State v. Serrano

210 P.3d 892, 346 Or. 311, 2009 Ore. LEXIS 33
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 25, 2009
DocketCC C063227CR; SC S056399
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 210 P.3d 892 (State v. Serrano) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Serrano, 210 P.3d 892, 346 Or. 311, 2009 Ore. LEXIS 33 (Or. 2009).

Opinion

*313 DE MUNIZ, C. J.

This case concerns the meaning of several sections of Oregon Evidence Code (OEC) 505, which governs marital privileges in Oregon. Defendant was charged with multiple counts of aggravated murder, involving three victims. Defendant’s wife agreed to testify for the state regarding certain communications between defendant and wife that had occurred both before and after the murders. Although it is not entirely clear from the record, it appears that the state sought to offer wife’s testimony regarding those communications as some evidence that defendant had had a motive to commit the murders and then had attempted to conceal his involvement in them. Before trial, defendant filed a motion in limine, in which he asserted the marital communications privilege as to those communications. The trial court granted defendant’s motion and excluded the communications now at issue. The state filed this expedited appeal pursuant to ORS 138.060(2)(a). 1 For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

For purposes of this appeal, the undisputed facts are taken from the record and the parties’ briefs. Defendant is charged with the aggravated murders of Melody Dang and her two young sons. At the time of the murders, defendant’s wife (wife) was having an affair with Dang’s long-time boyfriend, Nguyen, and was pregnant with Nguyen’s child.

By late summer 2006, wife decided that she wanted to leave defendant and dissolve their marriage. She shared her plans to leave defendant with a “few friends,” her mother and two sisters, and three or four coworkers. Wife also discussed with at least one of her sisters how she should tell defendant. On September 1, 2006, wife moved out of the family home, took the couple’s five children with her, and moved in with one of her sisters. Wife left defendant a page-long note, in which she told him that she was leaving him and moving out of the house.

*314 On the night that wife moved out, defendant called wife on her cell phone. At that time, wife was in her sister’s living room. Wife’s sister was in the room while wife spoke with defendant; however, she heard only wife’s side of the conversation. Wife reiterated that she wanted a divorce. Wife testified that, during the telephone call, defendant expressed a desire to reconcile with her.

Approximately one week later, wife left another note for defendant, informing him that she had had an affair. By the time that wife left the second note, she already had told her mother and sisters about the affair and had talked with them about how she should tell defendant.

Defendant called wife again after reading the second note. During that conversation, they discussed her affair. In another conversation that evening, she also told defendant, for the first time, that she was pregnant and that defendant probably was not the child’s father. According to wife, defendant responded that her pregnancy did not matter, that she should not tell anyone, and that he would raise the child as his own. However, wife told defendant that she already had spoken to the baby’s father about the baby. 2 Wife’s sister also was present during that call, but again heard only wife’s side of the conversation.

At some point after wife moved out of the family home, defendant called Brandi Preciado, with whom he had had an intermittent intimate relationship, and told her that wife had moved out. Preciado and defendant later met in person. Defendant told Preciado that he and wife had split up and that wife had taken the children and moved in with her sister.

After defendant’s second telephone call with wife, but before November 2, 2006, wife moved back into the family home with defendant, because her sister did not have enough space for wife and the children. Wife told defendant that she did not want to reconcile with him and that the living arrangement would continue only until she could find her own place.

*315 The state contends that the murders occurred on the evening of November 2, 2006. Nguyen, who worked the night shift, discovered the bodies of Dang and their two sons the following morning when he returned home. Nguyen later reported to the police that the only property missing from the house was a laptop computer. That same morning, defendant called wife at 5:35 a.m. as she was coming home from work. Defendant worked a day shift and typically watched the children at home in the evening while wife worked a night shift. He routinely called her to make sure that she was on her way home from work before he left for work in the morning. Based on their conversation that morning, wife thought that defendant was “[o]n his way to work.”

Wife arrived home approximately ten minutes after the telephone call and noticed that one of defendant’s trucks was not in the driveway. She called him several times to ask him about the truck, but he did not answer his phone. Defendant called wife back approximately 30 minutes later and explained that he had not been able to answer his phone because it had been left in his jacket, which was in the back seat. She asked defendant about the missing truck, and defendant explained that it had broken down the night before when he went to the store and that it was parked a few blocks away from the house. Before ending the call, he told her that he was walking into work and had to hang up.

Approximately one week after the murders, defendant told wife that he had lost his cell phone while shopping. That conversation took place while they were at home with their children. Then, in mid-November 2006, defendant told wife that he knew someone who was selling a laptop computer and asked her if she wanted to buy it. Wife told him that she did not want the computer.

On November 28, 2006, Washington County Sheriffs Detective Hays interviewed defendant as a suspect in the murders. During the interview, defendant told Hays that he had lost his cell phone approximately two weeks earlier near the local WinCo store. Defendant also told Hays that his truck was parked a few blocks away from his house because it had broken down. Police arrested defendant on November 29, and he was later charged with ten counts of *316 aggravated murder. Wife moved out of the family home on the same day.

Preciado remained in contact with defendant after he was arrested, and, at some point, defendant told her that wife was pregnant. Preciado testified that she initially thought that wife was pregnant with defendant’s baby. However, she later discovered that defendant was not the father. When she confronted defendant about it, he eventually told Preciado that he did not believe that the baby was his.

Wife agreed to testify for the state about certain communications that she had had with defendant before and after the murders. Before defendant’s scheduled trial, he filed a motion in limine, asserting the marital communications privilege set out in OEC 505(2) as to those communications.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
210 P.3d 892, 346 Or. 311, 2009 Ore. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-serrano-or-2009.