State ex rel. Juvenile Department v. Dompeling
State ex rel. Juvenile Department v. Dompeling
Opinion of the Court
The trial court found that youth was within its jurisdiction because she committed acts that would constitute the crime of menacing if she were an adult. On appeal, youth argues that the evidence does not establish that she intended to put her mother in fear of imminent injury. We review de novo and affirm.
Youth lived with her mother. One evening, youth got “very upset” because her mother had unplugged the telephone to keep youth from using it. When asked what occurred that evening, mother testified:
“Well, she came into the bathroom and said that she wanted to use the phone. And when I said no, she got more angry, and more angry, and she finally just came in and said, ‘I wish you were dead, I um, I could stab you right now.’ And then she came back a minute later, and said, ‘I thought about doing it while you were in your sleep.’ ”
Mother explained the reason for youth’s threats:
“I’ve always let [youth] get her way, [but] I’ve c[o]me down real hard on [youth] in the last few months, because she’s totally out of control and she’s not used to it and when she doesn’t get her way, she blows. And she’s very violent, very angry, she slams, she bangs and she, I did not give in, and she was very, very angry with me.”
Based on this evidence, the trial court found that youth had committed acts that would constitute menacing if she were an adult; that is, the trial court found that “by word or conduct [youth] intentionally attempted] to place [mother] in fear of imminent serious physical injury.” ORS 163.190 (defining the crime of menacing).
Youth’s argument turns on what the statutory term “imminent” means. We look initially to the common understanding of the word. See PGE v. Bureau of Labor and Industries, 317 Or 606, 611, 859 P2d 1143 (1993). Imminent is defined as:
“ready to take place: near at hand: impending < our - departure»; usu : hanging threateningly over one’s head: menacingly near < in - jeopardy» <this - danger».”
Webster’s Third New Int’l Dictionary, 1130 (unabridged ed 1993) (capitalization omitted). Understood in its usual sense, the word does not require that the state prove a threat of immediate injury. It is sufficient if the threatened injury is “near at hand,” “impending,” or “menacingly near.” Nothing in the remainder of the statute suggests that the word is not used in its usual sense, and youth does not argue that the constitution requires a more restrictive interpretation. See State v. Garcias, 296 Or 688, 698, 679 P2d 1354 (1984).
Applying the statutory definition, we find that youth attempted to put her mother in fear of imminent serious physical injury. Youth made two statements to her mother. She stated initially, “I could stab you right now.” Youth does not dispute that she intended to place her mother in fear of serious physical harm, and her use of the words “right now”
Affirmed.
The dissent “takeM issue with lourl statement of facts.” 171 Or App at 696. It reasons that, in quoting mother’s testimony, we have “ignore!dl the fact that there is no evidence that youth had ever assaulted or harmed mother or that she had a reputation or character of acting violently toward people.” Id. As the dissent implicitly acknowledges, the record does not disclose one way or the other whether youth had been violent towards mother or anyone else in the past. The dissent thus appears to take the position that the absence of evidence in the record somehow contradicts mother’s testimony that when youth does not get her way, “she’s very violent, very angry, she slams, she bangs.” It may be that the dissent believes that additional evidence of youth’s violent behavior would be persuasive, but mother’s testimony is uncontradicted.
We accept youth’s concession. Stabbing is a serious physical injury. We also agree, on de novo review, that youth intended to put her mother in fear of being stabbed. Mother’s testimony that youth was “very, very angry” and that she would become “very violent, very angry” and slam things convinces us that youth’s words were in fact intended to put mother in fear that youth would carry out her threats.
The dissent would reverse the trial court on the basis of issues that youth has not raised. The dissent reasons that the statute cannot constitutionally be applied to youth’s statements. 171 Or App at 699-700, 701-02. The Oregon Supreme Court has already held that the menacing statute is facially constitutional. See State v. Garcias, 296 Or at 697 & n 8. Youth, at most, is left with an as-applied challenge, but youth has not asked us to hold that the statute is unconstitutional as applied to her. Indeed, she has raised no constitutional challenge on appeal. The issue that the dissent would reach is not properly before us. See State v. Wyatt, 331 Or 335, 15 P3d 22 (2000); Garcias, 296 Or at 698 n 9.
Building on its constitutional analysis, the dissent reasons that youth’s statements were not threats. 171 Or App at 696 (Armstrong, J., dissenting passim). It is worth noting that the statute does not prohibit threats as such, although evidence of threatened injury may be relevant to proving that a person has “attempted to place another person in fear of imminent serious physical injury.” See ORS 163.190. In any event, youth has not argued on appeal that her statements were not threats nor has she argued that they were not intended to put her mother in fear of serious physical harm. Finally, the dissent’s conclusion that youth’s statements were not threats “cannot be separated,” to use the dissent’s words, from its constitutional analysis. 171 Or App at 698. We imply no agreement with the dissent’s reasoning when we say that the constitutional issue upon which the dissent’s conclusion depends is not properly before us.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
The majority concludes on de novo review that youth committed an act that, if committed by an adult, would constitute the crime of menacing. Because I conclude that youth’s speech, although troubling, cannot reasonably be construed as threatening and that, even if threatening, the potential harm to which her speech alluded was not imminent, I would reverse the juvenile court’s assumption of jurisdiction. Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.
As a preliminary matter, I take issue with the majority’s statement of facts. The majority accepts at face value
The majority also errs in focusing solely on youth’s argument that the contemplated harm was not imminent. The majority’s myopic focus on the question of imminence inappropriately dispenses with some of youth’s arguments below and on appeal and fails to live up to our obligation to apply the menacing statute correctly. As a consequence, the majority fails to consider whether the challenged statements were in fact threats and therefore punishable under the menacing statute. Although youth’s argument that she did not engage in conduct that would violate the menacing statute is based, in large part, on the fact that the contemplated harm was not imminent, we are nonetheless required on de novo review to address the broader question whether youth’s conduct satisfied the other requirements of the menacing statute. If youth incorrectly assumes that her conduct satisfied one requirement of the statute when, in fact, it did not, we are not bound by youth’s misconstruction of the statute. See, e.g., Stull v. Hoke, 326 Or 72, 77, 948 P2d 722 (1997).
Moreover, the majority’s contention that we must interpret the menacing statute, as applied to this case, without reference to the state and federal constitutional free
Because the question whether youth’s speech constituted a threat under ORS 163.190 cannot be separated from the question whether her speech was of a type that may be constitutionally proscribed, I address the two issues together.
Based on the foregoing principles, I would conclude that youth’s statements are insufficient as a matter of law to meet the requirements of ORS 163.190. In this case, youth stated that she “wished” her mother were dead and that she “could stab [her] right now.” A little later she acknowledged that she had considered stabbing her mother in her sleep. Neither statement is a threat, and neither statement evidences an attempt to place mother in fear of serious physical injury. See Garcias, 296 Or at 698.
The first alleged threat, that youth could stab mother right now, was uttered in the conditional tense and followed an expression of sentiment (that youth wished mother were dead). Such a conditional statement is too equivocal to constitute an attempt to place someone in fear of serious physical injury. Indeed, if it were such an attempt, it was a very poor one. Given that all we have to go on in evaluating whether youth had the requisite intent is the objective nature of the statement, I would conclude that the statement was not such an attempt.
Moreover, the statement cannot be construed as a threat because it lacks the gravity of purpose, unambiguousness and immediacy that is necessary to remove a purported
Even assuming that youth’s first statement was a threat, it still would not be proscribable in light of the requirement that it be objectively probable that the threat will be carried out, because the context of youth and mother’s relationship indicated that youth would not act on her violent feelings. See Lovell, 90 F3d at 372 (discussing the importance of context in determining the likelihood that threats will be carried out and the extent to which they are therefore proscribable); Roy v. United States, 416 F2d 874, 878 (9th Cir 1969) (same).
Because I conclude that youth’s first statement was not a statement of intent to cause harm and therefore was not a threat or an attempt to place mother in the requisite state
I turn to youth’s second statement. After uttering the statement about the stabbing, the youth left the bathroom and then returned a minute later and reported that she had “thought about doing it while you were in your sleep.” That statement could be interpreted as a general expression of youth’s past feelings about mother, in which case it could not possibly be understood as a threat
Even if I were to reach the untenable conclusion that the statement was a veiled declaration of intent, the statement would nonetheless lack the unambiguousness, immediacy, and gravity of purpose necessary to remove it from the free speech protections of the state and federal constitutions. See Chung, 862 P2d at 1072-73. The statement lacks immediacy because it does not refer to a time period in the near future or indicate that an assault will occur in the immediate future. For similar reasons, the statement is ambiguous. It fails to indicate whether the thoughts are still being entertained or whether they have been rejected as a possible
As was the case with the first statement, the context of the second statement does not convert it into a proscribable threat. See Lovell, 90 F3d at 372; Roy, 416 F2d at 878. Because youth did not have a history of physically harming people, her expressions of her feelings do not take on a more ominous countenance than the ordinary meanings of her words imply. Moreover, taking the two statements as context for each other does not increase their seriousness because neither of them has any of the required elements: unambiguousness, gravity of purpose, and immediacy. The majority errs in failing to address whether youth’s statements meet the requirements of ORS 163.190 other than imminence.
Finally, I disagree with the majority’s conclusion that either of youth’s statements, even if threatening, apprised mother of imminent danger, as required by ORS 163.190. The conditional nature of youth’s first statement indicates that the utterance, even if a threat, did not satisfy the imminence requirement of ORS 163.190. Because the statement was made in the conditional tense, and thus merely indicated the theoretical possibility of an assault, it was necessarily too indefinite to convey the idea that such an assault was immediately forthcoming or impending. See Webster’s Third New Int’l Dictionary, 1130, 1132 (unabridged ed 1993) (defining “imminent” as “ready to take place: near at hand: impending” and defining “impend” as “to threaten from near at hand or as in the immediate future”). The majority errs in relying on youth’s use of the words “right now” to conclude otherwise. Because the statement expressed a possibility rather than a purported certainty or even a probability, the words “right now” add no substance to the indefinite statement.
Because I would conclude that youth’s statements do not meet the requirements of ORS 163.190,1 would reverse the juvenile court’s finding of jurisdiction. Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.
The fact that mother waited two months to report the behavior at issue suggests that even her subjective reactions to youth’s outbursts were not as strong as she contends.
The majority contends that my focus on the constitutional limits that bear on ORS 163.190 means that I treat the case as presenting an as-applied challenge to the court’s decision to assume jurisdiction over youth for violating the statute, which is not a challenge that youth has made. The majority misunderstands my point. We are obliged to apply the statute correctly in this case, see Stull, 326 Or at 77, which means that we must be sensitive to the constitutional constraints that bear on the permissible reach of the statute when we do that. The constitution informs my understanding that the statute does not reach the conduct at issue in this case. Because I do not conclude that youth’s conduct violates the statute, I do not consider the case to be one that presents an as-applied challenge under Article 8, section 8.
The majority also questions my discussion of the constitutional principles that bear on the proscription of threats, because the menacing statute “does not prohibit
The only reasonable construction that can be given youth’s statement is that she said that she hates her mother enough that she could kill her right then. That statement is understandably one that would trouble a mother to hear. Nevertheless, it is not a statement that youth is going to kill her mother at that moment, which is what youth would have had to have said to violate the menacing statute.
A threat would necessarily have a future reference point. See Hall, 327 Or at 573; Webster’s Third New Int’l Dictionary, 2382 (unabridged ed 1993) (defining “threat” and “threaten”). Although it may be possible to infer that someone who has thought in the past about harming a particular person might be more likely to do so than someone else, one cannot be convicted of the crime of menacing simply by expressing past thoughts without linking them in some way to proposed future conduct. A “threat” that is inferred from an expression of past feelings necessarily lacks the required unambiguousness, immediacy, and imminence to sustain a conviction under ORS 163.190.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- In the Matter of Amy Dompeling, a Minor Child. STATE ex rel JUVENILE DEPARTMENT OF KLAMATH COUNTY v. Amy DOMPELING
- Cited By
- 14 cases
- Status
- Published