State v. Marling

529 P.2d 957, 19 Or. App. 811, 1974 Ore. App. LEXIS 856
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedDecember 16, 1974
Docket18341
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 529 P.2d 957 (State v. Marling) 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. Marling, 529 P.2d 957, 19 Or. App. 811, 1974 Ore. App. LEXIS 856 (Or. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

LANGTRY, J.

Tried before a jury, defendant was found guilty of the crime of robbery in the first degree. ORS 164.415. Four assignments of error are included *814 in this appeal from the' judgment based upon that verdict. Two challenge the testimony of witnesses produced by the state, which was admitted over objection; one challenges an instruction based upon OES 17.250 (6) and (7); and the last asserts it was error to deny a motion seeking a new trial, based upon newly discovered evidence.

Defendant first challenges as improper the admission of allegedly “irrelevant” testimony offered by the state.

Appearing at defendant’s trial as a witness for the state, an admitted participant in the robbery— Gregory Banks — implicated this defendant as well as two others — Rick Watson and James Manning — as accomplices to the crime. Banks testified that the defendant planned the robbery and used his car — a yellow Z28 Camaro with black stripes on the hood and trunk — to transport the confederates to and from the scene of the robbery, and that defendant remained outside while the robbery occurred and afterward accompanied the participants to his home, where the proceeds were divided evenly between the four.

*815 OES 136.440 provides in relevant part:

“(1) A conviction cannot be had upon the testimony of an accomplice unless it is corroborated by other evidence that tends to connect the defendant with the commission of the offense. The corroboration is not sufficient if it merely shows the commission of the offense or the circumstances of the commission.

As part of its required corroboration, the state offered testimony by Officers Grant, Parr, Stenkamp and Arney. Grant and Parr testified that about 2:30 p.m. on the day following the robbery they observed James Manning place some groceries in the defendant’s automobile, and that he fled as they approached him for the purpose of making a stop and identification. Officer Stenkamp indicated that in the course of responding to a call for assistance broadcast by Grant and Parr — having been provided with a description and license number of the vehicle into which Manning had placed the groceries — he located defendant in the locked restroom of a nearby gasoline station at which his car was parked. Defendant then admitted to being together with Eick Watson and “another fellow” in the vehicle earlier in the day. Officer Arney testified that the defendant shortly thereafter, at the police station, repeated what he had said to Stenkamp. This evidence was admitted over relevancy objections.

Defendant asserts that this testimony was erroneously admitted because (1) it was not proper corroboration, and (2) it allowed the state to get into evidence the incriminating act of a conspirator after any possible conspiracy had ended.

*816 With regard to the testimony as corroboration, defendant cites State v. Caldwell, 241 Or 355, 405 P2d 847 (1965); State v. Clipston, 237 Or 634, 392 P2d 772 (1964); and State v. Townsend, 19 Or 213, 23 P 968 (1890), for the rule that:

“Evidence of association between a defendant and alleged accomplices is admissable [sic] as corroboration only if it places them together at a time and place when it is unlikely that they would have been together in the absence of criminal concert between them * * (Emphasis supplied.)

Defendant claims that association in the same automobile and at a grocery store on the day following a robbery of a residence does not constitute the kind of corroboration required by the rule of these cases.

The proposition for which these cases stand is not, however, identical or equivalent to the rule defendant claims. In State v. Caldwell, supra, the court said:

“ORS 136.550 [now ORS 136.440] requires that the corroboration must be * * other evidence that tends to connect the defendant with the commission of the crimed The corroborative, evidence must be independent of any of the testimony of the accomplices. If the corroboration must be supplemented by testimony by the accomplices in order to connect the defendant with the crime it is insufficient. State v. Brake, 1921, 99 Or 310, 195 P 583; State v. Reynolds, 1939, 160 Or 445, 86 P2d 413. Intimate association before or after the crime may be sufficient. State v. Clipston, 1964, 237 Or 634, 392 P2d 772. However, as pointed out in both Brahe and Clipston the association must place defendant and the accomplices * * together at a place under circumstances not likely to have occurred unless there had been concert between them * * State v. Townsend, 1890, 19 *817 Or 213, 215, 23 P 968 * * (Emphasis supplied.) 241 Or at 360.

The rule is that evidence of association subsequent to a crime will be sufficient to meet the statutory requirement of corroboration only where that association is “at a place under circumstances not likely to have occurred unless there had been criminal concert * * Evidence of apparently innocent post-crime association is not made inadmissible by this rule. The rule merely requires additional corroboration. Evidence of this nature may be relevant and admissible on the issue of a defendant’s involvement in specific criminal activity, and may, when taken together with additional evidence tending to corroborate, provide the quantum of evidence required by the statute as a prerequisite to the use of evidence submitted by an accomplice.

If the state had attempted to corroborate Mr. Banks’ testimony solely by use of the evidence supplied by these officers, defendant’s arguments here might have been well taken. This would be so because the facts would then have been substantially similar to those in State v. Carroll, 251 Or 197, 444 P2d 1006 (1968), where the court concluded:

“* * * Before independent evidence of defendant’s association with an admitted accomplice will furnish the corroboration necessary, it must appear that the defendant and the accomplice were together at a place and under circumstances not likely to have occurred unless there was criminal concert between them. State v. Caldwell, 241 Or 355, 360, 405 P2d 847 (1965); State v. Clipston, 237 Or 634, 638-639, 392 P2d 772 (1964); State v. Townsend, 19 Or 213, 215, 23 P 968 (1890). The fact that defendant awaited in an automobile on the store’s parking lot while Miss Nissen cashed *818

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Bluebook (online)
529 P.2d 957, 19 Or. App. 811, 1974 Ore. App. LEXIS 856, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-marling-orctapp-1974.