State v. Spunaugle

504 P.2d 756, 11 Or. App. 583, 1972 Ore. App. LEXIS 737
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedDecember 22, 1972
Docket36696
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 504 P.2d 756 (State v. Spunaugle) 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. Spunaugle, 504 P.2d 756, 11 Or. App. 583, 1972 Ore. App. LEXIS 737 (Or. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

LANGTRY, J.

Defendant, convicted by a jury of illegal possession of a dangerous drug, former ORS 475.100, appeals from the resulting judgment.

*585 Defendant and two others, Pinski, the owner of the camper vehicle in which all three were traveling, and another companion named Elkington, stopped at a service station in Boseburg to pick np a car belonging to Pinski. The police were called and Officer Daly arrived to interrogate Pinski concerning switched license plates on the car which had been left for repairs when the threesome were on their way from the Portland area to Mexico in the two vehicles.

Officer Daly took Pinski, in the absence of the defendant and Elkington, into a police car, ostensibly in connection with the switched license plates and read him his Miranda rights (Miranda v. Arizona, 384 US 436, 86 S Ct 1602, 16 L Ed 2d 694, 10 ALR3d 974 (1966)). Officer Daly in his testimony acknowledged that he was suspicious that the camper contained narcotics because he knew the party was returning from Mexico. Pinski, at the officer’s request, executed a consent to search his camper vehicle. By the time the search began four police officers were present. Two, including Daly, entered the camper and made an exhaustive search of it for illegal drugs. None of the three suspects were inside the camper while the search was going on. A levi jacket was on the floor of a closet in the camper, and in its pockets was found a baggie, “one of these small plastic sandwich baggies, which contained four or five white double-scored tablets, which I immediately recognized as being what is known as mini bennies or amphetamine type tablets.”

Officer Daly then took the jacket outside without disclosing what he had found in its pockets and asked Pinski if the jacket were his. Pinski indicated that the jacket belonged to the defendant. The record contains contradictory testimony on whether the de *586 fendant was present when Pinski made this statement; and Officer Daly, who testified that the defendant was present, could not remember if he then asked the defendant if the jacket were his or if the defendant had responded directly to Pinski’s statement. In any event the defendant admitted to Officer Daly that the jacket was his. The defendant testified that at that point he was “under the impression that we had no choice” about leaving — that Officer Daly had taken his vehicle operator’s license and had refused to return it. This was never denied in Officer Daly’s testimony.

The defendant then went to the police station where he was read his Miranda rights for the first time and made a further statement admitting possession of the four tablets which contained the dangerous drug amphetamine. The trio was then released and continued their journey to Portland.

The next day a search warrant for the camper was obtained by the federal authorities. The resulting search revealed a cache of 125 kilos of marihuana skillfully hidden in the camper. This evidence was later ordered suppressed by the United States District Court because the affidavit supporting the warrant was defective.

This prosecution followed. A hearing was held to determine the validity of the search of the camper. The court found that Pinski’s consent was voluntary and refused to suppress the fruits of this search. At the trial defendant objected to the introduction by the state of the officer’s statement that the defendant admitted while at the camper and prior to being advised of his Miranda rights that the jacket was his. The court concluded that at the time the statement was made the defendant was not a focal suspect nor in custody and *587 overruled the objection. This ruling, as well as the failure to suppress the evidence, forms the basis for three of the five assignments of error. The other two concern latitude allowed in the cross-examination of defendant by the state, and the sentence. In light of our disposition of the first four assignments it is unnecessary to consider the latter.

On direct examination defendant had testified in answer to his counsel’s question whether he knew the bennies were illegal, “No, not really.”

On cross-examination, over repeated overruled objections and under threat of being held in contempt of court, defendant was required to testify in detail about his involvement with the 125 kilos of marihuana which had been suppressed in federal court. The reason assigned by the prosecution and accepted by the court for relevancy of this evidence was that if defendant had knowledge about the drug marihuana and that it is illegal, that would be some evidence that he would know the drug in bennies is illegal.

The fact that this line of questioning forced the defendant to be a witness against himself does not invalidate the cross-examination provided the questioning was “* * * ‘properly germane to and connected with the testimony in chief.’ * * *” ORS 139.310; State v. Cruse, 231 Or 326, 330, 372 P2d 974 (1962); State v. Rathie et al., 101 Or 339, 199 P 169, 200 P 790 (1921); State v. Lem Woon, 57 Or 482, 107 P 974, 112 P 427 (1910).

Here the defendant was forced to testify to the commission of a crime (the possession of marihuana) other than the one for which he was being tried. Such evidence if independently introduced is ordinarily admissible if it is relevant and its probative value out *588 weighs its prejudicial influence. State v. Lehmann, 6 Or App 600, 488 P2d 1383 (1971). The defendant’s testimony that he had seen marihuana in Tijuana was relevant to the inquiry concerning his general knowledge of drugs as a person who knows what marihuana looks like has some knowledge of illicit drugs. However, when that inquiry went beyond “general knowledge” and focused on the marihuana that had been hidden in the camper, the relevance of the testimony was outweighed by the prejudicial value. The defendant’s statement on direct examination was in the nature of a confession of ignorance of the specific chemical content of bennies and of the provisions of Oregon law. Whether or not he had known that there was marihuana in the camper or how much has little bearing on this point.

In addition, the line of questioning was erroneous as an attempt to get into the record evidence of facts that had come to the attention of authorities through a search that had been declared invalid by the United States District Court. The testimony by its nature must have had a prejudicial effect with the jury. In Walder v. United States, 347 US 62, 74 S Ct 354, 98 L Ed 503 (1954), evidence that had been seized in a search, the results of which were later suppressed, was held admissible for the purpose of impeaching the credibility of a defendant. The facts of that case are distinguishable from the case at bar. There the search had occurred two years prior to the offense which was charged (possession of heroin).

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593 P.2d 1198 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1979)
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Bluebook (online)
504 P.2d 756, 11 Or. App. 583, 1972 Ore. App. LEXIS 737, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-spunaugle-orctapp-1972.