*351 MEMORANDUM OPINION.
The state asks us to review a decision of the Court of Appeals which, following our decision in
State v.
Roper,
Roper and Sims were indicted with four others for agreeing in Multnomah County to commit a robbery but were tried separately. They moved for judgments of acquittal for failure to prove venue, on the ground that the evidence showed that they agreed to the robbery, if at all, in Clackamas County rather than in Multnomah County. In Roper’s case we stated that when an indictment charges that a criminal agreement was made in a certain county, a conviction cannot rest on proof that the agreement was made in a different county and only subsequent acts occurred in the county where the making of the agreement is alleged, nor would evidence of an agreement in Mult-nomah County among coconspirators other than defendant make his offense one committed in that county. We concluded that this result of the indictment followed from Oregon’s guarantee of a trial "in the county in which the offense shall have been committed,” Or Const art I, § 11, after the 1971 revision of the criminal code defined the offense of conspiracy as merely the agreement to engage in criminal conduct, removing from this offense the previously required element of an act to carry the agreement into effect.
The state now asks us to reconsider this holding, arguing that the prior agreement in Multnomah *352 County among defendant’s coconspirators made this defendant’s offense one "committed” in that county by virtue of ORS 161.455. Upon examining the origin and function of that section, we do not find the argument persuasive.
ORS 161.455 provides:
"If a person is guilty of conspiracy, as defined in ORS 161.450, and knows that a person with whom he conspires to commit a crime has conspired or will conspire with another person or persons to commit the same crime, he is guilty of conspiring with such other person or persons, whether or not he knows their identity, to commit such crime.”
The section is copied from subsection (2) of the American Law Institute’s Model Penal Code section 5.03, that code’s comprehensive treatment of the offense of conspiracy. The commentary accompanying the revision of the Oregon criminal code states that ORS 161.455 "extends the party dimension of a defendant’s conspiracy,” but it does not explain the purpose or practical significance of so extending "the party dimension.” Commentary, Proposed Oregon Criminal Code 60-62, § 60 (1970). The Oregon commentary merely repeats the opening sentences of the commentary to Model Penal Code section 5.03(2). The full Model Penal Code commentary explains that the provision is concerned with "the propriety of joint prosecution, admissibility against a defendant of the hearsay acts and declarations of others, questions of multiple prosecution or conviction and double jeopardy, satisfaction of the overt act requirement or statutes of limitation or rules of jurisdiction and venue, and possibly also liability for substantive crimes *353 executed pursuant to the conspiracy.” ALI Model Penal Code 118 (Tent. Draft No. 10,1960) (comments on § 5.03).
Our present concern, of course, is with the significance of the so-called "party dimension” for venue. On that question, the Model Penal Code is clear. Its commentary states that the "parties” section is designed to facilitate joinder of prosecutions "[sjubject to the limitations regarding venue . . . expressed in Subsection(4)(b).” Id. at 119. And in this subsection, § 5.03(4)(b), the Model Penal Code provides that
"(i) no defendant shall be charged with a conspira,cy in any comity other than one in which he entered into such conspiracy or in which an overt act pursuant to such conspiracy was done by him or by a person with whom he conspired.”
This venue provision is consistent with the logic of the Model Penal Code’s approach to the crime of conspiracy, which retained the overt act as a necessary element. But it is precisely the elimination of this element in the Oregon codification that led to our holding that the county "in which the offense shall have been committed,” Or Const art I, § 11, is the county where the defendant agreed to the criminal enterprise. 1
*354 In short, since the source from which ORS 161.455 was copied makes it clear that the objective of facilitating joinder of defendants in a conspiracy prosecution was to be subordinated to the rules governing venue, this section does not contradict our conclusion in State v. Roper, supra.
Petition for review allowed; decision of Court of Appeals affirmed.
Notes
The state also argues that we should have interpreted article I, section 11 by reference to federal cases on venue under the fifth amendment, citing
State v. Flores,
In
State v. Roper, supra,
we noted that Oregon is among the minority of states whose constitutions specify trial in the county in which the offense is committed. We also noted that this would not prevent venue in more than one county in a conspiracy case if the defendant’s negotiations or other communications alleged to constitute the criminal agreement occurred in more than one county or across county lines.
