Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1980

State v. McCaffrey

State v. McCaffrey
Court of Appeals of Oregon · Decided March 10, 1980 · Campbell, Schwab, Thornton
45 Or. App. 87; 607 P.2d 777; 1980 Ore. App. LEXIS 2287

State v. McCaffrey

Opinion of the Court

THORNTON, J.

Defendant appeals from a sentence imposed following a plea of guilty to the charge of failure to appear in the first degree on the ground that the trial court considered confidential information not contained in the presentence report without stating reasons for nondisclosure as required by ORS 137.079(3). We reverse.

At sentencing, the following colloquy occurred:

"THE COURT: I would also indicate to counsel that I have received some confidential information in the form of a cover letter from the Corrections Division and although this is basically, it is covered in the presentence report. There is some information that the Court is considering that will not be released to the parties.
« * * * * *
"Mr. Corl?
"MR. CORL [defendant’s attorney]: Yes, your Honor. Now, it is my understanding that the Court has a confidential communication from where?
"THE COURT: From the person who conducted the presentence report.
"MR. CORL: And that is not going to be available to the parties?
"THE COURT: No, it is not.
"MR. CORL: And the Court is going to be considering that in making the sentence?
"THE COURT: Yes. Although, as I indicated, it does not vary in any great detail from what is contained in the presentence report.
"MR. CORL: Well, your Honor, for the record, of course, we would object to the Court’s considering something that we would not have an opportunity to review and perhaps challenge the detailed credibility, et cetera.”

ORS 137.079(1) requires disclosure of all information received by the sentencing court which it consid*90ers in reaching its decision.1 Subsection (2) authorizes the court to except from disclosure confidential information, in which case subsection (3) requires the court to alert counsel to the fact that it is withholding information and the court

"shall state for the record the reasons for the court’s actions. The action of the court in excepting information shall be reviewable on appeal.”2

The reasons stated by the trial court for withholding the information are that the information was "basically covered” by the presentence report (although it appears that some new information was considered) and that it is confidential. The fact that information may have been repetitious is not a ground for withholding it under the statute. Further, the mere conclusion that certain information is "confidential” provides no basis for review by this court. The court must state some basis for holding the information confidential.

Reversed and remanded for resentencing.

"(1) A copy of the presentence report and all other written information concerning the defendant that the court considers in the imposition of sentence shall be made available to the district attorney, the defendant or his counsel a reasonable time before the sentencing of the defendant. All other written information, when received by the court outside the presence of the counsel, shall either be summarized by the court in a memorandum available for inspection or summarized by the court on the record before sentence is imposed.
"(2) The court may except from disclosure parts of the presen-tence report or other written information described in subsection (1) of this section which are not relevant to a proper sentence, diagnostic opinions which might seriously disrupt a program of rehabilitation if known by the defendant, or sources of information which were obtainable with an expectation of confidentiality.
"(3) If parts of the presentence report or other written information described in subsection (1) of this section are not disclosed under subsection (2) of this section, the court shall inform the parties that information has not been disclosed and shall state for the record the reasons for the court’s action. The action of the court in excepting information shall be reviewable on appeal.” ORS 137.079.

As established in State v. Biles, 287 Or 63, 68, 597 P2d 808 (1979), when a statute says that a court "shall state” something on the record, it is a mandatory requirement.

Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.