State v. J. N. L.

344 P.3d 59, 268 Or. App. 802
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedFebruary 4, 2015
DocketC061425CR; A156627
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 344 P.3d 59 (State v. J. N. L.) 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. J. N. L., 344 P.3d 59, 268 Or. App. 802 (Or. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

HADLOCK, J.

Defendant appeals a trial court order denying his motion to set aside a conviction under ORS 137.225. The trial court denied the motion because defendant had previously been convicted of an offense in Washington state. Defendant asserts that the conduct underlying the Washington conviction occurred before the conviction that he seeks to set aside and therefore did not preclude relief under ORS 137.225. We agree with defendant and, therefore, reverse and remand.

Defendant was charged in Washington County Circuit Court with possession and delivery of marijuana in June 2006. Around the same time, he was also arrested in Washington state and charged in Clark County Superior Court with manufacturing marijuana. In November 2006, defendant pleaded guilty to delivery of marijuana in the Oregon case, and the possession count was dismissed. In March 2007, he entered a guilty plea in the Washington case.

Defendant later filed a motion in the Clark County court to vacate the Washington conviction under RCW 9.94A.640, which permits courts, under certain circumstances, to “clear the record of conviction” and provides that, once the court has done so, “the offender shall be released from all penalties and disabilities resulting from the offense. For all purposes, including responding to questions on employment applications, an offender whose conviction has been vacated may state that the offender has never been convicted of that crime.” The Clark County court granted the motion in July 2013.

The next month, defendant filed a motion in the Washington County court to set aside the Oregon conviction under ORS 137.225. That statute provides, in pertinent part:

“(l)(a) At any time after the lapse of three years from the date of pronouncement of judgment, any defendant who has fully complied with and performed the sentence of the court and whose conviction is described in subsection (5) of this section by motion may apply to the court where the conviction was entered for entry of an order setting aside the conviction; * * *
[804]*804“(3) Upon hearing the motion, the court may require the filing of such affidavits and may require the taking of such proofs as the court deems proper. The court shall allow the victim to make a statement at the hearing. Except as otherwise provided in subsection (13) of this section, if the court determines that the circumstances and behavior of the applicant from the date of conviction * * * to the date of the hearing on the motion warrant setting aside the conviction, * * * the court shall enter an appropriate order * * * Upon entry of the order, the applicant for purposes of the law shall be deemed not to have been previously convicted, * * * and the court shall issue an order sealing the record of conviction and other official records in the case * * *.
“(6) Notwithstanding subsection (5) of this section, the provisions of subsection (1) of this section do not apply to:
“(b) A person convicted, within the 10-year period immediately preceding the filing of the motion pursuant to subsection (1) of this section, of any other offense, excluding motor vehicle violations, whether or not the other conviction is for conduct associated with the same criminal episode that caused the arrest or conviction that is sought to be set aside. Notwithstanding subsection (1) of this section, a conviction that has been set aside under this section shall be considered for the purpose of determining whether this paragraph is applicable.”

Defendant asserted that the vacated Washington conviction could not be considered in determining whether he was eligible to have the Oregon conviction set aside, arguing that ORS 137.225(6)(b) allowed the court to consider a vacated conviction only if the conviction had been “set aside under this section” — that is, under ORS 137.225. Because the Washington conviction was set aside under ROW 9.94A.640, defendant contended, the court should not consider it.

The state objected to defendant’s motion, raising two arguments. First, citing ORS 137.225(6)(b), it asserted that defendant had been “convicted of another offense within the 10 years preceding this motion,” referring to the 2007 [805]*805Washington conviction. The state acknowledged that the conviction had been vacated, but it argued that a conviction that was not set aside under ORS 137.225 — in other words, a conviction that was set aside under some other law— should be considered for purposes of determining whether a defendant is eligible to have an Oregon conviction set aside. Second, citing ORS 137.225(3), the state asserted that the fact that defendant was convicted in the Washington case “four months after this conviction should lead the court to find that the ‘circumstances and behavior of the defendant from the date of the conviction to the date of the hearing on the motion to set aside’ do not warrant this conviction being set aside.”

Defendant responded that the events that led to his Washington conviction occurred no later than June 2006, several months before he was convicted in the Oregon case, and thus were not part of the “circumstances and behavior” that the court could consider under ORS 137.225(3).

At the hearing on defendant’s motion, the trial court stated that defendant’s view of ORS 137.225(6)(b) was correct “from a technical standpoint” because the Washington conviction had not been “set aside under this section”— that is, under ORS 137.225. However, the court went on to observe that it was required to assess defendant’s “circumstances and behavior” in determining whether setting aside the Oregon conviction was “the right thing to do” under ORS 137.225(3). Addressing defendant, the court stated:

“If you had been convicted in Oregon under the statute it would absolutely — so if all we do, we take the exact same facts, we just move them across the border, you’d agree that you wouldn’t qualify [to have the Oregon conviction set aside]. I mean, you just — by the plain language of the statute, it’s intended to stop that very situation, right?

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Related

State v. Kindred
499 P.3d 835 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2021)
State v. McVein
471 P.3d 796 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2020)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
344 P.3d 59, 268 Or. App. 802, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-j-n-l-orctapp-2015.