State v. Ramirez ( 2021 )


Menu:
  •                                        117
    Submitted September 19, 2019; resubmitted en banc September 21, 2020;
    remanded for resentencing, otherwise affirmed June 3, 2021
    STATE OF OREGON,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    RICARDO SANTOS RAMIREZ,
    aka Sergio Martinez Gonzales,
    aka Ricardo Santo Ramirez,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Umatilla County Circuit Court
    17CR39991; A167114
    493 P3d 522
    Defendant appeals a judgment of conviction for driving under the influence
    of intoxicants (DUII), ORS 813.010, contending, among other things, that the
    trial court erred in relying on two earlier out-of-state convictions in permanently
    revoking defendant’s driving privileges under ORS 809.235(1)(b). Specifically, he
    contends that the trial court erred in concluding that his Washington convic-
    tion for first-degree negligent driving qualified as a predicate offense under ORS
    809.235(1)(b)(B). Held: The trial court erred. Under ORS 809.235(1)(b)(B), an out-
    of-state conviction cannot serve as a predicate offense unless the offense requires
    proof that the person’s impaired driving was causally related to the person’s use
    of an intoxicant. The Washington offense that the trial court relied on in perma-
    nently revoking defendant’s driving privileges does not have that requirement.
    Remanded for resentencing; otherwise affirmed.
    En Banc
    Eva J. Temple, Judge.
    Ernest G. Lannet, Chief Defender, Criminal Appellate
    Section, and Sarah De La Cruz, Deputy Public Defender,
    Office of Public Defense Services, filed the brief for appellant.
    Ellen F. Rosenblum, Attorney General, Benjamin Gutman,
    Solicitor General, and Hannah K. Hoffman, Assistant
    Attorney General, filed the brief for respondent.
    Before Egan, Chief Judge, and Armstrong, Ortega, DeVore,
    Lagesen, Tookey, DeHoog, Shorr, James, Aoyagi, Powers,
    Mooney, and Kamins, Judges.
    118                                       State v. Ramirez
    DeHOOG, J.
    Remanded for resentencing; otherwise affirmed.
    DeHoog, J., filed the opinion of the court in which
    Armstrong, Ortega, Lagesen, Shorr, James, Aoyagi, Powers,
    and Kamins, JJ., joined.
    Mooney, J., dissented and filed an opinion in which Egan,
    C. J., and DeVore and Tookey, JJ., joined.
    Cite as 
    312 Or App 117
     (2021)                                                  119
    DeHOOG, J.
    Defendant appeals a judgment of conviction for driv-
    ing under the influence of intoxicants (DUII), ORS 813.010,
    contending, among other things, that the trial court erred
    in relying on two earlier out-of-state convictions in perma-
    nently revoking defendant’s driving privileges under ORS
    809.235(1)(b).1 In his first assignment of error, defendant
    argues that the trial court erred in relying on a California
    judgment of conviction for DUII despite there being insuf-
    ficient evidence that defendant was the person named in
    the judgment. In defendant’s second assignment of error, he
    contends that the trial court erred in concluding that his
    Washington conviction for first-degree negligent driving
    qualified as a predicate offense under ORS 809.235(1)(b)(B).
    For the following reasons, we agree with defendant that his
    Washington conviction did not qualify under that statute
    and, therefore, remand for resentencing.2
    The relevant facts are procedural. Defendant
    entered a plea of guilty to DUII without sentencing conces-
    sions from the state. At the sentencing hearing, the state
    argued that, although defendant’s current DUII conviction
    did not qualify as a felony because at least one of his prior
    convictions was too old, he did have two previous convictions
    for “DUI type offenses” that, collectively, triggered the
    1
    Under Oregon’s motor vehicle laws, a person’s driving privileges must be
    revoked upon a third or subsequent conviction for one of various driving offenses,
    including:
    “A driving under the influence of intoxicants offense in another jurisdiction
    that involved the impaired driving of a vehicle due to the use of intoxicat-
    ing liquor, cannabis, a controlled substance, an inhalant or any combination
    thereof.”
    ORS 809.235(1)(b)(B). The text of ORS 809.235(1)(b) is set out more fully below. 312
    Or App at 122-23. Although the statute refers to revoking licenses “permanently,”
    a driver may petition the court for reinstatement after 10 years. ORS 809.235(2).
    2
    In light of our conclusion that the trial court erred in relying on defendant’s
    Washington conviction as a basis for revoking his driving privileges, we need not
    further consider his first assignment of error, as it is undisputed that the manda-
    tory revocation provision of ORS 809.235(1)(b) would not be triggered unless both
    the Washington and California convictions qualified as prior convictions under
    the statute. Furthermore, we need not address defendant’s related but undevel-
    oped argument that the trial court erred in imposing a fine, although we note
    that the court indicated that it was exercising its discretion in determining the
    amount of the fine and not strictly relying on the provisions of ORS 809.235 in
    doing so.
    120                                               State v. Ramirez
    mandatory license revocation provisions of ORS 809.235
    (1)(b). As relevant here, one of the convictions was for the
    Washington offense of first-degree negligent driving, which
    Washington law defines, in part, as follows:
    “(1)(a) A person is guilty of negligent driving in the
    first degree if he or she operates a motor vehicle in a man-
    ner that is both negligent and endangers or is likely to
    endanger any person or property, and exhibits the effects
    of having consumed liquor or marijuana or any drug * * *.”
    Revised Code of Washington (RCW) 46.61.5249. The state
    described the negligent-driving conviction as a “pled down
    DUI” and told the court that the underlying plea petition
    included defendant’s admission to “operat[ing a] motor vehicle
    in a negligent [manner] by exhibiting the effects of consum-
    ing alcohol.” The state further explained that, as a result of
    that conviction, defendant had been ordered to undergo alco-
    hol and substance abuse counseling and install an ignition
    interlock device.
    Defendant objected, arguing that the Washington
    conviction did not qualify as a prior conviction under ORS
    809.235(1)(b). He argued that what mattered was the “crime
    of conviction,” and not any “potential statutory equivalents”
    or whether the sentence that had been imposed included
    probation terms typical in DUII cases.
    The trial court concluded that defendant’s Washington
    conviction qualified as a predicate offense under ORS
    809.235(1)(b). Recognizing that an offense’s “name is not
    always indicative of the nature of the crime,” the court
    expressed its understanding that, under the case law, it
    was required to compare the elements of the Washington
    offense to the elements of DUII in Oregon. After examining
    the Washington statute, considering its associated defini-
    tions for “negligent” and “exhibits the effects of having con-
    sumed liquor or marijuana or any drug,” and comparing it to
    the offense of DUII in Oregon, the court concluded that the
    offenses were sufficiently similar. The court explained:
    “So it is not identical to driving under the influence of intox-
    icants, but it does basically include an element of being
    under the influence of alcohol and marijuana, and driving
    in a way that is negligent, so it’s not exactly the same, but it
    Cite as 
    312 Or App 117
     (2021)                                 121
    is * * * I would say more similar to driving under the influ-
    ence than reckless driving, for example, because it includes
    the element of being under the influence or exhibiting the
    effects of consuming an intoxicant.”
    Based upon its conclusion that defendant’s negligent-driving
    conviction was for an offense sufficiently similar to DUII
    under Oregon law, the court relied on that conviction—
    together with the California conviction, which it accepted
    as being defendant’s—and permanently revoked defendant’s
    driving privileges. Defendant now appeals, contending that
    the trial court erred in revoking his driving privileges
    based, in part, on his Washington conviction for negligent
    driving.
    On appeal, defendant reprises his challenge to the
    trial court’s use of his Washington conviction, but he takes
    a slightly different tack. Relying on our decisions in State v.
    Rawleigh, 
    222 Or App 121
    , 192 P3d 292 (2008), and State v.
    Mersman, 
    216 Or App 194
    , 172 P3d 654 (2007), rev den, 
    344 Or 390
     (2008), abrogated by State v. Guzman, 
    366 Or 18
    , 46,
    455 P3d 485 (2019), he recognizes that a “statutory counter-
    part” to ORS 813.010 from another jurisdiction qualifies as
    a predicate offense under ORS 809.235(1)(b), but he argues
    that the first-degree negligent driving statute does not qual-
    ify as a statutory counterpart to Oregon’s DUII statute. See
    ORS 809.235(1)(b)(A)(ii) (providing that a “statutory coun-
    terpart to ORS 813.010 in another jurisdiction” is a predi-
    cate offense under ORS 809.235(1)(b)). Citing our decision in
    Mersman for the proposition that, for an out-of-state statute
    to qualify as a statutory counterpart to ORS 813.010, the
    two statutes must be “either remarkably similar or have the
    same use, role, or characteristics,” defendant explains why,
    in his view, the negligent-driving statute does not satisfy
    that test. Mersman, 
    216 Or App at 203-04
    .
    The state, in turn, argues that defendant’s “stat-
    utory counterpart” argument is beside the point, because
    proving that Washington’s first-degree negligent-driving
    statute is a statutory counterpart to ORS 813.010 is only one
    of several ways to establish it as a predicate offense under
    ORS 809.235(1)(b). See ORS 809.235(1)(b)(A) (treating, as
    predicate offenses, prior convictions under ORS 813.010
    122                                                       State v. Ramirez
    or a “statutory counterpart”). Here, the state argues, the
    trial court properly treated defendant’s Washington con-
    viction as a predicate offense under ORS 809.235(1)(b)(B).
    Citing Dyrdahl v. DMV, 
    204 Or App 509
    , 131 P3d 770
    (2006), the state argues that that provision requires only
    that the out-of-state provision “criminalize activity that is
    ‘substantially similar’ to activity that Oregon considers to
    be ‘driving under the influence.’ ” And, quoting a decision
    of the Washington Court of Appeals, the state reasons that
    “the Washington statute, RCW 46.61.5249(1)(a), is a ‘driving
    under the influence of intoxicants offense’ because it crim-
    inalizes driving dangerously while ‘exhibit[ing] the effects
    of having consumed liquor or marijuana or any drug.’ ” See
    State v. Mullen, 186 Wash App 321, 334, 345 P3d 26 (2015)
    (stating, in dictum, that a “person may not be guilty of first
    degree negligent driving unless he is under the influence of
    alcohol or drugs”).3
    As we will explain, we agree that the state was not
    required to establish that the Washington statute was a
    statutory counterpart to ORS 813.010 for the trial court to
    treat it as a predicate offense. We conclude, however, that
    defendant’s conviction for first-degree negligent driving
    under RCW 46.61.5249 did not fall within the provisions
    of ORS 809.235(1)(b)(B), the statute that the state relies on
    in this appeal. Accordingly, the trial court erred in relying
    on defendant’s Washington conviction as a basis for perma-
    nently revoking defendant’s driving privileges.
    Before addressing that issue, we set out more com-
    pletely the license-revocation provision at issue in this case.
    As relevant here, ORS 809.235(1) provides:
    “(b) The court shall order that a person’s driving priv-
    ileges be permanently revoked if the person is convicted of
    felony driving while under the influence of intoxicants in
    violation of ORS 813.010 or if the person is convicted for a
    third or subsequent time of any of the following offenses in
    any combination:
    “(A) Driving while under the influence of intoxicants
    in violation of:
    3
    The relevant text of RCW 46.61.5249 is set out below. 312 Or App at 128.
    Cite as 
    312 Or App 117
     (2021)                                               123
    “(i) ORS 813.010;[4] or
    “(ii) The statutory counterpart to ORS 813.010 in
    another jurisdiction.
    “(B) A driving under the influence of intoxicants
    offense in another jurisdiction that involved the impaired
    driving of a vehicle due to the use of intoxicating liquor,
    cannabis, a controlled substance, an inhalant or any com-
    bination thereof.
    “(C) A driving offense in another jurisdiction that
    involved operating a vehicle while having a blood alcohol
    content above that jurisdiction’s permissible blood alcohol
    content.”
    As framed by the trial court’s decision and the
    arguments on appeal, our primary analytical task in this
    case is to construe ORS 809.235(1)(b)(B), and particularly to
    determine whether the Washington offense of first-degree
    negligent driving is, within the meaning of that provision,
    “[a] driving under the influence of intoxicants offense in
    another jurisdiction that involved the impaired driving of a
    vehicle due to the use of intoxicating liquor, cannabis, a con-
    trolled substance, an inhalant or any combination thereof.”
    That question requires us to determine the meaning of both
    ORS 809.235(1)(b) and RCW 46.61.5249, and we review the
    trial court’s application of those provisions for legal error. See,
    e.g., Alfieri v. Solomon, 
    358 Or 383
    , 391, 365 P3d 99 (2015)
    (reviewing for legal error trial court actions that turned on
    proper interpretation of a statute). In performing that task,
    we rely, in part, on the interpretive framework set out by
    the Supreme Court in State v. Gaines, 
    346 Or 160
    , 171-72
    206 P3d 1042 (2009) (evaluating statutory text in context,
    considering any helpful legislative history, and turning to
    canons of construction when necessary), and, to the degree
    4
    Oregon’s DUII statute, ORS 813.010, provides, in relevant part:
    “(1) A person commits the offense of driving while under the influence of
    intoxicants if the person drives a vehicle while the person:
    “(a) Has 0.08 percent or more by weight of alcohol in the blood of the per-
    son as shown by chemical analysis of the breath or blood of the person * * *;
    “(b) Is under the influence of intoxicating liquor, cannabis, a controlled
    substance or an inhalant; or
    “(c) Is under the influence of any combination of intoxicating liquor, can-
    nabis, a controlled substance and an inhalant.”
    124                                                       State v. Ramirez
    it is appropriate, on Washington decisional law regarding
    the interpretation and meaning of that state’s laws.
    In arguing that defendant’s negligent-driving con-
    viction falls under ORS 809.235(1)(b)(B), the state, citing
    the Washington Court of Appeals’ decision in Mullen,
    focuses on the first part of that provision and contends that
    the Washington conviction was for a “driving under the
    influence of intoxicants offense.” Although the state quotes
    ORS 809.235(1)(b)(B) more completely in other parts of its
    brief, in our view, the state pays inadequate attention to the
    statutory language that closely follows the state’s empha-
    sized language of “driving under the influence of intoxi-
    cants offense,” namely, the requirement that the offense
    be one “that involved the impaired driving of a vehicle due
    to the use of intoxi[cants].” ORS 809.235(1)(b)(B) (emphasis
    added). And, because defendant’s Washington conviction
    cannot serve as a predicate offense unless it satisfies ORS
    809.235(1)(b)(B) in full, we will focus our assessment of that
    provision on the latter language, without deciding whether
    the Washington statute might otherwise be deemed to
    define a “driving under the influence of intoxicants offense.”5
    We first consider the specific text of the statute. See
    Gaines, 
    346 Or at 171
     (“[T]here is no more persuasive evi-
    dence of the intent of the legislature than the words by which
    the legislature undertook to give expression to its wishes.”
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.)). Here, the only terms
    in the latter part of ORS 809.235(1)(b)(B) that appear at all
    susceptible to dispute are the phrases “impaired driving”
    and “due to the use.” And, because it is ultimately disposi-
    tive, we focus our attention on the latter phrase, “due to the
    use,” both in isolation and in the context in which it appears.
    The phrase “due to the use” consists of words of com-
    mon usage; thus, following our typical practice, we may con-
    sider a standard dictionary to determine how those words
    are ordinarily understood. E.g., State v. Baker-Krofft, 348
    5
    Similarly, because the state effectively concedes that the Washington stat-
    ute is not a statutory counterpart to ORS 813.010 and advances no argument that
    it satisfies any part of ORS 809.235(1)(b) other than ORS 809.235(1)(b)(B), we do
    not decide whether any other provision might have allowed the trial court to rely
    on the conviction as it did.
    Cite as 
    312 Or App 117
     (2021)                                             
    125 Or 655
    , 661, 239 P3d 226 (2010) (explaining that, when the
    legislature has not defined statutory terms, “we look to the
    dictionary to determine their ordinary meaning”). And, as
    it appears here, the prepositional phrase “due to” most likely
    means “because of.” See Webster’s Third New Int’l Dictionary
    699 (unabridged ed 2002). Although the phrase “because of”
    also appears in the dictionary, its principle definition does
    not provide much, if any, clarity. See Webster’s at 194 (defin-
    ing “because of” as meaning “by reason of” or “on account
    of”). However, the ordinary meaning of “because” supports
    a preliminary understanding that the expression “due to
    the use” in ORS 809.235(1)(b)(B) is intended to convey an
    element of causation, that is, a requirement that, to fall
    within that provision, an offense must involve impairment
    (of either driving or a driver) that is causally related to the
    person’s use of intoxicants. See Webster’s at 194 (also defin-
    ing “because” as “since : for the reason that : on account of
    the cause that” and noting that the word is derived from “by
    + cause” (emphasis in original)).
    Moreover, even at that first-level examination of the
    plain text and context of “due to the use,” we are not limited
    to dictionary definitions for guidance as to its meaning; prior
    interpretations of the same or related text also inform our
    understanding of how the legislature likely intended those
    words to be understood here. See, e.g., Keller v. Armstrong
    World Industries, Inc., 
    342 Or 23
    , 35, 147 P3d 1154 (2006)
    (previous judicial interpretations of related statutes pro-
    vide “relevant context” when construing a statute); State v.
    Bryan, 
    221 Or App 455
    , 459, 190 P3d 470 (2008), rev den, 
    347 Or 290
     (2009) (previous constructions of a statute are rele-
    vant at the first stage of statutory construction). Although
    neither we nor the Supreme Court have construed ORS
    809.235(1)(b)(B), we have case law construing comparable
    language in the closely related context of ORS 813.010.6 We
    turn to those decisions.
    6
    In considering whether the provisions of ORS 809.235(1)(b) encompassed
    convictions under the predecessor to ORS 813.010, the Supreme Court has, in
    passing, distinguished between ORS 809.235(1)(b)(A) and subparagraphs (B)
    and (C), observing that the latter described qualifying offenses that “might not
    be criminal in Oregon.” State v. Kellar, 
    349 Or 626
    , 633, 247 P3d 1232 (2011).
    However, the meaning of ORS 809.235(1)(b)(B) was not at issue or further dis-
    cussed in Kellar. Thus, while it is true that the 2007 amendments would likely
    126                                                      State v. Ramirez
    In Oregon, the offense of DUII, ORS 813.010, can
    be proved in either of two ways. One, the state can establish
    that a driver’s blood-alcohol content (BAC) was equal to or
    greater than a statutory limit at the time of driving—the so
    called “DUII per se” cases. See ORS 813.010(1)(a) (prohibit-
    ing driving a vehicle when the driver has a BAC of .08 per-
    cent or more); State v. Hedgpeth, 
    365 Or 724
    , 727, 452 P3d
    948 (2019) (describing prosecutions under ORS 813.010(1)(a)
    as “the per se method of proving DUII”). Two, the state can
    establish, under ORS 813.010(1)(b) or (c), that the driver was,
    at the time of driving, “under the influence” of one or more
    intoxicants. It is the case law construing the latter, non-
    DUII per se method of prosecution that informs our under-
    standing of “due to the use of” intoxicants as it appears in
    ORS 809.235(1)(b)(B).
    Both we and the Supreme Court have developed a
    long-standing and substantial body of DUII case law that
    has always required, in non-DUII per se cases, proof of both
    impairment and a causal relationship between a person’s
    use of intoxicants and that impairment. See, e.g., State v.
    Eumana-Moranchel, 
    352 Or 1
    , 7-8, 277 P3d 549 (2012) (to be
    “under the influence” of an intoxicant within the meaning of
    ORS 813.010(1)(b), a person must be shown to be “adversely
    affected by intoxicants to a perceptible degree” (emphasis
    added)); State v. Stroup, 
    147 Or App 118
    , 124, 
    935 P2d 438
    (1997) (noting, in determining that officer lacked probable
    cause to arrest defendant for DUII, that nothing in record
    “suggest[ed] a correlation between defendant’s” circum-
    stances “and a mental or physical impairment because of
    the consumption of alcoholic beverages” (emphases added));
    see also State v. Sinkey, 
    303 Or App 673
    , 678, 465 P3d 284
    (2020) (“To constitute probable cause [to support a DUII
    arrest], there must be information from which a law enforce-
    ment officer could conclude that it is more likely than not
    that defendant drove while he was physically or mentally
    impaired.”); State v. Snyder, 
    288 Or App 58
    , 62, 405 P3d 175
    (2017), rev den, 
    362 Or 508
     (2018) (a person who is shown to
    encompass such things as a conviction on a DUII per se theory in a state that had
    a .05 percent statutory BAC limit—that is, conduct that would not, as such, “be
    criminal in Oregon”—Kellar does not aid our inquiry as to whether a statute such
    as RCW 46.61.5249 fits within the newer provisions.
    Cite as 
    312 Or App 117
     (2021)                                               127
    have driven after consuming alcohol but who is not shown
    to be adversely affected by that alcohol or to have a BAC of
    at least 0.08 percent “has not committed a crime”). And, as
    the Supreme Court observed in State v. Guzman, 
    366 Or 18
    ,
    46, 455 P3d 485 (2019), “[t]he perceptible degree standard
    has been part of our law for close to a century.” (Internal
    quotation marks omitted.)
    To be sure, the cases cited above all relate to ORS
    813.010, and not ORS 809.235(1), the Oregon statute at issue
    here. Nonetheless, those cases and others like them support
    our preliminary understanding that, in referring, in ORS
    809.235(1)(b)(B), to a driving under the influence offense
    involving impaired driving “due to the use of” intoxicants,
    the legislature was contemplating out-of-state offenses that,
    like DUII in Oregon, involved proof of both impairment
    and a correlation between a driver’s use of intoxicants and
    that impairment. See Guzman, 366 Or at 31 (recognizing,
    as contextual support for a particular reading of a statute,
    Court of Appeals decisions construing same or similar lan-
    guage); cf. id. at 34 (applying “the canon of consistent usage,”
    which is “the principle that, in the absence of evidence to
    the contrary, we ordinarily assume that the legislature uses
    terms in related statutes consistently”). And, although the
    statutory phrases “impaired driving” and “due to the use
    of [intoxicants]” are not themselves phrases that appear in
    other statutes, it stands to reason that their placement in a
    DUII-related statute reflects the legislature’s awareness of
    our case law repeatedly discussing those essential aspects
    of a DUII prosecution.7
    In light of the foregoing, we understand ORS
    809.235(1)(b)(B) to encompass out-of-state offenses only to
    the degree that those offenses require proof that a person
    or the person’s driving was impaired by the person’s use
    of intoxicants.8 We turn then, to whether the Washington
    7
    Except as reflected in the above decisional law, we are aware of no legisla-
    tive history that might inform our understanding of ORS 809.235(1)(b)(B).
    8
    Because we ultimately conclude that the Washington offense at issue in
    this case did not satisfy the “due to” component of ORS 809.235(1)(b)(B), we need
    not separately determine whether what must be “impaired” due to the person’s
    use of intoxicants is the driver, the driving, or both.
    128                                                        State v. Ramirez
    offense of first-degree negligent driving, RCW 46.61.5249,
    satisfies that requirement.
    As with our examination of ORS 809.235, we begin
    by considering the text of RCW 46.61.5249, which provides,
    in relevant part:
    “(1)(a) A person is guilty of negligent driving in the
    first degree if he or she operates a motor vehicle in a man-
    ner that is both negligent and endangers or is likely to
    endanger any person or property, and exhibits the effects of
    having consumed liquor or marijuana or any drug * * *.
    “* * * * *
    “(2)   For the purposes of this section:
    “(a) ‘Negligent’ means the failure to exercise ordi-
    nary care, and is the doing of some act that a reasonably
    careful person would not do under the same or similar
    circumstances or the failure to do something that a rea-
    sonably careful person would do under the same or similar
    circumstances.
    “(b) ‘Exhibiting the effects of having consumed liquor,
    marijuana, or any drug’ means that a person has the odor of
    liquor, marijuana, or any drug on his or her breath, or that
    by speech, manner, appearance, behavior, lack of coordi-
    nation, or otherwise exhibits that he or she has consumed
    liquor, marijuana, or any drug, and either:
    “(i) Is in possession of or in close proximity to a con-
    tainer that has or recently had liquor, marijuana, or any
    drug in it; or
    “(ii) Is shown by other evidence to have recently con-
    sumed liquor, marijuana, or any drug.”
    RCW 46.61.5249 (emphases added).
    On its face, it is difficult to see how, if at all,
    Washington’s negligent-driving offense requires proof of a
    causal relationship between a person’s use of an intoxicant
    and the impairment of the person or the person’s driving.9
    9
    Like Oregon, Washington follows an established methodology when con-
    struing statutes. See State v. Dennis, 191 Wash 2d 169, 172-73, 421 P3d 944 (2018).
    In Washington, as in Oregon, the words of a statute are paramount and taken at
    face value. Id. at 172. Thus, when “interpret[ing] a criminal statute,” Washington
    courts “give it a literal and strict interpretation.” Id. (internal quotation marks
    Cite as 
    312 Or App 117
     (2021)                                                129
    While it may well be true that, in most instances, the pros-
    ecution of a person charged with first-degree negligent driv-
    ing will include evidence that the person or the person’s driv-
    ing was impaired by (or “due to”) intoxicants, nothing in the
    statute defining that offense appears to require that show-
    ing. Indeed, RCW 46.61.5249 does not, on its face, appear to
    require actual impairment of any sort, much less impair-
    ment “due to the use of” intoxicants, as ORS 809.235(1)(b)(B)
    explicitly contemplates. (Emphasis added.)
    As the emphasized language of RCW 46.61.5249
    suggests, a person may be convicted of first-degree negli-
    gent driving under that statute based merely upon a show-
    ing of ordinary negligence if, in conjunction with that show-
    ing, the person also has an “odor of liquor * * * on his or her
    breath” and is near (“in possession of or in close proximity”)
    to “a container that has or recently had liquor, marijuana, or
    any drug in it.” RCW 46.61.5249(2)(b) (defining “ ‘Exhibiting
    the effects of having consumed liquor * * *’ ”). Stated differ-
    ently, although the Washington statute recognizes, as evi-
    dence of “the effects of having consumed liquor,” arguable
    manifestations of impairment, such as any telltale aspects
    of a person’s “speech, manner, appearance, behavior, lack
    of coordination,” etc., 
    id.,
     it does not require any evidence of
    impairment, because impairment is not an element of that
    offense.
    Under the plain language of RCW 46.61.5249, any
    number of scenarios might satisfy the elements of first-
    degree negligent driving, even where the charged incident
    does not involve impairment due to the use of intoxicants,
    as we have determined ORS 809.235(1)(b)(B) requires.10
    Consider, for example, a person who, as part of a religious
    omitted); 
    id. at 172-73
     (“We derive the legislative intent of a statute solely from
    the plain language” of the text in its statutory context.). Unlike Oregon courts,
    Washington courts may not consider legislative history unless the statutory text
    is ambiguous. Id.; see Gaines, 
    346 Or at 172-73
     (in light of 2001 amendments to
    ORS 174.020, Oregon courts may consider legislative history for what it may be
    worth even in absence of ambiguity).
    10
    We note that, under analogous circumstances, the Supreme Court has
    similarly considered hypothetical scenarios in determining whether the defen-
    dant’s convictions under a California statute were for offenses “comparable” to a
    qualifying Oregon offense for purposes of the sentence enhancement provisions
    of ORS 137.719(3)(b)(B). See State v. Carlton, 
    361 Or 29
    , 35, 388 P3d 1093 (2017).
    130                                         State v. Ramirez
    observance, takes a sip of sacramental wine, then drives
    home with her husband’s medical prescription on the car
    seat next to her. Or the designated driver who drinks only
    nonalcoholic beer on a night out with friends but picks up
    a six-pack on the way home. Or a conscientious wine-lover
    who tastes but never drinks the wine at tastings, but always
    buys a bottle before leaving. Or even a liquor-store patron
    who takes half a sip from a sample of local whiskey, then
    leaves the store with a bottle of Jack Daniels. Assume then,
    that as each of those people drives home, he or she suffers a
    momentary lapse of attention, resulting in a fender-bender
    at a red light or some other such minor accident.
    Under each scenario, even though alcohol impair-
    ment played no role in the incident—because very little or
    no alcohol had been consumed, much less enough to cause
    perceptible impairment or trigger even the strictest stat-
    utory limit—there seems to be little doubt that the driver
    could be prosecuted for first-degree negligent driving under
    RCW 46.61.5249. That is, the person would have (1) “oper-
    at[ed] a motor vehicle in a manner that is * * * negligent”
    (momentarily failing to watch); (2) “endanger[ed another]
    person or property” (the other vehicle and its occupants);
    and (3) “exhibit[ed] the effects of having consumed liquor” by
    (a) having “the odor” of the sipped, tasted, or alcohol-free
    beverages “on his or her breath,” RCW 46.61.5249(2)(b), and
    (b) being “in possession of or in close proximity to a con-
    tainer that has or recently had liquor, marijuana, or any
    drug in it,” RCW 46.61.5249(2)(b)(i), namely, the bottles of
    beer, wine, or whiskey that each had purchased or, in the
    case of the first person, the prescription drugs belonging
    to her husband. Thus, under the plain language of the
    Washington statute, it is apparent that a person can be con-
    victed of first-degree negligent driving without engaging
    in any conduct that, as least under the plain text of RCW
    46.61.5249, can be viewed as “impaired driving of a vehi-
    cle due to the use of intoxi[cants].” See ORS 809.235(1)(b)(B)
    (applying only to such convictions). The dissent views our
    reliance on hypotheticals as an attempt “to illustrate why a
    conviction for first-degree negligent driving in Washington
    does not involve impairment due to intoxicants.” 312 Or App
    at 138 (Mooney, J., dissenting) (emphasis added). But that is
    Cite as 
    312 Or App 117
     (2021)                                              131
    not our point. As we acknowledge above, most convictions for
    that offense probably do “involve” impairment due to intoxi-
    cants. The point we seek to illustrate, however, is that there
    is a considerable difference between an offense that often
    involves impairment and one for which proof of impairment
    is required, i.e., an offense that necessarily involves impair-
    ment. As the foregoing discussion concludes, only the latter
    type of offense is one that satisfies ORS 809.235(1)(b)(B).
    Resisting the conclusion that first-degree negli-
    gent driving is not such an offense, the state relies on the
    Washington Court of Appeals’ decision in Mullen to support
    its argument that, notwithstanding the plain language of
    RCW 46.61.5249, a conviction under that statute qualifies
    as a predicate offense under ORS 809.235(1)(b)(B). For two
    reasons, we find that reliance misplaced. Ultimately, we
    conclude that, even assuming that we ordinarily would defer
    to the construction of an out-of-state statute by the other
    state’s appellate courts to determine whether the statute fit
    within ORS 809.235(1)(b)(B),11 Washington’s decisional law
    is not helpful in that regard; that is, because that case law
    simply adheres to the plain language of RCW 46.61.5249,
    which, as we have just concluded, lacks any apparent causal
    element, it does not illuminate whether such an element is
    nonetheless required.
    First, although the court in Mullen observes in pass-
    ing that the offense of first-degree negligent driving requires
    the state to prove that a driver drove “under the influence
    of alcohol or drugs,” 186 Wash App at 334, the meaning of
    RCW 46.61.5249 was not at issue in that case. Rather, the
    11
    The Supreme Court has taken somewhat of a hybrid approach. In Carlton,
    for example, the court considered whether the defendant’s convictions under a
    California statute were for offenses “comparable” to a qualifying Oregon offense
    for purposes of the sentence enhancement provisions of ORS 137.719(3)(b)(B). 
    361 Or at 35
    . In ultimately concluding that the California offense was not comparable
    (because it had one fewer conduct element than the qualifying Oregon sexual
    offense and could be committed through “even outwardly innocent touching”),
    the court cited a decision of the California Supreme Court to that effect. 
    Id. at 44
    . Even then, however, the Oregon Supreme Court seems to have relied ini-
    tially on its own examination of the California statute and not wholly deferred
    to the California court’s interpretation. See 
    id.
     Notably, in Carlton, the court
    began its analysis with an extensive exploration of the meaning of the applicable
    Oregon statute, ORS 137.719(3)(b)(B), before turning to the question whether the
    California statute at issue fell within its ambit. 
    361 Or at 35-43
    .
    132                                         State v. Ramirez
    issue in Mullen was whether the defendant, who previously
    had been convicted of reckless driving under a different stat-
    ute, was entitled to a jury instruction requiring the jury to
    determine whether the defendant had been previously con-
    victed of an offense involving alcohol or drugs. 186 Wash
    App at 325-26. The court’s reference to RCW 46.61.5249
    was in passing and clearly intended only as a contrasting
    example of an offense that, unlike the offense for which the
    defendant had previously been convicted, did involve alco-
    hol or drugs. Id. at 333-34. As a result, it was dictum, and
    not a binding statement of law. See Guzman, 366 Or at 28
    (explaining that “the term dictum refers to a statement that
    is not necessary to the court’s decision” (internal quotation
    marks omitted)).
    Second, even if the observation in Mullen were not
    dictum, it would seem unlikely to be viewed as a correct
    statement of Washington law. As noted above, 312 Or App
    at 128 n 9, Washington courts must construe statutory lan-
    guage strictly, and, unless there is an ambiguity in the text,
    they may not resort to legislative history or otherwise give
    statutes something other than a “literal and strict interpre-
    tation.” State v. Dennis, 191 Wash 2d 169, 172-73, 421 P3d
    944 (2018). As the foregoing discussion illustrates, there
    are no apparent ambiguities in the relevant text of RCW
    46.61.5249. As a result, construing that statute to add an
    “under the influence” element would seem to deviate from
    Washington law. And, although it would not be our role to
    correct a Washington court’s statement of Washington law,
    if, in fact, the statement in Mullen were a holding, that
    understanding counsels against relying on the passing
    reference to RCW 46.61.5249 in that case as somehow con-
    trolling here.
    In urging a different result, the dissent, 312 Or
    App at 137-38 (Mooney, J., dissenting), relies on two other
    Washington appellate decisions, State v. Bosio, 107 Wash
    App 462, 27 P3d 636 (2001), and State v. Wu, 194 Wash
    2d 880, 453 P3d 975 (2019), but neither of those opinions
    supports the dissent’s view that a conviction under RCW
    46.61.5249 falls within the scope of ORS 809.235(1)(b)(B).
    First, in Bosio, the defendant was prosecuted under
    Cite as 
    312 Or App 117
     (2021)                               133
    Washington law for vehicular assault after she crashed the
    car she had been driving and seriously injured her passen-
    ger’s arm; subsequent testing disclosed that the defendant’s
    BAC was .23 percent. 107 Wash App at 463-64. At trial, the
    defendant requested that the jury be instructed on the ele-
    ments of first-degree negligent driving as a lesser-included
    offense. 
    Id.
     The appellate court held that the trial court had
    not erred in refusing that request. Id. at 466.
    The court explained that vehicular assault could
    be established based on either of two theories: (1) that the
    person drove recklessly and caused serious bodily injury, or
    (2) that the person drove intoxicated and caused serious
    bodily injury. Id. at 465 (citing RCW 46.61.522(1)). To estab-
    lish first-degree negligent driving, on the other hand, the
    state was required to prove that the person drove negli-
    gently, endangered persons or property, and “exhibit[ed]
    effects of alcohol or drugs.” Id. Applying Washington’s case
    law as to lesser-included offenses, the court determined
    that first-degree negligent driving was not a lesser-included
    offense of vehicular assault, because not every element of
    first-degree negligent driving was a necessary element of
    vehicular assault. Id. at 465-66.
    Specifically, as to the intoxicated-driving theory of
    vehicular assault, the court reasoned that it was not neces-
    sary to prove that the person drove negligently, which was
    an element of first-degree negligent driving. Id. Therefore,
    the crime of first-degree negligent driving was not a lesser-
    included offense to the crime of vehicular assault when
    charged on an intoxicated-driver theory. And, as the dissent
    observes, 312 Or App at 137 (Mooney, J., dissenting), the
    court reached a similar conclusion as to the reckless-driving
    theory of vehicular assault:
    “To commit negligent driving in the first degree, a driver
    must: drive negligently, endanger persons or property and
    exhibit effects of alcohol or drugs. First degree negligent
    driving is not a lesser-included offense of the [reckless-
    driving] means of committing vehicular assault because
    under that alternative, there is no requirement of signs of
    intoxication.”
    Bosio, 107 Wash App at 465.
    134                                         State v. Ramirez
    The dissent emphasizes Bosio’s reference to “signs
    of intoxication” and suggests (without expressly saying so)
    that the Washington court’s reference to “signs of intox-
    ication” expressed its view that something more than the
    statutorily defined “exhibit[ing of] the effects of having con-
    sumed” intoxicants is required to prove negligent driving.
    312 Or App at 137-38 (Mooney, J., dissenting). However, in
    a later passage in Bosio, the court dispels any such belief.
    In explaining why an earlier decision holding that negligent
    driving was a lesser-included offense of vehicular assault
    was no longer controlling, the court noted that, due to inter-
    vening legislative changes, first-degree negligent driv-
    ing now “includes [the additional element of] ‘exhibits the
    effects of having consumed liquor or an illegal drug.’ ” Id. at
    466 (quoting RCW 46.61.5249(1)(a)). In other words, rather
    than holding that the negligent driving required more than
    the statutorily defined exhibiting of effects, the court was
    merely observing that requirement, itself, which, the court
    correctly indicated, is not an aspect of vehicular assault
    under Washington law.
    The Washington Supreme Court’s decision in Wu
    lends even less support for the dissent’s view. In relevant
    part, Wu simply states that “[n]egligent driving includes as
    an express element that the person ‘exhibits the effects of
    having consumed liquor.’ ” 194 Wash 2d at 888 (quoting RCW
    46.61.5249(1)(a) (emphasis added)). In other words, the court
    was simply quoting the language of the statute, not constru-
    ing it, not even in dictum. And, although, like the dissent,
    we see no reason that the Washington Supreme Court would
    inaccurately quote the statute—and agree that it did not—
    that observation does nothing to support the dissent’s con-
    clusion that the Washington law is one that “involv[es] the
    impaired driving of a vehicle due to the use of intoxi[cants],”
    as ORS 809.235(1)(b)(B) requires.
    The dissent concludes by recounting the sentencing
    proceedings in this case, including the prosecutor’s descrip-
    tion of defendant’s Washington conviction as a “pled down
    DUI.” 312 Or App at 140 (Mooney, J., dissenting). Echoing
    the language of the Washington statute, the dissent empha-
    sizes that, in his Washington case, defendant “ ‘exhibit[ed]
    the effects of having consumed alcohol,’ ” id. (Mooney, J.,
    Cite as 
    312 Or App 117
     (2021)                            135
    dissenting), but the dissent does not take issue with our
    conclusion that, under RCW 46.61.5249(1)(a), the element
    of “exhibits the effects of having consumed liquor” can be
    established without proving impairment. Finally, based
    on the prosecution’s unopposed recitation of the contents
    of defendant’s Washington judgment of conviction, the dis-
    sent concludes that “the Washington conviction was appro-
    priately before the court and available for it to consider
    as it formulated defendant’s sentence.” 312 Or App at 141
    (Mooney, J., dissenting). But, as the dissent itself acknowl-
    edges, defendant has never contended that the conviction
    was not “properly before the court.” See id. (Mooney, J., dis-
    senting). Rather, defendant contends—as we conclude—that
    the conviction itself does not satisfy the requirements of ORS
    809.235(1)(b)(B). Whether or not the prosecutor’s comments
    were evidence on which the trial court could base factual
    findings—a matter that we need not consider—the dissent
    has not persuaded us that the prosecutor’s recitation of the
    elements of first-degree negligent driving as they appeared
    in the judgment of conviction somehow supports a different
    conclusion.
    In sum, under ORS 809.235(1)(b)(B), an out-of-state
    conviction cannot serve as a predicate offense unless the
    offense requires proof that the person’s impaired driving
    was causally related to the person’s use of an intoxicant.
    The Washington offense that the trial court relied on in per-
    manently revoking defendant’s driving privileges does not
    have that requirement. Accordingly, the trial court erred.
    Remanded for resentencing; otherwise affirmed.
    MOONEY, J., dissenting.
    Defendant pleaded guilty to driving under the influ-
    ence of intoxicants (DUII). ORS 813.010. At the time of sen-
    tencing, his driving privileges were permanently revoked
    because he had been convicted of impaired driving twice
    before, once in California and once in Washington. ORS
    809.235(1)(b). Defendant argues, and the majority agrees,
    that his license should not have been revoked because the
    Washington conviction does not qualify as a predicate
    offense under ORS 809.235. I respectfully disagree. In my
    136                                                      State v. Ramirez
    view, the Washington conviction is a predicate offense and
    defendant’s license was properly revoked.1
    ORS 809.235(1)(b)2 requires permanent revocation
    of driving privileges when
    “the person is convicted for a third or subsequent time of
    any of the following offenses in any combination:
    “(A) Driving while under the influence of intoxicants
    in violation of:
    “(i) ORS 813.010; or
    “(ii) The statutory counterpart to ORS 813.010 in
    another jurisdiction.
    “(B) A driving under the influence of intoxicants
    offense in another jurisdiction that involved the impaired
    driving of a vehicle due to the use of intoxicating liquor,
    cannabis, a controlled substance, an inhalant or any com-
    bination thereof.
    “(C) A driving offense in another jurisdiction that
    involved operating a vehicle while having a blood alcohol
    content above that jurisdiction’s permissible blood alcohol
    content.”
    The relevant provision here is ORS 809.235(1)(b)(B), which
    requires that the conviction be for an offense “that involved
    the impaired driving of a vehicle due to the use of intoxicat-
    ing liquor.” The question is whether defendant’s conviction
    under Revised Code of Washington (RCW) 46.61.5249 con-
    stitutes such a qualifying predicate offense. The majority
    concludes that it does not; I conclude that it does.
    1
    Although the majority does not reach defendant’s other assignments of
    error, I would also find that the California conviction was a predicate offense
    and that, regardless of whether this was defendant’s first, second, or third DUII
    conviction, the fine imposed was within the permissible statutory range. ORS
    813.010(6); ORS 161.635(1)(a).
    2
    The language used in ORS 809.235(1)(b) is virtually identical to several
    other statutes that enhance penalties for those repeatedly convicted of impaired
    driving and reflects a statewide sentencing policy for those repeat offenders.
    See, e.g., ORS 813.010(5) (increasing crime of DUII from a misdemeanor to a
    felony); ORS 813.215 and ORS 813.220 (disqualifying individuals from DUII
    diversion programs); ORS 809.730 (allowing for a motor vehicle to be seized);
    ORS 813.430 (increasing the length of driving privilege suspension (1) related to
    refusal or failure of a breath or blood test and (2) before a hardship permit may
    issue).
    Cite as 
    312 Or App 117
     (2021)                                  137
    To qualify as a predicate offense under ORS
    809.235(1)(b)(B), defendant’s conviction for first-degree neg-
    ligent driving under RCW 46.61.5249 must have “involved”
    impaired driving due to the use of intoxicants. RCW
    46.61.5249 provides, in relevant part:
    “(1)(a) A person is guilty of negligent driving in the
    first degree if he or she operates a motor vehicle in a man-
    ner that is both negligent and endangers or is likely to
    endanger any person or property, and exhibits the effects of
    having consumed liquor or marijuana or any drug or exhib-
    its the effects of having inhaled or ingested any chemical,
    whether or not a legal substance, for its intoxicating or hal-
    lucinatory effects.
    “* * * * *
    “(2)   For the purposes of this section:
    “* * * * *
    “(b) ‘Exhibiting the effects of having consumed liquor,
    marijuana, or any drug’ means that a person has the odor
    of liquor, marijuana, or any drug on his or her breath, or
    that by speech, manner, appearance, behavior, lack of coor-
    dination, or otherwise exhibits that he or she has consumed
    liquor, marijuana, or any drug, and either:
    “(i) Is in possession of or in close proximity to a con-
    tainer that has or recently had liquor, marijuana, or any
    drug in it; or
    “(ii) Is shown by other evidence to have recently con-
    sumed liquor, marijuana, or any drug.”
    In State v. Bosio, 107 Wash App 462, 465, 27 P3d
    636 (2001), the Washington Court of Appeals described neg-
    ligent driving in the first degree as follows:
    “To commit negligent driving in the first degree, a driver
    must: drive negligently, endanger persons or property and
    exhibit the effects of alcohol or drugs. First degree neg-
    ligent driving is not a lesser-included offense of the first
    alternative means of committing vehicular assault because
    under that alternative, there is no requirement of signs of
    intoxication.”
    In other words, “signs of intoxication” are required for
    negligent driving in the first degree. In State v. Wu, 194
    138                                          State v. Ramirez
    Wash 2d 880, 888, 453 P3d 975 (2019), the Supreme Court
    of Washington stated that “[n]egligent driving includes as
    an express element that the person ‘exhibits the effects of
    having consumed liquor.’ ” (Quoting RCW 46.61.5249.) And,
    although Wu concerned felony DUII, and its discussion of
    negligent driving was dictum, I can think of no reason why
    its description of negligent driving under RCW 46.61.5249
    would be inaccurate. What is clear from the text of the stat-
    ute and Bosio and Wu is that, in Washington, the crime of
    negligent driving in the first degree includes (1) negligent
    driving, (2) endangerment, and (3) exhibited effects of alco-
    hol or drugs.
    The majority nevertheless concludes that impair-
    ment is not required for a conviction under RCW 46.61.5249
    and, because of that, it is not an offense involving impaired
    driving due to the use of alcohol or drugs. 312 Or App at
    130-31. It presents a series of hypothetical scenarios to illus-
    trate why a conviction for first-degree negligent driving in
    Washington does not involve impairment due to intoxicants.
    But the question is whether, during sentencing, the trial
    court erred in concluding that defendant’s conviction for
    first-degree negligent driving in Washington qualifies as a
    predicate offense under ORS 809.235.
    It is important to understand that, prior to 2007, ORS
    809.235(1)(b) and similar statutory provisions increased or
    enhanced penalties only when the defendant had been previ-
    ously convicted of (1) DUII in Oregon under ORS 813.010 or
    (2) “[t]he statutory counterpart to ORS 813.010” of another
    jurisdiction. But, in 2007, House Bill (HB) 2651 expanded
    the reach of those statutes by adding the language currently
    found in subparagraphs (B) and (C) of ORS 809.235(1)(b),
    quoted above, ORS 813.010(5)(a), ORS 809.730(1)(a), ORS
    813.215(1)(a), ORS 813.220(7)(a), and ORS 813.430. See Or
    Laws 2007, ch 879, § 4.
    The Supreme Court, in State v. Kellar, 
    349 Or 626
    ,
    633, 247 P3d 1232 (2011), provides a historical overview of
    the evolution of those statutory provisions that supports the
    conclusion that the scope of ORS 809.235(1)(b) and similar
    provisions was expanded in 2007 by the passage of HB 2651:
    Cite as 
    312 Or App 117
     (2021)                                 139
    “Two of the 2007 legislative changes bear mention. First,
    the legislature omitted the term ‘misdemeanor,’ found in
    the 2003 and 2005 versions of ORS 809.235, as a limitation
    on the DUII convictions that can serve as predicate convic-
    tions for the purposes of ORS 809.235. Second, the legisla-
    ture added subparagraphs (B) and (C), which expanded the
    category of DUII offenses from other jurisdictions that will
    result in the permanent revocation of a person’s driver’s
    license to include acts that violate that jurisdiction’s DUII
    laws but that might not be criminal in Oregon.”
    (Emphasis added.) The majority opinion discounts the impor-
    tance of the history and context of ORS 809.235 carefully
    outlined by the Supreme Court in Kellar, and it dismisses
    that court’s conclusion that a predicate offense from another
    jurisdiction need not be a criminal offense in Oregon as a
    mere observation made “in passing.” 312 Or App at 126 n 6.
    And, yet, the history and evolution of ORS 809.235 is as
    important here as it was in Kellar to determining whether
    an out-of-state conviction qualifies as a predicate offense
    requiring a permanent license revocation.
    The Supreme Court revisited that history in State
    v. Guzman, 
    366 Or 18
    , 455 P3d 485 (2019), a case concerned
    with the “statutory counterpart” language of ORS 813.011.
    In rejecting an argument by the state that, when the vot-
    ers adopted ORS 813.011 in 2010, they would have under-
    stood the phrase “statutory counterpart to ORS 813.010” to
    include any statute with the “same use, role or character-
    istics” as ORS 813.010, the Supreme Court noted the 2007
    amendments and quoted extensively from our decision in
    State v. Donovan, 
    243 Or App 187
    , 256 P3d 196 (2011), in
    which we discussed ORS 813.215(1)(a):
    “The Court of Appeals explained in Donovan that
    “ ‘[t]hose disqualifying offenses are phrased in the dis-
    junctive—that is, they are presented as alternative means
    of rendering a person ineligible for diversion. Thus, we
    presume the legislature intended subparagraphs (B) and
    (C) [the new additions] to have independent meaning from
    subparagraph (A) [where the term ‘statutory counter-
    part’ appears], rather than to be duplicative or illustra-
    tive of what a ‘statutory counterpart’ might be. Any other
    140                                            State v. Ramirez
    interpretation would mean the amendments were merely
    redundant of what was already in the statute.’ ”
    Guzman, 366 Or at 32-33 (quoting Donovan, 
    243 Or App at 196
     (brackets in Guzman)).
    It is clear that the 2007 amendments rejected the
    requirement of a direct connection to Oregon’s DUII statute
    and expanded the type of out-of-state convictions that would
    qualify as predicate offenses. The majority’s acknowledg-
    ment that this is not a “statutory counterpart” case is cor-
    rect. But, respectfully, it seems to me that, by that acknowl-
    edgment, the court today sidesteps the importance of the
    legislature’s decision in 2007 to broaden the scope of out-
    of-state convictions that qualify as predicate offenses, and
    it analyzes this case as if those amendments had not been
    made.
    Defendant was not convicted under RCW 46.61.5249
    for endangering persons or property by mere negligent driv-
    ing. He was convicted under RCW 46.61.5249 because, in
    addition to driving negligently and dangerously, he also
    “exhibit[ed] the effects of having consumed alcohol.” At the
    time of sentencing, the state described the Washington con-
    viction for the court as follows:
    “Defendant was also convicted of Negligent Driving in the
    First Degree in the State of Washington in 2016. This is
    a pled down DUI. I’ve got a certified copy of the judgment
    showing that this was a DUII. He was ordered to attend the
    DUI victim’s impact panel. It shows that this is a negligent
    driving—sorry a—a DUI judgment amended to Negligent
    Driving in the First Degree. He was ordered to obtain and
    use an ignition interlock device, undergo alcohol and sub-
    stance classes, and he stated in his petition that on April
    10th, 2016 in Pasco, Washington I did operate my motor
    vehicle in a negligent manner by exhibiting the effects
    of consuming alcohol, and in the State of Washington
    under their statutory system a negligent Driving in the
    First Degree is a predicate offense for a felony DUI. If a
    person were to have a negligent Driving in the First-
    Degree conviction, a DUI conviction, their third convic-
    tion would be a felony DUI, similar to here in the State of
    Oregon.”
    Cite as 
    312 Or App 117
     (2021)                             141
    We note here that the state’s counsel referred to a certified
    copy of the judgment that he was holding as he spoke, but
    he did not technically offer it into the evidentiary record.
    Generally, the assertions of counsel are not evidence. State
    v. Green, 
    140 Or App 308
    , 317 n 11, 
    915 P2d 460
     (1996).
    However, in the context of sentencing, courts may rely on
    assertions of counsel determined to be “reliable.” State v.
    Balkin, 
    134 Or App 240
    , 242, 
    895 P2d 311
    , rev den, 
    321 Or 397
     (1995); State v. McNeil, 
    170 Or App 407
    , 412, 12 P3d
    992 (2000). Although the court made no express reliability
    findings, no party on appeal disputes that the Washington
    conviction was properly before the court. Defendant did not
    object to the state’s reference to the judgment nor claim that
    the prosecutor’s description was unreliable. Accordingly, the
    Washington conviction was appropriately before the court
    and available for it to consider as it formulated defendant’s
    sentence.
    Nevertheless, the majority concludes that defen-
    dant’s conviction does not qualify and that it essentially
    amounted to a conviction for first degree-negligent-but-not-
    impaired driving. It illustrates its conclusion through hypo-
    thetical drivers who sip but do not swallow, keep alcohol or
    drugs within reach while driving, drive negligently or reck-
    lessly and then cause accidents, but who, according to the
    majority, are not impaired. Would that it were so.
    Impaired drivers place themselves and others at
    unnecessary risk of injury and death. And, yet, those strug-
    gling with alcoholism and other addiction disorders can
    recover and achieve sobriety. That is one reason why DUII
    diversion programs exist for first-time offenders. And it is a
    reason why drug and alcohol treatment programs are ordered
    as probationary conditions for repeat offenders. It cannot
    seriously be disputed that the risk posed by impaired driv-
    ers is significant and likely increases with each additional
    conviction for impaired driving. The increasing penalties
    for drivers who continue to drive impaired reflects reason-
    able and prudent intolerance for the risk that those drivers
    repeatedly create. Permanent license revocation removes
    the opportunity, at least in theory, for a repeat offender to
    exercise poor judgment about when he has sipped or swal-
    lowed too much to drive safely.
    142                                           State v. Ramirez
    The trial court was well within its authority to
    revoke defendant’s license because he was convicted of
    exactly the type of offense that the Oregon legislature
    intended to include as a predicate offense when it expanded
    ORS 809.235(1)(b) in 2007 to include the driving offenses
    described in subparagraphs (B) and (C). Accordingly, I
    dissent.
    Egan, C. J., and DeVore and Tookey, JJ., join in this
    dissent.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A167114

Judges: DeHoog

Filed Date: 6/3/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/10/2024