State v. Paolone

209 P.3d 324, 228 Or. App. 369, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 710
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMay 20, 2009
Docket055376; A132904
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 209 P.3d 324 (State v. Paolone) 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. Paolone, 209 P.3d 324, 228 Or. App. 369, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 710 (Or. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

*371 BREWER, C. J.

Defendant appeals a number of convictions that arose out of his invasion of a home in order to assault a person who was visiting the occupants. 1 In the process, a codefendant stole property that belonged to the home’s occupants. We write only to address the assignments of error that are related to the trial court’s admission of evidence of the codefendant’s statements to a police officer after the codefen-dant’s arrest; we reject defendant’s other assignments of error without discussion. We reverse and remand those convictions that are related to the theft of property and affirm those that are related to the assault.

Because of the jury’s guilty verdicts, we state the facts in the light most favorable to the state, except when we evaluate whether the erroneous admission of evidence was harmless; for the latter purpose, we “review all pertinent portions of the record, not just those portions most favorable to the state.” State v. Maiden, 222 Or App 9, 11, 191 P3d 803 (2008), rev den, 345 Or 618 (2009). Smith, one of defendant’s codefendants, believed that Maschka, one of the victims, had stolen Smith’s wallet, which contained a substantial amount of money. Smith offered to pay defendant and another codefendant, McDonough, to beat up Maschka in retaliation for the supposed theft. McDonough and defendant agreed to assault Maschka but declined a direct payment. Smith drove defendant and McDonough toward Maschka’s former residence. On the way, Smith drove by the house of Miller and Grimes, who were friends of both Smith and Maschka. Smith had been to the Miller and Grimes’s residence many times and knew that Grimes had recently received an inheritance of $10,000, that Miller and Grimes kept their most valuable possessions in an attic above their bedroom, and that the attic was reached by a set of stairs that pulled down from the ceiling in the bedroom. Maschka had previously lived in the *372 attic room for a short time. Neither McDonough nor defendant knew Miller or Grimes, or had previously been in their home.

When he went by the house where Miller and Grimes lived, Smith saw Maschka’s car parked in front. He therefore let McDonough and defendant out of the car and told them to call him when they were through assaulting Maschka. The assault, however, did not go as McDonough and defendant had expected. The two went to the front door and walked into the living room without knocking. They identified Maschka, asked him whether he thought it was funny to take people’s money, and punched him. 2 At the same time, they saw that Miller’s and Grimes’s two young daughters were in the room. McDonough pushed Grimes and the children into the children’s bedroom. Grimes and the children then left through an outside door in that room and ran to a neighbor’s house to call the police. At about the same time, and before McDonough and defendant could complete their assault of Maschka, Miller attacked defendant, and the two grappled for a time. Defendant pulled Miller’s sweatshirt over his face so he could not see. While they were tussling, Maschka escaped out the front door. Defendant had brought a .22 caliber pistol with him, and during the struggle, the pistol fired. 3 Defendant then called McDonough for help. Together, they broke free from Miller, hit him sufficiently to bruise him, and left.

After McDonough had sent Grimes and the children to the children’s bedroom, and while Miller and defendant were grappling, McDonough went into Miller’s and Grimes’s bedroom and up the pull-down stairs into the attic, which he ransacked. From the attic, he took an electric guitar, the small case in which Grimes previously had kept the money from her inheritance, 4 and several marijuana pipes from Miller’s collection. McDonough carried those things with him *373 when he and defendant left the house. The entire episode took approximately five minutes. McDonough and defendant then called Smith, who picked them up in his van. A few minutes later, police stopped the van both for a traffic violation and because they suspected that it was connected to the events at the home of Miller and Grimes. When the van was stopped, defendant’s coat was covering the guitar case. After Grimes identified McDonough and defendant, police officers arrested all three occupants of the van.

While McDonough was in custody, he made a number of statements to Officer Eskridge that the court admitted into evidence over defendant’s objection. Those statements were (1) that defendant told McDonough to go upstairs and get the guitar and told him where to look for the stairs; (2) that defendant told McDonough that, “We gotta get goin’ ” at the end of the episode; (3) that defendant threw flex cuffs 5 and duct tape at McDonough and told him to put them in his pack; (4) that defendant asked Maschka, “Where’s my money?”; (5) that defendant took a camouflage bag out of his coat or vest and told McDonough to pack it up; and (6) that, while they were in Smith’s van after the episode but before the police stopped them, defendant handed McDonough the pistol and told him to get rid of it. The admission of those statements is the basis for defendant’s first six assignments of error. In order to evaluate those assignments, we must first describe the crimes for which defendant was convicted.

Defendant was indicted on a number of charges, some of which are related to the theft of property and some of which are related to the assault on Maschka. He was tried jointly with Smith and McDonough. The jury found defendant guilty of the following offenses related to the theft: first-degree robbery; first-degree burglary by unlawfully entering a dwelling with the intent to commit theft in it; conspiracy to commit first-degree burglary with the same intent; second-degree robbery; conspiracy to commit second-degree robbery; and theft in the second degree. The jury found defendant guilty of the following offenses related to the assault: third-degree assault; unlawful use of a weapon; felon in possession *374 of a firearm; and fourth-degree assault as a lesser-included offense of the charge of second-degree assault. As the state correctly points out, and as defendant concedes, defendant’s arguments regarding the admission of McDonough’s statements apply only to the charges that are related to the theft, not to those related to the assault.

Defendant argues that McDonough’s statements are inadmissible hearsay under the Oregon Evidence Code and that they violate his rights to confrontation under both the state and federal constitutions. He recognizes that the hearsay and state constitutional analyses are the same, because the hearsay exceptions involved are firmly rooted. See State v. Cook, 340 Or 530, 540, 135 P3d 260 (2006) (if a statement falls within a firmly rooted hearsay exception, its admission does not violate Article I, section 11, of the Oregon Constitution). His federal constitutional argument is based on the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution as the United States Supreme Court construed it in Crawford v.

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Related

State v. Smith
211 P.3d 961 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2009)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
209 P.3d 324, 228 Or. App. 369, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 710, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-paolone-orctapp-2009.