State v. Haase
This text of 895 P.2d 813 (State v. Haase) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The state appeals a pretrial order allowing defendant’s motion to suppress the audio portion of a videotape recording made during defendant’s arrest for driving under the influence of intoxicants. The trial court ruled:
“That the officer failed to specifically inform the Defendant that the Defendant’s conversation was being obtained by electronic recording, and that in the totality of the circumstances the Defendant was unaware that the conversation was being obtained.”
The issue is whether, as a matter of law, the officer’s statement to defendant sufficiently informed him that “their conversation is being obtained” as required by statute. ORS 165.540 provides:
“(1) Except as otherwise provided in ORS 133.724 or subsections (2) to (7) of this section, no person shall:
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“(c) Obtain or attempt to obtain the whole or any part of a conversation by means of any device, contrivance, machine or apparatus, whether electrical, mechanical, manual or otherwise, if all participants in the conversation are not specifically informed that their conversation is being obtained.”1
The trial court found that the officer lawfully stopped defendant’s car and
“[t]hat initially upon approaching the Defendant, the officer advised the Defendant that he was ‘being monitored both by camera and by audio means’ and that the officer was in fact, recording the Defendant’s voice and image by means of a video camera, and an inconspicuous microphone attached to the officer’s uniform.”
The state argues that defendant was sufficiently “informed,” because ORS 165.540(l)(c) does not require the use of the specific words “obtained by electronic recording,” as the trial court held. The substance of the warning and not [419]*419its form is what is important, the state contends. The court also was incorrect, the state argues, in requiring that defendant actually understand the warning. Defendant, on the other hand, contends that he was not given adequate warning that his conversation was being recorded, because the word “monitoring” is not synonymous with “recording.”2
We have held that the requirements of ORS 165.540(l)(c) are not met when a party to a conversation, although not warned, “reasonably should have known that [a] recording was being made.” Instead, that party must receive “an unequivocal warning” that the conversation is being “obtained.” State v. Bichsel, 101 Or App 257, 790 P2d 1142 (1990). However, the statute does not require any particular form of warning. In substance, it requires that the participants be informed that the conversation is being recorded or otherwise “obtained” by some device. As long as the warning reasonably imparts that information, it is sufficient.
Here, the arresting officer approached defendant and said:
“I need to tell you before you start that this conversation is being monitored by camera and by audio means.”3
That statement would reasonably inform a person that the conversation was being recorded on film and on an audio recording device. We hold as a matter of law that ORS 165.540(l)(c) was satisfied.
The trial court also found that “in the totality of the circumstances the Defendant was unaware that the conversation was being obtained.” The test is not whether defendant [420]*420was aware that the conversation was being recorded; it is whether the officer gave defendant the required information.4 The statute does not require that defendant understand it.5 See State v. Nguyen, 107 Or App 716, 813 P2d 569, rev den 312 Or 528 (1991); State v. Weishar, 78 Or App 468, 717 P2d 231, rev den 301 Or 338 (1986).
The trial court suppressed the audio portion of the videotape on statutory grounds. Defendant argued below and now on appeal as an alternative basis for affirming the trial court’s ruling that the audio recording should be suppressed under Article I, section 9, of the Oregon Constitution. He contends that a surreptitious tape recording of defendant’s conversation is a search and seizure under the state constitution. He argues that the search and seizure of the conversation was not authorized by warrant, probable cause or consent and, therefore, it was illegally obtained and subject to suppression.
Defendant’s argument depends on the predicate that the recording was surreptitious. If the warning requirements of ORS 165.540(l)(c) are met, the recording is not surreptitious or clandestine. The recording was not clandestine and we need not decide whether defendant is correct that an unlawful search would otherwise occur.
Defendant finally contends that, if the trial court erred by suppressing the recording, the error was harmless and does not require reversal of the suppression order. In essence, he argues that the state has sufficient other evidence6 and does not need the recorded conversation. He also argues that, under OEC 103(1), the state must show that the evidential error was prejudicial and affected a substantial right of the state.
[421]*421The ruling we consider is a pretrial order that excluded evidence; the case must still be tried. It would be contrary to the factfinding process to exclude admissible evidence in advance of trial on the ground that the state has other evidence to offer. We decline to apply the harmless error rule under these circumstances.
Reversed and remanded.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
895 P.2d 813, 134 Or. App. 416, 1995 Ore. App. LEXIS 766, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-haase-orctapp-1995.