State v. Paniagua
STATE OF OREGON, Plaintiff-Respondent v. JULIO ALBERTO PANIAGUA
Attorneys
Elizabeth Daily, Deputy Public Defender, argued the cause for appellant. With her on the briefs was Peter Gartlan, Chief Defender, Office of Public Defense Services., Brandon Cobb, Certified Law Student, argued the cause for respondent. On the brief were Ellen F. Rosenblum, Attorney General, Anna M. Joyce, Solicitor General, and Erin K. Galli, Senior Assistant Attorney General.
Full Opinion (html_with_citations)
Defendant appeals a judgment
The facts are procedural and not in dispute. The state charged defendant with the above-mentioned offenses following an altercation between defendant and his ex-girlfriend, Jones, the victim in this case. At trial, Jones and defendant testified to different versions of the altercation.
Jones testified that, on the evening in question, she and defendant were outdoors arguing about defendant stealing her bicycle when defendant grabbed her by the shoulders and shook her, and told her to âshut up.â Jones testified that she pushed defendant away and, when he tried to grab her, she kicked defendant in the groin and walked away, heading toward a friendâs house. On the way, Jones stopped to talk to a different friend. Jones testified that defendant caught up with her and started yelling at her and eventually started swinging at her. Ultimately, defendant punched her in the chest and right arm. Jones was the only witness to testify that defendant had punched her.
Defendantâs testimony was to the contrary. He admitted to having stolen Jonesâs bike, but testified that Jones had been the aggressor in the ensuing encounter and that she had punched and kicked at him, one kick having hit him in the groin. Defendant stated that, after Jones kicked him in the groin, he walked away, and Jones said, âYouâre going to regret it.â Defendant testified that he never touched Jones.
Several witnesses to the altercation testified. Jonesâs friend testified that he had seen defendant swing at Jones but had not seen defendant hit her. Rebitzke was a
Defendant sought to impeach Jonesâs credibility through the testimony of Rebitzke and two other witnesses, Sullivan and Shaw. The trial court permitted Rebitzke and Sullivan to testify to their opinions that Jones was not a truthful person. The state impeached Rebitzke by eliciting testimony that he had lied to the police about his involvement in the altercation and by eliciting an admission that he had lied during his testimony. Sullivan did not testify as to his relationship with defendant or Jones and stated only that he had known Jones for six months to a year. The state impeached Sullivanâs testimony with his prior conviction for theft of services.
Later in the trial, defense counsel was preparing to call Shaw as his final witness. Outside the presence of the jury, the prosecutor objected to Shaw testifying as a character witness, arguing that her testimony would be cumulative given that Rebitzke and Sullivan had already testified as to Jonesâs character for truthfulness. The court did not rule on the stateâs objection but noted that defense counsel had to demonstrate that Shaw knew Jones on a personal basis and that she had had âsufficient contact with [Jones] in the last period of time to have the opinion.â Defense counsel told the court that he thought that he could establish those things. The court then called the jury back into the courtroom and defense counsel called Shaw to testify.
Shaw testified that she had known Jones for four years. Defense counsel asked Shaw whether, in those four years, she had formed an opinion as to whether Jones was a truthful person. Before Shaw could answer, the prosecutor objected that defense counsel had failed to lay a foundation for that testimony, and the court agreed, stating, âYou need to have more than sheâs known her.â In response, defense counsel sought to lay the foundation through the following line of questioning:
â[DEFENSE COUNSEL:] How do you know her?
â[SHAW:] I was introduced to her two weeks after I met my boyfriend.
*287 âQ How long ago was that?
âA Four years ago.
âQ And have you had contact with her in the last year?
âA Brief, but yes.
âQ Okay. How many times?
âA Five or six.
âQ Okay. Through your boyfriend?
âA Yeah.
âQ And in that time that youâve had contact with her, have you been able to form an opinion as to her truthfulness?â
At that point, the prosecutor objected again for lack of foundation. The trial court agreed and told defense counsel that â[flour or five times in the last year is not sufficient contact.â Defense counsel then tried to establish the necessary foundation by asking Shaw additional questions about the nature of Shawâs contacts with Jones in the last year:
â[DEFENSE COUNSEL:] Could you testify about those contacts. What kind of things have you done?
â[SHAW:] I mean, I just kind of saw her. There was one time that we went over to her house and hung out. She was drinking and, you know. She was just â we would go over there to party, or not party. We would just kind of hang out.
ÂŤĂjĂ ĂfĂ â âĄ
âQ And you know friends that she knows?
âA Yeah.
âQ Hang around the same circles?
âA Mm-hmm.
âQ And in that hanging around the same circles, partying with her, have you formed an opinion as to her truthfulness?â
Before Shaw could answer, the prosecutor renewed her objection based on foundation. The court, again, told defense counsel that four or five times in the last year was
At that point, defense counsel told the court that he would like to make an offer of proof, and the court removed the jury from the courtroom. During the offer of proof, Shaw testified that she knew Jones through her boyfriend, who was then in the county jail for sexual crimes that he had allegedly committed against Jones. Shaw testified that she had once caught Jones lying to her about spending time with Shawâs boyfriend but did not specify when that occurred. Defendant then asked Shaw why she thought that Jones was not a truthful person:
â[SHAW:] Because sheâs lied to me before, and sheâs lied to other people that I know before. And thatâs just her reputation that I know her of.
⥠⥠âĄ
â[DEFENSE COUNSEL:] Okay. How did you form an opinion as to that reputation?
âA Because of the people that I know and â they tell me stories about, âOh, she said this, and thatâs not true at all.â And â I donât know, how do you form an opinion.
âQ So youâve known her to lie?
âA Yeah.
âQ Sheâs lied to you?
âA Mm-hmm.
âQ And sheâs lied to you about contact with your boyfriend?
âA Yeah. And sheâs lied to my mom. She lied to her mom right in front of me. She lied to Michael Jonesâs parents about other things. Sheâs â I mean she- â she lies to get attention.
âQ And you are prepared to testify that you donât think sheâs a truthful person?
âA Yes.â
After the prosecutor cross-examined Shaw, the court excused her and did not permit her to testify about her opinion of
On appeal, defendant assigns error to the trial courtâs exclusion of Shawâs testimony. We review a trial courtâs exclusion of character testimony under OEC 608(1) for abuse of discretion. State v. Maxwell, 172 Or App 142, 150, 18 P3d 438, rev den, 332 Or 559 (2001). âAn abuse of discretion on an evidentiary ruling by a trial court occurs when the courtâs ruling exceeds the range of all legally correct discretionary choices.â Id. âIn that context, âdiscretionâ refers to the authority of the trial court to choose among several legally correct outcomes.â Id. at 150-51 (citing State v. Rogers, 330 Or 282, 312, 4 P3d 1261 (2000)).
Defendant argues that the trial court abused its discretion when it excluded Shawâs testimony, because he demonstrated that Shawâs contacts with Jones extended over a significant length of time, were recent, and were of such a nature that Shaw had a basis for her opinion regarding Jonesâs character for truthfulness under OEC 608(1). The state takes the opposite view: Shawâs brief contacts with Jones and what Shaw had heard from others were insufficient for her to form an opinion about Jonesâs character for truthfulness that was admissible under OEC 608(1). For the reasons that follow, we conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in excluding Shawâs opinion testimony.
Generally, â[e]vidence of a personâs character is not admissible for the purpose of proving that the person acted in conformityâ with that character trait. OEC 404(2). One exception to that general prohibition is contained in OEC 608(1), which provides:
â(1) The credibility of a witness may be attacked or supported by evidence in the form of opinion or reputation, but:
â(a) The evidence may refer only to character for truthfulness or untruthfulness; and
â(b) Evidence of truthful character is admissible only after the character of the witness for truthfulness has been attacked by opinion or reputation evidence or otherwise.â
âThus, under OEC 608(1), the credibility of a witness may be impeached or bolstered in the form of opinion or reputation
Under OEC 608(1), evidence of a personâs character for truthfulness may be established in two ways: (1) the character witness can testify as to the personâs reputation for truthfulness in the community in which the person lives, State v. Miller, 52 Or App 335, 342, 628 P2d 444 (1981), or (2) the character witness can testify as to the witnessâs own opinion about the personâs character for truthfulness. In either case, before a court will admit such evidence, the proponent must lay an appropriate foundation. Maxwell, 172 Or App at 152.
That foundation requires the proponent to establish the character witnessâs personal knowledge of the personâs reputation or character. As Kirkpatrick explains:
âA character witness, whether testifying in the form of reputation or opinion, will not be allowed to testify until a foundation has been laid showing that the witness has sufficient acquaintance with the reputation of the person in the relevant community or sufficient personal contact with the individual to have formed a personal opinion.â
Kirkpatrick, Oregon Evidence § 608.03 at 511 (citing Colon, 251 Or App at 720). Additionally, the proponent must demonstrate that the contact was âsufficiently recent so that there will be a current basis for the testimony.â Id. (citing State v. Coffee, 116 Or App 23, 27, 840 P2d 720 (1992), rev den, 315 Or 312 (1993)). Thus, â[t]he admissibility of evidence of prior character to prove present character depends on whether, in the discretion of the trial court, the contacts on which the opinion is based are frequent enough and recent enough to have probative value to the testimony given in court.â Maxwell, 172 Or App at 154-55 (emphasis in original).
As we explained in Maxwell, under OEC 608(1), â[a] personâs character with respect to truthfulness means
Here, defendant sought to elicit Shawâs testimony as to her personal opinion about Jonesâs character for truthfulness to impeach Jonesâs testimony at trial.
We cannot say that the trial court abused its discretion in excluding Shawâs opinion testimony. The trial court permitted defendant to make an offer of proof before ruling, and the court applied the correct legal standard in making its ruling. The record demonstrates that Shaw first met
Affirmed.
The trial court entered a judgment convicting defendant of fourth-degree assault constituting domestic violence and shortly thereafter entered an âamendedâ judgment which added the conviction for harassment. Defendant appeals both judgments.
Although Shaw testified about Jonesâs reputation for untruthfulness, defendant did not argue below and does not contend on appeal that Shawâs testimony was admissible under OEC 608(1) as reputation evidence.