Court Opinion

ID: 9940502
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-02-14 17:12:31.813113+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:44:56.307557
License: Public Domain

No. 85               February 14, 2024                   629

         IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE
                 STATE OF OREGON

                   STATE OF OREGON,
                    Plaintiff-Respondent,
                              v.
               JESSICA NICHOLE CARTER,
                   Defendant-Appellant.
                 Lane County Circuit Court
                   19CR28434; A176781

   Charles D. Carlson, Judge.
   Argued June 5, 2023.
   Brett J. Allin, 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.
   Philip Michael Thoennes, Assistant Attorney General,
argued the cause for respondent. Also on the brief were Ellen
F. Rosenblum, Attorney General, and Benjamin Gutman,
Solicitor General.
  Before Shorr, Presiding Judge, Mooney, Judge, and
Pagán, Judge.
   SHORR, P. J.
   Affirmed.
630                                                          State v. Carter

           SHORR, P. J.
         Defendant appeals from a judgment of conviction
for one count of driving under the influence of intoxicants
(DUII), ORS 813.010, and one count of reckless driving, ORS
811.140. Defendant argues that the trial court plainly erred
by providing a “Miles instruction” (UCrJI 2708) to the jury.1
For the following reasons, we conclude that the trial court
did not plainly err, and, therefore, affirm.
          Only a brief recitation of facts is required to provide
context for our decision. Defendant’s car struck a pole while
defendant was driving home after being dismissed from work
for being “too tired.” Defendant explained to the police offi-
cer who had responded to the crash that she had swerved to
avoid a rabbit. Defendant also admitted to taking a number
of prescription medications that day and to using marijuana
the previous evening. After conducting field sobriety tests,
police arrested defendant for driving under the influence. At
the jail, a breathalyzer test showed that defendant had no
blood alcohol content. But a police drug-recognition expert
conducted an examination and opined that defendant was
“highly impaired” by a central-nervous system depressant
and a narcotic analgesic. Defendant insisted that she was
simply sick and tired. A urine sample obtained from defen-
dant tested positive for methadone, alprazolam (Xanax), des-
venlafaxine (Pristiq) and its metabolites, and the metabo-
lites for clonazepam and marijuana. The state proceeded to
charge defendant with DUII and reckless driving. At trial,
the state requested a Miles instruction. Defendant did not
object to that instruction, and the trial court ultimately read
that instruction to the jury. The jury returned a guilty ver-
dict for both DUII (Count 1) and reckless driving (Count 2).

    1
      In State v. Miles, 8 Or App 189, 492 P2d 497 (1972), we affirmed the court’s
use of what is now Uniform Criminal Jury Instruction 2708. The Miles instruc-
tion provides as follows:
         “If you find from the evidence that [defendant] was in such a physical
    condition that they were more susceptible to the influence of intoxicants than
    they would otherwise be, and as a result of being in that physical condition,
    [defendant] became under the influence by a lesser quantity of intoxicants
    than it would otherwise take, [defendant] is nevertheless under the influence
    of intoxicants.”
UCrJI 2708.
Cite as 330 Or App 629 (2024)                               631

On appeal, defendant’s sole assignment of error is that the
trial court plainly erred in giving the Miles instruction.
         A court has plainly erred if the asserted error (1) is
one of law; (2) is apparent such that the error is obvious and
not reasonably in dispute; and (3) appears on the face of
the record. State v. Serrano, 355 Or 172, 179, 324 P3d 1274
(2014). Here, the asserted error satisfies the first prong, as
we review jury instructions given by the court for errors of
law. Id. at 187. But the asserted error fails at the second
prong because the error is not obvious or apparent.
         “A trial court errs if it gives a jury instruction that
is at odds with a general rule of Oregon law or inconsistent
with a specific application of that rule in prior Oregon case
law.” Montara Owners Assn. v. La Noue Development, LLC,
357 Or 333, 347-48, 353 P3d 563 (2015) (internal quotation
marks omitted). First, defendant argues that she consumed
no alcohol, and the Miles instruction is only appropriate in
cases of intoxication by alcohol consumption. Second, she
argues that under State v. Avila, 318 Or App 284, 507 P3d
704 (2022), the “physical condition” referenced in the Miles
instruction does not include “non-drug related physical con-
ditions,” such as defendant’s purported physical conditions
here: illness and fatigue. Neither of those arguments are
persuasive on plain error review because neither of those
arguments identify a rule of Oregon law that the trial court
apparently or obviously violated.
         Citing no authority, defendant first argues that a
Miles instruction is only appropriate in DUII cases where
the defendant was intoxicated by alcohol. To the contrary, we
have noted that the term “intoxicants” in the Miles instruc-
tion refers to “either or both intoxicating liquor and controlled
substances.” State v. Waldrup, 327 Or App 387, 393, 536 P3d
20 (2023) (citing Avila, 318 Or App at 296 n 4). Also, even
if defendant were correct that “[t]his court has never held
that a Miles instruction is appropriate * * * when the alleged
DUII does not involve alcohol,” defendant must still identify
“a general rule of Oregon law” or “specific application” of a
rule with which the Miles instruction is obviously “at odds” if
she is to prevail. Montara Owners Assn., 357 Or at 347-348.
Defendant has failed to identify that general rule of Oregon
632                                            State v. Carter

law or specific application of a rule that is obviously at odds
with the Miles instruction. See State v. Reyes-Camarena, 330
Or 431, 436, 7 P3d 522 (2000) (concluding that the trial court
did not plainly err when “[n]o Oregon appellate court has
considered the issue, let alone held that defendant’s posi-
tion is correct”); but see Dept. of Human Services v. S. S., 307
Or App 37, 45, 475 P3d 925 (2020), rev den, 368 Or 347 (2021)
(suggesting that the text of a statute could be “plain” so as to
make a legal point “obvious”).
          Defendant also argues that under Avila the term
“physical condition” referenced in the Miles instruction can-
not include “non-drug related physical conditions,” such as
defendant’s purported physical conditions here: illness and
fatigue. Defendant is correct insofar that we noted in Avila
that “we have grave doubts that a Miles instruction would
ever be appropriate when the ‘physical condition’ is something
other than a temporary condition caused by the ingestion of a
drug.” Avila, 318 Or App at 301. But those “doubts” amounted
to dicta, because the dispositive holding in that case was that
the state presented insufficient evidence to show that suf-
fering from a permanent physical condition—muscular dys-
trophy—made the defendant more susceptible to the effects
of alcohol. Avila, 318 Or App at 303. Indeed, defendant con-
cedes that the holding in Avila “did not rely on the nature of
the physical condition.” Defendant also relies on and cites to
cases where we have concluded that the Miles instruction was
erroneous when the physical condition at issue was illness or
fatigue, State v. Roller, 181 Or App 542, 47 P3d 52 (2002), and
State v. Curtis, 182 Or App 166, 47 P3d 929, rev den, 335 Or
104 (2002). But those cases were decided on grounds similar
to those in Avila: “there was a lack of evidence that suffering
from the flu or being fatigued made a person more susceptible
to the effects of alcohol.” Avila, 318 Or App at 298. In sum,
although we expressed “grave doubts” in Avila that a non-
drug-related physical condition could qualify as a “physical
condition” for the purposes of a Miles instruction, those doubts
were merely dicta and cannot stand alone as the underlying
basis for an “obvious” or “apparent” error of law. Accordingly,
we cannot conclude that the trial court plainly erred.
        Affirmed.