State v. Rice

476 P.3d 961, 307 Or. App. 274
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedOctober 21, 2020
DocketA166481
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 476 P.3d 961 (State v. Rice) 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. Rice, 476 P.3d 961, 307 Or. App. 274 (Or. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Submitted July 9, 2019; portions of judgment requiring defendant to pay $560 fine on each count of conviction under ORS 166.190 vacated, remanded for resentencing, otherwise affirmed October 21, 2020

STATE OF OREGON, Plaintiff-Respondent, v. SAMUEL LEE RICE, Defendant-Appellant. Clackamas County Circuit Court 16CR66661; A166481 476 P3d 961

For pointing a gun at four victims, defendant was charged with and con- victed of four counts of menacing, ORS 163.190, and four counts of pointing a firearm at another, ORS 166.190. On appeal, defendant assigns error to the trial court’s failure to merge the guilty verdict on each count of pointing a firearm at another with the guilty verdict on the menacing count associated with the same victim. Defendant also assigns as plain error the court’s imposition of fines exceeding the statutory maximum on each count of pointing a firearm at another. Held: The trial court did not err in failing to merge the verdicts, because each crime required proof of an element that the other did not. But the trial court plainly erred in imposing fines that exceeded the statutory maximum under ORS 166.190. Portions of judgment requiring defendant to pay $560 fine on each count of conviction under ORS 166.190 vacated; remanded for resentencing; otherwise affirmed.

Thomas J. Rastetter, Judge. Ernest G. Lannet, Chief Defender, Criminal Appellate Section, and Mark Kimbrell, Deputy Public Defender, Office of Public Defense Services, filed the brief for appellant. Ellen F. Rosenblum, Attorney General, Benjamin Gutman, Solicitor General, and Julia Glick, Assistant Attorney General, filed the brief for respondent. Before Lagesen, Presiding Judge, and DeVore, Judge, and James, Judge. LAGESEN, P. J. Portions of judgment requiring defendant to pay $560 fine on each count of conviction under ORS 166.190 vacated; remanded for resentencing; otherwise affirmed. Cite as 307 Or App 274 (2020) 275

LAGESEN, P. J. Too much alcohol turned an amicable October bar- becue into a brawl that defendant could not bring himself to let end. As B (who defendant had attacked with a fire poker and with whom he then exchanged punches), J, and J’s two children tried to leave the party in B’s Jeep, defendant came within 15 feet of the Jeep and pointed his pistol at all of them. For that conduct, defendant was charged with and convicted of four counts of menacing, in violation of ORS 163.190, and four counts of pointing a firearm at another, in violation of ORS 166.190. Each count of each offense per- tained to one of the four people in the Jeep. On appeal, defen- dant assigns error to the trial court’s failure to merge the guilty verdict on each count of pointing a firearm at another with the guilty verdict on the menacing count associated with the same victim. Defendant also assigns as plain error the court’s imposition of a fine exceeding the statutory maxi- mum on each count of pointing a firearm at another. We con- clude that the court plainly erred in imposing the too-large fines and, for that reason, vacate those fines and remand for resentencing but otherwise affirm. In his first four assignments of error, defendant contends that the trial court erred when it did not merge the guilty verdict on each count of pointing a firearm at another with the guilty verdict on the count of menacing the same victim. Defendant asserts that the offense of pointing a firearm at another under ORS 166.190 is a lesser-included offense of menacing under ORS 163.190, so as to require merger of the verdicts on each pair of counts involving the same victim. See State v. Gensitskiy, 365 Or 263, 269, 446 P3d 26 (2019) (“[A] court cannot enter separate convictions under ORS 161.067(1) for violations of two statutory provi- sions if the violations are based on the same conduct and one of the violations is a lesser-included offense of the other.”). The state responds that defendant did not preserve these assignments of error. Alternatively, the state argues that ORS 161.067(1) precludes merger because the offenses of menacing and pointing a firearm at another each require proof of an element that the other does not. 276 State v. Rice

We reject the state’s preservation argument. In arguing against preservation, the state notes, correctly, that defendant argued to the trial court that his “sentences” could not be distinct for purposes of “merger law,” and did not argue that the guilty verdicts should merge. See State v. Watkins, 236 Or App 339, 344 n 1, 236 P3d 770, rev den, 349 Or 480 (2010) (explaining that guilty verdicts, not con- victions or sentences, are what merge under Oregon merger law). The state contends that this shows that defendant’s argument was about the propriety of consecutive sentences and was not about whether the guilty verdicts should merge. What the state’s point overlooks, however, is that the type of imprecise and even mistaken “ ‘shorthand’ ” phraseology employed by defendant in the trial court (his reference to merger of sentences, that is) has long been a part of Oregon merger law (including in our own decisions), id. (quoting State v. Lepierre, 235 Or App 391, 395, 232 P3d 982 (2010)), but we have not treated imprecision in the vocabulary of merger as an impediment to the preservation of an issue about merger otherwise properly raised. Accord State v. White, 346 Or 275, 279 n 4, 211 P3d 248 (2009) (noting that “[t]he parties and the courts below often refer to the issue in this case as being whether defendant’s ‘convictions’ merge” but nonetheless addressing the merits of the parties’ merger argument). Beyond that, the trial court’s remarks on the record reflect that it understood defendant to be arguing for merger in the proper and usual sense, because, in rejecting defen- dant’s argument, the court’s analysis traced the antimerger rule contained in ORS 161.067(1). That provision states: “When the same conduct or criminal episode violates two or more statutory provisions and each provision requires proof of an element that the others do not, there are as many separately punishable offenses as there are separate statutory violations.”

ORS 161.067(1). Consistent with the analysis demanded by that provision, the court explained that “it’s the same act, but it violates two statutes,” and then did not merge the guilty verdicts. The merger issue is preserved for our review. Cite as 307 Or App 274 (2020) 277

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Dorn-Privett v. Brown
542 P.3d 62 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2023)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
476 P.3d 961, 307 Or. App. 274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-rice-orctapp-2020.