State v. Dennis ( 2020 )


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  •                                       595
    Argued and submitted February 28; in A169176, remanded for resentencing,
    otherwise affirmed; in A172819, affirmed April 15, 2020
    STATE OF OREGON,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    ROBERT EDWARD DENNIS,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Linn County Circuit Court
    17CR03409;
    A169176 (Control), A172819
    464 P3d 518
    Defendant was convicted of driving under the influence of intoxicants and
    driving while suspended. At his sentencing hearing, the trial court told defen-
    dant that it would impose 36 months of probation with a number of conditions.
    The trial court then entered a written judgment, which, in addition to impos-
    ing the sentence and probation terms described at the sentencing hearing, also
    required, for the first time, that defendant pay three particular fees. Defendant
    appeals, assigning error to the imposition of the three fees outside his presence.
    Held: The trial court erred in imposing the three fees for the first time in the
    written judgment. At least one of those errors was not harmless, so resentencing
    is necessary.
    In A169176, remanded for resentencing; otherwise affirmed. In A172819,
    affirmed.
    DeAnn L. Novotny, Judge.
    Kyle Krohn, Deputy Public Defender, argued the cause
    for appellant. Also on the briefs was Ernest G. Lannet,
    Chief Defender, Criminal Appellate Section, Office of Public
    Defense Services.
    Jennifer S. Lloyd, 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 Aoyagi, Judge.
    AOYAGI, J.
    In A169176, remanded for resentencing; otherwise affirmed.
    In A172819, affirmed.
    596                                          State v. Dennis
    AOYAGI, J.
    Defendant was convicted of misdemeanor driving
    under the influence of intoxicants, ORS 813.010, and driving
    while suspended, ORS 811.175. At defendant’s sentencing
    hearing, the trial court told defendant that it would impose
    36 months of probation with a number of conditions, includ-
    ing, as relevant here, that defendant “report to court moni-
    toring services,” “attend a victim impact panel,” and “have a
    mandatory alcohol evaluation and participate [in] and com-
    plete any treatment that’s recommended.” The trial court
    also told defendant that it was imposing a $2,000 “min-
    imum fine” under ORS 813.010(6)(c) and a $255 DUII fee
    under ORS 813.030 but that it was not imposing attorney
    fees.
    The trial court entered a written judgment in
    September 2018 that reflected the foregoing sentencing
    provisions but also imposed special conditions of probation
    requiring defendant to pay three fees that it had not men-
    tioned at his sentencing hearing: (1) “the monitoring fee”
    associated with court monitoring services, (2) “the fee” asso-
    ciated with the victim impact panel, and (3) a “$150.00 eval-
    uation fee” associated with the substance abuse evaluation.
    Defendant appeals the September 2018 judgment, assign-
    ing error to the imposition of those three fees outside his
    presence.
    A criminal defendant has a right to be present at
    sentencing. State v. Baccaro, 
    300 Or App 131
    , 137, 452 P3d
    1022 (2019). We have repeatedly held that a trial court errs
    when it imposes fines or fees in a written judgment that it
    did not pronounce at sentencing. E.g., 
    id.
     (written judgment
    imposed $100 fee not pronounced in the defendant’s pres-
    ence); State v. Coghill, 
    298 Or App 818
    , 819, 448 P3d 1195
    (2019) (written judgment imposed $255 fee not pronounced in
    the defendant’s presence); State v. Broyles, 
    296 Or App 358
    ,
    359, 438 P3d 476 (2019) (written judgment imposed larger
    fine than pronounced in the defendant’s presence); State v.
    Brooks, 
    285 Or App 54
    , 57, 396 P3d 302, rev den, 
    361 Or 803
    (2017) (written judgment imposed $25 assessments not pro-
    nounced in the defendant’s presence); State v. Kasper, 
    275 Or App 423
    , 426-27, 363 P3d 1289 (2015) (written judgment
    Cite as 
    303 Or App 595
     (2020)                                              597
    imposed $210 in attorney fees not pronounced in the defen-
    dant’s presence).1
    Here, as noted, defendant argues that the trial court
    erred because it did not pronounce the three fees at sentenc-
    ing but instead imposed them for the first time in the writ-
    ten judgment.2 In response, the state essentially concedes
    that the trial court erred but argues that the appeal is moot
    or, alternatively, that the errors were harmless.
    With respect to mootness, we are unpersuaded that
    the appeal is moot. Although the trial court continued the
    terms of probation in a later judgment entered in September
    2019, it did not impose the terms anew. Indeed, the trial
    court expressly declined to “reiterate the fines and fees after
    the fact,” as the state had requested, and instead simply
    continued the terms of probation. Under the circumstances,
    the appeal is not moot.
    Turning to the merits, the only significant question
    is harmlessness. The state argues that any error was harm-
    less, at least with respect to the substance abuse evaluation
    fee, because it is a mandatory fee, and the victim impact
    panel fee, because defendant had already been ordered to
    attend a victim impact panel in a different case.
    1
    “The right to be present at sentencing has both statutory and consti-
    tutional sources.” State v. Jacobs, 
    200 Or App 665
    , 671, 117 P3d 290 (2005)
    (identifying the statutory source as ORS 137.030 and the constitutional
    sources as Article I, section 11, of the Oregon Constitution, and the Fourteenth
    Amendment to the United States Constitution). The statutory right is lim-
    ited to felonies. ORS 137.030 (requiring the defendant to “be personally pres-
    ent” for giving of judgment on a felony conviction, but not a misdemeanor
    conviction). Here, defendant was convicted of misdemeanors, so he necessar-
    ily relies on the constitutional right. Although we have applied the principle
    more often to felonies, we have also applied it to misdemeanors—see, e.g.,
    Baccaro, 
    300 Or App at 137
     (the trial court erred by imposing a fee outside
    the defendant’s presence as part of a misdemeanor sentence); Coghill, 298
    Or App at 819 (accepting the state’s concession that the trial court erred by
    imposing a fee outside the defendant’s presence as part of a misdemeanor
    sentence)—and the state does not argue for any distinction between felonies and
    misdemeanors.
    2
    Defendant also challenges the imposition of the fees as not reasonably
    related “to the crime of conviction or the needs of the probationer for the pro-
    tection of the public or reformation of the probationer, or both.” ORS 137.540(2)
    (imposing limitations on special conditions of probation). However, we need not
    reach that issue given our disposition. See State v. Anotta, 
    302 Or App 176
    , 177
    n 1, 460 P3d 543 (2020) (similar disposition).
    598                                                        State v. Dennis
    Defendant argues that, even if the the substance
    abuse evaluation fee was mandatory, that does not make the
    error in imposing it outside his presence harmless, because,
    if he had known about the fee, he could have tried to per-
    suade the trial court to reduce other fees to offset it given
    his financial circumstances. Cf. Baccaro, 
    300 Or App at 137
    (holding that imposing fee outside of the defendant’s pres-
    ence was not harmless, even though the fee was mandatory,
    because defendant could have asked the court to exercise
    its discretion to suspend that part of the sentence); State
    v. Jacobs, 
    200 Or App 665
    , 674, 117 P3d 290 (2005) (hold-
    ing that trial court’s error in pronouncing judgment out-
    side the defendant’s presence was not harmless, because it
    denied the defendant the opportunity to plead for leniency
    or make any other argument or statement about his sen-
    tence). Defendant further argues that the state has made
    no harmlessness argument regarding the monitoring fee,
    which defendant contends was waivable, and that there is
    nothing in the record to indicate that defendant was ordered
    to pay the victim impact panel fee in the other case men-
    tioned by the state.
    Because we conclude that the trial court erred
    in imposing the three challenged fees outside defendant’s
    presence and that at least one of those errors (the victim
    impact panel fee) was not harmless, we reverse and remand
    for resentencing. See ORS 138.257(4) (requiring remand for
    resentencing if we determine that the trial court commit-
    ted an error that requires resentencing, and providing that
    the trial court “may impose a new sentence for any convic-
    tion” on remand).3 We need not address the parties’ harm-
    lessness arguments as to the other two fees that defendant
    challenges, given that defendant will be resentenced in any
    event.
    Finally, after appealing the September 2018 judg-
    ment (A169176), defendant also appealed the September
    2019 judgment (A172819), and we consolidated those appeals
    3
    ORS 138.257(4) applies because the judgment on appeal was entered after
    January 1, 2018. State v. Tison, 
    292 Or App 369
    , 372 n 3, 424 P3d 823, rev den,
    
    363 Or 744
     (2018); see also State v. Toombs, 
    302 Or App 173
    , 174 n 2, 460 P3d 533
    (2020) (stating that ORS 138.257(4) applies to all misdemeanors and felonies).
    Cite as 
    303 Or App 595
     (2020)                           599
    at defendant’s request. It appears that defendant appealed
    the September 2019 judgment out of an excess of caution,
    because of the state’s mootness argument regarding the first
    appeal. Given our disposition and the lack of any assign-
    ment of error with respect to the September 2019 judgment,
    we affirm that judgment. See State v. Snyder, 
    281 Or App 308
    , 310 n 1, 383 P3d 357 (2016) (similar disposition).
    In A169176, remanded for resentencing; otherwise
    affirmed. In A172819, affirmed.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A169176

Judges: Aoyagi

Filed Date: 4/15/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/10/2024