State v. Moore/Coen

245 P.3d 101, 349 Or. 371, 2010 Ore. LEXIS 902
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 2010
DocketCC CF050356; CA A134343; SC S057820; CC 020774FE; CA A135115; SC S058145, S058152
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 245 P.3d 101 (State v. Moore/Coen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Moore/Coen, 245 P.3d 101, 349 Or. 371, 2010 Ore. LEXIS 902 (Or. 2010).

Opinion

*374 DE MUNIZ, C. J.

In these two criminal cases, consolidated for purposes of opinion, each defendant testified at his trial after the trial court had erroneously admitted incriminating statements that police officers had obtained from each defendant in violation of Article I, section 12, of the Oregon Constitution. 1 In State v. Moore, 229 Or App 255, 211 P3d 344 (2009), the Court of Appeals concluded that it could not consider defendant’s trial testimony in determining whether the admission of defendant’s unlawfully obtained statement was “harmless error.” In State v. Coen, 231 Or App 280, 220 P3d 423 (2009) (Coen II), the Court of Appeals, citing Moore, concluded that the state could not introduce defendant’s prior trial testimony during his retrial. We allowed the state’s petitions for review. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the decisions of the Court of Appeals in both Moore and Coen II. Both cases are remanded to the trial court for further proceedings.

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

A. State v. Moore

In Moore, a state trooper had observed that defendant was not wearing a seatbelt while driving this truck and stopped him. During the stop, the trooper noticed ammunition on the dashboard and asked defendant if there were any firearms in the truck. When defendant responded affirmatively, the trooper asked, “What do you have?” Defendant replied, “Just my friend’s gun in the back there.” The trooper then asked if it was a pistol or a rifle, and defendant replied that it was a .22 rifle. When the trooper later asked defendant for the rifle, defendant retrieved the weapon from behind the front seat, and also showed the trooper a piece of a disassembled rifle. Upon checking defendant’s driving record and criminal history, the trooper discovered that defendant had a felony conviction. The trooper then handcuffed defendant and locked him in the back of the patrol car. The trooper informed defendant that he was being detained but was not under arrest. Shortly afterward, while standing in *375 the open doorway of the patrol car, the trooper questioned defendant about the rifle. Defendant stated that the rifle belonged to a friend with whom he had been hunting, and that the friend had left the rifle in the truck for safekeeping. Defendant also stated that he knew he was not supposed to have a gun and was going to take the rifle out of the truck, but had forgotten to do so. Defendant subsequently was charged with one count of felon in possession of a firearm, ORS 166.270.

Before trial, defendant moved to suppress the statements that he had made while in the patrol car, arguing that he had either been under arrest or in compelling circumstances when he made them, and therefore the trooper should have advised him of his Miranda rights before questioning him. The trial court denied defendant’s motion. At trial, defendant explained that his initial response to the trooper was a reference to the disassembled rifle piece, and that he did not know that his friend had left the functional rifle in the truck until he had turned to retrieve the piece of the disassembled rifle. In closing arguments, the prosecutor asserted that defendant’s explanation at trial was undermined by the statements that he had made while sitting in the patrol car. Ultimately, a jury convicted defendant on one count of felon in possession of a firearm.

Defendant appealed, assigning error to the trial court’s denial of his motion to suppress and argued that he should have been advised of his Miranda rights before being questioned. The state responded that Miranda warnings were not required under those circumstances and, alternatively, that any error was harmless. The Court of Appeals concluded that the trial court should have suppressed the statements that defendant had made in the patrol car because defendant had been under “compelling circumstances,” when the officer questioned him, requiring the officer to give defendant Miranda-like warnings before questioning. Moore, 229 Or App at 262. In reversing and remanding for a new trial, the Court of Appeals concluded (1) that, under State v. McGinnis, 335 Or 243, 64 P3d 1123 (2003), it could not consider defendant’s trial testimony to determine *376 whether the admission of defendant’s statements was harmless error, and (2) that the erroneous admission of defendant’s pretrial statements had not been harmless error. Id. at 264-65.

We allowed the state’s petition for review. On review, the state does not dispute that defendant’s pretrial statements were obtained in violation of Article I, section 12. Rather, the state argues that, under McGinnis, (1) excluding a defendant’s trial testimony from harmless error review is appropriate only when a defendant’s erroneously admitted pretrial statement were “actually coerced,” and (2) an appellate court must consider a defendant’s trial testimony when the state proves that erroneously admitted statements did not compel defendant’s trial testimony. Here, the state asserts that defendant voluntarily made the erroneously admitted statements; that is, they were not “actually coerced.” In addition, the state argues that the erroneous admission of defendant’s pretrial statements did not compel defendant to testify at trial because, notwithstanding those statements, defendant nevertheless needed to testify at trial to explain other statements that he had made to the trooper and that the trial court had properly admitted. The state also requests that this court reexamine McGinnis and hold that, when a defendant testifies voluntarily and admits the truthfulness of statements that the trial court erroneously admitted at trial, the defendant’s trial testimony may always be used for harmless error review or for rebuttal on retrial.

B. State v. Coen (Coen II)

In Coen, defendant was charged with second-degree manslaughter and driving under the influence of intoxicants (DUII) after a head-on automobile collision in which the driver of one vehicle was killed and defendant, the driver of the other vehicle, was hospitalized. At the accident scene, the responding officer, Trooper Allison, noticed a “half rack” of beer on the passenger side of defendant’s vehicle and another box of beer in the back seat. Allison went to the hospital to question defendant. When he arrived, he spoke with a doctor who stated that, in his opinion, defendant was intoxicated. Allison entered defendant’s hospital room and noticed that defendant’s eyes were bloodshot, watery, and droopy, and *377 that his speech was slow. Without first giving defendant Miranda warnings, Allison began to question him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
245 P.3d 101, 349 Or. 371, 2010 Ore. LEXIS 902, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-moorecoen-or-2010.