State v. Drew

Decision Date16 May 1972
Citation8 Or.App. 471,494 P.2d 270
PartiesSTATE of Oregon, Respondent, v. Gaylord S. DREW, Appellant.
CourtOregon Court of Appeals

James R. Strickland, and Gary K. Jensen, Eugene, argued the cause for appellant. With them on the brief were Dwyer, Jensen & Kulongoski, and Hansen, Curtis, Hendershott & Strickland, Eugene.

John W. Osburn, Sol. Gen., Salem, argued the cause for respondent. With him on the brief was Lee Johnson, Atty. Gen., Salem.

Before SCHWAB, C.J., and LANGTRY and FORT, JJ.

LANGTRY, Judge.

Defendant Drew was jointly indicted with Jerome P. Foster, tried separately, and convicted by jury of first degree felony murder. He appeals from the resulting judgment, alleging numerous errors, part of which do not merit discussion.

In the indictment it is alleged that the defendants 'in the commission of and attempt to commit armed robbery,' shot the victim. Defendant demurred to the indictment, claiming it charged more than one crime: namely, murder, armed robbery and assault with intent to commit armed robbery.

1. The demurrer was overruled, which defendant assigns as error.

ORS 163.010 provided that 'any person who * * * in the commission of or attempt to commit * * * robbery * * * kills another * * *' is guilty of first degree felony murder. The indictment here charges in the words of that statute. The decision in State v. Hinkle, 33 Or. 93, 54 P. 155 (1898), illustrates the difference between a defectively duplicitous allegation and an allegation like that in the case at bar. There, the indictment alleged defendant aided in a murder occurring in the commission of and attempt to commit robbery, and, also, in the same count, alleged that defendant, after the murder, concealed the other alleged principal and destroyed evidence of the murder. Only the after-the-fact allegations of the indictment were held duplicitous. The indictment in the case at bar was legally sound. State v. Merten, 175 Or. 254, 152 P.2d 942 (1944).

The rest of the assignments of error relate to the trial. The state produced overwhelming direct and circumstantial evidence that defendant Drew, with four others, planned and executed an attempted armed robbery of the victim's 'mom & pop' grocery store in Eugene. Four of the group carried guns. At least two of the guns were loaded. When the victim was confronted by three of the armed robbers in his store, he turned away. Defendant Foster fired two shots from the automatic .30 caliber carbine he was carrying, but both shots missed. At the same time, defendant Drew shot the victim with a load of .00 buckshot from the 12-gauge shotgun he carried. The robbers immediately fled. In spite of a massive wound in the abdomen the victim lived for several hours, and told his wife, police and medical personnel what had happened and described his assailants. All of the guns except the shotgun were recovered by police several days later under circumstances that linked defendant Drew to them. Shell casings left at the scene positively identified the .30 caliber carbine thus recovered. A state's witness, an accomplice who acted as lookout for the robbery, identified a rifle recovered near the store as one which he lost when he fell while fleeing. He also testified that preceding and on the night of the murder nine men had conspired together to rob drug pushers; that they divided into two groups; that he was in the group which Drew led; and that after they started out Drew changed the plan, resulting in the store robbery.

2. Defendant asserts the trial court refused to allow pretrial discovery of state's evidence. Our examination of the record discloses that the court was liberal in allowing defendant discovery in accordance with Oregon's criminal statute, ORS 133.755.

3. Defendant claims the court erred in not allowing his motion for a current transcription of the evidence at state expense each day of the trial, asserting a wealthy defendant could afford such a transcript--hence, he should have one. Defendant was entitled to a fair trial, with counsel and a transcript for purposes of appeal. But he has pointed to no prejudice he suffered because his motion for daily transcript was not allowed. The court appointed two able counsel for him, and after trial a transcript was provided--1616 pages of it. Two hundred eighty pages of this transcript is jury Voir dire examination, not one word of which was necessary for or in any way helpful to this appeal.

4. A prosecution witness whose testimony linked Drew closely to the weapons was shown by the defense, in an attempt at impeachment, to have criminal charges pending against her. Defendant sought to prove that she had been promised immunity on those charges for testifying against defendant. In rebuttal, the state showed that the witness previously had made statements consistent with her testimony. Defendant asserts it was error to allow this. The court instructed the jury that such rebuttal evidence was to be considered only in determining whether the witness had a self-interest in testifying for the state. After the defense opened the question of credibility, as it did, the prosecution was entitled to bolster its witness's credibility as it did. State v. Wong Wen Teung, 99 Or. 95, 195 P. 349 (1921).

5. Defense counsel moved for mistrial eleven times. Several of these motions followed overruled objections to references to a conspiracy among nine men to rob drug...

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6 cases
  • State v. Reams
    • United States
    • Oregon Court of Appeals
    • October 7, 1980
    ...that a felony murder instruction is improper), as support for his motion for acquittal. We rejected this contention in State v. Drew, 8 Or.App. 471, 477, 494 P.2d 270, 273, rev. den. (1972): " * * * Branch holds that an assault resulting in death merges into second degree murder so that onl......
  • State v. Middleton
    • United States
    • Oregon Court of Appeals
    • September 16, 1982
    ...the motive did not exist is admissible." State v. Clark, 26 Or.App. 55, 57, 551 P.2d 1313, rev. den. (1976). See also State v. Drew, 8 Or.App. 471, 475, 494 P.2d 270, rev. den. (1972); McCormick, Evidence 102-107, § 49 (2d ed Cleary In State v. Clark, supra, the court allowed the admission ......
  • State v. Quick
    • United States
    • Oregon Court of Appeals
    • December 1, 1980
    ...leading up to the commission of the crime." State v. Hockings, 29 Or.App. 139, 146, 562 P.2d 587, rev. den. (1977); see State v. Drew, 8 Or.App. 471, 476, 494 P.2d 270, rev. den. In State v. Hockings, the court explained the rationale of admitting such testimony: "An eye witness to an event......
  • State v. Cox
    • United States
    • Oregon Court of Appeals
    • November 14, 1978
    ...his arrival in Seattle was relevant to a robbery prosecution as were the circumstances that followed at the bus depot. In State v. Drew, 8 Or.App. 471, 494 P.2d 270, Rev. den. (1972), we said that evidence is admissible when it tends to complete the picture of the crime for which defendant ......
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