Defendant appeals from a conviction for receiving and concealing stolen property. Former ORS 165.045. His assignments of error are: (1) evidence seized pursuant to a valid search warrant should have been suppressed; (2) there was insufficient evidence that defendant knew or had good reason to believe the property was stolen; and (3) (a) ORS 165.045 is unconstitutional to the extent which it allows conviction based on a person’s “having good reason to believe” property he received or concealed is stolen; (b) a jury instruction based upon the statute was erroneous.
On or about March 4, 1971, Cleveland High School in Portland was burglarized and 23 pieces of electrical equipment were taken. Based on information received from an informant, police obtained a warrant on April 13 authorizing seareh of defendant’s premises for two of these items—an Eieo Oscilloscope and an RCA Signal Generator. The next day the police exe *332 cuted the warrant. During the search defendant fled. The police found the oscilloscope, described in the warrant, plus two signal generators and a battery-charger not identified in the warrant but which corresponded in serial number and description to equipment taken in the high school burglary. They seized this equipment and, also, a baggie of marihuana, furniture, stereo equipment, cameras, two filing cabinets and a stamp collection. They believed some or all of this property was the fruit of other burglaries. In all, the entire contents of defendant’s apartment except for a 2,000-pound waterbed were seized.
The trial court suppressed all evidence unrelated to the high school burglary and struck from the indictment the second count which charged defendant with receiving and concealing some of that property. The remaining count, upon which defendant was convicted, related to the Eico Oscilloscope. The state introduced into evidence at the trial the other electrical equipment taken from the high school which was found in defendant’s apartment.
Defendant contends that the seizure of the items suppressed by the trial court was so unreasonable as to require suppression of the oscilloscope, seized pursuant to the search warrant, and the other electrical equipment found in “plain view.”
State v. Ronniger,
The authorities defendant urges are not in point. They deal with suppression of evidence seized in an unreasonable search incident to arrest, ② or evidence seized in a search which exceeded the bounds of the warrant. ③
At conclusion of the state’s case-in-chief defendant moved for acquittal, and after state’s rebuttal he moved for a directed verdict. In the motion for directed verdict defendant referred to the motion to acquit in which he said the state had “failed to show that the defendant knew the material was stolen and that the heading of the statute on good cause neither has been established nor would it be constitutional
*334
* * * to create a felony on the grounds of stupidity * * We understand the initial objection to be a challenge of the sufficiency of the evidence that defendant knew or had good reason to believe the goods were stolen, as provided by former ORS 165.045. If the record as a whole contains sufficient evidence to support a verdict against defendant, the verdict will be affirmed.
State v.
Nix,
The state’s evidence established that the oscilloscope and other electrical equipment found in defendant’s apartment had been stolen from an electronics instruction classroom at Cleveland High School. The electronics instructor had marked the oscilloscope with a number “six” on each side of its screen. Defendant was a student in that class in 1970, from which the jury might infer he could recognize the oscilloscope as belonging to the school.
When the police arrived with the search warrant defendant was present. One officer read the warrant to defendant and advised him of his rights; another proceeded to the bedroom and, upon finding the equipment on a shelf, called: “I found them—I found it.” At that point, the officer testified:
“* * * Lynn Redeman looked at me and said, I know who the son of a bitch was that finked on me and I’ll get him * *
Defendant then ran out the door without shoes or a shirt. He was apprehended two months later in Colorado and was returned to Oregon.
At trial defendant claimed he had bought the equipment from a man, but he could not remember the *335 man’s last name or whether he had exchanged four or five waterbeds for the equipment. An alleged receipt to the transaction could not be produced. Defendant contended the police took it when they searched the apartment.
Whether the jury believed defendant or not, the evidence of his former classroom exposure to the equipment, his statement when the equipment was found, and his subsequent flight, ④ were more than sufficient for the jury to infer defendant knew or believed the equipment was stolen.
Under this assignment of error defendant also argues there was insufficient evidence that he concealed the stolen property. Eegardless of its merits, this was not raised in the trial court and we will not consider it now.
Defendant also grounded his motion for judgment of acquittal on the contention that OES 165.045 is unconstitutional insofar as it defines the requisite mental element for conviction as “knowing or having good reason to believe” the property is stolen. (Emphasis supplied.) Prom defendant’s brief argument in support of this contention we understand his objection to be that the statutory standard violates due process because, “having good reason to believe” allowed the jury to convict him on the basis of what a reasonable person would believe under the circumstances of the case, rather than what defendant actually believed, and thus it permits conviction for lack of diligence or intelligence.
In order to consider defendant’s constitutional challenge to OES 165.045, we would first need to con
*336
sirue it as not requiring a finding of defendant’s actual knowledge or belief for conviction. For reasons which follow we do not so construe it, although in some jurisdictions such a construction has been applied to similar language. See cases collected in Annotation,
The reasoning of
State v. Aschenbrenner,
“s. . . Yet the effect of such an instruction [“reasonable person”] is to make guilty knowledge of a respondent depend upon what the jury find would induce “belief” in the mind of a “reasonable man,” rather than upon what they find induced “belief” in his own mind. One essential element of *337 the offense is that the person, at the time he received the stolen goods, had knowledge that they had been stolen. If he did not have actual or positive knowledge, the question is whether from the circumstances he—not some other person—believed they had been stolen. The circumstances must have that effect upon his mind, to constitute knowledge by him. The question must be determined upon the individual test of the accused ® ”171 Or at 671 . (Emphasis supplied.)
The court in
Aschenbrenner
went on to say that
State v. Savan,
We hold that OES 165.045 requires actual knowledge or belief ⑤ by defendant that the property is stolen. Of course, in the absence of direct evidence a jury may draw reasonable inferences of whether, from the facts and circumstances, the defendant knew or believed the property was stolen.
Morissette v. United States,
Defendant assigns as error the trial court’s instruction on guilty knowledge:
“Now the State is required to prove * * * that he knew or had good reason to believe the personal property was stolen * * *.
“Now, guilty knowledge is a state of mind. The state of mind of a defendant may be proved in two ways. First, by an admission or admissions; or second, by circumstances. From circumstances, you may impute guilty knowledge. When I say impute, I mean you can attribute guilty knowledge. You may impute guilty knowledge from evidence if any there be, which tends to show first that the defendant was in possession of recently stolen property and secondly, that the defendant was aware of circumstances at the time of the offense charged which *339 would compel any rational person to conclude that the property had been stolen.” (Emphasis supplied.)
Under the standard set out in ORS 165.045, which we have construed to require a finding that defendant knew or believed the property was stolen, the court’s reference to a “rational person” standard was erroneous, for we construe the words “rational” and “reasonable” as synonymous in this context. See Webster’s Third New International Dictionary (1969).
However, the exception to this instruction did not apprise the trial court why it was erroneous. The exception was:
“I’ll except to the good reason to believe it’s stolen on the same grounds I set forth in my motion to take it from the jury * *
The motion to “take from the jury” thus referred to was the motion for a directed verdict, the pertinent portion of which is:
“* * * I also move to take from the jury on count one, the indictment, so much of the allegation that states having good reason to believe on the grounds it violates due process under Section 1, Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution for a statute such as, ORS 165.045, found felony guilty so stupid or ignorance.”
The exception, by referring to grounds for a previous motion, which were unintelligible, so obscured the real reason the instruction was erroneous, if that is what defendant was urging, as to violate the requirement that proper exception be taken if we are to consider the error on appeal.
State v. Barton,
Affirmed.
Notes
The police testifying at the suppression hearing gave two reasons for the massive seizure of the contents of defendant’s apartment: (1) they knew some of the items were fruits of a burglary under investigation from identification on the property; others they suspected came from another burglary under investigation, but they had no concrete basis at that time for concluding that this was true; (2) since defendant had fled they felt it incumbent upon them to seize and inventory all the property in order to protect it. The trial court properly suppressed items seized which the police did not have probable cause to believe were stolen. State v. Elkins,
Coolidge v. New Hampshire, supra; Von Cleef v. New Jersey,
Stanley v. Georgia,
Evidence of flight or escape is admissible as circumstantial evidence of guilty knowledge. State v. McIntire,
Although as a matter of semantics, “knowledge” differs from “belief,” in respect to receiving and concealing statutes the two are generally used synonymously. 2 Wharton, Criminal Law & Procedure, supra, at 285.
Our holding accords with cases we have recently decided involving related questions. In State v. Neel,
In State v. Gulbrandson,
“* * * Whether anything short of ‘actual knowledge’ is constitutionally sufficient is a question which has not been squarely answered in this state. This question may sometimes arise in connection with a requested jury instruction or motion for judgment of acquittal, or in some other manner, but it is not before us now.”2 Or App at 514 .
