State v. Theriault , 300 Or. App. 243 ( 2019 )


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  •                                         243
    Argued and submitted May 31; judgment of conviction for assault in the fourth
    degree constituting domestic violence reversed and remanded, otherwise affirmed
    October 23, 2019
    STATE OF OREGON,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    SEAN PATRICK THERIAULT,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Multnomah County Circuit Court
    17CR03181; A165703
    452 P3d 1051
    Defendant appeals a judgment of conviction for fourth-degree assault consti-
    tuting domestic violence. ORS 163.160; ORS 135.230. Defendant assigns error to
    the trial court’s denial of his midtrial motion to require the state to elect which of
    his acts it was relying on to establish the elements of that crime, and the court’s
    refusal to give a jury concurrence instruction. Held: Because the state charged
    defendant with one count of fourth-degree assault but presented evidence at trial
    of multiple separate acts by defendant that could constitute that crime, the trial
    court erred by failing to instruct the jury that the requisite number of jurors
    must agree on which act constituted the crime in order to find defendant guilty.
    The court’s error was not harmless because, considering the evidence and record
    as a whole, jurors could have based their verdicts on different occurrences.
    Judgment of conviction for assault in the fourth degree constituting domestic
    violence reversed and remanded; otherwise affirmed.
    Jerry B. Hodson, Judge.
    Eric Johansen, Deputy Public Defender, argued the
    cause for appellant. Also on the brief was Ernest G. Lannet,
    Chief Defender, Criminal Appellate Section, Office of Public
    Defense Services.
    Greg Rios, Assistant Attorney General, argued the cause
    for respondent. Also on the brief were Ellen F. Rosenblum,
    Attorney General, and Benjamin Gutman, Solicitor General.
    Before Armstrong, Presiding Judge, and Tookey, Judge,
    and Shorr, Judge.
    244                                      State v. Theriault
    SHORR, J.
    Judgment of conviction for assault in the fourth degree
    constituting domestic violence reversed and remanded; other-
    wise affirmed.
    Cite as 
    300 Or App 243
     (2019)                              245
    SHORR, J.
    Defendant appeals from a judgment of conviction
    for fourth-degree assault constituting domestic violence.
    ORS 163.160; ORS 135.230. On appeal, defendant assigns
    error to both the trial court’s denial of defendant’s motion—
    made at trial—to require the state to elect which of defen-
    dant’s acts it was relying on to establish the elements of that
    crime, and the trial court’s refusal to give a “Boots” jury con-
    currence instruction. See State v. Boots, 
    308 Or 371
    , 376-79,
    
    780 P2d 725
     (1989), cert den, 
    510 US 1013
     (1993) (explain-
    ing the importance of jury concurrence on the material
    elements of a crime). We conclude that, because the state
    charged defendant with one count of fourth-degree assault
    but presented evidence at trial of multiple separate acts by
    defendant that could constitute that crime, the trial court
    erred in denying defendant’s requested jury concurrence
    instruction. Accordingly, we reverse and remand.
    The state charged defendant with one count of
    strangulation constituting domestic violence, ORS 163.187,
    and one count of fourth-degree assault constituting domes-
    tic violence, ORS 163.160; ORS 135.230. The operative
    amended information broadly stated the elements of both
    crimes and stated that defendant committed those crimes
    on or about January 17, 2017. The amended information did
    not further allege the specific occurrences of those alleged
    crimes.
    “In determining whether a concurrence instruc-
    tion was required, we must consider all pertinent evidence
    admitted at trial.” State v. Slaviak, 
    296 Or App 805
    , 806,
    440 P3d 114 (2019). The facts underlying the assault charge
    occurred during a period of one to two hours. The state put
    on evidence that, during that time, defendant committed
    several acts that resulted in injuries to defendant’s former
    girlfriend, E.
    The following facts are taken from E’s testimony
    at trial. E and defendant ended their relationship in early
    January, but E continued to stay with defendant at various
    friends’ houses. E and defendant slept at a friend’s apartment
    the night of January 16. The following day, after defendant’s
    friends had left the apartment, E and defendant started
    246                                        State v. Theriault
    to argue. Defendant took E’s phone and held it out of her
    reach. Defendant then “proceeded to push [E] down onto the
    ground.” While on the ground or soon after she was pushed,
    E took defendant’s wallet and threatened to throw the wallet
    over the apartment balcony unless defendant returned her
    phone. In response, defendant “grabbed [E] by the throat”
    and choked her “with one hand.” E threw the wallet over
    the balcony, and defendant released E. Defendant left the
    apartment to find his wallet.
    While defendant was outside locating his wallet,
    E locked the apartment door. When defendant returned, E
    let defendant back inside, still hoping that he would return
    her phone. As E opened the door, defendant “pushed his way
    into the door and pushed [E], and [she] fell on the floor.” E
    recounted falling onto a baby’s “bouncer chair” and hitting
    her “neck right on the side of it.”
    After E fell, she and defendant continued arguing,
    and E resumed her attempts to retrieve her phone. E tes-
    tified that defendant blocked the door and refused to let E
    leave the apartment. At some point during the argument,
    E sat near the balcony door to smoke a cigarette. When E
    finished smoking, defendant pulled her “on top of him” by
    her neck. Defendant was lying on his back with “his arm
    around [her] neck * * * strangling [her]” and holding her
    “[i]n a chokehold.”
    When defendant let go of E, she was able to take her
    phone from defendant’s back pocket. E ran out the front door
    of the apartment and used her phone to call a friend. While
    E spoke to her friend on the phone, defendant followed her
    outside and ripped the phone from E’s hand, cutting her
    nose with his fingernail.
    Defendant returned to the apartment and E fol-
    lowed. When inside, E sat on the couch, while she and defen-
    dant continued to argue. At that point, a resident of the
    apartment, Booth, came home briefly, and E and defendant
    stopped arguing. Booth “was doing something in the kitchen,”
    and he asked E what was going on. E responded that defen-
    dant had “just been throwing [her] around [the] apartment
    for the last hour.” Booth “didn’t really say anything” and left
    Cite as 
    300 Or App 243
     (2019)                                                247
    the apartment. Defendant and E resumed arguing, and E
    was still seated on the couch when defendant approached
    the couch and held E down by the wrists. As defendant held
    her down, E “knock[ed] his glasses off his face” and “bent
    them in half.” Defendant “got mad, really mad, and the
    next thing [E knew] he was punching [her] in the face and
    mouth.” E testified that defendant hit E with his fist on the
    mouth once, and twice on her head, resulting in a cut lip,
    swelling, and bruising to her face, head, and forehead.
    Now holding E by the forearms, defendant told E
    to find his glasses, and then released his grip. E positioned
    herself on the couch on her knees and looked behind the
    couch. Defendant “grabbed [her] off the couch and started
    choking [her]” for the third time. Again, defendant released
    E, who ran outside through the front door, where the res-
    idents of the apartment were waiting. The police arrived
    shortly thereafter.
    Describing her injuries from that day, E testified
    that she “had head contusions, [her] neck was killing [her],”
    and “[her] entire body hurt.” She attributed significant neck
    pain to hitting her neck on the baby furniture. When the
    prosecutor showed E photographs of her injuries, E noted
    bruising on her face and forehead, a cut on her lip, bruis-
    ing on her ribcage, and redness on her neck. A bruise on
    her elbow came from “smacking [her] arm against the wall
    when [defendant] was choking [her] at one point,” which E
    estimated was after defendant first took her phone. Other
    bruises on her arms and wrists were caused by defendant
    “grabbing [E’s] wrists and holding [her] arms at certain
    points.” When asked how long the bruising on her body
    lasted, E replied “about a week and a half.”
    A medical report from E’s hospital visit that eve-
    ning was admitted into evidence. Medical staff wrote that E
    was punched and elbowed in the head and face. The report
    contained several descriptions of injuries, including bruis-
    ing to her face, head, and elbow, as well as “excoriations” to
    her neck.1
    1
    The judge later instructed the jury that the term “excoriation” is defined as
    “one, the act of abrading or wearing off the skin, chafing and excoriation of the
    skin; two, a raw, irritated lesion.”
    248                                        State v. Theriault
    The responding police officer, Hunzeker, also testi-
    fied. During his testimony, Hunzeker recounted defendant’s
    description of the incident. Defendant told Hunzeker that
    both he and E were “pushing and grabbing one another,”
    and that “they both fell into the wall, and * * * that’s where
    she hit her face.” According to defendant, E later climbed on
    defendant’s back, so defendant “hip-tossed” E onto the couch.
    At that point defendant “got on top of her on the couch,”
    and “she grabbed his glasses and threw them behind the
    couch.” As they were “struggling on the couch,” defendant
    “accidentally hit [E] in the face with [his] hand.” Defendant
    also told Hunzeker that, when E tried to get away from
    him, defendant “grabbed her by the arms” and “might have
    caused her pain because he was so upset.” Hunzeker testi-
    fied that he noticed blood on defendant’s knuckles but could
    not identify the source. When Hunzeker later spoke to E,
    she told Hunzeker that defendant “punched her two times in
    the head and face” and put her in a headlock twice. During
    that conversation, E complained of lip, nose, and head pain.
    Hunzeker noticed redness and bruising on her head and a
    cut on her lip. After additional interviews with two other
    witnesses, Hunzeker’s impression of the incident was that it
    was not a “one hundred percent fight.” In his view, “a fight
    happened, there were some arguments,” then “one [person]
    came in and it stopped a little bit. He left and it went on a
    little bit,” then “the two [apartment residents] came in and
    [the fight] stopped.”
    After the state’s case-in-chief, defendant moved the
    trial court to require the state to elect which of the alleged
    acts and injuries the state would rely on as the basis for
    the assault charge, to ensure the requisite number of
    jurors agreed on the particular act constituting the crime.
    Defendant also requested that the court instruct the jury
    that the requisite number of jurors must agree on which act
    constituted the crime in order to find defendant guilty of
    assault. The court denied both motions. The jury convicted
    defendant of assault but acquitted defendant of the strangu-
    lation charge.
    Defendant now appeals, assigning error to the trial
    court’s denial of defendant’s motion to require the state
    to elect and its failure to give defendant’s requested jury
    Cite as 
    300 Or App 243
     (2019)                                            249
    instruction. With respect to both assignments of error,
    defendant argues that the state charged defendant with
    one count of fourth-degree assault but presented evidence
    at trial that defendant committed several acts that could
    constitute that crime. Accordingly, defendant asserts that
    either the state was required to elect which act formed the
    basis for the assault charge or defendant was entitled to an
    instruction requiring the jury to concur as to that act. In
    response, the state contends that jury concurrence was not
    required in this case because defendant engaged in a single,
    ongoing course of conduct constituting assault, rather than
    multiple separate occurrences of the crime.
    A trial court faced with meritorious motions for
    the state’s election and a jury concurrence instruction must
    grant one or the other. See State v. Ashkins, 
    357 Or 642
    ,
    643, 357 P3d 490 (2015) (when the state charges a single
    crime, but the evidence is sufficient for the jury to find that
    there were multiple, separate occurrences of that crime,
    “the state either must elect which occurrence constituted the
    charged crime or, alternatively, the defendant is entitled to
    an instruction that ten or more jurors must concur on which
    occurrence constituted that crime” (emphases added)); State
    v. Teagues, 
    281 Or App 182
    , 189, 383 P3d 320 (2016) (when
    the state charges one count of a crime but the evidence at
    trial substantiates multiple separate occurrences of that
    crime, “the trial court must either require the state to elect
    the occurrence on which it will proceed or instruct the jury
    that the requisite number of jurors must agree on one of
    the multiple occurrences” (emphases added)). In prior cases
    where the defendant assigned error to the trial court’s
    denial of both these motions, we have focused our analysis
    on the denial of the requested jury concurrence instruction.
    See Teagues, 
    281 Or App at 183
     (“Because the trial court
    declined to require an election, it subsequently erred when
    it failed to instruct the jurors that they had to agree on the
    occurrence that constituted the assault.”).
    We follow that approach here, and address only defen-
    dant’s second assignment of error, the trial court’s denial
    of defendant’s requested jury concurrence instruction.2
    2
    Additionally, we note that, under State v. Payne (A163092), requiring
    the state to elect the basis for the crime in closing argument is an inadequate
    250                                                      State v. Theriault
    Whether a trial court is required to give a particular jury
    instruction “is a question of law, which we review for legal
    error, viewing the evidence in support of the instruction in
    the light most favorable to [the party seeking the instruc-
    tion].” 
    Id. at 187
    .
    “The right to jury concurrence arises from Article I,
    section 11, of the Oregon Constitution.” State v. Payne
    (A163092), 
    298 Or App 411
    , 421, 447 P3d 515 (2019). Under
    Article I, section 11, “to return a verdict of guilty, the requi-
    site number of jurors must ‘agree that the state has proved
    each legislatively defined element of a crime.’ ” Mellerio v.
    Nooth, 
    279 Or App 419
    , 429, 379 P3d 560 (2016), rev den,
    
    361 Or 803
     (2017) (quoting State v. Pipkin, 
    354 Or 513
    , 527,
    316 P3d 255 (2013)). There are two situations when special
    measures may be necessary to ensure jury concurrence.
    “One situation occurs when a statute defines one crime but
    specifies alternative ways in which that crime can be com-
    mitted.” Pipkin, 
    354 Or at 516
    . The other situation occurs
    when the state charges a defendant with a single violation of
    a crime, “but the evidence permits the jury to find multiple,
    separate occurrences of that crime.” 
    Id. at 517
    . In the sec-
    ond situation, “the jury must concur as to which occurrence
    constitutes the offense.” Teagues, 
    281 Or App at 193
    . In such
    cases, “a trial court has three primary tools at its disposal
    to ensure a jury bases its verdict on a discrete factual situ-
    ation: a jury instruction, a statement of issues, or a verdict
    form.” Payne, 
    298 Or App at 422
    .
    This case presents the second situation. The evi-
    dence admitted at trial substantiated multiple acts that could
    constitute the crime of fourth-degree assault. Two recent
    cases, Teagues and Slaviak, are exemplary. In Teagues,
    the defendant was charged with one count of strangula-
    tion and one count of fourth-degree assault, but the state
    measure to ensure jury concurrence. 
    298 Or App 411
    , 422, 447 P3d 515 (2019)
    (“Because an Ashkins election exists to ensure jury concurrence, mere argument
    by the parties is insufficient to ensure that the jury only relied on certain evi-
    dence in reaching its verdict. To ensure the jury limits its consideration in the
    manner contemplated by the motion for election, the trial court needs to charge
    the jury in some manner.”). We need not address that in our analysis, however,
    because we conclude that the trial court erred in denying defendant’s requested
    jury concurrence instruction, and we reverse on that basis.
    Cite as 
    300 Or App 243
     (2019)                             251
    presented evidence of two separate occurrences of assault.
    
    281 Or App at 183-84
    . The victim’s roommate was the
    state’s primary witness. He testified that he was awakened
    by sounds of the defendant and the victim arguing, and that
    shortly thereafter he heard a loud thud at the front door.
    The roommate heard more arguing but went back to sleep.
    Later that night, he was awakened again by the victim, who
    told the roommate that the defendant had choked her. The
    roommate observed that the victim’s acrylic nails were bro-
    ken, there was redness on the victim’s neck, and she had a
    scrape on her knee. 
    Id. at 184
    . According to the state, the
    defendant had committed assault either by pushing the vic-
    tim and causing her to scrape her knee outside the front door
    of their house or by choking her inside their house later that
    night. Because the state’s theories “were based on evidence
    of two different actions, which occurred at different times
    and in different locations and resulted in different injuries,”
    the two occurrences were “ ‘temporally, spatially, and sub-
    stantively distinct,’ ” such that “they gave rise to different
    factual questions for the jury to resolve in order to deter-
    mine whether the state had proven the elements of assault.”
    
    Id. at 191
     (quoting Mellerio, 
    279 Or App at 432
    ).
    In Slaviak, we again concluded that a jury concur-
    rence instruction was required. 
    296 Or App at 806
    . In that
    case, the defendant was charged with two counts of first-
    degree sexual abuse. One count alleged that the defendant
    had unlawfully touched the victim’s genital area, while the
    other alleged that the defendant had unlawfully touched the
    victim’s breast. At trial, the victim testified that the defen-
    dant groped her in her bedroom, and then, after she pushed
    him away, the defendant followed the victim to the kitchen,
    where he groped her again. 
    Id. at 806-07
    . During both inci-
    dents, the defendant touched the victim’s genital area and
    breast. Therefore, the evidence admitted at trial would have
    allowed the jury to determine that the defendant had com-
    mitted each count of sexual abuse in either the kitchen or
    the bedroom. Those two instances “were separated tempo-
    rally and spatially” and presented as distinct occurrences,
    such that “different jurors could have voted to convict on
    each count based on different factual findings.” 
    Id. at 811
    .
    252                                         State v. Theriault
    Here, defendant was charged with one count of
    fourth-degree assault in violation of ORS 163.160(1)(a),
    which provides, in part, that “[a] person commits the crime
    of assault in the fourth degree if the person * * * [i]nten-
    tionally, knowingly or recklessly causes physical injury to
    another.” That offense has three elements: “(1) a culpable
    mental state, (2) causation, and (3) physical injury.” Teagues,
    
    281 Or App at 188
    . The state may establish the “physical
    injury” element by proving either “impairment of physical
    condition or substantial pain.” ORS 161.015(7).
    At trial, E testified to various acts by defendant that
    caused her some form of injury. Several of those acts were
    “temporally, spatially, and substantively distinct.” Teagues,
    
    281 Or App at 191
    . That is, they occurred at different times,
    in different spaces, and were the cause of different injuries.
    We do not decide here whether all three of those factors
    must exist for a series of acts to constitute multiple, separate
    occurrences of a crime, but all three exist in the present case.
    According to E, defendant punched her, strangled
    her, grabbed her by the wrists and arms, and pushed her
    into furniture. Those episodes of strangulation, the punches,
    and the pushing were separated by several temporal breaks.
    At least two of those breaks involved defendant or E leaving
    the apartment, and, during another, E and defendant were
    interrupted by a third party. And, as we understand E’s tes-
    timony, it appears that there were several stretches of time,
    over one to two hours, when defendant and E were argu-
    ing, but not engaged in any physical encounter. As our cases
    demonstrate, to be “temporally distinct,” multiple criminal
    occurrences need not be separated by lengthy periods of
    time nor by a complete cessation of the interaction between
    the defendant and the victim. For example, in Slaviak, the
    incidents in the kitchen and bedroom were separated only
    by the time required to walk between those rooms, and the
    defendant pursued the victim throughout. 
    296 Or App at 807
    . Similarly, in Teagues, the victim and the defendant
    argued with one another between the incidents of assault.
    
    281 Or App at 184
    .
    The occurrences of assault here were also “substan-
    tively distinct.” Defendant’s acts were the cause of a variety
    Cite as 
    300 Or App 243
     (2019)                             253
    of different injuries, including bruising and swelling to E’s
    face and mouth, pain and excoriations to her neck, a bruised
    elbow, and bruising on her wrists and arms. As in Teagues,
    these injuries are not properly characterized as “a single
    injury or a cluster of injuries,” but are distinct with respect
    to form and causation. Id. at 193.
    Finally, defendant caused one injury here—the cut
    on E’s nose—outside of the apartment and caused the other
    injuries inside, in various parts of the living room. Again,
    we note that both Teagues and Slaviak indicate that no sig-
    nificant spatial difference is required to conclude that sep-
    arate criminal occurrences are “spatially distinct.” Thus,
    although several of the underlying acts occurred in substan-
    tially the same location, that factor exists here as well.
    Accordingly, the occurrences were sufficiently dis-
    tinct to generate “different factual questions for the jury to
    resolve in order to determine whether the state had proven
    the elements of assault.” Id. at 191. That is, to determine
    whether defendant was guilty of assault for punching E,
    the jury would have to determine whether defendant had in
    fact punched her, whether that action caused the cut on her
    lip, the bruising, the swelling to her face, or some combina-
    tion of those injuries, and whether that constituted physical
    impairment or substantial pain. Those same factual ques-
    tions would arise should the jury consider separate inci-
    dents of choking, pushing, and grabbing of E’s wrists and
    arms. Because “different jurors could have voted to convict
    on each count based on different factual findings,” a jury
    concurrence instruction was required. Slaviak, 
    296 Or App at 811
    .
    In support of its argument that defendant was
    engaged in a single course of conduct, the state relies on
    State v. White, 
    115 Or App 104
    , 
    838 P2d 605
     (1992), and
    State v. Greeley, 
    220 Or App 19
    , 184 P3d 1191 (2008). Both
    are distinguishable from the present case. In White, the
    defendant was charged with menacing after brandishing a
    flashlight and then a gun at his neighbor. 
    115 Or App at 106
    .
    The defendant argued that jury concurrence was required
    because either the defendant’s act involving the gun or his
    254                                        State v. Theriault
    act involving the flashlight could have constituted menacing.
    We held that jury concurrence was not required, explaining
    that, because intent to place another person in fear is the
    “gravamen” of menacing, the state is not required to prove
    a single act to support a conviction for menacing. Rather, a
    defendant’s entire course of conduct may be evidence of that
    defendant’s intent to instill fear in the victim. 
    115 Or App at 107-08
    . In Greeley, the defendant was convicted of reck-
    less driving. We explained that the defendant “could have
    committed several acts that, alternatively, constituted evi-
    dence of a single element—recklessness—in an episode of
    driving that lasted no more than four minutes.” 
    220 Or App at 25-26
    . In each of those cases, the state relied on evidence
    of the defendants’ separate acts as means of establishing a
    single element of the crime.
    Here, evidence of the acts underlying the assault
    charge could not properly constitute alternative means
    of establishing a single element of the crime. As we have
    explained, the factual occurrence underlying the assault
    charge implicates factual questions relating to each ele-
    ment: defendant’s mental state, the corresponding injury,
    and defendant’s causation of that injury.
    Lastly, we conclude that the trial court’s error was
    not harmless. In criminal cases, a verdict may be affirmed,
    despite error, if there is “little likelihood that the error
    affected the verdict.” Ashkins, 
    357 Or at 660
    . In determining
    whether a trial court’s erroneous denial of requested jury
    instructions is harmless, “the court considers the instruc-
    tions as a whole and in the context of the evidence and
    record at trial, including the parties’ theories of the case
    with respect to the various charges and defenses at issue.”
    
    Id.
     A court’s erroneous failure to give a jury concurrence
    instruction is not harmless when “jurors could have based
    their verdicts on different occurrences.” Teagues, 
    281 Or App at 194
    .
    The state asserts that the trial court’s error was
    harmless because the state focused on a single underlying
    occurrence—the punches—during its closing argument
    to the jury, thereby electing one theory of the assault. We
    Cite as 
    300 Or App 243
     (2019)                             255
    disagree for two reasons. First, we have recently expressed
    doubt that a state’s voluntary election during closing argu-
    ment is, on its own, an effective safeguard against jury
    nonconcurrence. See Payne, 
    298 Or App at 422
     (“Because
    an Ashkins election exists to ensure jury concurrence,
    mere argument by the parties is insufficient to ensure
    that the jury only relied on certain evidence in reach-
    ing its verdict.”). Second, even assuming that the state’s
    closing argument could be a reason to consider the error
    here harmless, because the state repeatedly referred to
    E’s pain, bruising, and excoriations to her neck as “inju-
    ries” during the trial, we are not persuaded that the state’s
    argument was sufficiently clear to constitute an election.
    Although the state did narrow its focus in closing argu-
    ment during a discussion of the “physical injury” element, it
    recounted several of E’s other injuries at other points in its
    argument.
    Considering the issue in the context of the evi-
    dence and record as a whole, jurors in this case “could have
    based their verdicts on different occurrences.” Teagues, 
    281 Or App at 194
    . In Ashkins, the defendant was entitled to a
    concurrence instruction, but the trial court’s error in deny-
    ing the instruction was harmless. 
    357 Or at 664
    . In that
    case, the state’s evidence regarding the underlying factual
    occurrences was almost exclusively undifferentiated and
    unspecific victim testimony, whereas the defense was a
    denial that any of the alleged crimes had occurred. Based on
    the evidence and the parties’ theories, the Supreme Court
    concluded that the evidence did not suggest the jury might
    reach different conclusions as to different occurrences. That
    is, because the evidence was not specific, and the defense did
    not focus on refuting specific instances of the crime, the jury
    necessarily found the victim credible as to all the alleged
    occurrences. 
    Id. at 662-63
    .
    In contrast, in Mellerio, we concluded that the erro-
    neous denial of a jury instruction was not harmless because,
    unlike in Ashkins, there were “circumstantial and eviden-
    tiary distinctions” between each of the factual occurrences at
    issue. 
    279 Or App at 436
    . There, the defendant was charged
    with, among other things, two counts of coercion pertaining
    256                                         State v. Theriault
    to two different victims. At trial, the evidence substantiated
    two instances of coercion for each count. According to the
    only testifying victim, the defendant compelled the victims
    to abstain from asking for help from the residents of a house
    and, later, disclosing the defendant’s conduct to the police.
    
    Id. at 432
    . As to the first instance, the residents of the house
    testified that the victims did not appear concerned and that
    they had opportunity to ask for help outside of the defendant’s
    presence. As to the second, there was evidence that the non-
    testifying victim did contact the police. We concluded that
    that evidence created instance-specific questions of credibil-
    ity regarding the victim’s testimony. As a result, there was
    more than a “mere possibility” that “individual jurors were
    persuaded by [the victim’s] testimony as to one of the alleged
    incidents but not the other, or vice-versa, yielding an imper-
    missible ‘mix-and-match’ verdict.” 
    Id. at 436
    .
    The present case is more analogous to Mellerio
    than Ashkins in several respects. The defense here was
    particularized, as opposed to a sweeping denial of the alle-
    gations like that in Ashkins. Defendant focused on creating
    doubt with respect to specific incidents alleged by E, point-
    ing out discrepancies between her testimony, the medical
    report, and the police officer’s testimony. But defendant
    also highlighted evidence that corroborated E’s account of
    certain injuries, like the medical report’s inclusion of the
    excoriations to the neck, hematomas on the forehead, bruis-
    ing on the elbow, and the fall into the baby furniture that
    caused pain in E’s neck. And, as in Mellerio, some jurors
    could have been persuaded by E’s testimony as to one inci-
    dent, but not others, yielding a “mix-and-match” verdict.
    Both the medical report and Hunzeker’s testimony could,
    at least potentially, support inferences that contradicted
    portions of E’s testimony. Moreover, the jury acquitted
    defendant of the strangulation charge. While some jurors
    might have voted to acquit defendant of strangulation
    because they questioned E’s testimony with respect to the
    choking, others may have been persuaded by E, but decided
    an instance of choking better supported a conviction for
    assault. Accordingly, we conclude that the trial court’s erro-
    neous denial of the jury concurrence instruction was not
    harmless.
    Cite as 
    300 Or App 243
     (2019)                           257
    Judgment of conviction for assault in the fourth
    degree constituting domestic violence reversed and remanded;
    otherwise affirmed.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A165703

Citation Numbers: 300 Or. App. 243

Judges: Shorr

Filed Date: 10/23/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/10/2024