State v. Gortmaker

668 P.2d 354, 295 Or. 505, 1983 Ore. LEXIS 1436
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 16, 1983
DocketTC 119905/CA 19226, TC 119906/CA 19227, TC 119907/CA 19228, SC 29266
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 668 P.2d 354 (State v. Gortmaker) 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. Gortmaker, 668 P.2d 354, 295 Or. 505, 1983 Ore. LEXIS 1436 (Or. 1983).

Opinion

*507 JONES, J.

Defendant appeals his conviction for two counts of theft in the first degree and one count of official misconduct. 1

The sole question upon which we allow review is whether the special grand jury which indicted the defendant was constitutionally selected under Article VII (Amended), Section 5, of the Oregon Constitution. The Court of Appeals held that the grand jury selection procedure violated the Oregon Constitution but the defendant’s subsequent “reliable conviction” by a properly selected trial jury negated the constitutional violations and allowed the conviction to stand. We affirm the Court of Appeals decision, but for different reasons.

The defendant argues on constitutional grounds that the trial court erred in failing to quash the indictment on at least one of three grounds: (1) that grand jurors were selected from a petit jury panel in violation of Article VII (Amended), Section 5(1) (b), of the Oregon Constitution, (2) that the Marion County Court Administrator excused prospective grand jurors from the grand jury panel without authority of the court and for reasons not allowed by statute and this resulted in less than random selection, and (3) that because some grand jury members were not selected by lot from among all the jurors in attendance at the court as required by Article VII (Amended), Section 5(2), of the Oregon Constitution.

The state responds that the defendant is prevented from attacking the grand jury selection procedure because of the limitations of ORS 135.510(1), which reads:

“The indictment shall be set aside by the court upon the motion of the defendant in either of the following cases:
(a) When it is not found, indorsed and presented as prescribed in ORS 132.360,132.400 to 132.430 and 132.580.
*508 (b) When the names of the witnesses examined before the grand jury are not inserted at the foot of the indictment or indorsed thereon.”

The state also takes the position that ORS 10.050(1), 2 as applied by ORS 132.030, 3 further prohibits the defendant’s challenge to the procedure utilized for empaneling the grand jury. If the defendant were simply claiming that the state had violated a statute in the procedure that was utilized for empaneling the grand jury, we would be inclined to agree with the state that these statutes prohibit such a challenge. For over 100 years such an objection has been in effect a challenge to the panel and not to individual jurors and such a challenge has long been abolished by statute in Oregon. See, State v. Fitzhugh, 2 Or 227 (1867); 4 see also State v. Dale, 8 Or 229 (1880); State v. Savage, 36 Or 191, 60 P 610, 61 P 1128 (1900). A predecessor statute 5 was applied in State v. Ju Nun, 53 Or 1, 97 P 96, 98 P 513 (1908), where this court held that specific statutory challenges are the only challenges allowed to a grand jury. However, we did state “[i]t may be that, if persons were *509 called or summoned as jurors wholly without color of law, an objection on that ground would be available to a litigant, for in such a case the persons so called or summoned would not be a jury either de facto or de jure. ” Id. at 5. In Ju Nun we followed State v. Dale, supra, where we said if a juror were improperly or illegally drawn or summoned a challenge was available outside the statute. The Ju Nun court held “[w]here, however, the drawing and summoning is under color of law and semblance of legal authority, and the jurors are accepted and treated by the court as legal jurors, they are at least such defacto; and it is not open to a litigant to object to their serving in a particular case on the ground that the law under which they were drawn is unconstitutional.” Ju Nun, 53 Or at 6.

In State v. Carlson, 39 Or 19, 25, 62 P 1016, 62 P 1119 (1900), we held pursuant to the statute:

“* * * No challenge shall be made or allowed to the panel from which the grand jury is drawn, nor to an individual grand juror, unless when made by the court for want of qualification as prescribed. The statute having thus imposed upon the court the duty of ascertaining the qualifications of grand jurors before accepting them, and prohibited all persons from challenging the panel or any individual grand juror, it remains to be seen whether the statute, in these respects, is violative of any constitutional provision. * * *” (Emphasis supplied; citation omitted.)

In State v. Lawrence, 12 Or 297, 7 P 116 (1885), a grand jury was empaneled under the authority of a statute which allowed the jurors to be selected several days prior to the start of the term of the court. Although the statute prohibited a challenge to the indictment on that ground, see State v. Whitney, 7 Or 386, 388 (1879), we found the statute under which the grand jury was selected violated Article VII (Original), Section 18, quashed the indictment and reversed the defendant’s conviction. We held:

“* * * [I]t is the constitutional right of a defendant accused of a crime to demand that the indictment shall be found by a grand jury selected only as provided in the Constitution. * * *” Lawrence, 12 Or at 300.

Review of this court’s rulings for over 116 years clearly reveals that if the defendant had restricted his attack to statutory grounds, he would be prohibited from attacking the procedure used in empaneling the grand jury. However, the *510 defendant has consistently argued that the selection procedure used in empaneling the grand jury which indicted him was in violation of the Oregon Constitution. Notwithstanding this position, the trial court, relying upon ORS 135.510, and the holding of State v. Bock, 49 Or 25, 88 P 318 (1907), found that the defendant was prohibited from attacking the grand jury selection procedure on constitutional grounds. The Court of Appeals disagreed and ruled the defendant could make a direct constitutional challenge to the procedure outside the complex maze of statutes, legislative history and court decisions surrounding statutory violations.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
668 P.2d 354, 295 Or. 505, 1983 Ore. LEXIS 1436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gortmaker-or-1983.