Defendant appeals his misdemeanor convictions for driving under the influence of intoxicants (DUII), reckless driving, attempting to elude and failure to perform the duties of a driver at the scene of an accident. ORS 813.010; ORS 811.140; ORS 811.540; ORS 811.700. The issue is whether the trial court imposed an unauthorized sentence.
Defendant’s convictions stem from an incident in which he led the police on an extended high-speed car chase and two patrol vehicles were damaged. The trial court orally sentenced defendant:
(1) DUII conviction: license suspended for one year and defendant ordered to serve 48 hours in jail, receiving credit for time served before trial;
(2) Reckless driving conviction: 180 days in jail, with 90 days suspended on the condition that defendant successfully complete probation;
(3) Attempting to elude and failure to perform driver’s duties convictions: imposition of sentence suspended, defendant placed on three years’ probation and ordered to pay restitution of approximately $12,000.
Four separate judgments and sentencing orders were signed by the judge. However, they differed in two respects from the oral sentences: a three-year probationary term was ordered on each of the four convictions; and in each of the sentences for DUII, reckless driving and failure to perform, the court included the notation that defendant was “further ordered * * * to pay restitution as ordered in [the attempting to elude sentence]. ”
Defendant first argues that, on the DUII conviction, he could not be sentenced to 48 hours in jail as a condition of probation. That is incorrect. The two-day jail requirement for DUII offenders may be imposed either as a sentence or as a condition of probation. State v. Oary,
The state concedes that, under State v. Holder,
Defendant’s final argument is that restitution is impermissible in this case. He relies on State v. Eastman/Kovach,
Conviction affirmed; remanded for resentencing on reckless driving conviction; remanded with instructions to vacate restitution portion of judgments on DUII and failure to perform driver’s duties; otherwise affirmed.
