State v. Rivera-Waddle

379 P.3d 820, 279 Or. App. 274, 2016 Ore. App. LEXIS 801
CourtLane County Circuit Court, Oregon
DecidedJune 29, 2016
Docket201310878; A156817
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 379 P.3d 820 (State v. Rivera-Waddle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lane County Circuit Court, Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Rivera-Waddle, 379 P.3d 820, 279 Or. App. 274, 2016 Ore. App. LEXIS 801 (Or. Super. Ct. 2016).

Opinion

DEVORE, J.

Defendant appeals a judgment revoking her probation. She assigns error to the trial court’s determination that her probation should be revoked for violations of the terms and conditions of her probation. Defendant acknowledges that she did not preserve either of her two claims of error but requests that we review them as plain error. ORAP 5.45(1). As to defendant’s first assignment of error, regarding a special probation condition that was not imposed by the trial court, we agree that the error is plain, and we exercise our discretion to correct it. We do not reach defendant’s second assignment of error regarding revocation of her probation for failing to pay financial obligations without necessary findings; that is an issue that the trial court can consider in the first instance on remand. We reverse and remand.

Defendant pleaded guilty to the offense of assaulting a public safety officer, ORS 163.208, and was sentenced to 60 days of incarceration and 36 months of probation. The judgment required that defendant pay a $200 fine, to be paid “on a schedule set by [her] probation officer.” The general conditions of probation included, among other things, a catch-all provision that defendant “[r]eport as required and abide by the direction of the supervising [probation] officer.” None of defendant’s probation conditions prohibited her from consuming alcohol. During her period of probation, however, she signed three “action plans,” as presented to her by her probation officer, in which she agreed to abstain from intoxicants.1

Before the end of her probation term, the state alleged that defendant violated the terms of her probation, and defendant was ordered to show cause why her probation should not be revoked. The state alleged five bases for revocation: (1) failure to pay court-ordered financial obligations, (2) failure to abstain from the use of intoxicants, (3) failure to provide a physical address, (4) failure to abide by the probation officer’s “direction,” and (5) failure to report to the probation officer at designated times.

[276]*276At the show cause hearing, defendant’s probation officer testified that defendant had not “made any payments on her fees,” that she had consumed alcohol on multiple occasions, that she did not provide a physical address, and that she had a pattern of missing her reporting appointments. He testified that, by the time defendant had reported to him, he “told her [he] already filed a [probation violation] because [he] hadn’t been able to locate her” for some time. Defendant provided testimony that she was homeless and did not have a permanent address, that she had not been drinking, and that she tried to have meetings with her probation officer but could not always make appointments on the designated dates. Defendant did not offer any testimony about the court-ordered fines.

Defendant’s counsel argued in closing that, given defendant’s ongoing challenges with mental health issues and homelessness, she had made an unusual effort to comply with each of the conditions of her probation and that “she was abiding but not necessarily specifically the way she was supposed to abide.” With regard to the failure to pay her financial obligations, counsel stated, “[S]he was a homeless person. I don’t think that she was able to do that. And I don’t think that actually she gave testimony on that, so we will concede that issue.”

The court ruled that defendant had violated the “terms and conditions of her probation in all five particulars alleged, by a preponderance of the evidence [.]” The court revoked defendant’s probation and sentenced her to 30 months of incarceration and 24 months of post-prison supervision. On appeal, she advances two assignments of error challenging the revocation.

First, defendant contends that the trial court plainly erred in revoking her probation because the court could not determine that she had violated a condition of her probation on the basis that she had consumed alcohol. Defendant relies on State v. Maag, 41 Or App 133, 135, 597 P2d 838 (1979), for the proposition that a defendant’s probation may not be revoked “for conduct which did not violate a condition of probation fixed by the sentencing judge at the time of sentencing, but was fixed by defendant’s probation officer [277]*277subsequent to sentencing.” In light of Maag, she argues that the purported condition requiring her to abstain from intoxicants was imposed by the probation officer and probation cannot be revoked based on a violation of a condition that the court itself did not impose.

The state does not directly address the merits of defendant’s argument or otherwise attempt to distinguish Maag. The state contends that any error would be harmless because the trial court had determined that the state had proved all five allegations and “the trial court did not give any indication that it more heavily weighed or more seriously considered the alcohol use evidence because it was separately alleged, nor did the trial court suggest that the quantity — five versus less — or cumulative effect of the allegations made it more likely to revoke than not.” The state concludes that the trial court would have reached the same ultimate determination to revoke defendant’s probation, regardless of the condition that she abstain from intoxicants.

We agree that defendant’s assignment of error is unpreserved and depends upon plain-error review. We may review an unpreserved assignment of error as “an error of law apparent on the record” under ORAP 5.45(1) if certain conditions are met: (1) the error is one of law; (2) the error is “apparent” — that is, the legal point is obvious and is not reasonably in dispute; and (3) the error appears “on the face of the record” — that is, “[w]e need not go outside the record or choose between competing inferences to find it, and the facts that comprise the error are irrefutable.” State v. Brown, 310 Or 347, 355, 800 P2d 259 (1990). Where those conditions are satisfied, we must determine whether to exercise our discretion to reach the error and correct it. State v. Reynolds, 250 Or App 516, 521, 280 P3d 1046, rev den, 352 Or 666 (2012) (citing Ailes v. Portland Meadows, Inc., 312 Or 376, 382, 823 P2d 956 (1991)). Among the factors that we consider in deciding whether to exercise our discretion are

“the competing interests of the parties; the nature of the case; the gravity of the error; the ends of justice in the particular case; how the error came to the court’s attention; and whether the polices behind the general rule requiring preservation of error have been served in the case in [278]*278another way, i.e., whether the trial court was, in some manner, presented with both sides of the issue and given an opportunity to correct any error.”

Ailes, 312 Or at 382 n 6. Additionally, we consider “whether the defendant encouraged the trial court to make the error; whether the defendant made a strategic choice not to object; and whether the trial court could have corrected the error if the defendant had raised it below.” State v. Lusk, 267 Or App 208, 212, 340 P3d 670 (2014) (citing Reynolds, 250 Or App at 521).

We conclude that there is error apparent on this record and that the error is without any reasonable dispute. A pair of cases demonstrates the error in this case. In Maag,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
379 P.3d 820, 279 Or. App. 274, 2016 Ore. App. LEXIS 801, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-rivera-waddle-orcclane-2016.