State v. Jones

439 P.3d 485, 296 Or. App. 553
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMarch 20, 2019
DocketA160930 (Control); A160931
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 439 P.3d 485 (State v. Jones) 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. Jones, 439 P.3d 485, 296 Or. App. 553 (Or. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

HADLOCK, J.

*487*555After an evening that involved heavy drinking and arguments, defendant shot her husband, J, in the leg. All four of defendant's children were present. A jury convicted defendant of first-degree assault and four counts of reckless endangerment, and she appeals, raising three assignments of error. Defendant first challenges the trial court's denial of her motion to suppress statements that she made in response to questions that police officers asked before they read her Miranda warnings. Second, defendant makes unpreserved challenges to what she characterizes as comment on her "invocation of her rights to counsel, and on her exercise of her rights to remain silent." Third, defendant challenges the trial court's exclusion of expert testimony that she offered in support of her self-defense theory; the excluded evidence related to a "danger assessment" regarding the threat that J may have posed to defendant before she shot him.

For the reasons set forth below, we reject defendant's first assignment of error on the grounds that admission of her un-Mirandized statements did not violate the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution and that, even if the trial court erred in admitting those statements because they were obtained in violation of defendant's rights under Article I, section 12, of the Oregon Constitution, any such error was harmless. We reject without further discussion the unpreserved arguments that defendant makes in association with her second assignment of error, including her suggestion that we should overlook certain evidence admitted without objection when we conduct our harmless-error analysis on the first assignment of error. Finally, we conclude that the trial court did not err in excluding defendant's "danger assessment" evidence. Accordingly, we affirm.

I. THE TRIAL

In considering whether a trial court erred in denying a motion to suppress, we review the ruling for legal error.

*556State v. Krause , 281 Or. App. 143, 145, 383 P.3d 307 (2016), rev. den. , 360 Or. 752 (2017). In conducting that review, we ordinarily would be bound by the trial court's implicit and explicit factual findings so long as the record supported them, id ., and therefore would describe the evidence in the light favoring the court's ruling. Here, however, we ultimately conclude that any Article I, section 12, error associated with denial of defendant's suppression motion was harmless. A harmless error analysis is based on reviewing "all pertinent portions of the record" to determine "if there is little likelihood that [any] error affected the verdict." State v. Wirkkala , 290 Or. App. 263, 271, 414 P.3d 421 (2018) (internal quotation marks omitted); see State v. Simon , 294 Or. App. 840, 849, 433 P.3d 385 (2018) (similar). We therefore describe the evidence in accordance with that standard.

A. Evidence Not Challenged on Appeal

We begin by reviewing the pertinent evidence that was introduced at trial, not including the evidence that was the subject of defendant's suppression motion, which we describe later in the opinion. Because the trial spanned five days and the transcript is lengthy, our description of the relevant facts necessarily summarizes and characterizes certain evidence instead of setting it out in detail.

At trial, there was no dispute that defendant shot J in the leg after they argued and that the shooting occurred in the couple's home, where four children, ages 13, 12, 8, and just under 2, were present. The three older children are defendant's from a previous marriage; J is the father of the youngest child. The state's theory, as described in its *488opening statement, was that defendant intentionally shot J in the leg in anger following an argument, and that she also fired other shots inside the house. The shot that struck J shattered his femur, requiring surgery. Defendant's theory was that she acted in self-defense, shooting J only after he physically attacked her and one of the children.

J was the state's first witness at trial. He described a party at the couple's house that involved heavy drinking and that, after their guests left, led to him and defendant arguing-a type of circumstance that often resulted in him *557packing up and leaving the house.1 J testified that, on this occasion, he told defendant that he was going to take his child and leave. J could not find his keys, however, and he thought that defendant had taken them. J and defendant continued arguing; J acknowledged that he was angry and that he called defendant names.

J testified that, as he looked through desk drawers for his keys, defendant told him that "she should have shot [him] a long time ago in the foot like she always said she was going to do" if he left her or cheated on her. Defendant said to J, "you think I won't shoot you," he responded that defendant would not shoot anybody, and they went back and forth that way several times. J testified that defendant then shot him and he fell, saying "bitch you shot me." Defendant responded, "you're god damn right" and asserted that she should have done it a long time ago. Yelling continued, and according to J, defendant then fired three additional shots.

Sometime after defendant shot him, J asked defendant to call an ambulance, but she did not. Instead, defendant pulled J's pants off, got peroxide, and called her mother (who is a nurse) to seek advice. Defendant went upstairs at one point and J reached a cell phone and dialed 9-1-1. Defendant came back down the stairs and, J testified, he threw the phone (which ended up connecting with 9-1-1) somewhere around the chair or the couch. Later, J heard defendant speaking to a 9-1-1 operator on another telephone, but he did not yell because he saw lights outside indicating that police officers had already arrived. Defendant put the gun on the desk. Police officers called over a loudspeaker for everybody to come outside, and officers eventually entered the house.

At trial, J denied that he had ever hit or head-butted defendant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
439 P.3d 485, 296 Or. App. 553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-jones-orctapp-2019.