State v. Smith

560 P.2d 1066, 277 Or. 251, 1977 Ore. LEXIS 1113
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 25, 1977
DocketCA 5649, SC 24708
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 560 P.2d 1066 (State v. Smith) 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. Smith, 560 P.2d 1066, 277 Or. 251, 1977 Ore. LEXIS 1113 (Or. 1977).

Opinion

*253 TONGUE, J.

Defendant, an enrolled member of the Warm Springs Indian Tribe, was on November 25, 1974, a prisoner in the Jefferson County jail. On that date he was taken for dental services by a Jefferson County deputy sheriff to the Warm Springs Dental Clinic, located on the Warm Springs Indian Reservation, also in Jefferson County.

While at that clinic, defendant escaped from the officer. He was not immediately recaptured, but in October 1975 was returned to the Jefferson County jail from Lampoc Federal Prison in California. Defendant was then charged with escape in the second degree under ORS 162.155. 1 The information charged that defendant on November 25, 1974:

"* * * in Jefferson County, State of Oregon did unlawfully and knowingly escape from custody * * * having been incarcerated and being an inmate of a correctional facility, to wit: the Jefferson County Jail * * * »

Defendant appealed from a conviction on that *254 charge, assigning as error the denial by the trial court of his motions to dismiss the charge and for a directed verdict, both based upon a lack of jursidiction of the State of Oregon because of the fact that the crime was committed on the Warm Springs Indian Reservation, over which the state has no jurisdiction by reason of the provisions of various federal statutes. Defendant also moved for a directed verdict upon the further ground that the state failed to prove that defendant "actually escaped from the Correctional Facility.”

The Court of Appeals affirmed defendant’s conviction by an opinion which held that defendant’s conduct constituted an "escape” by "unlawful departure” from a "correctional facility,” as that crime is defined in ORS 162.135 and 162.155, 2 "unless the existence of federal jurisdiction excludes that of the state under the circumstances of this case.” The Court of Appeals went on to hold, however, that despite the provisions of various federal statutes, the State of Oregon had jurisdiction over the offense even though defendant was an Indian and the "situs” of the offense was the Warm Springs Indian Reservation. 26 Or App 49, 552 P2d 261 (1976).

In reaching that conclusion the Court of Appeals cited and relied primarily upon statements in Cohen, Handbook of Federal Indian Law (1945), to the effect (at 117) that the state may have jurisdiction in cases involving both Indians and non-Indians "to a degree which calls into play the jurisdiction of a state government”; that (at 119) jurisdiction in such cases depends upon "situs, person and subject matter,” and that (at 121) except in cases involving "only Indians on an Indian Reservation,” the state has jurisdiction unless "there is involved a subject matter of special federal concern.”

The Court of Appeals adopted this analysis by Cohen and held that "[prevention of state prosecution of an Indian for unlawful escape from state custody *255 does not appear to be a matter of 'special federal concern’.” 26 Or App at 54. The court also appeared to rely in part upon the conclusion that this was not a case involving only Indians on an Indian reservation because one of the persons involved was "a non-Indian state officer who legally had the Indian in custody.” We accepted review because we question the validity of this analysis, particularly in view of federal statutes and federal decisions since the publication by Cohen in 1945.

Also, in our opinion, even the statements quoted by the Court of Appeals from Cohen do not clearly support such an analysis as applied to the facts and nature of this case. First of all, those statements are general in nature and applicable to all "Indian Affairs,” not specifically to crimes on Indian reservations. (S ee Cohen, supra, 119-121.) Subsequently, in discussing the more specific question of state jurisdictions over crimes on Indian reservations, Cohen states (at 146):

"It is clear that the original criminal jurisdiction of the Indian tribes has never been transferred to the states. Sporadic attempts of the states to exercise jurisdiction over offenses between Indians, or between Indians and whites, committed on an Indian reservation, have been held invalid usurpation of authority.
"The principle that a state has no criminal jurisdiction over offenses involving Indians committed on an Indian reservation is too well established to require argument, attested as it is by a line of cases that reaches back to the earliest years of the Republic.
"A state, of course, has jursidiction over the conduct of an Indian off the reservation. A state also has jurisdiction over some, but not all, acts of non-Indians within a reservation. But the relations between white and Indians in 'Indian country’ and the conduct of Indians themselves in Indian country are not subject to the laws or the courts of the several states.” 3

*256 For the purposes of this opinion it is not necessary to trace the tangled and tragic history of the relations between the federal government and the various Indian tribes or to examine the many cases cited in support of this statement by Cohen, which we believe to be an accurate statement of the law on the subject as of 1945. 4

In 1953, however, Congress enacted a further statute on this subject, Public Law 280. 5 The apparent reason for the enactment of that statute was the need to curtail lawlessness on Indian reservations. 6 By the terms of that statute, criminal jurisdiction over Indian reservations was granted to five states, including Oregon, but with the important exception of the Warm Springs Indian Reservation. Again, we need not, for the purposes of this opinion, consider the strong criticism of Public Law 280 by Indians, who apparently believe, among other things, that the federal gov *257 ernment and its Bureau of Indian Affairs is more understanding of their problems than are the various states. 7 The important fact is that crimes by Indians on the Warm Springs Reservation are expressly excluded from the provisions of Public Laws 280 in conferring upon Oregon jurisdiction over crimes by other Indians on other Indian reservations. 8

It follows, in our opinion, that the State of Oregon had no jurisdiction in this case. In so holding, we do not overlook the contention by the state that it has jurisdiction to try an offense where only part

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
560 P.2d 1066, 277 Or. 251, 1977 Ore. LEXIS 1113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-smith-or-1977.