State v. Harris

599 P.2d 456, 287 Or. 335, 1979 Ore. LEXIS 1012
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 11, 1979
DocketTC C 77-11-16147, CA 10825, SC 26048
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 599 P.2d 456 (State v. Harris) 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. Harris, 599 P.2d 456, 287 Or. 335, 1979 Ore. LEXIS 1012 (Or. 1979).

Opinions

[337]*337LINDE, J.

Defendant was indicted on separate counts of kidnapping, ORS 163.225, coercion, ORS 163.275, menacing, ORS 163.190, sexual abuse, ORS 163.425, five counts of sodomy, ORS 163.405, and illegal possession of a firearm, ORS 166.270, all arising "[a]s part of the same act and transaction” involving one victim during a period of about three hours. Upon his conviction of nine of these counts (one charge of sodomy having been withdrawn), the circuit court sentenced defendant to 20 years’ imprisonment on each count of sodomy and five years on the sexual abuse charge, these sentences to run concurrently, and in addition to consecutive terms of five years on the weapons charge, five years on coercion, 10 years on kidnapping, and on the menacing charge to 127 days in the county jail, the time defendant had already been jailed. Of the resulting total of 40 years, the judge also imposed one half as a minimum sentence. On appeal, defendant contended that certain of these counts should have been "merged” in the judgments of conviction and sentence.1 The Court of Appeals declined to consider this contention on the ground that it had not been adequately raised in the circuit court. 37 Or App 715, 588 P2d 100 (1978). We allowed review of this ruling.

Our precedents show that a defendant is not entitled as of right to a reversal on appeal of trial court errors that were not brought to the attention of the trial court, including a failure to "merge” offenses in entering a judgment of conviction and sentence. State v. Ragghianti, 260 Or 347, 490 P2d 490 (1971); State v. Kennedy, 250 Or 422, 443 P2d 226 (1968). Defendant argues that the Court of Appeals and this court may consider "egregious” error apparent on the face of the record even if not raised below, and that the imposition of an illegal sentence is such an "egregious” and evident error. We agree that lack of prior objection in [338]*338the trial court does not place such claimed errors beyond appellate jurisdiction. The Court of Appeals has, in fact, often considered claims like the present that had not been argued to the trial court, as pointed out in Judge Buttler’s concurring opinion, 37 Or App at 720-721. But it does not follow that the Court of Appeals is obliged to decide every such claim.2 The question is not one of statutory authority but of judicial administration.

There is a practical as well as a legal difference between appellate review of a sentence challenged as "excessive” pursuant to the legislative command of ORS 138.040 and 138.050 and one challenged for lack of legal authority or procedural error. A trial court may well be more receptive to reconsideration of a sentence attacked on these legal grounds if they are brought to its attention than to an argument that the sentence is excessive. While postconviction relief in circuit court under ORS 138.530 is available for unauthorized or unconstitutional sentences even when raised there for the first time,3 the legislature has expressly assigned review for excessiveness to the Court of Appeals.

[339]*339Accordingly, the Court of Appeals acted within a judicial discretion supported by our precedents when it held in this case and later in State v. Applegate, 39 Or App 17, 591 P2d 371, rev den, 287 Or 301 (1979), that henceforth it would review a challenge to multiple sentences arising from a single criminal episode for legality (as distinguished from excessiveness) only if the issue was first raised in the trial court, except in "exceptional circumstances . . ., especially when it presents a novel problem.” 39 Or App at 20. This court, of course, retains the power to review in any case. But although we hold that the Court of Appeals adopted a permissible policy in requiring that legal challenges to multiple sentences ordinarily must first be raised in trial courts, the question remains whether the issue in fact was adequately raised in this case.

We find that the issue was brought to the trial court’s attention. It was not a new issue discovered for the first time in preparing the appeal. At the sentencing hearing, court and counsel discussed the significance for the "merger” issue of the then recent decision of the Court of Appeals in State v. Cloutier, 33 Or App 121, 575 P2d 996 (1978), since reversed, 286 Or 579, 596 P2d 1278 (1979). Defense counsel characterized the course of defendant’s conduct as a continuous act rather than a series of independent acts punishable as separate offenses. The record indicates that the prosecutor had previously submitted a legal memorandum on the issue. Although the precise legal relationships among the several crimes charged were not spelled out at the sentencing hearing, there is no reason to believe [340]*340that the court did not decide defendant’s claim adversely on the merits. We therefore reach the substance of his claim.

Defendant’s first contention on appeal was that the charge of sexual abuse should have been "merged” in the conviction for sodomy. We agree. In State v. Cloutier, supra, we stated that the term " 'merger’..., which can easily become a name for a conclusion rather than a reason, is best reserved for the narrow situation when the completion of one offense necessarily includes commission of acts sufficient to constitute violation of another statute.” 286 Or at 586. In the factual setting of this case, commission of sodomy in the first degree necessarily included commission of the offense of sexual abuse.4 It is, of course, possible to commit one of these offenses on one occasion and the other offense against the same victim on another occasion; but in this case the first sexual contact and at least one act of sodomy were not so separated in time, intervening events, or other circumstances as not to be consecutive steps in the sodomy.

Defendant’s second contention concerns the claimed "merger” of the kidnapping, menacing, and weapons [341]*341charges. These do not present a true issue of merger. As far as the statutory definitions go, it is quite possible to commit each of these offenses without committing one of the other two.5 Apart from "merger,” however, the statutes do not necessarily authorize multiple sentences for the violation of one of these prohibitions in the act of violating another. As stated in State v. Cloutier, supra,

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State v. Harris
599 P.2d 456 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1979)

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Bluebook (online)
599 P.2d 456, 287 Or. 335, 1979 Ore. LEXIS 1012, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-harris-or-1979.