State v. Torres

136 P.3d 1132, 206 Or. App. 436
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJune 14, 2006
DocketC020546CR; A118463
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 136 P.3d 1132 (State v. Torres) 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. Torres, 136 P.3d 1132, 206 Or. App. 436 (Or. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

*438 WOLLHEIM, J.

Following a jury trial, defendant was convicted of fourth-degree assault, ORS 163.160, and menacing, ORS 163.190, both stemming from an alleged domestic violence incident involving his fiancée. On appeal, defendant assigns error to the trial court’s admission of out-of-court statements from the alleged victim and her seven-year-old son. For the reasons explained below, we reverse defendant’s convictions and remand for a new trial.

In recounting the factual background, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the state. See State v. Gibson, 338 Or 560, 562, 113 P3d 423, cert den, _US _, 126 S Ct 760 (2005). Defendant engaged in a protracted altercation with Rios, his pregnant fiancée, after Rios had locked the door of their apartment with the keys inside. Rios did not testify at trial, but her account of events was related at trial by Officer Mehl, a police officer who, along with his partner, responded to the scene. According to Mehl, defendant broke the door handle while regaining entry to the apartment, and he then abrasively ordered Rios around the apartment over the next few hours. Defendant became increasingly upset when Rios tried to talk to him about what had happened and, as the argument progressed, Rios picked up a CD rack in anticipation of needing to defend herself. The three children were told to go to their room upstairs. Defendant closed the shades in the living room, turned out the lights, grabbed a “shiny object” from the kitchen, and orally threatened to stab Rios. With the cover of darkness, defendant moved behind Rios, jumped on top of her, and began to choke her. Rios, beginning to get dizzy and believing that defendant was going to kill her, bit down on defendant’s hand. The two struggled on the ground. Defendant finally pinned Rios with his knee and punched her in the face.

Defendant emerged with a bitten and bloodied hand, Rios with a bruised and bloodied face. Rios’s three children fled to the nearby apartment of Teresa Perez, Rios’s aunt. Perez testified at trial that she had heard children crying and, as she was walking to her living room, Rios’s children came in and told her that defendant was hitting their mother. *439 Rios soon joined her children at Perez’s apartment, saying that defendant was trying to kill her or that he had hit her. Defendant fled the scene in the couple’s car. Perez called the police, who arrived and interviewed Perez and Rios’s seven-year-old son, J. Mehl testified that, on his arrival at Perez’s apartment, Rios was crying, rocking back and forth on a couch, and stating, to no one in particular, “I thought he was going to kill me. I couldn’t breathe.” Rios was then taken to the hospital for treatment. Defendant was arrested later that evening at the apartment of his relative.

Officer Soliz took a statement from J who, like his mother, did not testify at trial. Soliz testified:

“He told me that he had saw [defendant] and Olivia Rios, his mother, fighting, arguing in the living room. At one point, [defendant] had told [J] and his two brothers * * * to go to their bedroom while they were arguing.
“[J] told me that while [defendant] and [Rios] were fighting, [defendant] had thrown a computer down on the ground and told her to, quote, pick it up before I give it away to my sister. [J] then told me that [defendant] then grabbed a screwdriver and began chasing Olivia Rios around the apartment, and at one point [defendant] told Olivia to, quote, sit down or I will stab you.
“After that, [J] told me that [defendant] then stabbed his mother in the face with a screwdriver. [J] then said that he took his two brothers and left the apartment and went to their — to the next door apartment * *

Mehl and Soliz then went to the hospital to interview Rios. There, Rios provided a statement incriminating defendant as the aggressor, as summarized above. Rios also gave a similar statement to medical personnel.

Approximately one month later, Rios provided a substantially different statement to an investigator employed by defendant’s counsel. According to the investigator’s testimony, Rios said that the altercation had begun with an argument, the subject of which she could not recall, that when defendant attempted to leave the apartment Rios had grabbed defendant’s hand and bit his finger, and that defendant had hit Rios to make her let go.

*440 Trial was set for April 11, 2002. On April 9, the state filed notice of its intent to offer hearsay statements under OEC 803(18a)(b), which provides for admission of hearsay statements concerning an act of abuse. Attached to the notice was an affidavit in which the prosecutor averred that “the state expects [Rios and J] to testify at defendant’s trial.”

On the day set for trial, the court held an evidentiary hearing on the state’s motion. By that time, however, it appeared that Rios would not testify because she had not been served with a subpoena and was not present at court. Although J had been served the evening before, he was not present at court. Accordingly, the state sought to establish that neither witness was available and that the statements they had made to police officers should be admitted under exceptions to the general rule prohibiting the admission of hearsay.

The state offered Rios’s and J’s statements under a number of statutory exceptions to the rule against hearsay. It offered Rios’s statements to investigating police officers as excited utterances, OEC 803(2), 1 and as statements regarding domestic violence, OEC 803(26)(a). 2 In addition, it offered into evidence Rios’s statement to medical personnel under the hearsay exception for statements given to secure medical diagnosis or treatment, OEC 803(4). 3 The state also offered J’s statement as a statement regarding abuse, OEC 803(18a)(b). 4 Following the hearing, the trial court admitted *441 the statements, finding that the witnesses were unavailable and that the proffered statements otherwise fell within exceptions to the rule against admission of hearsay. In light of the result of the pretrial hearing, the parties and court agreed to postpone the trial for a week, until April 16.

At trial, Mehl and Soliz testified to statements made by Rios and J. As noted, defendant ultimately was convicted of two counts of felony fourth-degree assault and one count of menacing.

On appeal, defendant renews his position that the trial court erred in admitting the hearsay. He makes three assignments of error that contain essentially two arguments. First, he asserts, the trial court erred in finding that Rios and J were unavailable to testify.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
136 P.3d 1132, 206 Or. App. 436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-torres-orctapp-2006.