687 P.2d 161 | Or. Ct. App. | 1984
Defendant appeals his conviction for burglary in the first degree. He contends that the trial court erred in ruling that ORS 164.225(1) (a) is not unconstitutionally vague in violation of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution.
Defendant was charged with burglary of a building described as an office or shop portion of a U.S. Forest Service warehouse under ORS 164.225(1)(a), which provides:
“A person commits the crime of Burglary in the First Degree if he violates ORS 164.215 and the building is a dwelling, or if in effecting entry or while in a building or in immediate flight therefrom he:
“(a) Is armed with a burglar’s tool as defined in ORS 164.235 * *
The information alleged that defendant “was armed with a prybar, a burglar’s tool” while effecting entry into the building and fleeing therefrom. ORS 164.235(2) defines “burglar tool”:
“[A]n acetylene torch, electric arc, burning bar, thermal lance, oxygen lance or other similar device capable of burning through steel, concrete or other solid material, or nitroglycerine, dynamite, gunpowder or any other explosive, tools, instrument or other article adapted, designed or commonly used for committing or facilitating a forcible entry into premises or theft by a physical taking.”
In essence, defendant contends that the statute fails adequately to define “burglar tool” or the conditions under which possession of such tools constitutes burglary in the first degree. Assuming the general validity of this contention, the statute as applied to defendant is sufficiently clear. See State v. Warner, 67 Or App 251, 677 P2d 733, rev allowed 297 Or 124 (1984); State v. Larsen, 37 Or App 425, 588 P2d 41 (1978); State v. Zeit, 22 Or App 480, 539 P2d 1130 (1975). Defendant admitted to police after his arrest that his entry was accomplished by use of a prybar that he had found outside the Forest Service compound. In so stating, he admitted not only the possession of the prybar but, also, its use in gaining entry to
As to defendant’s argument that the statute is unconstitutionally vague, we have previously held that it is not. State v. Cockrum, 14 Or App 431, 512 P2d 1373 (1973). Defendant fails to convince us that that holding should be overruled.
Affirmed.
Defendant argued in his brief that ORS 164.225(1) (a) is also constitutionally overbroad. At his oral presentation, however, he conceded that argument.
Similar statutes have been upheld, generally, when attacked as violating the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution because of vagueness. See cases collected in Annot., 33 ALR3d 798, 809 et seq (1970), and Supp 107-108 (1983).