State v. Shutoff
State v. Shutoff
Opinion of the Court
After a bench trial, defendant was convicted of one count of interfering with a peace officer. ORS 162.247. He appeals, raising two assignments of error. We write to address only the argument that the trial court erred by proceeding with defendant’s trial in his absence. Because we conclude that the trial court erred in allowing defendant’s trial to proceed in his absence, we reverse and remand.
The facts pertinent to our disposition are procedural and undisputed. The state charged defendant with one count of interfering with a peace officer, a misdemeanor. ORS 162.247(2).
A criminal defendant has a statutory right to be present at trial. ORS 136.040.
In Harris, the defendant had been present in the courtroom on Friday when the judge announced that the trial would resume on Monday. The defendant did not appear for trial that Monday. The defendant’s attorney had been unable to reach the defendant by telephone calls to his brother or father, with whom the defendant was supposed to be living under the terms of his custody agreement. The court excused the jury until Tuesday. On Tuesday, the defendant’s attorney reported that he had looked for the defendant “in his usual haunts,” had attempted to contact him by telephone calls to every number he could think of, and had advised his family that he was needed in court. Nonetheless, the defendant did not appear in court on Tuesday. The trial court granted the defendant’s attorney one more day to reach other persons who might have had information about the defendant’s whereabouts. On Wednesday morning, with the defendant still absent, the defendant’s attorney reported that he had left messages with “everybody” but still had not heard from the defendant. At that point, the court proceeded with trial in the defendant’s absence. 291 Or at 186. The Supreme Court concluded that the trial court was aware, at the time it proceeded in the defendant’s absence, of sufficient information to support a conclusion that the defendant’s absence was voluntary. Id. at 187.
“Here, the court knew only that defendant was not present and that his lawyer had said that he had told him of the time and place of trial. [The trial court] did not permit any additional opportunity for counsel to attempt to produce him or to discover why he failed to appear. We hold that, on only those facts, the court erred in denying defendant the opportunity to appear at trial.”
Id. at 179. Thus, where the only information available is that a defendant is absent and was told the date of trial, a trial court lacks sufficient information to conclude that the defendant’s absence is voluntary.
This case resembles Turner more than Harris. As in Turner, the only information available to the trial court when it decided to proceed in defendant’s absence was that defendant had been told the date of trial and that defendant was absent. Unlike in Harris, the trial court had before it no additional information that could have supported a conclusion that defendant’s absence was voluntary. As noted, in concluding that defendant’s absence was voluntary, the court observed that defendant had “been here before.” To the extent that the trial court referred to the fact that defendant had been in court in February 2011 when the court informed him of his trial date, that is evidence that defendant had been told the date of trial. However, as in Turner, evidence that a defendant was told the date of trial— standing alone — is not sufficient to support a conclusion that defendant’s absence from his criminal trial is voluntary.
Reversed and remanded.
Defendant also argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion for judgment of acquittal. We reject that argument without further discussion.
The state also charged defendant with one count of interfering with a law enforcement animal, ORS 167.337, but that charge was dismissed before trial.
ORS 136.040(1) provides:
“If the charge is for a misdemeanor, the trial may be had in the absence of the defendant if the defendant appears by counsel; but if it is for a felony, the defendant shall appear in person.”
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.