Defendant appeals two judgments of conviction arising out of consolidated prosecutions. First, he argues that the trial court should have granted his motion for judgment of acquittal on a charge of first-degree burglary. Next, defendant demurs, for the first time on appeal, to his indictment on a charge of carrying a concealed weapon. We reject without further discussion defendant’s challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence on first-degree burglary. We write to address only defendant’s challenge to the indictment on the charge of carrying a concealed weapon. For reasons we explain below, we affirm.
The relevant portion of the indictment charging defendant with carrying a concealed weapon alleged:
“The defendant, on or about November 6, 1999, in Lane County, Oregon, did unlawfully and knowingly carry upon the defendant’s person an instrument similar to a dagger, which was designed and intended for use as a weapon and could be used to inflict injury upon a person or property of another * * *.
* * * *
“ORS 166.240/Class B Misdemeanor [.]”
Defendant did not demur to or otherwise challenge his indictment on that charge, either before arraignment or before or during trial. On appeal, however, defendant raises a claim that the facts set out above do not allege an offense. In particular, defendant argues that, although “carrying a dagger on one’s person can be illegal * * *, the state did not allege any particular facts in this case that would make defendant’s carrying of the dagger illegal.” From that premise, defendant concludes that, “[b]ecause the indictment did not state an offense, the court lacked jurisdiction to enter the conviction [on carrying a concealed weapon].” The state responds by urging that, read liberally and as a whole, the indictment was sufficient to inform defendant that the state intended to prove that the weapon was concealed and otherwise to serve the purposes of an indictment.
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As an initial matter, the parties do not debate whether defendant may raise that issue for the first time on appeal. That lack of debate is not surprising — our cases have stated repeatedly that an indictment’s failure to allege facts constituting an offense is a claim that can be asserted on appeal despite the lack of preservation.
See, e.g., State v. Early,
Terry
involved a prosecution for aggravated murder under ORS 163.095(1)(d) (1993), which required that the murder be committed intentionally and that there be more than one murder victim during the same criminal episode.
Although he did not make that argument to the trial court, the defendant in
Terry
argued on direct review that the failure to allege deliberateness in the indictment “deprived the trial court of subject matter jurisdiction and that lack of subject matter jurisdiction can be raised at any stage of the proceedings.”
Id.
The Supreme Court rejected that argument.
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The court reasoned that subject matter jurisdiction generally “defines the scope of proceedings that may be heard by a particular court” and is “conferred by statute or the constitution.”
Id.
at 186. In Oregon, circuit courts have jurisdiction “over all actions unless a statute or rule of law divests them of jurisdiction.”
Id.
Specifically, “once a person has been indicted by a grand jury, that person can be charged ‘in a circuit court with the commission of any crime punishable as a felony.’ ”
Id.
(quoting Or Const, Art VII (Amended), § 5(3)). After reviewing those principles, the court in
Terry
concluded that “[t]he trial court * * * had subject matter jurisdiction to try [the] defendant for the crime of aggravated murder, even if the indictment arguably was defective.”
Terry is significant in two respects. First, it expressly holds that the failure of an indictment to allege facts sufficient to constitute an offense is not a jurisdictional defect. Second, Terry establishes that the merits of such a claim can be considered for the first time on appeal only if the claim qualifies as plain error. Necessarily implicit in the court’s “plain error” examination is the court’s conclusion that preservation requirements apply to a challenge to the failure of an indictment to allege an offense. Under Terry, then, we can reach and resolve the merits of defendant’s claim in this case — i.e., a challenge to the indictment based on the state’s *725 failure to plead the element of “concealed” — only if the issue qualifies as error apparent on the face of the record. 3 We therefore turn to that question. 4
To be error apparent on the face of the record, an alleged error must satisfy three predicate criteria: (1) it must be an error “of law”; (2) it must be “apparent,” meaning the point must be obvious, that is, not reasonably in dispute; and (3) it must appear on the face of the record, meaning the court need not look beyond the record to identify the error or “choose between competing inferences, and the facts constituting the error must be irrefutable.”
Ailes v. Portland Meadows, Inc.,
Here, we need not decide whether the issue satisfies the predicate three requirements for showing plain error. Even assuming that the issue meets those requirements, we decline to exercise our discretion to consider the alleged error. The challenged count of the indictment alleges that defendant engaged in the charged conduct “on or about November 6, 1999” and refers to ORS 166.240. That section defines the crime of carrying of concealed weapons, a Class B misdemeanor for which the statute of limitations is two years. ORS 131.125(6)(b). Defendant was tried on that charge on September 8, 2000. Had he raised the alleged defect in the indictment in the trial court by demurrer, the state could have moved to amend the indictment, presented the evidence once again to a grand jury and sought to reindict defendant or, because the crime is a misdemeanor, simply filed a district attorneys information. Any of those actions would have permitted the state to take the case to trial before the statute of limitations ran in November 2001. Defendant’s choice to raise the issue for the first time on appeal, however, frustrates the state’s ability to bring the prosecution at all.
Thus, were we to exercise our discretion to consider this claimed error for the first time on appeal, the result would be, in effect, an outright reversal, because the statute of limitations has run. That would reward defendant for not making a timely challenge at trial, either by way of demurrer or motion in arrest of judgment. In other words, if we reach defendant’s argument, he and others similarly situated are potentially better off not challenging the indictment before trial. Instead of doing so and running the risk of being rein-dicted and subsequently convicted, a defendant could essentially gamble that a reviewing court would consider any alleged defect in the indictment as plain error and do so at a time when the state would be precluded from proceeding against the defendant again.
As earlier noted,
Ailes
cautions that we should exercise our discretion to consider plain error only “with utmost caution” so as not to undercut “the strong policies requiring preservation and raising of error.”
Affirmed.
Notes
See also State v. Crain,
More specifically, the court concluded that the error did not satisfy the requirements of the plain error doctrine that it be an obvious error because it was not error at all.
Id.
at 187. As that conclusion on the court’s part suggests, an uncomfortable tension sometimes exists between the principle that a reviewing court is not permitted to review the merits of an unpreserved claim
(see Wyatt,
Past cases concluding that such an issue can be raised for the first time on appeal have not offered any substantial rationale for the conclusion.
See generally
Our rules require that an appellant demonstrate that a particular issue is an error apparent on the face of the record and of the kind that this court can reach notwithstanding the lack of preservation. ORAP 5.45(4), (6). Here, defendant did not do so, having justifiably relied on our prior cases applying the principle that his claim is one that can be raised for the first time on appeal. We therefore waive that requirement in this instance. See ORAP 1.20(5) (providing that, for good cause, the court may waive any rule of appellate procedure).
