State v. Supanchick

323 P.3d 231, 354 Or. 737, 2014 WL 576069, 2014 Ore. LEXIS 88
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 13, 2014
DocketCC 200525537; CA A139011; SC S060017
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 323 P.3d 231 (State v. Supanchick) 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. Supanchick, 323 P.3d 231, 354 Or. 737, 2014 WL 576069, 2014 Ore. LEXIS 88 (Or. 2014).

Opinion

*739 KISTLER, J.

In 2005, the Oregon legislature added a new exception to the prohibition against the admission of hearsay evidence. Or Laws 2005, ch 458, § 1; see OEC 804(3)(g). Under that exception, a declarant’s hearsay statements are admissible against a party “who engaged in * * * wrongful conduct that was intended to [and did] cause the declarant to be unavailable as a witness.” OEC 804(3)(g). 1 Throughout this litigation, defendant has argued that his wife’s hearsay statements do not come within the terms of that exception and that, if they do, admitting her statements violated his rights under the state and federal constitutions. The trial court disagreed, a jury convicted defendant of aggravated murder, and the Court of Appeals affirmed the resulting judgment. State v. Supanchick, 245 Or App 651, 263 P3d 378 (2011). We allowed defendant’s petition for review and now affirm the Court of Appeals decision and the trial court’s judgment.

I

The state charged defendant with aggravated murder for killing his wife. The evidence showed that defendant and his wife were estranged and that, shortly before her death, his wife had obtained a restraining order against defendant based on allegations that defendant had physically and emotionally abused her. 2 One week after the trial court issued the restraining order, defendant filed for divorce.

*740 Approximately one month after defendant’s wife had obtained the restraining order and three weeks after defendant had filed for divorce, defendant devised a plan to persuade his wife to recant the allegations against him, give him custody of their daughter, and leave the state. Defendant believed that his wife had no real interest in their daughter, had been indifferent to their daughter’s safety, and “just want[ed] to have money and go party[.]” Defendant also believed that, if he offered his wife some money, he could persuade her to accept his offer — namely, to recant the allegations, give him custody of their daughter, and leave Oregon. One problem, from defendant’s perspective, was how to speak to his wife without her calling 9-1-1 and reporting that he was violating the restraining order.

At 11:00 p.m. one night, defendant took a loaded shotgun, duct tape, and a knife to his wife’s house. He opened the door and went up to her bedroom, where she was reading a book in bed. He walked in carrying the shotgun, told her that “we’re going to talk about this[, a]nd then [he] put the tape on her mouth so she wouldn’t scream and * * * taped her arms.” When asked whether he had pointed the shotgun at her, defendant replied, “Didn’t need to.”

As defendant later explained, his plan was to “go through the door real quick [and] subdue her to the point where *** she’s not a threat” to call 9-1-1 and report his violation of the restraining order. 3 Defendant believed that, if he had a chance to talk with his wife before she could call 9-1-1, he would be able to persuade her, relatively quickly, to accept to his offer. Going in, defendant believed that the whole operation could be accomplished in “[a]n hour, tops.”

Things did not go according to plan. His wife would not agree to give defendant custody of their daughter, nor would she agree to leave the state. The discussion that defendant had anticipated would be accomplished quickly turned into a four-hour “talk.” As defendant explained, “we started talking way too much.” He still believed, however, *741 that they “were getting stuff out” and having a meaningful conversation. He explained:

“She wasn’t gonna — she wasn’t gonna leave, but we were making headway as far as her saying, Yeah, a lot of stuff [she was] doing isn’t fair, and you — you know, [she] do[es] need to give [me my] money [back], [She] shouldn’t be keeping this money [that, in defendant’s view, his wife had wrongfully taken from him].”

One issue that arose was how, once defendant knew that his wife would not agree to all his terms, he could keep her from reporting that he had violated the restraining order. Defendant explained that he thought that they would be able to find a middle ground; he would leave, she would “just * * * drop it,” and “she will find something that makes it — makes it a bonus to her, you know.” When asked later if he would have let his wife walk out of the house if she had asked to do so, defendant answered, “No, because we hadn’t reached a — a— *** Not before there was some — not before there was a hard copy agreement * * *.”

After defendant had been at his wife’s house for several hours, his mother called him on his wife’s cell phone, but he did not answer. He also saw his sister’s husband outside the house, but he did not go out to talk to him. Defendant explained that he “wasn’t there to talk to them. I was — we [defendant and his wife] were having a good conversation.” He believed that he was “getting through to [his wife] that she was really not helping [their daughter] right now.” Then, defendant heard “heavy” knocking and people announcing that they were police officers. They asked his wife to come to the door, but she shouted, “I can’t. I can’t come to the door.” At that point, defendant heard “the noise, this noise.” As the officers kicked open the door of his wife’s house, defendant picked up the shotgun, put a round in the chamber, and shot his wife.

When the officers spoke with defendant after-wards, they asked him two separate but related questions. The first question was why he had not let his wife leave once the officers got there. The second was why he had shot her. In answering the first question, defendant explained, “[b]ecause there had to be a way, a better option than [letting *742 her walk out]. A better option because now I’m gonna go to jail for whatever, for being — violating parole [sic] and having a gun there.” He added that he was not “sitting there weighing it. It was like, you know, there’s got to be a better way to fix this or a better way to go — for—I don’t know. Better way for my daughter to be safe and [for me] not [to] go to jail.” When asked whether “shooting her [was] that better way,” defendant answered, “I wasn’t saying that at all.”

Wdien asked why he shot his wife, defendant initially either did not or could not accept the possibility that he had shot her. Later, he acknowledged that, because no one else was in the house, he must have killed her. Defendant then told the officers that, when he heard “this noise,” he “did a failure drill.” As defendant explained, a failure drill is appropriate when you have “no chance of the — whatever, you know, what — your target is coming at you.” He added that “[fit’s the most successful way of stopping whatever’s coming at you.” Having explained that a failure drill is intended to stop the “target * * * coming at you,” defendant could not explain why he shot his wife rather than the officers coming through the door.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
323 P.3d 231, 354 Or. 737, 2014 WL 576069, 2014 Ore. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-supanchick-or-2014.