State v. Maletta

781 P.2d 350, 98 Or. App. 643, 1989 Ore. App. LEXIS 1484
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedOctober 11, 1989
DocketCF880309; CA A49687
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 781 P.2d 350 (State v. Maletta) 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. Maletta, 781 P.2d 350, 98 Or. App. 643, 1989 Ore. App. LEXIS 1484 (Or. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

WARREN, J.

Defendant was charged with kidnapping, rape, murder and three counts of aggravated murder. The state appeals the trial court’s dismissal of the aggravated murder charges, ORS 138.060(1), for which capital punishment is a possibility. The basis for the dismissal was that defendant was not represented at his preliminary hearing by an attorney qualified under the State Court Administrator’s standards to represent indigent defendants in capital or other murder cases.1 The state argues that the dismissal was not proper, because defendant was not prejudiced by the appointment or the representation. We agree and reverse.

The significant events all occurred between defendant’s arrest in Colorado on May 16,1988, and the filing of the information in the Circuit Court of Umatilla County on June [646]*64623, a period of 38 days. Because several attorneys were involved in the early stages of the case, and because their involvement is important to the issue before us, we set out the history in detail.

Defendant was returned to Oregon on May 18 and spoke with a Umatilla County Public Defender within an hour after he was lodged in jail. On the same day, District Court Judge Courson appointed Yokom, an attorney qualified to defend capital cases under the State Court Administrator’s standards, to represent defendant in the district court proceedings.

In the meanwhile, the Deputy Director of Indigent Defense Services, Cross, a member of the State Court Administrator’s staff, began looking for attorneys who were qualified and available to try capital cases. Baker County attorney Smith was under contract with the state to try capital cases and was therefore a possible choice. On Cross’s inquiry, Smith expressed an interest in taking the case with Umatilla County attorney Hachler as co-counsel. When Cross learned that Courson had appointed Yokom for the district court proceedings, she called the circuit court judge and advised him that she had located counsel whom he might be interested in appointing when the case reached the circuit court.

Courson told Hachler that he would not appoint either him or Smith to represent defendant. Nevertheless, Hachler, Smith and the state assumed that Smith and Hachler would be appointed when the case reached circuit court. The state discussed the case with them and provided them discovery materials.

On May 20, Yokom represented defendant at the arraignment. Hachler was there and attempted to tell Yokom what motions he should file. On May 23, Smith visited the defendant in jail and discussed the case with him. Later the same day, Yokom visited defendant and learned that defendant wanted to follow Smith’s advice rather than his; accordingly, on May 25, Yokom resigned from the case.

On the same day, Courson appointed Baum, who was not qualified under the State Court Administrator’s standards to defend capital cases. Although Courson was aware of that fact, he was not concerned, because the appointment was only [647]*647for the preliminary hearing and he believed that a new attorney would be appointed when the case reached circuit court. When Smith learned that Baum had been appointed, he immediately advised Baum that the State Court Administrator’s office had told him that he would be appointed when the case reached circuit court. Smith and Baum met the next morning and Smith told Baum what motions he wanted filed and provided Baum with examples of them. He also provided Baum with the discovery materials that the state had provided, and they discussed strategy for the preliminary hearing, including the questions that Baum should ask. Baum filed the motions that Smith had suggested and also hired Smith’s investigator to begin investigating the case for defendant.

The preliminary ‘hearing was held on June 6. Although Hachler was present, Baum represented defendant and Baum asked all the questions that Smith had suggested. On June 23, the state filed an information in circuit court charging defendant with three counts of aggravated felony murder, kidnapping in the first degree, kidnapping in the second degree and rape in the first degree. Smith and Hachler were appointed on that date to represent defendant on all of the charges. Baum’s involvement in the case continued from his appointment on May 25 to June 23. During that time, Baum and Smith both provided some services to defendant, and the investigator continued to work.

At the omnibus hearing in circuit court, defendant moved to dismiss the information, because he had not been represented at the preliminary hearing by an attorney qualified to try capital cases under the State Court Administrator’s standards. The circuit court considered the confusion and lack of continuity concerning who would represent defendant and dismissed the three aggravated murder counts. It reasoned:

“Because the penalty of death is at stake, because the defendant is presumed to be innocent until the contrary is shown, because he is constitutionally entitled to effective assistance of counsel and because the statutes provide for the qualifications of counsel in such cases, and these were not allowed, prejudice to the defendant is presumed. It would be too late and of little use to wait until the penalty of death is imposed to determine the full extent of any actual prejudice. This court appreciates that Mr. Baum did a commendable job under the [648]*648circumstances, however he told the District Court that he was not qualified and that court said that it did not care. I would suspect that even the most able of our trial lawyers on the civil bench would admit they are not qualified to defend a death penalty case.”

The court found that the actions of the district court were egregious.

The initial inquiry is whether the district court erred in appointing Baum. If, at arraignment, an accused does not have an attorney, the trial court must, in absence of a waiver, appoint “suitable” counsel. ORS 135.045. Unless the trial court appoints a public defender or an attorney under a contract with the state, the court must select an attorney who “satisfies the standards of eligibility established under ORS 151.430(3)(a).” ORS 151.480.2 Under ORS 151.430(3), the State Court Administrator has established criteria that an attorney must meet before he can be appointed in a capital or other murder case. In this case, the district court violated ORS 151.480 when it appointed Baum, who did not meet the standards.

We consider next whether dismissal was an appropriate remedy for the statutory violation. ORS 151.480 does not provide a remedy for its violation. In other contexts, we have stated the general rule that, in the absence of a statutory requirement, we will not suppress evidence because of a statutory violation. State v. Whalen,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
781 P.2d 350, 98 Or. App. 643, 1989 Ore. App. LEXIS 1484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-maletta-orctapp-1989.