State v. Shouse

941 P.2d 546, 148 Or. App. 274, 1997 Ore. App. LEXIS 762
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJune 11, 1997
Docket95CR-0404; CA A88785
StatusPublished

This text of 941 P.2d 546 (State v. Shouse) 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. Shouse, 941 P.2d 546, 148 Or. App. 274, 1997 Ore. App. LEXIS 762 (Or. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinions

WARREN, P. J.

Defendant appeals her conviction for assault in the first degree. ORS 163.185. We affirm.

The assault charge arose from an incident involving defendant, her ex-girlfriend, Mary, and Mary’s current boyfriend, Gus, the victim. Defendant lived three houses from where Gus lived with Mary and her three children. A letter addressed to defendant had been delivered to Gus and Mary’s home. Gus took the letter to defendant’s house and left it with her roommate. Later, while Gus and Mary were eating dinner, defendant repeatedly called their home. They ignored the calls for a while, but, eventually, Gus decided to speak to defendant to get her to leave them alone. Defendant was upset with Gus and accused him of threatening her. She told him she wanted to “fuck [him] up” and he told her “to come on down.” She did and then stood outside their house yelling at them. Gus went outside to talk to defendant, and Mary followed, standing right behind him. Defendant spat on Mary and she responded by taking “a swipe” at defendant, hitting her. Gus turned around to move Mary back and defendant stabbed him.

The state charged defendant with assault in the first degree. The state also alleged that Gus “did not substantially contribute to the commission of the offense * * * by precipitating the attack.” If proven beyond a reasonable doubt, that allegation would raise the assault from category 9 to category 10 on the crime seriousness scale. OAR 213-04-002; App 3.1

At trial, defendant claimed that she had stabbed Gus in self-defense. Gus and defendant met and became friends in May 1994 but, by that October, the relationship had ended. Gus, by then, was involved with Mary and had [277]*277assisted Mary in obtaining a restraining order against defendant. Defendant testified that she generally made a “nuisance of herself’ after her break-up with Mary, but she asserted that she had not threatened Gus, Mary or Mary’s family. She testified that Gus constantly threatened her between October 1994 and the night of the assault, which occurred on February 14, 1995.- She believed that Gus wanted to fight her. Gus acknowledged that he “probably” threatened defendant “at the same level” that she had threatened him, but stated that he was doing it in retaliation for her threats and that he had made the threats to get her to leave him, Mary and her family alone. In addition, several witnesses testified about specific threatening acts by Gus toward defendant. Defendant testified that she believed that Gus was turning to retrieve a machete to use against defendant and that she had stabbed him in self-defense.

The court gave the jury a special verdict form that asked it to determine whether Gus had substantially contributed to the commission of the offense by precipitating the attack. During its deliberations, the jury posed the following question to the court:

“Can we the jurors consider events (threats) that took place outside the window where the attack occurred in determining [Gus’s] contribution in precipitating it?”

After meeting with the parties, the court asked the jury to explain what it meant by “window.” The jury responded: “The actual time of stabbing or moments just prior to it when defendant was in [Gus’s] face.”

The state argued that the jury should be instructed that it could consider only the events immediately surrounding the attack. Defendant argued that the court should not place any limitation on the jury, stating:

“The jury as the factfinder, in looking at this enhancement, has to decide in a common sense way what the word precipitate means, and they have to look at that and use their common sense. If there is nothing that we can give them to help them do that, then I don’t think we can also limit them in any way.”

[278]*278The court agreed with the state and instructed the jury:

“The Court’s made a decision that the jury, when it is answering the question and answering the question only, that you’re to confine your deliberations to the events at or near the time of the actual attack. Now, I want to make that clear. That doesn’t mean when it comes to the assault—in your deliberations on the assault you can still consider all of the events that you heard in the evidence as it related to the issue of self-defense. But for purposes of answering the question, and that was whether or not [Gus] was involved in precipitating it, you’re to confine your consideration of the evidence to that evidence that occurred at or near the time of the attack.” (Emphasis supplied.)

The jury unanimously found defendant guilty of assault in the first degree and eleven of its members concluded that Gus had not substantially contributed to the commission of the offense by precipitating the attack. The other juror concluded that he had. Defendant’s assault conviction therefore ranked as a category 10 offense on the crime seriousness scale, and the court sentenced defendant accordingly.

Defendant assigns error to the court’s instruction to the jury that, when determining whether Gus substantially contributed to the commission of the offense by precipitating the assault, it had to “confine [its] deliberations to the events at or near the time of the actual attack.” She argues that all of the evidence about the parties’ relationship was relevant to that determination. The state counters that the evidence could not be considered relevant because past threats and events cannot, by definition, “precipitate” an attack.2 It argues: [279]*279It concludes, therefore, that “[e]vidence of the victim’s conduct at or near the time of the attack * * * would be relevant; his conduct on prior occasions would not be.” We agree with the state.

[278]*278“The word’s connotation of suddenness and immediacy suggests that a victim does not ‘precipitate’ an attack by a prior course of conduct toward the defendant, no matter how provocative, but rather by acts or words that trigger a sudden and immediate attack by the defendant.”

[279]*279Neither the sentencing guidelines nor the commentary to them offers any explicit guidance on the meaning of the relevant language. OAK 253-04-002(2) provides, however, that a single statutory offense “maybe subclassified factually in more than one crime category to capture the full range of criminal conduct covered by the statutory offense.” In the context of assault, the language of the two subcategories emphasizes “that an unprovoked assault is a more serious offense” than a provoked assault. State v. Guthrie, 112 Or App 102, 106, 828 P2d 462 (1992).3

“The seriousness of an assault can depend, in part, on whether a defendant justifiably reacted to a victim’s conduct. A jury can evaluate the circumstances and determine the culpability, if any, that a victim may share in provoking an assault.” Id.

The issue in this case is what “circumstances” are relevant to that determination. We agree with the state that the phrase “precipitating the attack” connotes a sense of immediacy. To precipitate an assault, the victim must take some identifiable action to which the defendant responds by attacking him or her.

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Related

State v. Guthrie
828 P.2d 462 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1992)
State v. Boots
848 P.2d 76 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1993)

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Bluebook (online)
941 P.2d 546, 148 Or. App. 274, 1997 Ore. App. LEXIS 762, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-shouse-orctapp-1997.