinion

HOLMAN, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of conviction of second degree murder because of the death of one Eggsman. Defendant had previously been tried for the first degree murder of one Kirk, and found not guilty. Both of the victims died as the result of the same altercation. It is defendant’s principal contention that the state is collaterally estopped from convicting him of the death of Eggsman because of the manner in which the two men were killed and the prior adjudication of his non-responsibility for the death of Kirk.

Eggsman and Kirk were passengers in the rear seat of a two-door automobile driven by defendant. Eggsman was sitting behind the driver and Kirk was on the right-hand side. In the front seat Avith defendant were one Barber, who was sitting on the passenger’s side, and defendant’s girl friend, who was sitting between them. The 'evidence indicatés that some sort of a controversy arose concerning remarks made by the persons in the rear seat about defendant’s girl friend. As a result, defendant stopped the vehicle on the roadway and the three persons in the *461 front seat got out. Defendant and Ms girl friend used the door on the driver’s side and Barber the door on the passenger’s side. Immediately thereafter Eggs-man and Kirk were both shot and killed while in the back seat.

It could be found from the evidence that three shots were fired, two from a .30-.30 caliber rifle and one from a .22 caliber rifle. Neither defendant nor Barber testified concerning the shooting. Defendant’s girl friend testified in a manner which was consistent with Barber’s having killed Eggsman. She was impeached by evidence that she had previously told others that defendant had killed Eggsman with the large rifle.

Both victims were killed by the large caliber rifle, although Kirk had a superficial wound in the abdomen inflicted by the smaller rifle. There was shattered glass in the back seat and the left rear window was missing, indicating that it had been shot out. The small caliber wound in Kirk’s abdomen had a halo of powdered glass particles around it from which it could be inferred that the small rifle had been used from the driver’s side. No such powdered glass was found in or around any other wounds.

The state produced as a witness a medical doctor, a specialist in pathology, who performed an autopsy on both victims and who was also qualified as an expert on ballistics and the wounding characteristics of bullets. In addition to performing the autopsy he also examined the clothing of both victims for bullet holes and the presence of powder and glass. The autopsies disclosed an entering wound the size of a bullet under the right shoulder blade of Kirk. The missile traveled diagonally across and upward through his body, com *462 ing ont through an approximate one-inch diameter hole in the middle portion of his left collar bone'. There was an entering wound on Eggsman about four inches in diameter which was under the left cheek bone. The missile continued diagonally through his head toward its back, destroying a portion of the upper jaw. A bullet was found on the right side of the neck at the base of the skull which was fractured.

The witness testified that a .30-.30 caliber bullet fired into the head of Eggsman without its having been previously impeded would have gone right on through it and would not likely have been lodged in his neck. He expressed the opinion that window glass would not have been a sufficient impediment. No glass was found in Eggsman’s wound. He also testified it was unlikely that a previously unimpeded and therefore undistorted bullet would have made an entering wound four inches in diameter. There was no evidence from which it could be found that the bullet which killed Eggsman could have previously hit anything other than the body of Kirk. From this and other evidence the witness expressed ■ the opinion that both victims had probably been killed by the same bullet.

It is defendant’s contention that he had previously been absolved of criminal responsibility for the firing of the shot that killed both men when he was found innocent of the murder of Kirk and that the state is thereby estopped from trying him for the murder, of Eggsman.

The doctrine of collateral estoppel prevents- the relitigation of an issue between the same parties. It is the subject of a statute, ORS 43.160, which provides as follows:

“That only is determined by a former judgment, *463 decree or order which appears upon its face to have been so determined or which was actually and necessarily included therein or necessary thereto.”

The doctrine is somewhat similar to that of res judicata, but it is distinguishable. The distinction is made in State of Oregon v. Dewey, 206 Or 496, 504, 292 P2d 799 (1956). The court said:

■ “In its consideration of the subject this court, like others, has uniformly made a distinction between cases in which the second action is upon the same claim or demand as the first, and those in which it is upon a different claim or demand. In the former case the judgment, if upon the merits, is an absolute bar and concludes the parties and their privies not only as to every matter that was actually litigated but as to any other matter that might have been litigated. But in the latter case it is essential that the issue in the second action was a material issue in the first and necessarily determined therein * *

The same case also defines the breadth of the doctrine of collateral estoppel by quoting from 2 Freeman on Judgments (5th ed) 1465, § 693 as follows:

“ ‘Matters which follow by necessary and inevitable inference from an adjudication because the judgment could not have been rendered without determining them are as effectually concluded thereby as though specifically and in terms adjudicated.’ ”

This action is not upon the same claim or demand as that which was litigated in the case in which defendant was tried for the murder of Kirk. Therefore, before defendant’s acquittal for the murder of Kirk will prevent his subsequent conviction of Eggs-man’s murder in the present case, it must be determined that both men must have been lulled by the same shot and that all criminal responsibility for firing it *464 in relation to both victims must have been necessarily adjudicated and decided in defendant’s favor in the Kirk case. A determination of whether this situation exists necessitates an examination of the evidence and instructions in the first case as well as the evidence in the present one. We have before us the records in both cases. The evidence in both is substantially the same except for the impeachment of defendant’s girl friend which occurred only in the second ease.

The record in the present case must first be examined to determine if the evidence necessitates a finding that both victims were killed by the same shot. We find that it does. The jury could have found that there were two shots fired by the .30-.30 caliber rifle. However, we believe that there was no basis for finding that two fatal

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Bluebook (online)
455 P.2d 609, 253 Or. 458, 1969 Ore. LEXIS 474, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-george-or-1969.