Defendant appeals his conviction for carrying a loaded firearm on the ground that the ordinance under which he was convicted violates Oregon Constitution, Article I, Section 27. We disagree and affirm.
A City of Portland police officer noticed defendant’s automobile travelling “at a high rate of speed without headlights.” The officer stopped defendant and walked toward the car. As he drew closer, he observed “what looked like a possible automatic handgun lying on the seat * * He reached in and found a loaded. 32 caliber automatic. Defendant was charged, tried and convicted under Portland Ordinance No. 138210, Sec. No. 14.32.010, which provides:
“It is unlawful for any person on a public street or in a public place to carry a firearm upon his person, or in a vehicle under his control or in which he is an occupant, unless all ammunition has been removéd from the chamber and from the cylinder, clip or magazine.”
Defendant’s sole contention on appeal is that the ordinance violates Article I, Section 27. That provision states:
“The people shall have the right to bear arms for the defence [sic] of themselves, and the State, but the Military shall be kept in strict subordination to the civil power[.]”
In addition to the language of the Constitution, defendant bases his argument on two recent cases from the Oregon Supreme Court construing section 27. The first,
State v. Kessler,
Defendant argues that Blocker controls this case because the facts in the two cases “are virtually identical, * * * the only difference being the character of the weapon.” We do not agree.
The most important distinction between Blocker and this case is that the statute in Blocker and Kessler and the ordinance here are fundamentally different. The statute, ORS 166.510(1), proscribed the “mere possession” of certain weapons, and that was the characteristic that made it unconstitutional. The Portland ordinance, on the other hand, does not proscribe the mere possession of anything. Under it, an individual may possess both a firearm and ammunition. He may even possess a loaded firearm, so long as he is not in a public place. In a public place, he may posess both a firearm and ammunition, so long as the ammunition is not in the chamber, cylinder, clip or magazine. Thus, the quality that rendered ORS 166.510 unconstitutional is not present in the Portland ordinance.
The ordinance does regulate the manner of possession, something that
Kessler
and
Blocker
both recognize as permissible when the regulation is reasonable.
2
In fulfilling its obligation to protect the health, safety and welfare
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of its citizens, a government body must sometimes pass legislation that touches upon a right guaranteed by the state or federal constitution. Such an encroachment is permissible when the unrestricted exercise of the right poses a clear threat to the “interests and welfare of the public in general,”
Christian et al. v. La Forge,
This is a case where a restrained exercise of the police power is permissible. As Kessler points out, and as we think obvious, firearms are extraordinarily dangerous. The danger is particularly severe when the firearms are in public places and loaded. Portland has identified a need to protect its citizens from the hazards that are created when people are permitted to roam free with loaded guns at their sides. The City’s assessment was reasonable, and it chose a permissibly limited form of intrusion on the right.
Section 27 was intended, in part, to enable people to protect their property and themselves. When a threat to person or property arises in the victim’s home or other private place, the ordinance will not interfere at all with the victim’s defense capacity. It is true, on the other hand, that, when the threat arises in a public place, the fact that a person must have any ammunition separated from his firearm will hinder him to the extent that he is put to the trouble of loading the weapon. However, given the magnitude of the City’s felt need to protect the public from an epidemic of random shootings, we think that the hindrance is permissible.
City of Portland Ordinance No. 138.210, Sec. No. 14.32.010, which regulates the manner of possession of a firearm, does not violate Oregon Constitution, Article I, Section 27. 3
Affirmed.
Notes
State v. Blocker, supra, states:
“The text of the constitution * * * is not qualified as to place except in the sense that it can have no effect beyond the geographical borders of this state.”291 Or at 259 .
The court in Kessler stated:
“The constitutional guarantee that persons have the right to ‘bear arms’ does not mean that all individuals have an unrestricted right to carry or use personal weapons in all circumstances. * * * [T]he danger of firearms was recognized shortly after the development of gunpowder. * * *289 Or at 369-70 .
In Blocker, the court went to great pains to point out that neither Blocker nor Kessler
*666 “* * * goes to the question of permissible legislative regulation of the manner of possession or of regulation of the use of the billy. Indeed, in Kessler, we expressly noted the possibility of that kind of regulation. * * *”291 Or at 259 .
Defendant makes a one-sentence state preemption argument, but he does not cite a statute that either conflicts with the ordinance or reserves this type of regulation to the state. Because we know of none, we find this argument unpersuasive.
