State v. Bishop , 336 Or. App. 161 ( 2024 )


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  • No. 811             November 14, 2024                   161
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE
    STATE OF OREGON
    STATE OF OREGON,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    JOHN LESTER BISHOP,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Clackamas County Circuit Court
    21CR61095; A180148
    Ulanda L. Watkins, Judge.
    Argued and submitted August 28, 2024.
    Peter G. Klym, 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.
    Kate E. Morrow, Assistant Attorney General, argued the
    cause for respondent. On the brief were Ellen F. Rosenblum,
    Attorney General, and Benjamin Gutman, Solicitor General,
    and E. Nani Apo, Assistant Attorney General.
    Before Shorr, Presiding Judge, Pagán, Judge, and Mooney,
    Senior Judge.
    SHORR, P. J.
    Affirmed.
    162   State v. Bishop
    Cite as 
    336 Or App 161
     (2024)                             163
    SHORR, P. J.
    Defendant appeals from a judgment of conviction
    following a bench trial for one count of third-degree theft,
    ORS 164.043. Defendant raises two assignments of error.
    First, defendant assigns error to the trial court’s denial of
    his motion for judgment of acquittal (MJOA). Second, defen-
    dant argues that the trial court erred by failing to offer him
    the opportunity for allocution before imposing sentence. We
    conclude that the trial court did not err, and therefore affirm
    the judgment of conviction.
    We state the facts and all reasonable inferences that
    may be drawn from those facts in the light most favorable
    to the state. State v. Walker, 
    356 Or 4
    , 6, 333 P3d 316 (2014).
    “[W]e do not differentiate between evidence based on the
    timing of its admission, because, on review of the denial of
    an MJOA, we must consider all of the trial evidence, regard-
    less of when the motion was made.” State v. Cox, 
    329 Or App 228
    , 229, 540 P3d 36 (2023).
    On the evening of October 29, 2021, defendant and
    his girlfriend, Lee, went to dine at an all-you-can-eat buffet
    for the price of $19.99 per person, not including drinks. They
    had previously dined at the restaurant. On this occasion,
    they ordered sake for $3.50 and filled their plates at the
    buffet. Lee testified that she took shrimp from the buffet,
    but because defendant does not like seafood, he took and
    ate other food from the buffet. Approximately half an hour
    after they had been seated, they started yelling that there
    was shit in the shrimp. The restaurant owner explained to
    them that the buffet served both whole and peeled shrimp
    for guests to select from according to their preferences. He
    told them that besides shrimp, they could choose from the
    many other items available at the buffet. The couple then
    sat down and ate for another 15-20 minutes. They had three
    or four plates on their table. The couple then came up to the
    front and began yelling, using profanity, and degrading the
    restaurant in front of other customers. Defendant shouted,
    “You guys, Asians, don’t know how to make this shrimp. * * *
    You don’t serve shit to customer.” They offered to pay for the
    sake, but the owner insisted that they pay in full for their
    164                                           State v. Bishop
    meals. They said they did not want to pay for the bill and
    walked out of the restaurant without paying.
    Defendant was charged by information with one
    count of third-degree theft, ORS 164.043. He opted for a
    bench trial, and at the close of the state’s case, moved for
    judgment of acquittal on the ground that the state had not
    met its burden of proving theft. The court denied the motion
    and ultimately found defendant guilty of third-degree theft.
    At sentencing, defense counsel argued that the state’s
    requested jail time was excessive, and offered mitigating
    factors such as defendant’s sobriety and his involvement
    with prison reintegration initiatives. Defense counsel con-
    cluded his statements by saying, “I think 24 hours commu-
    nity service and some time to complete that is a far more
    appropriate outcome than the 15 days that the State rec-
    ommended from the outset of this matter. I submit it with
    that.” The court then proceeded with sentencing, noting
    defendant’s “appalling” conduct both on the day of the inci-
    dent and throughout the trial. As the court was announcing
    the sentence, defense counsel interrupted to ask the court to
    stay the imposition of the sentence for defendant to look into
    appellate options. The court denied the request, and contin-
    ued to read defendant’s sentence. Defendant was sentenced
    to 12 months bench probation, 15 days in jail, $43.48 in res-
    titution, and $429 in attorney fees.
    After the trial court finished reading the sentence,
    defendant asked to speak. Defendant apologized for any dis-
    respect, and said, “[Y]ou did make me realize, if I had that
    situation again, I would definitely handle it a different way.”
    Defendant reiterated his sobriety and that he has “got [his]
    life together.” He told the court, “I don’t feel like I should
    be doing jail time ‘cause * * * I’m out there busting my—my
    tail end working.” The court commended defendant for his
    efforts towards reformation but did not amend the sentence.
    The court reiterated that defendant would be doing jail time
    because of his “horrific” conduct.
    In his first assignment of error, defendant contends
    that the trial court erred in denying his MJOA because the
    evidence was insufficient to prove that he committed the crime
    of theft. In support of that assignment, defendant advances
    Cite as 
    336 Or App 161
     (2024)                              165
    two arguments. He claims first that the record does not show
    that he had the requisite intent to commit theft and second,
    that the state’s theory of the case supported, at best, theft of
    services and not third-degree theft. We review the denial of
    an MJOA by “examining the evidence in the light most favor-
    able to the state to determine whether a rational trier of fact,
    accepting reasonable inferences and reasonable credibility
    choices, could have found the essential element of the crime
    beyond a reasonable doubt.” State v. Cunningham, 
    320 Or 47
    ,
    63, 
    880 P2d 431
     (1994), cert den, 
    514 US 1005
     (1995).
    A person commits theft when, “with intent to deprive
    another of property or to appropriate property to the person
    or to a third person, the person takes, appropriates, obtains
    or withholds such property from an owner thereof.” ORS
    164.015(1). Theft constitutes third-degree theft when the
    amount of property taken is less than $100. ORS 164.043.
    “Property” means “any article, substance or thing of value,
    including * * * tangible and intangible personal property.”
    ORS 164.005(5).
    Defendant argues that the state failed to prove that
    he took food with the requisite intent to steal it. Under ORS
    164.015, a theft requires both a physical taking and the
    intent to deprive. Both the state and the defendant agree
    that a taking occurred when defendant put the food on his
    plate at the buffet. The state argues that defendant had the
    intent to steal upon plating the food, or at minimum, when
    he left the restaurant without paying. Defendant maintains
    that he never had the intent to steal, but rather merely
    refused to pay for unsanitary food. Moreover, defendant con-
    tends that the state’s evidence does not support a reasonable
    inference that he possessed the requisite intent to deprive.
    He cites State v. Simmons, 
    321 Or App 478
    , 516 P3d 1203
    (2022), rev den, 
    370 Or 740
     (2023) in support of his argu-
    ment that his continued eating or later failure to pay does
    not support a reasonable inference that he had the intent
    to deprive upon plating the food. See id. at 485 (concluding
    that the defendant’s later failure to pay did not support an
    inference that he had the requisite intent to avoid payment
    at the outset). But in Simmons, the defendant started mak-
    ing payments on a fraudulently created Comcast account,
    166                                                        State v. Bishop
    and only ceased payment when he was taken into custody
    on an unrelated matter. Id. at 480. Because the defendant
    had made some payments, the evidence did not support a
    reasonable inference that he had the initial intent to avoid
    payment. Id. at 484.1 Simmons does not apply to this case,
    where defendant took food and did not make any payment.
    Here, defendant does not like seafood and never
    took any shrimp from the buffet. He continued to eat after
    complaining aggressively about the shrimp. He made loud,
    disparaging statements and racist comments in front of the
    other guests, and ultimately walked out without paying. We
    conclude that the evidence, viewed in the light most favorable
    to the state, permits a reasonable inference that defendant
    had the requisite intent to deprive the restaurant of food
    without payment. A reasonable factfinder could infer from
    the evidence that defendant never had the intent to pay for
    the food. A factfinder might also infer from the evidence that
    defendant refused to pay based on a dispute with the man-
    ager over the quality of the food that was served and had
    initially intended to pay. But a factfinder is not obligated to
    accept as true a defendant’s “alternative, less incriminating,
    version of what happened.” Cunningham, 
    320 Or at 63-64
    . As
    noted, we must draw reasonable inferences in the light most
    favorable to the state in determining whether the trial court
    erred in denying defendant’s MJOA. Walker, 
    356 Or at 6
    .
    As to defendant’s theft of services argument, he con-
    cedes that he did not specifically argue at trial that he could
    not be convicted of theft because he took a service rather
    than property. We do not resolve the issues of preservation
    or whether defendant could have been charged with theft
    of services, because we conclude that, regardless, defendant
    could be properly charged with theft of property. Food served
    at a restaurant is tangible personal property that has mon-
    etary value, thus meeting the definition of “property” under
    ORS 164.005(5), which, as noted, includes “a substance or
    thing of value” and “tangible property.” The trial court did
    not err in denying defendant’s MJOA.
    1
    Simmons involved ORS 164.125(1)(a), which criminalizes theft of services.
    That statute defines such theft as taking services “with intent to avoid payment
    therefor.”
    Cite as 
    336 Or App 161
     (2024)                             167
    In his second assignment of error, defendant con-
    tends that the trial court erroneously denied him the right
    to be heard from personally and directly without counsel at
    sentencing. Article I, section 11, of the Oregon Constitution
    provides a criminal defendant the right “to be heard by
    himself and counsel.” That right of allocution includes the
    defendant’s right to personally make a case for sentencing
    mitigation before the imposition of sentence. State v. Ross,
    
    331 Or App 570
    , 571, 546 P3d 960 (2024).
    Defendant claims that he “did all that should be
    expected to preserve the error,” and in the event we dis-
    agree, he argues that preservation be excused or that this
    court exercise its discretion to review for plain error. Having
    reviewed the record, we conclude that defendant’s argument
    is unpreserved. Defense counsel argued for mitigation before
    sentencing and interrupted the court mid-sentencing, but
    never indicated that defendant wished to be heard. Because
    defendant had the opportunity to ask to speak and failed to
    exercise his right, there is no reason to excuse preservation.
    Moreover, any error is not plain. Where the defendant does
    not indicate on the record that he wishes to speak, we have
    concluded that there “is no error that we may review.” State
    v. Fern, 
    110 Or App 185
    , 187, 
    822 P2d 1210
     (1991). “Because
    defendant did not in any way indicate to the court that he
    wished to speak” before or during sentencing, “nor does he
    now argue that the right cannot be exercised by counsel,
    the court did not deny him the right of allocution.” State
    v. Juarez-Hernandez, 
    333 Or App 794
    , 796, 553 P3d 1068
    (2024); see also Ross, 331 Or App at 573 (explaining that
    the court did not deny the defendant’s right of allocution
    because he did not indicate that he wished to speak until
    after he was sentenced). Accordingly, the trial court did not
    err, plainly or otherwise.
    Affirmed.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A180148

Citation Numbers: 336 Or. App. 161

Judges: Shorr

Filed Date: 11/14/2024

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/27/2024