Defendant appeals his conviction in a jury trial for the traffic crime of driving under the influence of intoxicants. ORS 487.540. Defendant was convicted of a Class A misdemeanor pursuant to ORS 484.365(1), which provides:
“Any Class A traffic infraction, as defined in subsection (3) of this section, shall be prosecuted and be punishable as a Class A misdemeanor if the defendant has been convicted of a Class A traffic infraction, as defined in subsection (3) of this section, or a traffic crime within a five-year period immediately preceding the commission of the offense, and the previous conviction was not part of the same transaction as the present offense.”
At a pre-trial omnibus hearing, the state sought a ruling on the admissibility of an abstract of record of the prior conviction. Defendant objected, arguing that his Sixth Amendment right to counsel would be violated by use of a prior conviction obtained when he had no attorney. Defendant provided no testimony in support of that argument. Although the proceeding was in the form of a test of admissibility, the trial court, the Court of Appeals, and the parties have treated the motion, objection and ruling as directed toward the sufficiency of the abstract alone to prove a constitutionally valid prior conviction. The trial court overruled the objection, the Court of Appeals affirmed, and we accepted review to examine the defendant’s contention that his right to counsel was violated by the state’s use of a prior conviction based upon a guilty plea entered without counsel.
Preliminarily, the state argues that prior convictions are not subject to collateral attack except as provided in the Post Conviction Relief Act, ORS 138.510 to 138.680. The United States Supreme Court has held to the contrary. In
Baldasar v. Illinois,
At the time of defendant’s guilty plea, the traffic code provided that a person accused of a traffic infraction
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was not entitled to an attorney at public expense, ORS 484.390(1). In
Brown v. Multnomah County Dist. Ct.,
The abstract of record on the back of a uniform traffic citation, see ORS 484.150(2) (b) and (6), consists of a form with blanks, which are to be filled in by the trial court as appropriate. The pertinent part in this case appears as follows:
“5/3/77 Defendant arraigned X Plea G
Attorney for Defendant _”
It then recites that defendant was fined. There is no other reference to counsel. It is inferable from the existence of a blank for the name of a defendant’s lawyer, from the fact that no name or other notation is inserted, and from the absence of any evidence to the contrary, that defendant was not represented by counsel.
There is no evidence of waiver of counsel. A valid waiver will not be presumed from a silent record.
Burgett v. Texas, supra,
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We cannot conclude that the jury was not influenced by evidence of a prior conviction of a similar offense which was improperly before them. Because the error was not harmless, we do not exercise our authority to modify the conviction to one for the lesser offense of driving under the influence of intoxicants under ORS 487.540 alone.
Cf. State v. Branch,
Reversed and remanded for new trial.
Notes
Speaking for myself only and not necessarily for any other member of the court, my reliance on
Brown v. Multnomah County Dist. Ct.,
The Court of Appeals reasoned that defendant had not shown that he was denied counsel because he might have been able to afford counsel and chose not to. The election by a person who can afford counsel to nevertheless forego counsel is a waiver. The rule that waiver will not be found from a silent record precludes that reasoning.
See, Boag v. State,
The overruling of defendant’s objection was technically correct, in that the abstract would have been admissible as evidence of the prior conviction if additional evidence was forthcoming to prove waiver. Nevertheless, as we noted above, the parties and the court used the procedure for a determination of legal sufficiency of the abstract standing alone to prove the prior conviction, and the ruling was incorrect in that respect. The procedure was functionally equivalent to a motion for judgment of acquittal. Therefore, as to the evidence of prior conviction a remand for retrial of the enhanced charge under the principles we stated in
State v. Verdine,
