State v. Barnum
State v. Barnum
Opinion of the Court
Defendant appeals the guidelines sentence imposed following his post-conviction proceeding in which the post-conviction court found that his dangerous offender sentence was invalid under State v. Davis, 315 Or 484, 847 P2d 834 (1993). Defendant argues that the court erred by sentencing him to a 40-month departure sentence instead of sentencing him as a dangerous offender to 40 months with a 20-month determinate term. See State v. Coburn, 146 Or App 653, 934 P2d 579 (1997) (where court initially sentenced the defendant as dangerous offender, on remand from post-conviction proceeding, sentencing court was not free to impose a sentence other than a dangerous offender sentence). After oral argument, the state filed a motion to dismiss the appeal as moot because, under either the guidelines sentence or dangerous offender sentence, defendant had completed his sentence by the time of resentencing.
In defendant’s response to the state’s motion,
Defendant points out that the state did not argue at resentencing that his position was moot and that he relied on the record of that proceeding on his appeal. He also notes that it was not until after briefing and oral argument that the state documented its contention that the appeal is moot. He notes that, had the state done so before oral argument, “defendant could have done then what he does now,” which is to concede that there is no substantive difference in the incarceration terms.
Defendant is subject to the 1989 version of the sentencing guidelines. OAR 253-11-004(3) (1989) provided, in part:
“Except as provided in OAR 253-05-004(2) [post-prison supervision for aggravated murder], during the full term of post-prison supervision, an offender may not be required to serve more than one hundred and eighty (180) days of incarceration for violations of the conditions of supervision.”
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.