Defendant appeals from a judgment of conviction for robbery in the second degree. ORS 164.405. He assigns error to the trial court’s denial of a continuance so that he could hire substitute counsel and argues that he was unconstitutionally sentenced under Ballot Measure 11, a voter initiative mandating minimum sentences for certain felonies. We affirm.
Defendant’s conviction stems from a shop-lifting incident at the Payless store in Dallas, Oregon, on May 18, 1995. 1 Because force was used against a store security guard, defendant was indicted for robbery in the second degree. He was arraigned July 10,1995, and appointed counsel the next day. Trial was scheduled for August 29,1995. On August 25, a continuance was allowed for defendant to take a polygraph test. Defendant assumed that the charge would be dismissed if he passed the test. Trial was reset for September 7,1995.
On that date, about eight minutes before trial, defendant told the court that he wanted to fire his appointed attorney and hire another lawyer, to be retained by his parents. Defendant’s dissatisfaction with counsel apparently arose a week and a half before, when defendant learned that he had failed the polygraph test and that his attorney gave him only a 10 percent chance of winning at trial. Defendant also was upset because his attorney had incorrectly told him that he had been indicted for robbery in the first degree. 2 The trial court found defendant’s request untimely, noting that he had been arraigned approximately two months before and could have hired his own lawyer during that time. Defendant was found guilty by a jury and sentenced to 70 months in prison pursuant to Measure 11.
On appeal, defendant first assigns error to the denial of a continuance to hire a new attorney. Citing
State v. Edwards,
In addressing an indigent defendant’s request for substitute counsel, the trial
Edwards, Bronson,
and
Heaps
addressed requests by indigent defendants to obtain new
court-appointed
counsel and were based on a statute granting the trial court authority to “substitute one appointed counsel for another[.]” ORS 135.050(5). Because defendant here wished to
hire
another lawyer, his reliance on
Edwards
and
Bronson
is misplaced. Unlike an indigent defendant, a person with the means to retain a lawyer need not obtain court approval to do so.
See State v. Schmick,
What defendant sought was a
continuance
to give him time to retain counsel.
4
A motion for a continuance to
hire an attorney is also addressed to the trial court’s discretion.
State v. Higley,
Although defendant’s complaints about his attorney apparently arose about a week and a half before, he waited until eight minutes before trial to inform the court that he wanted a new lawyer. His explanation for the delay was his incarceration in the Intensive Management Unit (IMU) at the Oregon State Penitentiary. However, as the state points out, defendant did not claim that he was held incommunicado in the IMU, and there is no indication in the record that he was otherwise prevented from contacting the court regarding his desire for new counsel, or from contacting his parents so they could hire a lawyer.
We do not hold that, had defendant retained substitute counsel, a week and a half would have been sufficient time to prepare defendant’s case. That is not the question before us. We hold only that it was not an abuse of discretion to deny a continuance that was requested eight minutes before trial when defendant knew at least a week and a half earlier that he wanted a new lawyer.
Defendant next argues that imposition of a 70-month sentence pursuant to Measure 11 violates the “separation of powers” principles of Article III, section 1, and the “reformation clause” of Article I, section 15, of the Oregon Constitution. We have already rejected those arguments in
State v. Jackson/Hoang,
Affirmed.
Notes
See State v. Spence,
The prosecutor’s information charged defendant with both first and second degree robbery, but the grand jury only returned an indictment for robbery in the second degree.
Although in
Edwards
and
Heaps
we spoke of the right to “effective” counsel, the Supreme Court has stated that “ ‘the term “adequate” assistance of counsel may be more accurate than “effective” assistance of counsel. Counsel cannot always be effective, but they must always be “adequate” to the task.’ ”
State v. Langley,
We also note that defendant assigns error to the denial of a “set-over,” not the denial of substitute counsel.
