State v. Lane

318 P.3d 750, 260 Or. App. 549, 2014 WL 25194, 2014 Ore. App. LEXIS 1
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJanuary 2, 2014
Docket07C49819; A148507
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 318 P.3d 750 (State v. Lane) 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. Lane, 318 P.3d 750, 260 Or. App. 549, 2014 WL 25194, 2014 Ore. App. LEXIS 1 (Or. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

EGAN, J.

Defendant appeals, challenging the revocation of four separate probationary terms that defendant was serving for crimes that he had committed against different victims. The trial court found that defendant had violated a probationary term that prohibited him from consuming alcohol and imposed four prison terms as a sanction for that single violation. The trial court ordered some of those prison terms to run consecutively. OAR 213-012-0040(2)(a) provides that “[i]f more than one term of probationary supervision is revoked for a single supervision violation, the sentencing judge shall impose the incarceration sanctions concurrently.” Article I, section 44(1) (b), of the Oregon Constitution provides that “[n]o law shall limit a court’s authority to sentence a criminal defendant consecutively for crimes against different victims.” The issue in this case is whether OAR 213-012-0040(2)(a) foreclosed the trial court from imposing consecutive terms for the single probation violation, or whether Article I, section 44(l)(b), instead operated to invalidate that regulatory limitation on the court’s authority. For the following reasons, we conclude that OAR 213-012-0040(2) limited the trial court’s authority to impose consecutive prison terms and accordingly remand for entry of judgment ordering the terms to run concurrently.

The facts are procedural and not disputed. Defendant pleaded no contest to four felony counts of encouraging child sexual abuse. Defendant admitted that the conduct involved four different victims. The judgments of conviction provided that the applicable sentencing gridblock for each count was 8-1, which calls for a presumptive prison sentence of 16 to 18 months. Pursuant to a plea petition, the court imposed a dispositional departure sentence of 60 months’ probation on each of the four counts. One of the probationary conditions prohibited defendant from consuming alcohol.

A little less than two years after the judgments of conviction were entered, the state requested, and the court signed, an order for defendant to show cause why his probation should not be revoked. The state asserted that defendant had admitted to consuming alcoholic beverages; it also [551]*551indicated that defendant had visited a bar in violation of his probationary terms.

The court held a revocation hearing at which defendant admitted that he had imbibed in violation of his probationary terms. The court found defendant in violation of his probation and scheduled a second hearing to determine an appropriate sanction for that violation. In a memorandum filed before the second hearing, defendant argued that the trial court lacked the authority to impose consecutive prison terms for a single probation violation, citing ORS 137.123, OAR 213-012-0040, and State v. Stokes, 133 Or App 355, 891 P2d 13 (1995). The state responded that Article I, section 44(l)(b), of the Oregon Constitution provided the court with the authority to sentence defendant to consecutive prison terms because there were four separate victims of the underlying crimes of conviction. The trial court concluded that it did have the authority to impose consecutive prison terms, stating:

“I think if this was a case where time was imposed, but not executed, and nothing was on the box checked as consecutive, the Court would have no choice but to run those concurrent. This is not such a case. The imposition of sentence was suspended. Therefore, the Court is at liberty to make that decision now.
“Second of all, I agree with [the state] that the Court allows — is allowed to give consecutive sentences in this case, based upon the fact that there were four separate victims. That was made clear in the plea petition.”

The court imposed 18 months in prison on each of the four counts. It ordered the prison terms on Counts 1 and 2 to run concurrently to one another, the terms for Counts 3 and 4 to also run concurrently to one another, and the combined term imposed for Counts 1 and 2 to run consecutively to the combined term for Counts 3 and 4. Accordingly, the court imposed a total of 36 months in prison for the probation violation.

Defendant’s sole contention on appeal is that the trial court lacked the authority to impose consecutive prison [552]*552terms for the single probation violation.1 As he did before the trial court, defendant points to OAR 213-012-0040(2), which provides:

“When an offender is serving multiple terms of probationary supervision, the sentencing judge may impose revocation sanctions for supervision violations as provided by OAR 213-010-0002 for the violation of each separate term of probationary supervision.
“(a) If more than one term of probationary supervision is revoked for a single supervision violation, the sentencing judge shall impose the incarceration sanctions concurrently.
“(b) If more than one term of probationary supervision is revoked for separate supervision violations, the sentencing judge may impose the incarceration sanctions concurrently or consecutively.”

We applied that regulation in Stokes, where a defendant who had been sentenced to two probation terms failed to complete a sex-offender treatment program, a failure that put him in violation of a probationary requirement. 133 Or App at 357. The court revoked the defendant’s probation and imposed two consecutive prison terms of 24 months each. On appeal, the state argued that the court had the authority to make those terms consecutive under ORS 137.1232 and [553]*553former OAR 253-12-010, renumbered as OAR 213-012-0010 (11/11/99). We disagreed, stating:

“The difficulty with the state’s position is that, under sentencing guidelines, the requirements for imposition of the initial sentence are not the same as the requirements for imposing sanctions when probation is revoked. Under [OAR 213-012-0010] and ORS 137.123, the court had the authority to impose consecutive sentences in the first instance. It did so when it imposed consecutive probationary terms as dispositional departure sentences. Under [OAR 213-010-0001], the court had the discretion to revoke those probationary sentences. On doing so, however, the court did not have the discretion to impose revocation sanctions other than those provided by the guideline rules. See State v. Guyton, 126 Or App 143, 868 P2d 1335, rev den, 319 Or 36 (1994).
“Under [OAR 213-010-0002(2)] alone, the court had discretion to impose up to the maximum presumptive term for revocation of the probationary sentence. However, defendant here was serving more than one probationary term, and the court’s authority to impose consecutive revocation sanction terms is subject to [OAR 213-012-0040(2).]”

Stokes, 133 Or App at 358 (footnote and citation omitted; emphasis in original). We thus concluded that, despite the fact that the court could have sentenced the defendant to consecutive prison terms at the initial sentencing, the “revocation sanctions had to be imposed concurrently.” Id. at 359.

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Related

State v. Lane
355 P.3d 914 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2015)
State v. Patterson
344 P.3d 497 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2015)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
318 P.3d 750, 260 Or. App. 549, 2014 WL 25194, 2014 Ore. App. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lane-orctapp-2014.