State v. Neill

173 P.3d 1262, 216 Or. App. 499, 2007 Ore. App. LEXIS 1801
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedDecember 12, 2007
DocketD041467M; A126766
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 173 P.3d 1262 (State v. Neill) 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. Neill, 173 P.3d 1262, 216 Or. App. 499, 2007 Ore. App. LEXIS 1801 (Or. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

*501 ARMSTRONG, J.

Defendant appeals from a judgment convicting her of interfering with a peace officer. ORS 162.247(l)(b). 1 She assigns error to the trial court’s denial of her motion to suppress evidence and her motion for a judgment of acquittal. We affirm.

The following facts are essentially undisputed. Police officers were dispatched to defendant’s apartment after her son called 9-1-1 and reported that he had been involved in a fight with another man (later identified as defendant’s boyfriend, Hardy) in the apartment and that he was concerned about defendant’s safety because she and Hardy were alone in the apartment. When the officers arrived, defendant opened the door slightly. She had blood on her shirt, her hair was disheveled, and it appeared that she had been crying. There was also blood on the dooijamb, the door itself appeared to be damaged, and the jamb and lock were broken off. One of the officers asked defendant if Hardy was inside the apartment, and defendant said that he was not. The officer then asked if they could look inside for Hardy, but defendant refused and began to shut the door. The officers explained that they needed to enter the apartment to perform a community caretaking welfare check on her because, based on the report from her son, they were concerned about her safety.

The officers entered the apartment and ordered defendant to sit on the couch. Defendant did not comply. She admitted, however, that Hardy was, indeed, in the apartment — specifically, that he was “passed out in the back bedroom,” but that “things had been taken care of.” The officer told defendant that she needed to call out for Hardy and have *502 him come into the living room. Defendant instead stated that she would go get him, and began to walk into a back bedroom. The officer instructed her not to go into the bedroom, but to sit on the couch and wait while the officers cleared the apartment. Defendant complied, but yelled that Hardy was asleep. Meanwhile, two of the officers located Hardy hiding under the bed and took him into custody.

As they were escorting Hardy out of the apartment, past defendant, defendant began yelling at the officers, jumped up, and ran down the hallway toward the back bedroom. One of the officers repeatedly instructed defendant to sit down and not move, but defendant continued to run toward the bedroom. The officer then attempted to place defendant into an escort hold; she pulled away and yelled obscenities. Despite the officer’s attempts to pull her back, defendant dove under the bed. One of the officers testified that she “wasn’t sure what [defendant] was reaching for, in my mind, you know, more likely than not, it was going to be a weapon.” Defendant eventually pulled a pair of shoes out from under the bed.

Defendant was arrested and charged under ORS 162.247(l)(b) with refusing to obey a lawful order by a peace officer. She moved to suppress all of the evidence resulting from the warrantless entry of her home, citing ORS 133.033, Article I, section 9, of the Oregon Constitution, and the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution. She argued that the officers were not acting pursuant to the community caretaking statute or the emergency aid doctrine, that the officers could not by their own illegal entry create officer safety issues, and that the officers’ orders to defendant were not lawful orders because the officers gave them when they were in her apartment unlawfully.

In response, the state argued that the evidence was admissible because the search of the apartment was valid under the community caretaking statute. The state further argued that, even if the search was illegal, evidence of a new crime — in this case, interfering with a peace officer — committed after an illegal search is nonetheless admissible under State v. Janicke, 103 Or App 227, 796 P2d 392 (1990).

*503 The trial court declined to rule on the legality of the search, but denied defendant’s motion to suppress, based on Janiche'.

“I reviewed the case law and I’m going to decide this on the simplest grounds that I can, and that is really under the Janiche case, and the cases cited therein that even if this were an illegal entry, I’m not required to decide whether it was or not so I won’t — it’s the type of offense for which evidence of that offense would not be suppressed because it is a — at least allegedly a crime occurring after the entry in which did threaten — potentially threaten the safety of police officers, or appeared to. So, I will deny the motion to suppress.”

In response to defendant’s request for findings on the lawfulness of the warrantless entry, the trial court further stated,

“I will make as a finding of fact that the officers did not ask [defendant] to step out onto the porch. And it seems to me that if they had asked her to step out onto the porch — first of all, [if] she said yes, then they could have satisfied their questions as to her safety. They didn’t have any reason to believe that the third person in the house was injured, so there was no community caretaking issue regarding the third person. And once they satisfied themselves that she was not injured and — or at least not seriously injured, and nobody was pointing a gun at her head and making her speak through this crack in the door that she was okay, that there would have been no reason to go into the house under the caretaking statute. And it seems to me, I haven’t analyzed this thoroughly but it seems that the state really can’t prove that it was reasonably necessary to go into the house until they [had] shown that they didn’t take other less intrusive reasonable steps to accomplish the same ends, which in this case would have included asking her to step out on the porch.”

The parties agreed to have the court resolve the merits of the case on the basis of the evidence admitted at the suppression hearing. Defendant moved for a judgment of acquittal, arguing that the officers’ orders were not lawful because they had entered the apartment illegally. The trial court denied the motion, without explanation, when it found defendant guilty of the offense of interfering with a peace officer.

*504 On appeal, defendant challenges the trial court’s denial of both motions. 2 In her first assignment of error, defendant argues that, because the officers’ warrantless entry was not authorized by the community caretaking statute and did not fall within the emergency aid exception to the warrant requirement, all evidence that flowed from the illegal entry must be suppressed under the state and federal constitutions. 3 Defendant also contends that the exception to the exclusionary rule relied on by the trial court and articulated in Janicke

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
173 P.3d 1262, 216 Or. App. 499, 2007 Ore. App. LEXIS 1801, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-neill-orctapp-2007.