STATE OF OREGON v. JOSEPH VALENTINO LONGORIA
16CR31152; A164245
Multnomah County Circuit Court
Submitted January 15, affirmed November 14, 2019
454 P3d 813
Defendant appeals a judgment of conviction for first-degree robbery,
Affirmed.
John A. Wittmayer, Judge.
Ernest G. Lannet, Chief Defender, Criminal Appellate Section, and Shawn Wiley, Deputy Public Defender, Office of Public Defense Services, filed the briefs for appellant.
Ellen F. Rosenblum, Attorney General, Benjamin Gutman, Solicitor General, and Greg Rios, Assistant Attorney General, filed the briefs for respondent.
Before DeHoog, Presiding Judge, and Aoyagi, Judge, and Hadlock, Judge pro tempore.
AOYAGI, J.
Affirmed.
State v. Longoria
300 Or App 495 (2019)
AOYAGI, J.
AOYAGI,
Defendant appeals a judgment of conviction for one count of first-degree robbery,
We take the facts from the trial record, noting discrepancies between the parties’ versions of events where those discrepancies are significant to our review. See State v. Pine, 336 Or 194, 196, 82 P3d 130 (2003).
Defendant stole a hat from a convenience store. The store owner saw the theft and confronted defendant outside the store. A physical altercation ensued, during which defendant stabbed the owner in the leg with a knife. Defendant was charged with robbery and assault. At trial, defendant admitted to stabbing the owner in the leg but argued that he was not guilty of either charged offense because he acted in self-defense. According to defendant, the owner grabbed and punched him from behind, and defendant used the knife to defend himself but only intended to slash the owner’s pants. The owner disputed defendant’s account and identified defendant as the initial aggressor.
Given the defense theory, the parties agreed that the trial court should give the jury the uniform instruction on self-defense, Uniform Criminal Jury Instruction 1107, which is based on
Jury Instructions 1109 and 1110, regarding the provocation and initial-aggressor limitations on self-defense. See
After hearing argument, the court ruled that it would give all three instructions and, accordingly, instructed the jury as follows regarding self-defense:
“The defense of self-defense has been raised. A person is justified in using physical force on another person to defend himself from what he reasonably believes to be the imminent use of unlawful physical force. In defending, a person may only use that degree of force that he reasonably believes to be necessary.
“The burden of proof is on the State to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defense does not apply.
“The defendant is not justified in using physical force on another person if he provoked the use of unlawful physical force by that other person with the intent to cause physical injury or death to the other person.
“Ordinarily a person is not justified in using physical force on another person if he was the initial aggressor. However, defendant’s use of physical force may be justified even though he was the initial aggressor if you find that he withdrew from the encounter and effectively communicated to the other person an intent to withdraw from the encounter but the other person nevertheless continued or threatened to continue the use of unlawful physical force on the defendant.”
(Emphasis added.)2
The jury found defendant guilty of both charges. On appeal of the resulting judgment of conviction, defendant challenges the trial court’s giving of the provocation instruction, i.e., the italicized portion of the instructions quoted above.3
In response, the state concedes that the trial court erred in giving the instruction but argues that the error was harmless and therefore does not permit reversal.
We review jury instructions for errors of law. State v. Bistrika, 262 Or App 385, 406, 324 P3d 584, rev den, 356 Or 397 (2014). One form of instructional error is when a court gives an instruction that correctly states the law but “there is no evidence in the record to support giving the instruction.” Montara Owners Assn. v. La Noue Development, LLC, 357 Or 333, 348, 353 P3d 563 (2015). Defendant alleges that type of error.
With respect to the legal correctness of the instruction, defendant argues—and the state now agrees—that the provocation limitation on self-defense applies when a person provokes another person to use physical force so as to justify responding with physical force. For example, if A taunts B with the intent of getting B to swing at A, so that A can punch B and claim self-defense, the provocation limitation would apply. However, defendant and the state agree, the limitation does not apply when a person does something “provocative” without that specific intent. For example, if A taunts B simply to be mean, and B then swings at A, who in turn punches B, one might say that B “provoked” A in a colloquial sense, but the provocation limitation on self-defense described in
physical force by that person.” According to the Criminal Law Revision Commission’s commentary on what would become
The instruction that the trial court gave therefore was legally correct. It tracked the substantive language of the statute and, as such, informed the jury that, to the extent that the store owner was the initial physical aggressor, defendant could not rely on the defense of self-defense if defendant had “provoked the use of unlawful physical force by [the store owner] with the intent to cause physical injury or death to the [store owner].”4
The next question is whether the trial court erred in giving the instruction, because there was no evidence to support it. Again, defendant and the state agree, as do we. No evidence presented at trial would have allowed the jury to find that defendant stole the hat (or did anything else) with the intent of provoking the store owner to physically assault him, so that he could then injure or kill the store owner. Therefore, having reviewed the record, we accept the state’s concession on that point.
Even when an erroneous instruction is given, however, we will reverse only if the error substantially affected a party’s rights. Montara Owners Assn., 357 Or at 345. In this context, defendant’s rights were substantially affected if the erroneous instruction “permit[ted] the jury to reach a legally erroneous result.” Bistrika, 262 Or App at 406. In making that determination, “we look not only to the other instructions given, but also to the contentions of the parties at trial.” Id. “Generally, little likelihood is not enough, but more—that is some or a significant likelihood that the error influenced the result—will suffice for reversal.” Montara Owners Assn., 357 Or at 351 (internal quotation marks omitted); see also State v. Mechler, 157 Or App 161, 165-66, 969 P2d 1043 (1998) (“Substantial rights of a defendant are not affected when there is little likelihood that the error affected the verdict.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.)). If “we can fairly say that the instruction probably created an erroneous impression of the law in the minds of the jurors which affected the outcome of the case,” then reversal is necessary. Bistrika, 262 Or App at 406 (internal quotation marks and brackets omitted).
The state contends that giving the provocation instruction was harmless in this case, because the jury found defendant guilty of first-degree robbery and therefore necessarily rejected defendant’s version of the facts. The state’s theory of the case was that defendant stole the hat and, when the store owner confronted him verbally, stabbed the
To find defendant guilty of robbery, as charged in this case, the jury had to find that defendant, in the course of committing or attempting to commit theft, “use[d] or threaten[ed] the immediate use of physical force upon another person with the intent of * * * [p]reventing or overcoming resistance to the taking of the property or to retention
thereof immediately after the taking.”
“In this case, to establish the crime of Robbery in the First Degree, the State must prove beyond a reasonable doubt the following elements: No. 1, that the act occurred on or about May 24, 2016; No. 2, that [defendant] committed or attempted to commit theft; No. 3, that [defendant], in the course of committing or attempting to commit theft, used or threatened the immediate use of physical force on another person; No. 4, that [defendant] acted with the intent of preventing or overcoming resistance to his taking of the property or retention of the property immediately after the taking; and No. 5, that [defendant] used a dangerous weapon or attempted to use a dangerous weapon.”
(Emphasis added.)
Thus, in finding defendant guilty of robbery, the jury necessarily accepted the state’s version of the facts—that defendant used physical force against the store owner with the intent of preventing or overcoming the store owner’s resistance to defendant’s retention of the stolen hat—and rejected defendant’s version of events—that defendant used physical force against the store owner to defend himself. Given the jury’s resolution of the disputed factual issue about defendant’s intent when he stabbed the store owner, defendant’s self-defense defense could not succeed, irrespective of any provocation issue. See
Defendant does not explain how, nonetheless, he was harmed by the erroneous instruction. It is defendant’s burden to demonstrate that the error at issue affected a substantial right. State v. Nguyen, 293 Or App 492, 498, 429 P3d 410 (2018). Toward that end, defendant correctly notes that his “claim of self-defense was his entire defense,” but he never addresses the implications of the jury’s verdict, nor does he point to anything specific in the record to explain
his allegation of harm. Instead, defendant asserts generally that “the trial court’s instruction and the state’s argument implied that defendant could not prevail on his claim of self-defense because he provoked K into grabbing defendant”—an assertion that does not appear to be supported by the record.
The provocation instruction that the court gave was legally correct, as defendant acknowledges, and we do not see how it could have “implied” an erroneous legal conclusion on this record. This is not a situation like that in Bistrika. In Bistrika, the trial court instructed the jury on law enforcement’s “community caretaking” function, but it did not instruct the jury about a limitation on that doctrine that was crucial to the case before it. 262 Or App at 406-07. Indeed, the very existence of the unacknowledged limitation was why it was erroneous to give the “community caretaking” instruction at all. Id. at 407. Meanwhile, the prosecutor relied significantly on the community caretaking statute in closing argument and rebuttal. Id. at 406-07. In those circumstances, even though the instruction given was legally correct in and of itself, we concluded that it “probably created an erroneous impression of the law in the minds of the jurors which affected the outcome of the case,” especially
As for defendant’s assertion that the “state’s argument” implied something inaccurate to the jury about the
provocation limitation, defendant has not identified—and we have not found in the trial transcript—any instance of the state saying something that might have encouraged the jurors to misunderstand the provocation limitation or that even suggested that the provocation limitation was at issue.
On this record, there is no reason to believe that the jury ignored the correct instruction that it received on the provocation limitation on self-defense, as well as ignored the court’s instruction not to speculate, and somehow relied on the provocation instruction in a manner that had any significant likelihood of affecting the verdict. See Montara Owners Assn., 357 Or at 351 (“We presume, as we ordinarily do, that the jury followed the instructions.”). This case is similar to Montara Owners Assn. in that regard. There, the jury was given a legally correct instruction on the “economic waste doctrine,” but the instruction should not have been given because there was no evidence in the record to support the application of that doctrine. Id. at 348, 350. After conducting a “contextual, record-based review that [took] into account what evidence the jury had before it,” the court concluded that the appellant had failed to show that the erroneous instruction substantially affected its rights. Id. at 351-53. Instead, “[t]he record point[ed] to the conclusion that the jury followed a permissible path from evidence in the record * * *, through the instructions given, to [its decision].” Id. at 353.
In sum, considering the disputed instruction in the context of the trial as a whole, we conclude that there is little, if any, likelihood that the error in giving the provocation instruction affected the verdict, even though it was error to give it because there was no evidence to support it. We therefore conclude that the error was harmless and, accordingly, affirm.
Affirmed.
