Following an altercation between defendant and his girlfriend, Gregory, defendant was convicted of one count of fourth-degree assault constituting domestic violence,
We review the facts in the light most favorable to the state, which prevailed at trial. State v. Summers,
Officer Barrett responded to Scevers’s call and interviewed Gregory and her roommate. The state’s case at trial relied heavily on Barrett’s testimony. Barrett testified that he observed swelling around Gregory’s left cheek, bruising beginning to form near her left eye, and scratch marks around her collar bone and neck. According to Barrett, Gregory told him that the argument began after she asked defendant to clean up the front yard; defendant yelled and “head butted” her. Defendant then pushed her into the kitchen and began kicking and punching her; at one point, defendant held her down on the ground with his hand around her neck. The altercation moved to the front porch, where defendant shoved Gregory against the front door, grabbed her around the throat, and shoved her into a porch chair. Defendant then left the scene. When Barrett asked whether Gregory could still breathe during the assault, she answered that her breathing was disrupted when defendant grabbed her by the neck in the kitchen, but not when he grabbed her neck on the porch. She said that if defendant had squeezed any harder she “wouldn’t be able to breathe at all.”
Barrett also described his interview with the roommate, Cook. Cook told Barrett that she was in the bathroom when she overheard the argument; she emerged to see defendant attacking Gregory in the kitchen. Cook described defendant being on top of Gregory, then hitting, kicking, and choking her.
The evidence at trial also included Barrett’s photographs from the day of the assault, which show that Gregory’s face is flushed and indicative of recent crying. The photographs depict what appears to be slight swelling of Gregory’s cheek and several small scratches or bruises near her neck. Additional photographs, taken the next day, show no visible facial swelling and little or no bruising.
The trial testimony of both Gregory and Cook was very different from Barrett’s. Contrary to Barrett’s testimony about her interview, Cook testified that she did not recall seeing defendant choke, strangle, or kick Gregory. According to Gregory’s testimony, when defendant refused to clean up the front yard, the two got into an argument that culminated in Gregory aiming a kick towards defendant. She explained that the argument “escalated into the kitchen,” where she came towards defendant angrily; in response, defendant put his hand out to stop her, making contact with her neck and collar bone area. She testified that she “starting hitting [defendant]” and temporarily prevented him from leaving the scene. Finally, she testified that, when the police arrived, she falsely reported that defendant had strangled her because she was still angry and wanted defendant to “get in trouble.”
Significantly for this appeal, when asked by defense counsel at trial whether she remembered feeling “a lot of pain,” Gregory answered “no,” explaining that she has a “high pain tolerance.” The prosecutor also inquired whether Gregory recalled complaining of pain from the assault:
“[PROSECUTOR:] And so when we went over injuries you never indicated that your jaw hurt at all?
“[GREGORY:] No.
“[PROSECUTOR:] Do you recall on September 16th, 2012, complaining of pain in your jaw and saying it was sore to the touch to officers?
“[GREGORY:] No.
“[PROSECUTOR:] And so—
“ [GREGORY:] I don’t recall.
“[PROSECUTOR:] Okay. And so are you confident that you had no pain in your jaw on that second day?
“ [GREGORY:] I’m pretty sure.
“[PROSECUTOR:] And so do you think—well, and do you recall your left arm was sore and painful to the touch?
“[GREGORY:] No.
“[PROSECUTOR:] And do you recall telling officers that?
“[GREGORY:] Vaguely.
“[PROSECUTOR:] And so just to go back and clarify. It wasn’t sore?
“[GREGORY:] I can’t remember. Maybe, maybe not. At the moment I wanted [defendant] to get in trouble. It was an exaggeration.”
At the close of the state’s case-in-chief, defendant moved for a judgment of acquittal (MJOA) on the “substantial pain” theory (but not on the “impairment of physical condition” theory) of fourth-degree assault, arguing that the state had failed to present sufficient evidence to support a conviction on the ground that Gregory had suffered substantial pain. Alternatively, defendant argued for the court to require the state to “elect” to proceed under the “impairment of physical condition” theory of physical injury. That is, defendant argued that the only plausible evidence of “physical injury” in the record was Barrett’s testimony regarding Gregory’s initial statement that her breathing was “impaired” when defendant grabbed her by the neck. Thus, defendant requested that the charges be “narrowed down” to specify that the state was proceeding under the “impairment of physical condition” theory, and not “substantial pain.” The state responded that the evidence was sufficient to support a conviction under either theory of physical injury. Specifically, the state noted that “there was testimony that [Gregory] complained of pain in her jaw and stated it was sore to the touch the next day,” and that that evidence was “probably sufficient to establish substantial pain.”
The trial court denied defendant’s motions, ruling that the evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to the state, was sufficient to go forward on both theories of physical injury.
The court’s ruling on defendant’s motions was followed shortly afterward by a discussion of jury instructions. Both defendant and the state had originally requested Uniform Criminal Jury Instruction (UCrJI) 1044, which defines “physical injury” as “an injury that impairs a person’s physical condition or causes substantial pain.” During the jury-instruction colloquy, although defendant excepted to the instruction on a different ground,
On appeal, defendant reprises his contention that the state failed to adduce evidence that Gregory suffered “substantial pain,” and that the trial court therefore erred by permitting that theory to go to the jury. The trial court’s error was harmful, defendant argues, because it allowed the jury to consider a theory of “physical injury” that is unsupported by evidence in the record.
The state, for its part, appears to have abandoned its position below that the record is sufficient to support a finding of substantial pain. Instead, the state now argues that, even if defendant is correct that the evidence would only support a finding of “physical injury” through “impairment of physical condition,” the trial court committed no error because defendant’s motions were procedurally improper mechanisms for obtaining the relief that defendant sought. According to the state, defendant should have objected to the giving of UCrJI 1044 (defining “physical injury” as an injury that causes “substantial pain”) on the ground that the instruction was not supported by evidence in the record. See State v. Wan,
Assuming, without deciding, that the state is correct that a MJOA was not the correct procedure for defendant’s challenge to a particular theory of “physical injury,” we are nonetheless persuaded that defendant’s arguments on appeal were squarely presented below and, for that reason, are properly before us. Defendant consistently argued that the evidence was insufficient to support a conviction under the “substantial pain” theory; the state responded to that argument on its merits (never asserting that a MJOA was procedurally improper), and the trial court ruled on the merits. Under those circumstances, the issue of whether the trial court erred in submitting the “substantial pain” theory to the jury is presented for our review, even if it was not procedurally “pigeonholed” correctly. See State v. Meyer,
We now turn to the merits of defendant’s argument that the state presented insufficient evidence to permit a finding that defendant caused Gregory “substantial pain.” We consider that argument consistently with our standard for reviewing a motion for judgment of acquittal, viewing the evidence “in the light most favorable to the state to determine whether a rational trier of fact, making reasonable inferences, could have found the essential elements of the crime proved beyond a reasonable doubt.” State v. Guzman,
The phrase “substantial pain” refers both to the degree and the duration of pain subjectively experienced by a victim. State v. Poole,
Ordinarily, whether a victim has suffered “substantial pain” is a question for the trier of fact; however, whether the evidence is sufficient to submit that question to the fact-finder depends on the nature of the evidence itself. Guzman,
Most recently, we found such an inference to be permissible in Guzman. In that case, the state was unable to produce an assault victim as a witness at trial and, consequently, the jury did not hear testimony describing the level or duration of the pain suffered by the victim.
A similar inference cannot reasonably be drawn from the evidence in this case. Although the state’s evidence, if believed, paints a picture of a violent attack, the state failed to adduce any evidence of either the quality or duration of Gregory’s pain. That omission is especially conspicuous where, as here, the only evidence in the record with regard to pain is that of Gregory’s testimony squarely denying that she experienced any pain as a result of the attack. Gregory’s injuries are not commensurate with those of the victim in Guzman, nor do the photographs of Gregory’s face and neck, taken on the day of the attack and the following day, allow any nonspeculative inferences about the nature and degree of pain that she may have experienced. Thus, although one could reasonably infer that Gregory suffered some pain as a result of the altercation, the record simply lacks evidence from which one could reasonably infer that her pain was substantial or lasting. See Lewis,
In sum, we conclude that the evidence was insufficient for a rational factfinder to find that defendant had caused Gregory “substantial pain,” and the trial court erred when it ruled that the state could proceed under both theories of “physical injury.” That error was harmful because, in the absence of a special verdict form, it created a risk that some jurors could vote to convict defendant based on a theory of “physical injury” that is unsupported by the evidence.
Conviction for fourth-degree assault reversed and remanded; otherwise affirmed.
Notes
ORS 132.586(2) provides that when a crime involves domestic violence, “the accusatory instrument may plead, and the prosecution may prove at trial, domestic violence as an element of the crime. When a crime is so pleaded, the words ‘constituting domestic violence’ may be added to the title of the crime.”
Defendant was also charged with one count of felony strangulation constituting domestic violence, ORS 163.187(4), and was acquitted on that count.
At the time of defendant’s trial, UCrJI 1044 defined both “physical injury” and “serious physical injury.” Defendant objected to the giving of UCrJI 1044 on the basis that the record contained insufficient evidence to support an instruction on “serious physical injury.” The trial court agreed and gave a modified version of the instruction that defined only “physical injury.” UCrJI 1044 has since been revised to, among other things, split the definitions of “physical injury” and “serious physical injury” into two separate instructions, UCrJI 1044 and UCrJI 1044A, respectively.
