State v. Marshall

183 P.3d 241, 219 Or. App. 511, 2008 Ore. App. LEXIS 577
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedApril 30, 2008
Docket051061; A131110
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 183 P.3d 241 (State v. Marshall) 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. Marshall, 183 P.3d 241, 219 Or. App. 511, 2008 Ore. App. LEXIS 577 (Or. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

*513 BREWER, C. J.

Defendant pleaded guilty to two counts of robbery in the second degree, one count of kidnapping in the second degree, and one count of assault in the third degree. Defendant was sentenced to concurrent 70-month prison terms on the robbery counts, ORS 137.700(2)(a)(R); a 70-month term of imprisonment on the kidnapping count, ORS 137.700(2)(a)(I), with 40 months of that sentence to be served consecutively to the robbery sentences; and a 14-month prison term on the assault conviction, to be served consecutively to the other sentences. On the assault conviction, the court sentenced defendant to a presumptive prison term under grid block 6-D of the sentencing guidelines. The total incarceration term was 124 months. On appeal, defendant asserts that the court erred in failing to shift to grid block 6-1 when it imposed a consecutive sentence on the assault conviction. OAR 213-012-0020(2)(a)(B). The state concedes that the sentencing court erred and, as explained below, we accept that concession. However, the state argues that the error was harmless. We remand for resentencing and otherwise affirm.

On December 2, 2004, the victim, S, was working as a bartender at the Labor Temple in Astoria. After the last customer left the bar that night, S began to close the bar. Two men, defendant and his cohort, Brown, entered the bar. The men had covered their faces, were wearing dark clothes, and were both armed with weapons. One man pointed a gun at S’s head while the other man clicked a stun gun, and the men instructed her to take them “to the safe.” S told them that she did not have access to the safe, and the men responded that they would blow her head off if she did not take them to the safe. The men tried to pry open the cash register, but they could not open it. S opened the lottery and poker tills for them, and she also opened the main till. The men told S that they would kill her if she did not give them all of the money. She complied, giving the men approximately $6,000. S was paralyzed by fear, and she believed that she was going to die.

While events unfolded, M, a regular customer of the bar, came “blazing” in with another man, E. E immediately *514 turned around and ran out of the bar, but M tried to fight defendant and Brown. The men fought M to the ground, and they repeatedly stunned him with the stun gun. Eventually the robbers left, and help arrived.

Defendant and Brown were apprehended and charged with several felonies. Defendant pleaded guilty to four lesser-included offenses. The parties left sentencing to the court. The court heard testimony from S and other witnesses, including defendant’s daughter, and then imposed the following sentences:

“Although there were two separate victims, [S] and [M], what we really had was a single robbery. And so the Court will follow Ballot Measure 11 as to Count 2 and commit each of you [defendant and Brown] to the legal and physical custody of the Department of Corrections for a period of 70 months. Those sentences [are] to be served concurrently with the sentences imposed in regards to Count 1 in each instance. And again, those are Ballot Measure 11 sentences.
“Certainly, as — and then as to Count 3, Robbery does carry a very substantial sentence, but you gentlemen didn’t just do a robbery. [M] came in during the course of the robbery, and you prevented him from leaving, as his friend was able to do. You interfered substantially with his liberty.
“That is a separate crime, a separate victim, a separate criminal activity, a separate intent. While this was not a plan to kidnap someone as a separate planned crime in and of itself, it was a separate act with a different loss than certainly Count 1.
“It’s therefore appropriate that at least a part of the sentence be consecutive to the sentences imposed in Count [ ] 1 and Count 2, under [ORS] 137.123, subsection 5. As I indicated, it was a separate crime. This was done to prevent the summoning of help or police assistance and to prevent the interference with completion of the robbery crime.
“It was a different victim, a different loss. It was the— the crime is the interference with [M]’s liberty, rather than the theft by use of force as the robberies. And again, the Ballot Measure 11 sentence is 70 months. Of that 70-month sentence, 40 months will be consecutive to the sentences *515 imposed in Counts 1 and 2, and 30 months will be concurrent with the sentences imposed in Counts 1 and 2.
“As to Count 4, and again not only did you interfere with [M]’s personal liberty by dragging him back through the door that he had entered, but once you got him in there, you assaulted him. And you assaulted him by using the stun gun. That is again, a separate crime with a separate criminal intent, not just to interfere with his liberty, but to cause him pain in order to gain compliance.
“And under [ORS] 137.123 that is available for a consecutive sentence, that being a different loss than kidnap.
“Under 6-D on the sentencing guidelines the presumptive sentence is 13 to 14 months, 6-C the presumptive sentence is 15 to 18 months. As I indicated earlier, it’s the Court’s intention that these gentlemen [defendant and Brown] be treated the same. And so in each instance I will commit you to the legal and physical custody of the Department of Corrections for a period of 14 months.
* * * *
“Again, that sentence — you guys didn’t need to do that. That sentence is consecutive to all of the other sentences.”

In his sole assignment of error on appeal, defendant asserts that the sentencing court erred in failing to shift to grid block 6-1 when it imposed a consecutive sentence on the assault conviction. OAR 213-012-0020(2)(a)(B). 1 The state acknowledges that the sentencing court erred. We agree. The court imposed the third-degree assault sentence consecutively to the sentences that it imposed on the other three counts. Neither of the exceptions to the “shift to column I” *516 rule applied here: Defendant was not sentenced as a dangerous offender, nor did the court sentence him for a crime that had a different victim from the kidnapping count. OAR 213-012-0020(5). Accordingly, the court erred in failing to sentence defendant in accordance with grid block 6-1. Had it done so, the presumptive sentence for the assault conviction would have been probation. 2

The state nonetheless contends that the error was harmless because the court could and would lawfully have imposed the same total incarcerative term by different means. The state relies on our decision in State v. Jenniches, 187 Or App 658, 69 P3d 771, rev den, 335 Or 578 (2003). In Jenniches,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
183 P.3d 241, 219 Or. App. 511, 2008 Ore. App. LEXIS 577, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-marshall-orctapp-2008.