Defendant appeals his conviction by a jury for reckless driving, ORS 811.140. He asserts that the trial court’s concurrence instruction to the jury was inadequate, because the state presented evidence of two distinct factual occurrences to prove that defendant committed reckless driving, and the jury was not instructed that it must agree on which occurrence supported its verdict. 1 We affirm.
We review a trial court’s refusal to give a requested instruction for errors of law in light of the facts that are most favorable to defendant.
State v. Averitt,
V, a former reserve deputy sheriff, called the Jefferson County Sheriffs dispatcher to report defendant’s driving. While he was on the telephone with the dispatcher, V sped up and passed the cars that defendant had passed in order to keep pace with and follow defendant. As he was following defendant in the vicinity of the intersection of Highway 97 and Ford Lane, V saw defendant pass two more cars traveling northbound at the same time that two cars were traveling southbound toward defendant. All of the cars slowed, and both southbound cars and the northbound car in front of V pulled across the fog line as defendant passed them. While V was on the phone with the dispatcher, another witness, F, was driving southbound on Highway 97. F, who *22 was monitoring police calls on his own radio, overheard V’s call. Immediately after the call, F saw defendant’s vehicle coming “right at us.” F moved his vehicle to the right of the fog line to avoid colliding with defendant’s vehicle. F then called the sheriffs dispatcher and reported that defendant’s vehicle had just passed him.
The entire course of events that was the subject of evidence at trial occurred on a three to four mile stretch of the highway over a span of no more than four minutes. Defendant was stopped by a sheriffs officer on Highway 97 in Madras. Defendant was arrested and charged, as pertinent here, with reckless driving under ORS 811.140. 2 The charging information alleged:
“The defendant, on or about June 21, 2005, in Jefferson County, Oregon, did unlawfully and recklessly drive a vehicle upon a public highway, to-wit: Highway 97 in a manner that endangered the safety of persons or property; contrary to statute and against the peace and dignity of the State of Oregon.”
At trial, the state’s theory was that defendant drove recklessly on Highway 97, as evidenced by the fact that he was passing vehicles in the face of oncoming traffic such that other drivers had to take evasive action to avoid a head-on collision. Defendant nevertheless argued that the state presented evidence of two separate occurrences of reckless driving, that is, evidence that he dangerously passed vehicles north of Jericho Lane and evidence that he dangerously passed vehicles in the vicinity of Ford Lane. As a consequence, defendant argued, the trial court erred in failing to instruct the jury that it must agree on which factual occurrence supported a guilty verdict. The trial court ruled that the jury only needed to agree that defendant drove recklessly on Highway 97. Based on that ruling, the court instructed the *23 jury that, “[t]his being a criminal case, each and every juror must agree on your verdict.” 3 Defendant excepted to that instruction, and he appeals from the ensuing judgment of conviction. He renews his argument that the court failed to properly instruct the jury with respect to the concurrence requirement.
The governing legal principle was first articulated by the Oregon Supreme Court in
State v. Boots,
In
State v. Houston,
We reversed, concluding that the trial court had erred, under
Boots,
in not giving the requested instructions or, alternatively, in not requiring the state to elect a specific basis for the charge.
Houston,
The decisive question here is whether, as in Houston, the jury improperly was allowed to base its verdict on alternative factual occurrences, each of which itself would be a separate crime or, as in King, the trial court properly instructed the jury because the state merely adduced alternative evidence to establish a single offense.
State v. White,
“Boots is inapplicable. There, the defendant was convicted of aggravated murder, which is a murder that requires proof beyond a reasonable doubt of at least one of 17 different acts. See ORS 163.095. Here, in contrast, no one act must be proven to support a conviction for menacing under ORS 163.190(1):
“ ‘A person commits the crime of menacing if by word or conduct the person intentionally attempts to place another person in fear of imminent serious physical injury.’
“The statute requires only that defendant acted by ‘word or conduct’ and intentionally attempted to place [the victim] in fear of imminent serious physical injury. The gravamen of the crime is the intentional attempt to place another person in fear. Defendant could have done several different acts and, if he intended thereby to attempt to place [the victim] in fear, would have committed menacing. The jury did not have to agree unanimously that he did any specific act that would cause fear in order to find him guilty of menacing.”
White,
So, too, here. Violation of the reckless driving statute requires that a defendant have “recklessly drive [n] a vehicle upon a highway or other premises described in this section in a manner that endangers the safety of persons or property.” ORS 811.140(1). Defendant could have committed several *26 acts that, alternatively, constituted evidence of a single element — recklessness-—in an episode of driving that lasted no more than four minutes. As in White, the state was entitled to rely on the entire course of defendant’s driving to establish the element of recklessness. Unlike in Houston, the state did not rely on alternative occurrences, each of which necessarily would constitute a separate offense. 4 Accordingly, the trial court did not err in instructing the jury as it did.
Affirmed.
Notes
Defendant’s remaining assignment of error does not require discussion.
ORS 811.140 provides:
“(1) A person commits the offense of reckless driving if the person recklessly drives a vehicle upon a highway or other premises described in this section in a manner that endangers the safety of persons or property.
“(2) The use of the term ‘recklessly” in this section is as defined in ORS 161.085.
“(3) The offense described in this section, reckless driving, is a Class A misdemeanor and is applicable upon any premises open to the public.”
Because the charge at issue was a misdemeanor, defendant was tried by a six-person jury, hence, the unanimity requirement.
As the trial court aptly noted, “[W]e would just be here arguing something else if the State filed fifteen different counts of Reckless Driving for every episode of crossing the fog line or crossing the center line.”
