Court Opinion

ID: 9900482
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-11-18 22:13:43.210524+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:21:05.872286
License: Public Domain

76                     March 29, 2023               No. 152

          IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE
                  STATE OF OREGON

                   STATE OF OREGON,
                   Plaintiff-Respondent,
                             v.
             MICHAEL WAYNE CHAMPAGNE,
                   Defendant-Appellant.
              Clackamas County Circuit Court
                   19CR60073; A175059

     Katherine E. Weber, Judge.
     Argued and submitted October 21, 2022.
   Morgen E. Daniels, Deputy Public Defender, argued the
cause for appellant. Also on the brief was Ernest G. Lannet,
Chief Defender, Criminal Appellate Section, Office of Public
Defense Services.
   Michael A. Casper, Assistant Attorney General, argued
the cause for respondent. Also on the brief were Ellen F.
Rosenblum, Attorney General, and Benjamin Gutman,
Solicitor General.
  Before Ortega, Presiding Judge, and Hellman, Judge,
and Landau, Senior Judge.
     LANDAU, S. J.
     Affirmed.
Cite as 325 Or App 76 (2023)                                 77

        LANDAU, S. J.
         In this criminal case, defendant was convicted of
committing various sexual offenses against two children,
both of whom were under 12 years old at the time of the
charges. On appeal, defendant argues that the court erred
in three ways: First, the trial court erred in admitting evi-
dence that defendant had previously sexually abused a third
child; second, the court erred in failing to strike, sua sponte,
testimony of the mother of one of the victims that amounted
to impermissible vouching; third, the court erred in enter-
ing an amended judgment without providing written notice
to him. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
                     I. BACKGROUND
        We begin with a brief description of the relevant
facts and leave a detailed description of those facts that are
pertinent to each assignment of error in our discussion of
each assignment.
         The state charged defendant with multiple sex-
ual offenses, including first-degree rape and first-degree
sodomy, against his granddaughter A and his step-grand-
daughter O. The children were between the ages of six and
nine when the offenses occurred. At trial, the court admit-
ted the testimony of B, who testified that defendant had
sexually abused her as well, some years earlier. The court
also admitted the testimony of O’s mother, who described
how O and A had reported that defendant had been abusing
them. The prosecutor asked O’s mother about her daugh-
ter’s “character for truthfulness,” and O’s mother replied
that she believed her daughter to be truthful. There was no
objection to the question or the answer. A jury ultimately
found defendant guilty of all counts, and the trial court
orally imposed a sentence of 25 years in prison on each of
four of the counts, as required by ORS 137.700. The written
judgment, however, erroneously sentenced defendant to 25
months in prison on those counts. A month later, the trial
court entered an amended judgment that reflected the sen-
tence that had been announced at the sentencing hearing.
The court did not provide defendant with prior notice that it
planned to amend the judgment.
78                                       State v. Champagne

                       II. ANALYSIS
A. Admission of Evidence of Prior Abuse
         Defendant first assigns error to the admission of B’s
testimony that, some years earlier, defendant had abused
her. Before trial, the state filed a motion to admit that testi-
mony, arguing that the evidence was relevant and admissi-
ble as nonpropensity evidence under OEC 404(3) and, in the
alternative, as propensity evidence under OEC 404(4).
        As to OEC 404(3), the state argued that the evi-
dence was admissible to show defendant’s sexual purpose,
which the state argued was “different than using the evi-
dence to establish defendant’s character and propensity to
act accordingly.” The state argued that the evidence should
not be excluded under OEC 403 because it had significant
probative value, in that it showed a consistent and repeated
pattern of inappropriate conduct around children and
described acts that were “uncannily similar” to some of the
acts described by O, and that evidence, although prejudicial,
was not unfairly so and did not improperly appeal to the
preferences of the trier of fact for reasons unrelated to the
power of the evidence to establish a material fact.
         As to admissibility under OEC 404(4), the state
argued that defendant’s sexual interest in children was
highly relevant to prove that he acted on that interest
and with that purpose on the charged occasion, citing
State v. Williams, 357 Or 1, 346 P3d 455 (2015). The state
again argued that such propensity evidence should not
be excluded under OEC 403 for two reasons. First, citing
United States v. LeMay, 260 F3d 1018, 1029 (9th Cir 2001),
the state argued that defendant was expected to suggest
that O and A were fabricating, and so the evidence was nec-
essary to bolster the credibility of the victims. Second, in a
related vein, the state noted that defendant was expected
to call an expert witness, Dr. Bourg, who would opine that
the victims’ reports had been tainted by O’s mother’s belief
that defendant was someone who might sexually abuse chil-
dren. According to the state, the evidence of defendant’s
prior sexual interest was necessary to counter Bourg’s
testimony.
Cite as 325 Or App 76 (2023)                                        79

         Defendant responded that the prior-acts evidence
was relevant but not for “a noncharacter purpose.” Defendant
argued that “if the Court allows [B] to testify, * * * I just
think it’s impossible for him to have a fair trial in this
matter.”
       Judge Rastetter, who heard the pretrial motion,
agreed with the state, ruling as follows:
      “On the other bad acts, I find that it is relevant under
   [OEC] 404(3) for the nonpropensity purpose of showing
   Defendant’s alleged sexual interest in children and that he
   acted with a sexual purpose.
      “On the [OEC] 404(4) issue, the other act evidence has
   significant [probative] value, since it shows a pattern of
   inappropriate conduct toward children. The State needs the
   evidence. It doesn’t [sic] need to show that the Defendant
   acted with a desire or that he was aroused or gratified by
   sexual acts with—or aroused or gratified by children.
      “On balancing, I find that the probative value of the evi-
   dence is not outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice.
   The allegations in the case are already appalling and sim-
   ply adding one more instance of that kind of behavior really
   doesn’t add much more outrage to the alleged conduct.
      “I also find that the evidence is admissible under [OEC]
   404(4), since it is relevant and that it shows sexual interest
   in children and will tend to show that he acted on that
   interest.
      “The State also needs the evidence in order to cross-
   examine Dr. Bourg. So the probative value of the evidence
   is not outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice as I
   have already stated.”

        Judge Weber later presided over defendant’s trial,
and she and the parties attempted to determine the exact
scope of Rastetter’s pretrial ruling. Weber explained that
she was “simply interpreting his ruling and making a deci-
sion based on the evidence the State seeks to introduce.”
         Weber ultimately concluded that the pretrial rul-
ing “clearly allows [B] to testify” but that the ruling also
“clearly requires me to severely limit what may be presented
80                                       State v. Champagne

through [B’s] testimony,” such that B was allowed to testify
as to her “age, basis of relationship, number of times, cir-
cumstances, how it was initiated and progressed, and that
it was essentially always the same and that’s it.” B testified
at trial in a manner consistent with that ruling.
         The trial court later instructed the jury that it “can-
not use evidence relating to [defendant’s] past conviction or
conduct for the purpose of concluding that because [defen-
dant] sexually abused [B] in 2002, he is guilty of sexually
abusing [A or O] in this case” but “may take into account
evidence that [defendant] has a sexual interest in children
to determine whether he was acting on that interest on the
occasion of each charge—each charge[d] act involving [A
and O].”
         On appeal, defendant argues that the trial court
erred in admitting evidence of his sexual abuse of B under
either OEC 404(3) or OEC 404(4). In light of intervening case
law, the state does not attempt to defend the trial court’s
reasoning under OEC 404(3), and we accept that concession
of error. See State v. Powers, 323 Or App 553, 563-64, 523
P3d 1112 (2023) (holding that the trial court erred in con-
cluding that evidence of prior sexual abuse of a child was
admissible under OEC 404(3) for a nonpropensity purpose).
Rather, the state’s position is that the trial court’s admis-
sion of the evidence was permissible under OEC 404(4) as
propensity evidence.
         Defendant acknowledges that the evidence is rele-
vant under OEC 404(4) as propensity evidence. He argues
that the evidence nevertheless is inadmissible because the
trial court failed to separately balance the relevance of that
evidence as propensity evidence against its potential preju-
dice under OEC 403. According to defendant, the court (first
Rastetter, and then Weber adhering to that ruling) admit-
ted the evidence as both propensity and nonpropensity evi-
dence and failed to conduct distinct OEC 403 balancing for
purposes of OEC 404(4).
        Evidence that is not relevant for a nonpropensity
purpose may still be admissible under OEC 404(4) as pro-
pensity evidence, provided—among other things—the pro-
bative value of that evidence is not substantially outweighed
Cite as 325 Or App 76 (2023)                                 81

by the danger of unfair prejudice under OEC 403. State v.
Baughman, 361 Or 386, 405, 393 P3d 1132 (2017). More spe-
cifically, in child sex abuse cases, evidence of prior sexual
misconduct may be admissible under OEC 404(4) to prove
a defendant’s character and propensity, provided that the
evidence is not subject to exclusion under the balancing
required under OEC 403. Williams, 357 Or at 20.
         The balancing process under OEC 403 is distinct
in the case of propensity evidence, however, because of the
significant due process concerns that are associated with its
highly prejudicial nature. State v. Skillicorn, 367 Or 464, 477-
78, 482 n 4, 479 P3d 254 (2021). Thus, for example, in State v.
Cave, 321 Or App 81, 516 P3d 279 (2022), the defendant was
charged with sexually abusing two of his granddaughters.
The trial court admitted testimony from the defendant’s
daughter that the defendant had abused her, as well, con-
cluding that the evidence was being offered for a nonpropen-
sity purpose under OEC 404(3) and was not subject to exclu-
sion under OEC 403. Id. at 83. On appeal, the state conceded
that the evidence was not admissible under OEC 404(3) but
argued that it was still admissible as propensity evidence
under OEC 404(4). Id. at 86-87. According to the state, it did
not matter whether the evidence at issue was labeled “non-
propensity” or “propensity” evidence, because in either case
the probative value of the evidence was the same; that is, it
was offered to show the defendant’s sexual purpose. Id. at 87.
As a result, the state contended, the trial court’s balancing
under OEC 403 sufficed, whether the evidence was admitted
under either category. Id. We rejected the state’s contention.
The distinction between the two categories of evidence goes
beyond mere labeling, we explained. Id. at 84. Moreover, the
record showed that the trial court had declined to reach the
admissibility of the evidence as propensity evidence under
OEC 404(4). Cave, 321 Or App at 88-89; see also State v.
Travis, 320 Or App 460, 469-70, 513 P3d 614 (2022) (evidence
erroneously admitted under OEC 404(3), remanded for trial
court to determine admissibility under OEC 404(4)).
         In contrast, in Powers, 323 Or App 553, another
sexual abuse case, the trial court admitted court-certified
copies of the defendant’s prior convictions for sexual abuse.
The court ruled that the evidence was admissible on two
82                                            State v. Champagne

separate grounds: (1) under OEC 404(3), to prove that the
defendant had acted intentionally in engaging in sexual
contact with the victim in that case; and (2) under OEC
404(4), to prove the defendant’s sexual interest in children.
Id. at 562. After concluding that the evidence was admissi-
ble under OEC 404(3), the court concluded that it was not
subject to exclusion under OEC 403. Id. at 563. Then, after
concluding that the evidence was also admissible under
OEC 404(4), the court explained that “[t]he court does not
reach a different analysis for admissibility for that purpose
under OEC 403 and incorporates its analysis above.” Id.
On appeal, the defendant argued that the trial court had
erred in admitting the evidence. Id. at 562. The state did not
defend the trial court’s ruling under OEC 404(3) but main-
tained that the evidence remained admissible under OEC
404(4). Id. at 563-64. In response, the defendant argued that
the evidence was not admissible under OEC 404(4), because
the trial court had failed to separately balance its proba-
tive value against the danger of prejudice under that rule.
Id. at 564. We rejected the defendant’s argument. Where
it is clear that the trial court understood the distinct pur-
poses of admitting the evidence, “the fact that the trial court
incorporated its previous OEC 403 balancing does not itself
demonstrate that the trial court failed to appreciate the pro-
pensity nature of the evidence.” Id. at 565. A trial court “is
not required to explicitly recite those differences as part of
its balancing,” as long as it is clear from the record that the
court understood those differences in evaluating the admis-
sibility of the evidence. Id.

         This case is much more like Powers than Cave. As
in Powers, the trial court clearly understood the state’s two
distinct theories of admissibility—as nonpropensity evi-
dence under OEC 404(3) and as propensity evidence under
OEC 404(4). The final two paragraphs of Rastetter’s ruling
reflect an explicit OEC 404(4) ruling that includes balancing
directed specifically at propensity purposes under that rule:
        “I also find that the evidence is admissible under [OEC]
     404(4), since it is relevant and that it shows sexual interest
     in children and will tend to show that he acted on that
     interest.
Cite as 325 Or App 76 (2023)                                     83

        “The State also needs the evidence in order to cross-
     examine Dr. Bourg. So the probative value of the evidence
     is not outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice as I
     have already stated.”
         That leaves the question whether the trial court
erred in concluding that the probative value of the evidence
substantially outweighed the danger of prejudice in admit-
ting it. We review that determination for an abuse of dis-
cretion. State v. Terry, 309 Or App 459, 461, 482 P3d 105
(2021). In this case, we conclude that the court’s balancing
fell within the permissible range of the court’s discretion,
particularly in light of the state’s need to cross-examine
Bourg, the limitations imposed on B’s testimony, and the use
of a limiting instruction. See Powers, 323 Or App at 567-68
(holding that, in light of the LeMay factors, the court acted
within its discretion to admit evidence of past abuse to show
sexual purpose); Terry, 309 Or App at 465 (same); State v.
Moles, 295 Or App 606, 620, 435 P3d 782, rev den, 365 Or
194 (2019), rev’d on other grounds, 366 Or 549, 466 P3d 61
(2020) (same). We therefore affirm with regard to the trial
court’s admission of evidence of defendant’s sexual abuse
of B.
B.    Vouching
          In his next assignment, defendant argues that “[t]he
trial court erred when it allowed [O’s mother] to vouch for
[O’s] truthfulness.” Defendant acknowledges that he did
not object to O’s mother’s testimony at trial but argues that
we should exercise our discretion to reverse on plain-error
grounds. We are not persuaded that, under the circum-
stances, the trial court committed plain error by failing
to interject and strike O’s mother’s testimony; and, in any
event, it is not an error that we would exercise our discretion
to correct in this case.
C. Entry of Amended Judgment
         At sentencing, the trial court indicated that it was
imposing a sentence of 300 months (25 years) on each of
Counts 1, 2, 3, and 4, pursuant to ORS 137.700. However,
the trial court’s written judgment imposed a sentence of 25
months in prison on each count. A month later, the court
84                                            State v. Champagne

amended the judgment to comport with the sentence that
it pronounced orally, but there is no indication in the record
that defendant was provided written notice before that
change was made.
        On appeal, defendant argues that the trial court
erred when it entered that amended judgment without the
written notice required by ORS 137.172(1). That statute
provides:
         “The trial court retains authority after entry of judg-
     ment of conviction or a supplemental judgment, including
     during the pendency of an appeal, to modify the judgment,
     including the sentence, to correct any arithmetic or cleri-
     cal errors or to delete or modify any erroneous term in the
     judgment. The court may correct the judgment either on
     the motion of one of the parties or on the court’s own motion
     after written notice to all of the parties.”
ORS 137.172(1) (emphasis added). Defendant argues that,
because the trial court failed to provide the required written
notice, it lacked authority to enter the amended judgment,
so we must vacate and remand for further proceedings. In
support, defendant relies on State v. Pryor, 310 Or App 403,
484 P3d 1123 (2021); State v. Nobles, 264 Or App 580, 333
P3d 1077 (2014); and State v. Whitlock, 187 Or App 265, 65
P3d 1114, rev den, 336 Or 17 (2003), in which we held that
written notice to all parties is a prerequisite to exercising
authority under ORS 137.172(1) and its statutory predeces-
sor, ORS 137.083 (2007), repealed by Or Laws 2017, ch 529,
§ 26.
         The state argues that any failure in not providing
notice was harmless because the court was required by stat-
ute to impose mandatory 25-year prison sentences for the
crimes of first-degree rape, sodomy, and unlawful sexual
penetration if the victim is under 12 years of age, as was the
case here. In the state’s view, notice would not have changed
anything because the sentence modification was one that
occurred solely by operation of law and involved no discre-
tion on the part of the trial court. In support, the state relies
on State v. Riley, 195 Or App 377, 384, 97 P3d 1269 (2004),
rev den, 340 Or 673 (2006), in which we concluded that the
trial court’s failure to provide the written notice required
Cite as 325 Or App 76 (2023)                                 85

by ORS 138.083, the predecessor statute to ORS 137.172(1),
amounted to harmless error when the modification to the
judgment was required by law.

         Both parties fairly claim some support from the
precedents that they cite, and neither line of cases engages
with the other. And, at least on the surface, there does
appear to be some tension in the case law—between cases
that, on the one hand, say that a prerequisite for exercising
authority under ORS 137.172(1) or its predecessor is provid-
ing notice to all parties and, on the other hand, cases hold-
ing that a failure to provide such notice may be subject to
harmless-error analysis.

         Given the parties’ competing but distinct lines of
cases, we take this opportunity to reconcile them. As we
will explain, there is no inconsistency in the cases. The
authorities on which defendant relies hold that, for a trial
court to exercise authority to amend a judgment under ORS
137.172(1), the court must satisfy the statutory requirement
for doing so, in this case, providing notice to the parties. To
the extent that a trial court purports to exercise authority
under that statute without providing the required notice, the
trial court errs. That does not mean that the error always
requires reversal. If the trial court possessed authority
independently of ORS 137.172(1), failure to comply with the
requirements of the statute may be harmless.

          In fact, ORS 137.172(1) is not the only source of
authority for trial courts to amend a judgment. At common
law, if a trial court entered a judgment that was legally erro-
neous, the court could correct the error. Gladden v. Kelly, 213
Or 197, 200, 324 P2d 486 (1958). This was regarded as an
exception to the general rule that trial courts lose authority
once a defendant begins serving a sentence. Id. The ratio-
nale was that, if the court entered an unlawful judgment,
it never lost its authority in the first place. State v. Nelson,
246 Or 321, 324, 424 P2d 223, cert den, 389 US 964 (1967).
In such circumstances, the fact that notice was not provided
to the parties did not affect the court’s authority to correct
the error. As the Supreme Court explained in Daugharty v.
Gladden, 217 Or 567, 578, 341 P2d 1069 (1959):
86                                             State v. Champagne

         “While it is a general rule that to protect interested par-
     ties notice should be given when an application is made to
     correct a judgment or its record, such notice is not necessary
     where the error is apparent on the face of the entire court
     record and the correction thereof could not be successfully
     opposed. * * * Stated simply, the law will not require the
     doing of a useless act.”
         The enactment of what is now ORS 137.172(1) did
not affect that authority. As originally enacted in 1989, the
statute provided:
     “The sentencing court retains authority irrespective of any
     notice of appeal after entry of judgment of conviction to
     modify its judgment and sentence to correct any arithme-
     tic or clerical errors or to delete or modify any erroneous
     term in the judgment. The court may correct the judgment
     either on the motion of one of the parties or on the court’s
     own motion after written notice to all the parties.”
Former ORS 137.083 (2007). We have concluded that the
effect of that statute was to expand, not limit, a trial court’s
authority to correct clerical errors. As we noted in State v.
Pinkowsky, 111 Or App 166, 170, 826 P2d 10 (1992), “nothing
in the statute provides that it is the exclusive authority for
corrections to be made” in a judgment. Instead, ORS 138.083
“permits a trial court to act on specific issues, even though
jurisdiction is in an appellate court. * * * ORS 138.083 is not
a limitation but is an expansion of trial courts’ authority
to correct clerical errors.” Id.; see also State v. Johnson, 242
Or App 279, 286, 255 P3d 547, rev den, 350 Or 530 (2011)
(“[T]he legislature is free to create additional exceptions to
the common-law rule, and, indeed, it did so with the enact-
ment of ORS 138.083.”); Whitlock, 187 Or App at 268-69 (dis-
cussing the common-law rule and statute).
          In 2017, the Oregon legislature overhauled the
state’s statutes concerning criminal appeals, and in the pro-
cess, what was originally former ORS 138.083 was slightly
reworded and codified at what is now ORS 137.172. Nothing
in the text or history of the current statute suggests that
the legislature intended any substantive changes to the
original. See Exhibit 37, Senate Committee on Judiciary,
SB 896, Apr 6, 2017 (Report of the Direct Criminal Appeals
Work Group on SB 896 (2017), Oregon Law Commission)
Cite as 325 Or App 76 (2023)                                                    87

(Criminal Appeals Report) (“Section 20 recodifies the pro-
visions of ORS 138.083(1)(a) and (b), relating to trial court
authority to correct or modify judgments, including during
the pendency of an appeal.”).1
         What follows from all this is that there are two
independent sources of trial court authority to modify a
judgment after a defendant begins serving a sentence—the
common law and ORS 137.172(1). Certainly, if a court pur-
ports to modify a sentence under the authority conferred by
the statute, the court must comply with any requirements
in that statute, and a failure to do so will be error. But the
error in failing to comply with the statute may be harm-
less, because the court possessed common-law authority to
do the same thing anyway—indeed, was required by law to
do so—and there was no cognizable prejudice from the lack
of notice.
         Our cases are generally consistent with that dis-
tinction, even if they have not always said as much. In Riley,
the trial court modified a judgment to conform to what the
law required. 195 Or App at 383. It did so under the ear-
lier version of the statute and did not provide the required
notice. The court thus erred. Id. at 384. But because the
court had inherent authority to make the change anyway—
because the law required it—we deemed the error harmless.
Id.
         The cases cited by defendant are not to the contrary.
In Pryor, the trial court amended a judgment of conviction
and imposed an upward departure sentence. 310 Or App
at 405. On appeal, the defendant argued that the sentence
was in excess of what the law allowed and, in any event,
had been imposed without the required notice under ORS
137.172(1). Id. at 404-05. The state conceded the error, and
we accepted the concession. Id. at 405. The issue turned to
the appropriate remedy. The state argued that it was pos-
sible that the amended judgment reflected a clerical error
which could be remedied by an amended judgment following

     1
       The primary legislative history for the bill that resulted in ORS 137.172(1)
is the report of the work group. See State v. Colgrove, 370 Or 474, 492, 521 P3d 456
(2022) (explaining the history of SB 896).
88                                       State v. Champagne

the notice required by ORS 137.172(1). Id. at 406. We agreed,
vacated the sentence, and remanded. Id. at 407.
         In Nobles, the defendant pleaded no contest to a
murder charge and was sentenced to 144 months in prison
followed by a life term of post-prison supervision (PPS). 264
Or App at 581. The defendant asked the trial court to reduce
the PPS term to three years, and the trial court agreed. Id.
Two days later, the court changed its mind and, invoking
ORS 138.083, reinstated the lifetime PPS, but without giv-
ing notice to the defendant. Id. We concluded that the court
lacked authority to modify the judgment under the statute,
because notice was “an explicit prerequisite” to exercising
authority under that statute. Id. at 581-82. There was a
hotly contested dispute between the parties as to whether
the sentence that the trial court had entered in the amended
judgment was required by law, and the possibility of harm-
less error was not discussed in the opinion; however, it was
not the kind of error that could be described as clerical or for
which the lack of advance notice could be deemed harmless.
See State v. Nobles, 306 Or App 1, 5, 473 P3d 1108 (2020)
(subsequently addressing the merits of the same substan-
tive legal dispute).
         In Whitlock, after the defendant began serving his
sentence, the trial court was advised that the defendant
had previously been convicted of first-degree burglary some
years earlier and concluded that the additional conviction
brought the defendant within the ambit of a statute, ORS
137.635, that foreclosed any eligibility for reductions of the
term of incarceration or early release. 187 Or App at 267.
Citing ORS 137.083, the court issued an amended judgment
that added a sentence to the effect that the defendant was
subject to the limitations of ORS 137.635. Id. at 268. The
court, however, did not notify the defendant of the modifi-
cation. Id. The defendant, when he learned of the change,
challenged the authority of the court to alter the original
judgment without notice to him. Id. On appeal, the state
asserted the trial court’s inherent authority to modify an
erroneous judgment. Id. at 270. The defendant did not con-
test the existence of that authority but argued that, unless
the original sentence was unlawful based on the record
before the court at the time the judgment was originally
Cite as 325 Or App 76 (2023)                                                     89

entered, that authority did not apply. Id. at 269-70. We
agreed that trial courts possess inherent authority to cor-
rect an invalid sentence and commented further that the
parties’ disagreement presented an “interesting question.”
Id. at 270. But ultimately, we did not address the issue
and reversed on other grounds, because the defendant was
entitled to an opportunity to be heard on the merits of the
modification—including arguing about the state of the record
and contesting any evidence offered by the state in support
of the modification. Id. at 271 (“Further, we are unaware
of any reason why, at that time, the state will be precluded
from introducing evidence of defendant’s prior conviction,
nor of any reason why defendant will be precluded from con-
testing the admissibility or accuracy of that evidence.”).2
         Returning to this case, the trial court did err in
amending the judgment pursuant to ORS 137.172(1) with-
out providing all parties the written notice that the statute
requires. But that error was harmless given that the court
was required by law to impose prison terms of 25 years on
each count, consistent with its pronouncement in court. As
in Riley, defendant has no basis for arguing that the trial
court lawfully could have entered any other judgment.
           Affirmed.

    2
      We note that, in a number of instances, we have described the conditions
on exercising authority under ORS 137.172(1) as “jurisdictional.” See, e.g., State v.
French, 208 Or App 652, 656, 145 P3d 305 (2006) (referring to the issue “whether
the trial court had jurisdiction to amend the sentence under ORS 138.083(1)”).
The term should not be understood in the sense of subject matter jurisdiction.
State v. Keys, 368 Or 171, 180, 489 P3d 83 (2021) (explaining that “courts have
not always been precise in their use of the term ‘jurisdiction’ ”); Dept. of Human
Services v. C. M. H., 368 Or 96, 108-09, 486 P3d 772 (2021) (describing various
ways that courts historically used the term “jurisdiction”). Rather, the references
should be understood to concern the trial court’s authority to correct judgment
when jurisdiction lies elsewhere, for example, in this court. See, e.g., Pinkowsky,
111 Or App at 169-70 (“The statute [ORS 138.083] permits a trial court to act on
specific issues, even though jurisdiction is in an appellate court.”).