Defendant was convicted of one count of first-degree assault, ORS 163.185.
The facts relevant to our disposition are undisputed. Defendant, Johnson, and a third man were together at Johnson’s apartment one night. Defendant and Johnson were drinking beer, playing music, and playing a game with a cue ball. At some point, Johnson placed defendant in a headlock and punched him on top of the head a couple of times. After Johnson released defendant, defendant retrieved a knife from his backpack and stabbed Johnson in the neck. Defendant proceeded to stab Johnson seven more times, including in the back of his legs. Defendant testified at trial that he was in fear of his life because, during the course of the night, Johnson had periodically become angry and hit defendant and had refused to let defendant leave. Defendant testified that he had preexisting spinal conditions that made him fearful that being hit again could cause paralysis or death.
During the prosecutor’s cross-examination of defendant, the following exchange occurred:
“[Defendant]: *** I’m going, what did I do, I’m sitting there freaking out. I don’t know, you never been in—
“[Prosecutor]: I’ve never stabbed someone, no.
“[Defendant]: Yeah. Okay.
“[Prosecutor]: So I don’t know what that’s like.
“[Defendant]: Well, I never have either, but—
“ [Prosecutor]: I’m sorry, what? You never have either?
“[Defendant]: No.”
At that point, the prosecutor argued that defendant’s testimony that he had never stabbed anyone before opened the door to questioning defendant about an incident “involving the defendant taking a swipe with the knife at a bicyclist [.]” Defense counsel argued that the incident did not rebut defendant’s statement and that defendant’s testimony did not show that he had a particular character trait that the incident could be admissible to rebut. The trial court allowed the prosecutor to ask limited questions about the incident with the bicyclist, stating:
“I think it opens the door for the next question, which is, isn’t it true that you’ve tried to stab people before, and we’ll see what he answers.
“I think it goes to whether or not the State has a reasonable expectation of the truthfulness of the matter that they’re asking about in cross, so I’m going to allow it and I’m going to stop it though at, isn’t it true that you’ve taken a swipe at other people with a knife. I’m going to let it stop there, depending on what the defendant says.”
The following exchange on cross-examination then occurred:
“[Prosecutor]: [Defendant], you said that you had never stabbed anyone before. Have you ever swung at anyone with a knife before?
“[Defendant]: Yes, I have.
“ [Prosecutor]: And when was that?
“[Defendant]: I don’t recall, but I know I’ve done it before but I don’t think I swiped, I just threatened.
“[Prosecutor]: You threatened someone else with a knife before.
“[Defendant]: Yeah. I didn’t swipe. He was looking through the cars by the theater where I live. I can watch right out my window and he wouldn’t leave and he was looking in the cars on his bicycle, and I said, get out, and he said, f you or whatever, and so I came out with it and then I went back in because he said he was going to call the police. So I went back in the house and just said, the police will come, you know, that’s it.
“ [Prosecutor]: You said the police came?
“[Defendant]: I think so. I don’t really remember because I — but I didn’t — itwasn’t, you know — it didn’t have anything to do with — it was protecting other people’s property because I don’t even drive.”
Evidence of prior, uncharged misconduct, such as the incident between defendant and the bicyclist, “is not admissible to prove the character of a person in order to show that the person acted in conformity therewith.” OEC 404(3). Such evidence of prior acts may, however, “be admissible for other purposes, such as proof of motive, opportunity, intent, preparation, plan, knowledge, identity, or absence of mistake or accident.” Id. Evidence of prior, uncharged misconduct also may be used to impeach the credibility of the defendant’s testimony. State v. Manrique,
On appeal, defendant asserts that the trial court erred in allowing the state to question him about the incident with the bicyclist because that evidence did not contradict his statement that he had never stabbed anyone before. As a result, defendant argues, the evidence was not proper impeachment and was relevant only as a means to infer that defendant has a violent temper, which is an impermissible basis for admission.
The state responds that the evidence was admissible for impeachment, because defendant had tried to persuade the jury in his opening statement that Johnson was a violent person and that defendant was not violent and only carried a knife for protection. In that context, the state urges, “defendant’s unsolicited testimony that he had never stabbed anyone in the past created an inaccurate perception,” and, thus, the state was entitled to impeach defendant with the prior incident to rebut a misleading inference. The state argues that the impeachment evidence did not have to directly contradict defendant’s testimony “in a literal sense” to be admissible.
We review the admission of evidence for errors of law. State v. Grey,
Although a party may impeach a witness by contradicting the witness’s testimony, see State v. Gibson,
We also reject the state’s argument that the evidence was admissible to impeach defendant’s testimony in order to correct a “misperception” that “defendant had not used his knife in a violent manner in the past.” In the state’s view, a misperception arose through a combination of defendant’s testimony that he had never stabbed anyone before and defense counsel’s opening statement that defendant did not have the “problems” that Johnson did with violent felony convictions and that defendant carried the knife only for protection. The state relies on a number of cases for that argument, including Smith,
The cases offered by the state do not persuade us otherwise. For example, in Smith, the defendant was charged with driving while suspended on a specific day.
Although we conclude that the trial court erred, we cannot reverse defendant’s conviction if that error was harmless. Erroneously admitted evidence is harmless if there is little likelihood that the error affected the jury’s verdict. State v. Davis,
Defendant argues that the error likely affected the jury’s verdict because the jury could have used the evidence to infer that defendant had a violent temperament and thus also infer that defendant was the initial aggressor and used unreasonable force. The dispositive issue that the jury was required to resolve was not whether defendant was the initial aggressor — it being undisputed that the incident started with Johnson putting defendant in a headlock and hitting him — but whether defendant used “force which [defendant] reasonably believe [d] [was] necessary for the purpose [of self-defense].” ORS 161.209. Given the undisputed evidence that what defendant feared was being hit by Johnson again and that he reacted by stabbing Johnson eight times, including in the back of the legs, the error at issue here had little likelihood of affecting the jury’s verdict as to the “reasonable use of force” issue. Accordingly, we affirm.
Affirmed.
Notes
ORS 163.185(l)(a) provides that “[a] person commits the crime of assault in the first degree if the person * * * [intentionally causes serious physical injury to another by means of a deadly or dangerous weapon.”
We note that, because the state elicited the fact statement from defendant on cross-examination, the state also may have been precluded from seeking to impeach the statement on another ground: a party cannot elicit a collateral fact on cross-examination that is beyond the scope of direct examination and then use impeachment by contradiction to introduce extrinsic evidence concerning that collateral fact. See State v. Johnson,
ORS 161.209 provides:
“Except as provided in ORS 161.215 and 161.219, a person is justified in using physical force upon another person for self-defense or to defend a third person from what the person reasonably believes to be the use or imminent use of unlawful physical force, and the person may use a degree of force which the person reasonably believes to be necessary for the purpose.”
