State v. Hershey

401 P.3d 256, 286 Or. App. 824, 2017 Ore. App. LEXIS 907
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJuly 19, 2017
Docket1310372CR; A157388
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 401 P.3d 256 (State v. Hershey) 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.

Bluebook
State v. Hershey, 401 P.3d 256, 286 Or. App. 824, 2017 Ore. App. LEXIS 907 (Or. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

DUNCAN, J. pro tempore

In this criminal case, defendant appeals the judgment convicting him of first-degree animal neglect, ORS 167.330.1 Defendant moved to suppress evidence gathered as a result of law enforcement officers’ warrantless entry onto his property, arguing that the entry violated his rights under Article I, section 9, of the Oregon Constitution.2 The trial court denied that motion, concluding that the search was justified under the emergency aid exception to the warrant requirement as we had recently interpreted that exception. See State v. Fessenden, 258 Or App 639, 649, 310 P3d 1163 (2013), aff’d on other grounds sub nom State v. Fessenden/Dicke, 355 Or 759, 333 P3d 278 (2014). Defendant assigns error to that ruling. Addressing the narrow question properly before us, we conclude that, under the totality of the circumstances, there were specific and articulable facts from which the officers could, and did, reasonably conclude that the entry was necessary in order to provide emergency aid to defendant’s cattle. We therefore affirm.

We review a trial court’s denial of a defendant’s motion to suppress for errors of law. State v. Ehly, 317 Or 66, 74-75, 854 P2d 421 (1993). We are bound by the trial court’s explicit and implicit findings of fact if there is constitutionally sufficient evidence in the record to support them. Id. at 75. We state the facts consistently with that standard.

At the time of the hearing on defendant’s motion to suppress, Sheriff Glerup was the Sheriff of Harney County. At the time of the hearing on defendant’s motion to suppress, Glerup had more than 31 years’ experience in law enforcement and had investigated “several” animal abuse and neglect cases in the county. Sergeant Needham was a [827]*827deputy sheriff in Harney County, who, at the time of the motion hearing, had conducted approximately 10 major animal abuse and neglect investigations.

On July 8, 2013, Needham went to defendant’s property in Burns, Oregon, in response to a call from Noelle Hauck, who lived on a nearby ranch and had reported “that [defendant’s] cows were starving, and/or had no water or food.” Needham drove to the property, but was unable to see the cattle. There is a hill with a lip, which can conceal the cattle from view from the highway.

Needham called defendant, who was at the coast, and explained that the sheriffs office had received a report about the condition of defendant’s cattle. Defendant told Needham that the cattle “were okay,” and that he had fired the workers who had been taking care of them approximately a week earlier but had arranged for a man named Brandon Baron to take care of the cattle.

Needham took no further action that day. Glerup called Noelle Hauck and relayed the information Needham had received from defendant.

The next day, Noelle Hauck’s husband, Scott Hauck, “a long-term rancher * * * who’s run cattle for most of his life,” whose ranch is “not far from” defendant’s property, and who was “very familiar with” cattle, called the sheriffs office and spoke to Glerup. Scott Hauck told Glerup that, “in his opinion [,] the animals were near death.”

As Needham later summarized at the motion hearing, the Haucks had reported that “the cows were thin, that they appeared to be starving, no food, and that they were trying to get out of the property to obtain food and/or water.” The animals appeared “to be dying” and “near death.” According to Needham, the Haucks’ reports were based on their personal observations of the cattle from the highway.3

In addition, Needham spoke with the persons who lived directly to the west of the gate to defendant’s property. They said that they had thrown “a small amount of hay over [828]*828the fence because the cows looked like they were starving,” and that “the cows had been coming down the road, to the gate area, trying to get out.”

Accordingto Glerup, after Scott Hauck’s call, “ [t] hat’s when * * * Sergeant Needham contacted Brandon Baron by phone, and we learned that what we had been told by [defendant] was not true, that [Baron] was not hired to take care of’ the cattle. Baron told Needham that defendant had contacted him a few days earlier because he had gotten a call that the cattle were out on the highway. Baron said that defendant asked him to check, and to put them back onto his property if they were out. Baron told Needham that he agreed to check for the cattle on the highway—he did not find them there—but that he had never been hired to take care of the cattle.

After Needham spoke with Baron, he briefed Glerup, and Glerup decided that they would to go out to the property. At the motion hearing, Needham testified that he and Glerup “were concerned about the health and safety of the cattle, that they were possibly dying on the property, and we knew that [defendant] was out of town, and that there was no apparent person taking care of the cattle.” When asked if he believed that the entry onto defendant’s property “was necessary to render immediate aid or assistance to the cows,” and whether it was his “belief that they needed immediate aid or assistance, and without that immediate aid or assistance they would suffer serious physical injury or death,” Needham answered, “Absolutely.”

Also at the motion hearing, Glerup described the information he had when he decided that they had to enter defendant’s property immediately: “We had two local people that were very familiar with cows and cattle, and they were telling us that they were in very poor health, and they— they feared for their safety and their lives.” When asked if he felt that it was necessary to enter the property to render immediate aid or assistance to the cows, he said, “Yes,” and that in his view it was their “duty” to ensure the safety of the cattle.

Glerup and Needham entered defendant’s property, where they made observations and gathered evidence of [829]*829animal neglect. Defendant was ultimately charged with five counts of first-degree animal neglect, ORS 167.330, and one count of second-degree animal neglect, ORS 167.325.

Defendant moved to suppress the evidence gathered as a result of the officers’ entry onto his property.4 In response, the only justification that the state advanced for the warrantless entry was the emergency aid doctrine. The parties both filed memoranda recognizing that a Court of Appeals’ decision, Fessenden, had recently held that that doctrine could apply to nonhuman animals. 258 Or App at 649. The parties also agreed on the legal analysis for determining whether the requirements of the emergency aid doctrine had been satisfied. The dispute before the trial court at the suppression hearing was whether the state had met its burden of proving that those requirements had been satisfied. At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court made findings, concluded that the emergency aid doctrine applied, and denied the motion to suppress.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
401 P.3d 256, 286 Or. App. 824, 2017 Ore. App. LEXIS 907, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hershey-orctapp-2017.