State v. Shipley ( 2020 )


Menu:
  •                                  263
    Submitted February 28; case No. 17CR54556 reversed, case No. 18CR04778
    affirmed October 14, 2020
    STATE OF OREGON,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    ROGER WILLIAM SHIPLEY II,
    aka Kevin William Morgan,
    aka Roger Shiple,
    aka Roger William Shipley,
    aka Roger William Shipley, Jr.,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Umatilla County Circuit Court
    17CR54556, 18CR04778;
    A168244 (Control), A168239
    476 P3d 971
    Daniel J. Hill, Judge.
    Ernest G. Lannet, Chief Defender, Criminal Appellate
    Section, and Sarah Laidlaw, Deputy Public Defender, Office
    of Public Defense Services, filed the brief for appellant.
    Ellen F. Rosenblum, Attorney General, Benjamin Gutman,
    Solicitor General, and Philip Thoennes, Assistant Attorney
    General, filed the brief for respondent.
    Before Armstrong, Presiding Judge, and Tookey, Judge,
    and Aoyagi, Judge.
    PER CURIAM
    Case No. 17CR54556 reversed. Case No. 18CR04778
    affirmed.
    264                                                         State v. Shipley
    PER CURIAM
    This is a consolidated criminal appeal. In Case
    No. 17CR54556, defendant was convicted of misdemeanor
    failure to report as a sex offender, ORS 163A.040(3)(a). The
    court discharged defendant’s sentence but ordered defen-
    dant to pay a $100 misdemeanor fine, ORS 137.286(1). On
    appeal, defendant challenges the trial court’s denial of his
    motion for judgment of acquittal, which argued that he
    could not be convicted of a failure-to-report offense because
    the relevant sex registration and reporting obligations did
    not apply to him. In defendant’s view, the triggering event of
    registration—release from custody—occurred before the rel-
    evant registration statutes were enacted. The state concedes
    that, under our reasoning in State v. Driver/Collins, 
    143 Or App 17
    , 22, 
    923 P2d 1272
    , rev den, 
    324 Or 395
     (1996), and
    State v. Clum, 
    216 Or App 1
    , 9, 171 P3d 980 (2007), defen-
    dant was not subject to any sex offender reporting require-
    ments and the trial court erred in concluding otherwise.
    We agree with the state, accept the concession, and reverse
    defendant’s failure-to-report conviction.1
    In Case No. 18CR04778, defendant, on a guilty plea,
    was convicted of first-degree failure to appear and ordered
    to pay a $200 felony fine. Defendant asks that we review the
    imposition of the fine as plain error, ORAP 5.45(1), argu-
    ing that the statute that requires a $200 felony fine, ORS
    137.286 (a court “may waive” the minimum fine “if the court
    finds that requiring payment of the minimum fine would be
    inconsistent with justice,” and that a court “shall consider”
    a defendant’s ability to pay in making “its determination”
    whether to waive the fee), requires an ability-to-pay deter-
    mination and that the trial court failed to do that. Further,
    defendant argues that our case law concerning another stat-
    ute, ORS 161.645 (in “determining whether to impose a fine
    and its amount” a trial court must consider ability to pay),
    supports his argument that the trial court lacked authority
    to impose the felony fine without considering a defendant’s
    ability to pay. See State v. Packer, 
    140 Or App 488
    , 491, 916
    1
    In an additional assignment of error, defendant challenges the imposition
    of the $100 misdemeanor fine, but our reversal of the conviction obviates the need
    to address that assignment.
    Cite as 
    307 Or App 263
     (2020)                            
    265 P2d 322
     (1996) (under ORS 161.645, “a court is required
    first to consider a defendant’s ability to pay a fine”).
    Recently, in State v. Seck, 
    304 Or App 641
    , 642-43,
    468 P3d 641, rev den, 
    366 Or 827
     (2020), we held that it
    was not plain error for the trial court to impose a minimum
    felony fine under ORS 137.286(2) without considering the
    defendant’s financial ability to pay it. In Seck, we pointed
    out that ORS 161.645 and prior cases interpreting that stat-
    ute concern fines other than the $200 mandatory minimum
    fine imposed under ORS 137.286, and we concluded that “it
    is not plain from the text of the statutes that ORS 161.645
    applies to fines imposed under ORS 137.286.” Id. at 643. We
    likewise hold in this case that it was not plain error for the
    trial court to order defendant to pay the $200 felony fine.
    Case No. 17CR54556 reversed. Case No. 18CR04778
    affirmed.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A168244

Filed Date: 10/14/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/10/2024