State v. Peacock

706 P.2d 982, 75 Or. App. 217, 1985 Ore. App. LEXIS 3837
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedSeptember 18, 1985
Docket10-83-02921; CA A33754
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 706 P.2d 982 (State v. Peacock) 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. Peacock, 706 P.2d 982, 75 Or. App. 217, 1985 Ore. App. LEXIS 3837 (Or. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

*219 GILLETTE, P. J.

Defendant appeals his conviction for assault in the first degree, ORS 163.185, and his subsequent sentencing as a dangerous offender. ORS 161.725. Among the claimed errors are the trial court’s admission of evidence of previous altercations in which defendant was involved and its permitting the prosecutor to mention defendant’s filing of a notice of intent to rely on a mental disease or defect defense. He also attacks a jury instruction which allowed the jury to convict him without finding that he intended to cause serious physical injury to the victim. We agree that the evidence of previous altercations was inadmissible and that the instruction was inadequate. 1 We therefore reverse and remand for a new trial.

Defendant and the victim had known each other for three years, during which time they had become close friends. They met originally at the Sidetrack Tavern in Eugene, where they were among the regular customers. At different times they lived in the same apartment, and they and their girlfriends went to Utah together. The women worked together in a tavern in Utah. At the time of the incident involved in this case, both defendant and the victim had moved back to Eugene. The victim and his girlfriend had broken up, and for a while the victim lived with defendant and defendant’s current girlfriend. The victim moved out shortly before the assault. Defendant and the victim remained on good terms, but they had had several arguments. Their social lives centered on the Sidetrack Tavern, and some of their arguments occurred there. When they got angry, they raised their voices and threatened each other verbally and physically.

On March 4, 1983, defendant and the victim were in the Sidetrack Tavern and got into another argument. Each later claimed that the other began it. During the argument, defendant took a beer glass and broke it. Defendant testified that he did so because he was afraid of the victim and intended to scare him into backing off. The victim did not retreat, but moved toward defendant. According to defendant, the victim threatened him with his artificial right hand. Defendant previously had seen the victim use his hand as a weapon. *220 When the victim failed to withdraw, defendant pushed the broken glass into the victim’s face, injuring his left eye so badly that it had to be removed.

Defendant was charged with first degree assault. His defenses were self defense and lack of intent to cause the injury. On direct examination, he testified concerning his earlier altercations with the victim in an attempt to show the victim’s aggressiveness. He also testified that he had previously seen the victim use his prosthetic hand to hurt someone. He added that the victim often got belligerent when he drank and that defendant backed off in those circumstances, because he did not want to get “into it” with the victim. Defendant testified that he did not remember actually stabbing the victim with the glass but that, in any event, he did not intend to cause him serious harm. Defendant’s current girlfriend also testified for the defense concerning the previous arguments at the tavern. Although this testimony incidentally portrayed defendant as avoiding conflict with the victim, its purpose was to show the victim’s aggressiveness, not defendant’s peacefulness. We conclude from our examination of the record that, contrary to the state’s position, defendant did not, by testimony of a specific instance of peaceful conduct, put his character for peacefulness in issue. OEC 405(1).

On cross-examination, the prosecutor asked defendant, over objections, about an incident in Utah in which he allegedly stabbed someone outside a bar and the victim used his prosthetic hand in rescuing defendant from attackers, about whether he always walked away from fights in bars and about an alleged threat he made two weeks after he injured the victim to the effect that he would come back and finish the job. On rebuttal, the state presented extensive evidence concerning all of these incidents. None of them had resulted in defendant’s arrest or conviction for any offense. This evidence of other bad acts would therefore normally be inadmissible. OEC 404. 2 The state asserts that the evidence was admissible *221 either to disprove defendant’s supposed claim that he had a peaceful character, OEC 404(2)(a), or to prove intent and absence of mistake or accident. OEC 404(3). We have held that defendant did not put his character for peacefulness in issue, and the evidence is therefore not admissible under OEC 404(2)(a). We turn to its admissibility under OEC 404(3).

Evidence of a defendant’s prior mistreatment of an assault victim may tend to establish intent to assault that particular victim and thus to negate the likelihood of accident, inadvertence or self-defense. The evidence is therefore generally admissible. State v. Mills, 39 Or App 85, 88, 591 P2d 396 (1979). However, in this case the state used the evidence, not to show defendant’s hostility to the victim, but to show his alleged general aggressiveness and violent character. The evidence was relevant only to show an increased likelihood that defendant would assault anyone who got in his way. That is precisely what OEC 404(3) prohibits. None of the exceptions to that prohibition is applicable.

That defendant may have intentionally attacked someone else is at best marginally probative of his intent to attack this victim and, thus, of the absence of mistake or accident in the injury he caused. In State v. Parks, 71 Or App 630, 634, 693 P2d 657 (1985), we held that evidence of an alleged 20-year old altercation was inadmissible because it did not tend to prove the defendant’s state of mind at the time of the assault for which he was on trial or to prove that there was no mistake or accident. Although the incidents in this case are not as remote as was the incident in Parks, the same considerations apply: the probative value of the incidents is minimal, while the possibility of prejudice — that the jury will convict defendant because of his general bad character rather than on *222 the basis of the facts of the case — is great. It was error to admit this evidence, and the error requires a new trial.

Defendant also asserts that the prosecution improperly introduced testimony that at one time his attorney filed a notice of intent to rely on a mental disease or defect defense. See State v. Hickan, 71 Or App 471, 692 P2d 672 (1984). We need not decide whether evidence of the notice would be inadmissible in this case, as it was in Hickan, because, in fact, no evidence was admitted. On cross-examination, the prosecutor asked defendant:

“Q. You didn’t have another idea about how you’d get out from under this thing?
“A. I can’t have another idea. The fact of how it happened, happened, you know.
“Q. Uh-huh.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
706 P.2d 982, 75 Or. App. 217, 1985 Ore. App. LEXIS 3837, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-peacock-orctapp-1985.