651 P.2d 1362 | Or. Ct. App. | 1982
Lead Opinion
In this proceeding under the Habitual Traffic Offenders Act, ORS 484.700 - 484.750, defendant appeals from the trial court’s order declaring him to be a habitual traffic offender. He was convicted of driving under the influence of intoxicants on April 18, 1977, and of the same crime on September 20, 1977; on June 8, 1978, he was convicted of driving while suspended. On June 4, 1981, a complaint seeking to declare him a habitual traffic offender was filed. Because more than two years had expired between defendant’s last conviction and the filing of the complaint in this proceeding, defendant contended that the two-year limitation period provided by ORS 12.110(2)
After the trial of this case, this court held in State v. Norton, 57 Or App 679, 646 P2d 53 (1982), with one judge dissenting, that the two-year limitation in ORS 12.110(2) was applicable, because the Habitual Traffic Offenders Act imposed either a “penalty” or a “forfeiture.” A majority of the court, sitting in banc, now concludes that Norton was decided wrongly; it is overruled.
Reading the Act as a whole makes it clear that its function is to determine the status of one who fits the statutory definition of a habitual offender. Once a driver has been judicially determined to have that status, his right to operate motor vehicles in this state is suspended for ten years, but is subject to the control and supervision of the Department of Motor Vehicles. ORS 484.735 provides in relevant part:
“(2) A one-year, renewable probationary license may be issued to a habitual offender if he:
“(a) Successfully completes a defensive driving course conducted by the division;
“(b) Continually satisfies the conditions of the probationary license; and
*622 “(c) Submits a report of a diagnostic examination conducted by a private physician showing to the satisfaction of the State Health Officer that he is physically and mentally competent to drive.
“(3) The conditions of a probationary license shall include that if a habitual offender is convicted of more than one moving violation within any 12-month period the probationary license shall be revoked and may not be reinstated for one year from the date of last conviction.
“(4) The division may establish by rule additional conditions of a probationary license.”
Although the status of habitual offender imposes severe restrictions on the offender’s right to drive an automobile, those restrictions do not amount to a forfeiture. It may well be, as appears to be the case here, that the offender’s driver’s license has already been suspended at the time his status as a habitual offender is determined. Here, the defendant’s third conviction within the relevant five-year period was for driving with a suspended operator’s license, so it is particularly difficult to consider that this defendant “forfeited” his license as a result of this proceeding. ORS 484.730 requires that after a determination that the driver is a habitual offender, he surrender to the court all licenses or permits to operate a motor vehicle on the highways of this state. Here, it appears that defendant had none to surrender.
It is equally difficult to characterize this proceeding as an action for a penalty. The Act does not provide a fine or imprisonment as a result of a determination that the driver is a habitual offender:
“* * * Act is not intended to punish habitual offenders; there is no such crime as being a habitual offender. The purpose of the Act is to protect the public. * * *” State v. Wells, 27 Or App 537, 540, 556 P2d 727 (1976).
The majority in Norton, in concluding that the legislature intended some statute of limitations to apply to proceedings under the Act, emphasized the provisions of
Whether the legislature intended not to have a period of limitation applicable to proceedings under the Act, or whether the absence of such a limitation period is an oversight, is not so clear as the majority in Norton assumed. Under ORS 484.730,
If the failure to include a period of limitations within which proceedings under the Act must be commenced is a legislative oversight, we should leave it to the legislature to fill that void. Certainly, it is inappropriate to make a judicial determination that proceedings under the Act are.either penal or effect a forfeiture, or both, in order to impose what we think is a reasonable limitation period.
Affirmed.
ORS 12.110(2) provides:
“(2) An action upon a statute for a forfeiture or penalty to the state or county shall be commenced within two years.”
ORS 484.715 provides in pertinent part:
“(1) When the division receives an abstract of the conviction or bail forfeiture, under ORS 153.625, and the conviction or bail forfeiture is the second one of those described by ORS 484.705(l)(a) for the convicted person, the division immediately shall notify the licensee and offer the licensee any opportunity of an advisory meeting with a representative of the division.
"(2) If the licensee requests a meeting under subsection (1) of this section, the meeting shall be held in the county wherein the licensee resides. At the meeting, the division shall advise the licensee of the provisions of ORS 484.700 to 484.750 and of the availability of educational programs for driver improvement.”
ORS 484.720 provides:
“(1) The administrator of the division shall certify in triplicate an abstract of the operating record as maintained by the division, of a habitual offender to the district attorney of the county in which the person resides, as his residence is shown by the records of the division. If the person is not a resident of this state, the record shall be certified to the Attorney General. The certified abstract may be admitted in evidence and shall be prima facie evidence that the person named therein was duly convicted of each offense shown by the abstract. If such person denies any of the facts as stated therein, he shall have the burden of proving that the fact is untrue.
“(2) The district attorney upon receiving the abstract shall forthwith file a complaint against the person named therein in the circuit court for the county in which such person resides, charging him with being a habitual offender. If the person is a nonresident of this state, the Attorney General shall file such complaint in the Circuit Court for Marion County.”
ORS 484.730 provides:
“If the court finds that the person before the court is not the person named in the abstract, or that he is not a habitual offender, the proceeding shall be dismissed; but if the court finds that the person before the court is the person named in the abstract and that the person is a habitual offender, the court shall so find and by appropriate order direct the person not to operate a motor vehicle on the highways of this state and to surrender to the court all licenses or permits to operate a motor vehicle on the highways of this state for disposal in accordance with ORS 482.470. The clerk of the court shall file with the division a copy of the order whereupon the division shall forthwith revoke the license of the person to operate motor vehicles.”
Notwithstanding the absence of an express limitation period in the Act, there may be circumstances under which the court may determine that it would not effectuate the purposes of the Act to determine that the driver is a habitual
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I dissent for the reasons stated in my opinion in State v. Norton, 57 Or App 679, 646 P2d 53 (1982). Warden, Judge, and Rossman, Judge, join in this dissent.