By way of background, defendant is subject to an SPO that generally prohibits him
Following the state's case, defendant moved for a judgment of acquittal, arguing that there was insufficient evidence to support a finding that defendant was within 25 feet of the theater. The court denied the motion and ultimately found defendant guilty of being within 25 feet of the theater. The court reasoned that defendant would have been within 25 feet of the theater if he had either walked in front of his car or if he had walked around the back side and then helped Sims out of the car. The court further reasoned that it "defies common sense" to think that defendant had walked the way that he needed to walk to avoid violating the restraining order, although the court acknowledged that defendant could have walked from his vehicle in a way that did not bring him within 25 feet of the theater.
On appeal, defendant assigns error to the trial court's denial of his motion for a judgment of acquittal. He reiterates his argument that the evidence is insufficient to support a finding that either he or his car was within 25 feet of the theater. The state responds that the officer's testimony
"[W]e review the denial of a motion for judgment of acquittal for legal error, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the state to determine whether any rational trier of fact could have found the elements of the crimes beyond a reasonable doubt." State v. Rivera-Ortiz ,
Before we address the evidence, the nature of defendant's alleged violation bears some emphasis. The SPO prohibited defendant from being within 25 feet of the theater. If defendant remained only slightly more than 25 feet away from the theater, he did not violate the SPO. Under those circumstances, it was incumbent upon the state to demonstrate with precision that defendant crossed that 25-foot line; it is not good enough to
Turning to the evidence, the trial court found that defendant violated the SPO by inferring that defendant must have walked around the car in a way that brought him within 25 feet of the theater. But that inference is entirely speculative on this record. The state presented no evidence about what path defendant took when he got out of his car, and, as the trial court recognized, there are paths that defendant could have taken that would not have brought him within 25 feet of the theater in a way that violated the restraining order.
The state nonetheless urges us to affirm on the alternative ground that the evidence would support a finding that defendant's car was parked within 25 feet of the theater. The state argues that the "vehicle one is driving *** is an extension or part of one's person" such that the car's presence within 25 feet of the theater constitutes a violation of the SPO.
We accept, for the sake of argument, the state's premise that defendant's car is an extension of defendant's person, when defendant is in the car. The trial court, however, does not appear to have made the finding that the car itself was within 25 feet of the theater, which means that the trial court may not have been persuaded of that fact. As defendant argued in closing, an application of the Pythagorean Theorem using the officer's measurement and estimate tended to show that the car was more than 25 feet from the theater.
It would have been simple for the state to prove that the car was within 25 feet of the theater, if, in fact, it was. Evidence of direct measurements to the car-or even to a
In his two remaining assignments of error, which are unpreserved, defendant challenges the court's imposition of supervision fees. The state concedes that the imposition of those fees appears to be erroneous, given the court's explicit finding that defendant lacks the ability to pay financial obligations. See ORS 423.570(1), (6) (a person sentenced to supervised probation must pay a monthly fee except in cases of financial hardship); ORS 137.540(1)(a) (a person is excused from paying supervision fees if condition of probation is "specifically deleted by the court"). We accept the state's concession and exercise our discretion to correct the error because of the burden on defendant of having to pay financial obligations that the trial court has found that defendant lacks the ability to pay.
In A160386, order to pay supervision fees reversed; otherwise affirmed. In A160387, judgment of conviction on Count 2 reversed; order to pay supervision fees on Count 1 reversed; otherwise affirmed.
Notes
As noted, defendant was permitted to be within 25 feet of the theater for the purpose of using the stairwell access to his apartment.
Relying on the officer's testimony that he had measured a 25-foot line straight along the sidewalk that the officer estimated to be about 10 feet from the car, defendant used the Pythagorean Theorem to compute that the direct distance from the theater to a point on the car six inches behind the car's passenger side front tire was 26.9 feet. Pointing out that that computation was based on a mere estimate of the distance between the line that the officer marked on the sidewalk and the car, defendant urged that the computation, which suggested that that particular part of the car was more than 25 feet away from the theater, gave rise to reasonable doubt as to whether the car was parked within 25 feet of the theater.
The investigating officer photographed defendant's parked car, and the state introduced those photographs into evidence. Those photographs show that the car was positioned in a marked parking space. Had the state also presented evidence that the distance from the theater to a point in the marked parking space that necessarily would have been covered by the car was 25 feet or less, a factfinder could infer that defendant's car was within 25 feet of the theater.
See State v. Wisowaty ,
