State v. Yashin

112 P.3d 331, 199 Or. App. 511, 2005 Ore. App. LEXIS 623
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMay 18, 2005
Docket03C47335; A123942
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 112 P.3d 331 (State v. Yashin) 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. Yashin, 112 P.3d 331, 199 Or. App. 511, 2005 Ore. App. LEXIS 623 (Or. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

*513 BREWER, C. J.

Defendant appeals a judgment convicting him of six counts of first-degree rape, ORS 163.375, and six counts of first-degree sodomy, ORS 163.405. The trial court counted three of the rape convictions as part of defendant’s criminal history for purposes of calculating his guidelines sentence on one of the sodomy convictions. Defendant assigns error to the imposition of that sentence, arguing that imposing it required a finding that none of the three rapes was part of the same criminal episode as the sodomy and, under Blakely v. Washington, 542 US 296, 124 S Ct 2531, 159 L Ed 2d 403 (2004), and Apprendi v. New Jersey, 530 US 466, 120 S Ct 2348, 147 L Ed 2d 435 (2000), the state was required to prove that fact to a jury beyond a reasonable doubt. Defendant concedes that he raises the issue for the first time on appeal but urges us to address it as plain error. We conclude that imposing the challenged sentence was not an error apparent on the face of the record and affirm.

Understanding the pertinent facts of this case requires a brief discussion of Oregon’s sentencing guidelines. Under the guidelines, the permissible range of sentences for a felony conviction generally is dictated by the 99-block sentencing guidelines grid. The grid is composed of a vertical axis, the “Crime Seriousness Scale,” and a horizontal axis, the “Criminal History Scale.” OAR 213-004-0001(1). To determine the permissible sentencing range for a given conviction, a sentencing court locates the appropriate category for the crime on the Crime Seriousness Scale, the appropriate category for the offender on the Criminal History Scale, and the grid block where the two categories intersect. Predictably, the permissible sentencing range increases with every increase on either the Crime Seriousness Scale or the Criminal History Scale. For certain crimes that carry a statutory minimum sentence, the sentencing court is required to impose either that statutory minimum sentence or the one dictated by the grid, whichever is higher. OAR 213-009-0001(1).

The category on the Criminal History Scale into which a given offender will fall depends on the number and *514 type of the offender’s prior convictions. OAR 213-004-0006(1). The categories range from “minor misdemeanor or no criminal record” to “multiple (3+) felony person offender.” A conviction may be counted in a defendant’s criminal history score if the trial court pronounced sentence on it before pronouncing sentence on the conviction at issue. OAR 213-004-0006(2). Thus, if a defendant is convicted of two crimes in one proceeding and a court pronounces sentence on the first conviction seconds before calculating the sentence on the second, then the first conviction may be used to calculate the defendant’s criminal history on the second conviction. There is one caveat: Only convictions that arose out of separate “criminal episodes” count as part of the defendant’s criminal history for sentencing purposes. State v. Bucholz, 317 Or 309, 317, 855 P2d 1100 (1993).

The legal determination that convictions arose out of separate criminal episodes is based on a factual finding specifically, the finding that the acts giving rise to the convictions were not part of “continuous and uninterrupted conduct that * * * is so joined in time, place and circumstances that such conduct is directed to the accomplishment of a criminal objective.” See State v. Knight, 160 Or App 395, 403, 981 P2d 819 (1999) (a finding for Bucholz purposes requires finding described in ORS 131.505(4), which defines “separate criminal episode”).

With that sentencing scheme in mind, we turn to the facts of this case. Defendant was charged with, among other things, three counts of rape and one count of sodomy. 1 Each count in the indictment alleged that, sometime between January 1, 1998 and June 30, 2003, defendant knowingly used forcible compulsion to engage in sexual intercourse (rape) or deviant sexual intercourse (sodomy) with his adult daughter. Each of the counts also alleged that defendant threatened the use of a weapon during the commission of those crimes. 2 Defendant waived his right to a jury trial and was tried by the court, which found defendant guilty on all *515 counts. The court found that the additional circumstance of threatening the use of a weapon during the commission of the offense existed only for Count 1 (rape) and Count 4 (sodomy). Because the statutory minimum sentence was higher than the guidelines sentence for the three rape convictions, the court imposed mandatory minimum sentences of 100 months on each of those convictions pursuant to ORS 137.700(2)(a)(J). The court imposed a guidelines sentence on the sodomy conviction, Count 4. That is the sentence at issue in this appeal.

On Count 4, the court sentenced defendant to 130 months’ imprisonment. The court arrived at that number through the following method. First, because the court had found that defendant threatened the use of a weapon in committing the crime alleged in Count 4, the court determined that the crime was ranked at a level 10 (out of 11) on the Crime Seriousness Scale. Second, the court used all three of defendant’s rape convictions (on which defendant had already been sentenced) in calculating defendant’s criminal history for Count 4. In doing so, the court found that “these are all complete [ly] and totally distinct acts involving, in the six counts, one victim, but at separate times with separate intents, separate criminal consequences.” Inclusion of the three rape convictions in defendant’s criminal history moved defendant into the highest category on the Criminal History Scale, category A. Accordingly, the court determined that the presumptive sentence in grid block 10A — 121 to 130 months — applied to the sodomy conviction, and the court sentenced defendant to 130 months’ imprisonment, to run consecutively to the sentences for rape. In the absence of its finding that the three rapes and the sodomy had each occurred during separate criminal episodes, the maximum sentence that the court could have imposed was 100 months, which is the mandatory minimum prescribed for first-degree sodomy by ORS 137.700(2)(a)(L).

Defendant argues that, because the fact found by the court increased the maximum sentence beyond what the court could have imposed based on the verdict alone, that fact had to be proved to a jury beyond a reasonable doubt. 3 As *516 noted, defendant did not make that argument before the trial court but asserts that we may address it as plain error.

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Bluebook (online)
112 P.3d 331, 199 Or. App. 511, 2005 Ore. App. LEXIS 623, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-yashin-orctapp-2005.