State v. Landahl

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FILED: December 12, 2012 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF OREGON STATE OF OREGON, Plaintiff-Respondent, v. ROBERT JAMES LANDAHL, Defendant-Appellant. Multnomah County Circuit Court 060140795 A146189 Lewis Bridgers Lawrence, Judge. Argued and submitted on October 31, 2012. David L. Sherbo-Huggins, Deputy Public Defender, argued the cause for appellant. With him on the brief was Peter Gartlan, Chief Defender, Office of Public Defense Services. Matthew J. Lysne, Assistant Attorney in Charge, Criminal Appeals, argued the cause for respondent. With him on the briefs were John R. Kroger, Attorney General, and Anna M. Joyce, Solicitor General. Before Brewer, Presiding Judge, and Wollheim, Judge, and Duncan, Judge.* BREWER, P. J. Appeal dismissed. *Wollheim, J., vice Armstrong, P. J. 1 BREWER, J. 2 Defendant, who appeals a judgment convicting him of driving under the 3 influence of intoxicants (DUII), argues that the trial court erred in setting aside its 4 previous dismissal of the charge and in entering a judgment based on his guilty plea made 5 upon his entry into a diversion program. Defendant asserts that we have jurisdiction over 6 this appeal pursuant to ORS 138.050(1)(a). The state asserts that we do not. As 7 explained below, we conclude that the state is correct; accordingly, we dismiss the 8 appeal. 9 The pertinent facts are procedural and not in dispute. Defendant was 10 charged with DUII in January of 2006 and petitioned to enter diversion. On March 1, 11 2006, the trial court granted defendant's petition, pursuant to which defendant made a 12 plea of no contest to the DUII charge. The diversion and plea agreement provided that 13 defendant understood that, if he fully complied with the conditions of the diversion 14 agreement, the court would dismiss the charge with prejudice pursuant to ORS 813.250, 15 but that, if defendant failed to comply with the agreement within the diversion period, the 16 court would enter a judgment of conviction based on defendant's plea. Conditions of the 17 diversion agreement required defendant to participate in treatment and prohibited him 18 from operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of intoxicants. 19 In March 2007, the court extended the diversion period for 180 days to 20 allow defendant to complete his required treatment. On August 22, 2007, defense 21 counsel filed a motion to terminate diversion, asserting that defendant had successfully 1 1 completed the diversion requirements. The state did not oppose that motion, so the trial 2 court granted it on September 11, 2007, and the court entered an order dismissing the 3 charge. Shortly thereafter, however, the state discovered that defendant had, in fact, 4 driven under the influence of intoxicants on August 17, 2007, approximately a week 5 before he had filed his motion to terminate diversion. The state moved to set aside the 6 judgment dismissing the DUII charge and to terminate defendant's diversion based on his 7 violation of the diversion agreement. The trial court granted the state's motion on 8 November 19, 2007, indicating that it was vacating the judgment due to "surprise" and 9 "misrepresentation by defendant." On December 15, 2007, the court issued a bench 10 warrant for defendant's arrest. Defendant was apprehended on the warrant in April 2010 11 and, at that point, moved to set aside the November 2007 order vacating the September 12 2007 judgment of dismissal. The trial court denied defendant's motion, entered a 13 judgment of conviction based on defendant's original no contest plea, and imposed a 14 sentence of probation. 15 Defendant appeals that judgment pursuant to ORS 138.050. Defendant 16 challenges the trial court's denial of his motion to set aside the November 2007 order 17 vacating the prior judgment, and he asks this court to "reverse his conviction and 18 sentence and remand for entry of an order dismissing the DUII charge." Defendant 19 recognizes, however, that in order to do so, we must first address whether this appeal is 20 cognizable under ORS 138.050, which limits a defendant's appeal in situations where a 21 defendant has entered a plea of guilty or no contest. 2 1 ORS 138.050 provides, in part: "(1) Except as otherwise provided in ORS 135.335,[1] a defendant who has pleaded guilty or no contest may take an appeal from a judgment or order described in ORS 138.053 only when the defendant makes a colorable showing that the disposition: 2 3 4 5 6 "(a) Exceeds the maximum allowable by law; or 7 "(b) Is unconstitutionally cruel and unusual. 8 "* * * * * 9 10 "(3) On appeal under subsection (1) of this section, the appellate court shall consider only whether the disposition: 11 "(a) Exceeds the maximum allowable by law; or 12 "(b) Is unconstitutionally cruel and unusual." 13 Defendant argues that the "judgment contains two dispositions that exceed 14 the maximum allowable by law--the DUII conviction and the sentence--because the trial 15 court had no authority to impose either after the case had been dismissed." Thus, 16 defendant posits that ORS 138.050 allows him to appeal, and allows this court to review 17 a challenge to, his conviction. As explained below, neither the text of the pertinent 18 statutes when read in context, nor the prior opinions of the appellate courts, ultimately 19 support defendant's reading of ORS 138.050. 20 21 Defendant's position rests on the assumption that his conviction is a "disposition," as that term is used in ORS 138.050(1), and the related assumption that a 1 ORS 135.335 allows a defendant in some circumstances to enter a plea while reserving the right to appeal from an adverse determination. That statute is not at issue in the present case. 3 1 conviction that is legally flawed necessarily is one that "exceeds the maximum allowable 2 by law." The term "disposition," as used in this context, is a legal term of art that can 3 mean, broadly speaking, "[a] final settlement or determination <the court's disposition of 4 the case >." Black's Law Dictionary 505 (8th ed 2004). Under that broad definition, 5 defendant's proposition--that a conviction is a disposition--could be correct. However, 6 ORS 138.050(1) refers to "disposition" in the context of orders or judgments "described 7 in ORS 138.053." ORS 138.053, in turn, provides: 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 "(1) A judgment, or order of a court, if the order is imposed after judgment, is subject to the appeal provisions and limitations on review under ORS 138.040 and 138.050 if the disposition includes any of the following: "(a) Imposition of a sentence on conviction. "(b) Suspension of imposition or execution of any part of a sentence. "(c) Extension of a period of probation. 16 17 "(d) Imposition or modification of a condition of probation or of sentence suspension. 18 19 "(e) Imposition or execution of a sentence upon revocation of probation or sentence suspension. 20 21 22 23 "(2) A disposition described under subsection (1) of this section is not subject to appeal after the expiration of the time specified in ORS 138.071 for appealing from the judgment or order imposing it, except as may be provided in ORS 138.510 to 138.680. 24 25 26 27 28 "(3) Notwithstanding ORS 138.040 and 138.050, upon an appeal from a judgment or order described in subsection (1)(c) to (e) of this section, the appellate court may review the order that extended the period of the defendant's probation, imposed or modified a condition of the defendant's probation or sentence suspension or revoked the defendant's 4 1 2 probation or sentence suspension if the defendant shows a colorable claim of error in the proceeding from which the appeal is taken." 3 (Emphasis added.) That statute, in short, provides that a disposition "includes" various 4 matters pertaining to a sentence or probation. It refers to the disposition in conjunction 5 with "the appeal provisions and limitations on review under ORS 138.040 and 138.050." 6 As noted, ORS 138.050 allows appeal and review if the "disposition" is one that exceeds 7 the maximum allowable by law or is cruel and unusual. ORS 138.040, by contrast, 8 authorizes the appellate court not only to review dispositions that exceed the maximum 9 allowable by law or are cruel and unusual, ORS 138.040(1)(b), but also to review "[a]ny 10 decision of the court in an intermediate order or proceeding." (Emphasis added.) Thus, 11 were the present case proceeding under ORS 138.040, there is no doubt that the "decision 12 of the court" in the "intermediate order" from November 2007 that defendant seeks to 13 challenge here would be reviewable on appeal. 14 Put another way, if defendant's understanding of "disposition" is correct, 15 and "disposition" includes the conviction itself and any error in the proceeding that 16 potentially affects the validity of that conviction, then ORS 138.040 and ORS 138.050 17 both offer an equally broad scope of review. As a purely textual matter, that seems 18 unlikely. Where a statute contains "several provisions or particulars," we attempt to 19 construe it to "give effect to all." ORS 174.010. Generally, "we assume that the 20 legislature did not intend any portions of its enactments to be meaningless surplusage." 21 State v. Stamper, 197 Or App 413, 417, 106 P3d 172, rev den, 339 Or 230 (2005). If 22 defendant were correct that ORS 138.050 allows appellate review in the same manner as 5 1 ORS 138.040, it is difficult to perceive why the legislature would have enacted both 2 statutes, much less have included additional text in ORS 138.040 that specifically allows 3 appellate review of intermediate orders. 4 In sum, from a purely textual view of ORS 138.050 and related statutes, 5 defendant's proposed construction is problematic. Prior case law, and the legislative 6 history of ORS 138.050 described therein, however, definitively demonstrates that 7 defendant's broad interpretation of ORS 138.050 is not what the legislature intended. See 8 generally State v. Gaines, 346 Or 160, 171-72, 206 P3d 1042 (2009) (in interpreting a 9 statute, we look primarily to the text in context, in light of any pertinent legislative 10 history); SAIF v. Walker, 330 Or 102, 108-09, 996 P2d 979 (2000) (prior case law forms 11 part of a statute's context). 12 In State v. Cloutier, 351 Or 68, 261 P3d 1234 (2011), the court reviewed at 13 length the history of ORS 138.050, including each version of its predecessor enactments 14 dating from the original in the early 1900s through the present version of the statute, the 15 court's case law interpreting it, and the legislative history of various changes. Id. at 77- 16 104. The text at issue here traces back to a version of the statute providing that 17 "imprisonment shall not in any event exceed the maximum term provided by law." Id. at 18 77 (quoting Lord's Oregon Laws, title XVIII, ch XI, ยง 1592 (1910)). The court's earliest 19 interpretation of the statute was that "the effect of a guilty plea is to admit the facts as 20 charged in the indictment; but that does not preclude a defendant who has so pleaded 21 from advancing purely legal challenges to the lawfulness of the conviction or sentence." 6 1 Cloutier, 351 Or at 77 (citing State v. Lewis, 113 Or 359, 361-62, 230 P 543 (1924), on 2 reh'g, 232 P 1013 (1925)). Thereafter, the legislature enacted a restriction providing that, 3 when a defendant had pleaded guilty, the appellate court was only to consider whether an 4 excessive fine had been imposed or a cruel, unusual, or disproportionate sentence had 5 been inflicted. Cloutier, 351 Or at 78 (citations omitted). Subsequently, the court 6 decided State v. Jairl, 229 Or 533, 368 P2d 323 (1962), where a defendant who had 7 pleaded guilty argued on appeal that the trial court had erred in failing to dismiss the 8 charge. The court held that Lewis had been legislatively overruled; accordingly, the court 9 held that the issue that the defendant sought to raise was not cognizable under ORS 10 138.050 and ORS 138.040 was the only statute "with language broad enough to justify an 11 appeal of the grounds submitted by the defendant." Id. at 539. The court further 12 observed that the defendant's remedy was not through direct appeal but, rather, through 13 the Post-Conviction Hearing Act. Id. at 542. 14 In Cloutier, the court reviewed the alterations of ORS 138.050 that were 15 enacted during the 1970s and 1980s, including a version of the statute that allowed a 16 defendant who had entered a plea to appeal a judgment that imposed a "sentence" that 17 was cruel, unusual, or "excessive in light of the nature and background of the offender or 18 the facts and circumstances of the offense." 351 Or at 80 (quoting ORS 138.050 (1977)). 19 Under that version of the statute, the court decided State v. Clevenger, 297 Or 234, 683 20 P2d 1360 (1984). In Clevenger, the defendant had entered a plea of no contest, and 21 sought to argue on appeal that the trial court had erred in entering a conviction based on 7 1 his plea because the factual basis for the plea was insufficient. The court rejected the 2 defendant's argument that the issue was reviewable and adhered to its prior interpretation 3 of the statute in Jairl. 4 Because of the earlier statutory change that had introduced the issue of 5 whether a sentence was "excessive in light of the nature and background of the offender 6 or the facts and circumstances of the offense," this court became inundated with appeals 7 challenging sentences under that provision. See Cloutier, 351 Or at 84 (so noting). In 8 1985, the legislature amended ORS 138.050, at the request of the Judicial Department, to 9 remove that language and, in essence, return the statute to its prior form. In State v. 10 Loyer, 303 Or 612, 740 P2d 177 (1987), a defendant who had pleaded guilty attempted to 11 raise on appeal an issue concerning the cross-examination of a state's witness at a 12 sentencing proceeding. Noting that the recent amendment of the statute had considerably 13 narrowed its scope, the court rejected the defendant's argument on the ground that he had 14 not established that a "procedural flaw prevents us from determining upon appellate 15 review whether the sentence 'exceeds the maximum sentence allowable by law or is 16 unconstitutionally cruel and unusual.'" Id. at 617 (quoting ORS 138.050 (1985)). 17 Most pertinent to the issue in this case, ORS 138.050 was amended in 1989, 18 and the word "disposition" was substituted for the word "sentence." As the court 19 explained in Cloutier: 20 21 22 23 "The amendments were prompted by uncertainty about whether a term of probation was within the meaning of the 'sentence' that a defendant could challenge on appeal under ORS 138.040. In State v. Carmickle, 307 Or 1, 6-7, 762 P2d 290 (1988), this court concluded that, although an order of 8 1 2 probation was appealable on other grounds, it was not a 'sentence' within the meaning of ORS 138.050. 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 "House Bill (HB) 2470 (1989) was introduced in direct response to Carmickle to make clear that probation is among the categories of sentencing decisions that are subject to the appellate jurisdiction of the courts. Among other things, the bill proposed to amend both ORS 138.040 and ORS 138.050 by replacing the word 'sentence' with the word 'disposition.' A new provision then specified that an appealable disposition includes [those specified in ORS 138.053(1)]." 10 351 Or at 91. The court further noted, in reviewing the legislative history of the 1989 11 amendments, that the legislature had declined to adopt an amendment proposed by the 12 American Civil Liberties Union that would have broadened the scope of review under 13 ORS 138.050 to allow the court to review constitutional issues beyond whether a 14 disposition was "cruel and unusual." Id. at 92-94. 15 With the stage so set, before returning to Cloutier, we turn briefly to our 16 own case law interpreting the post-1989 versions of ORS 138.050.2 In State v. Anderson, 17 113 Or App 416, 418, 833 P2d 321 (1992), we held that a challenge to the amount of 18 restitution imposed after entry of a guilty plea was reviewable under ORS 138.050; we 19 suggested that, by replacing the word "sentence" with "disposition," the legislature 20 intended to broaden our review, indicating that a disposition exceeds that allowable by 21 law if it is imposed inconsistently with statutory requirements. In State v. Summerlin, 22 139 Or App 579, 913 P2d 340 (1996), the defendant, who had pleaded guilty to numerous 23 charges, argued on appeal that the trial court had erred in failing to merge several of his 2 As the court noted in Cloutier, there have been minor amendments to the statute since 1989. 351 Or at 94 n 2. Those changes did not affect the text at issue here. 9 1 convictions. We held that that issue was properly before us pursuant to ORS 138.050(1), 2 because "a disposition exceeds the maximum allowed by law if it is not imposed 3 consistently with statutory requirements." Id. at 582; see also State v. Bowers, 234 Or 4 App 301, 227 P3d 822, rev den, 348 Or 621 (2010) (adhering to Summerlin and holding 5 that failure to merge convictions was appealable under ORS 138.050(1)). 6 Similarly, in State v. Stubbs, 193 Or App 595, 91 P3d 774 (2004), we took 7 an expansive view of "disposition" that "[e]xceeds the maximum allowable by law" as 8 used in ORS 138.050. There, the defendant had pleaded guilty and a judgment was 9 entered pursuant to his plea and stipulated sentencing agreement. Thereafter, the 10 defendant began serving his sentence under the judgment, which provided in part that 11 certain sentences would be served concurrently. Id. at 597. The state sought to have the 12 trial court enter an amended judgment that imposed those sentences consecutively rather 13 than concurrently, and the court did so. The defendant appealed from the amended 14 judgment, arguing that the trial court lacked authority to amend the judgment because the 15 sentences had been executed. Id. at 598. The state argued that ORS 138.050 only 16 permitted appeals that challenged the length of a sentence, citing Clevenger and our 17 decision in State v. Woodard, 121 Or App 483, 855 P2d 1139, rev den, 318 Or 26 (1993). 18 In Woodard, we held that a defendant who had pleaded guilty to first-degree sodomy 19 could not raise an issue under ORS 138.050 as to whether the conviction should instead 20 have been for incest, stating that a defendant "may not, on direct appeal, take issue with a 21 conviction to which he agreed to plead no contest." Id. at 485. In Stubbs, we noted that 10 1 Woodard and Clevenger had concerned situations where "the purported error concerned 2 the conviction itself, not the sentence." 193 Or App at 605. By contrast, we explained, in 3 cases such as Summerlin and Anderson, the challenges were not to the convictions, but, in 4 fact, concerned "dispositions" of the sort specified in ORS 138.053--that is, matters that, 5 in effect, related to sentencing--and thus could be reviewed to determine whether they 6 exceeded the maximum allowable by law under ORS 138.050(1). Id.; see also State v. 7 Nave, 214 Or App 324, 164 P2d 1219, rev den, 343 Or 690 (2007) (holding that a 8 "disposition" encompassed revocation of driving privileges). We concluded that the 9 defendant's challenge in Stubbs was essentially the same, because it concerned whether 10 "the sentence imposed in this case was not imposed consistently with statutory 11 requirements, because the trial court lacked authority to modify a sentence that had 12 already been 'executed.'" 193 Or App at 607. See also State v. Easton, 204 Or App 1, 13 126 P3d 1256, rev den, 340 Or 673 (2006) (similarly concluding that a defendant could 14 appeal from an amended judgment modifying his sentence based on an argument that the 15 court lacked jurisdiction to amend the judgment). 16 In sum, our case law construing ORS 138.050 after the 1989 amendments 17 does, in one sense, support defendant's assertion that "disposition" has been viewed 18 broadly to include whether single or multiple convictions should have been entered, 19 whether a court had jurisdiction to enter an amended judgment that affected a sentence, 20 or whether driving privileges were properly revoked as the result of a conviction. On the 21 other hand, the case law following Clevenger did not go so far as to allow a challenge to 11 1 the underlying convictions. See Stubbs, 193 Or App at 605 (citing cases); see also State 2 v. Brown, 225 Or App 207, 199 P3d 890 (2009) (defendant could not challenge 3 voluntariness of guilty plea on appeal under ORS 138.050); State v. Anderson, 215 Or 4 App 643, 171 P3d 972 (2007) (defendant could not challenge conviction pursuant to ORS 5 138.050 on the ground that the trial court failed to abide by terms of a plea agreement); 6 State v. Balukovic, 153 Or App 253, 258, 956 P2d 250 (1998) (order revoking eligibility 7 for deferred sentencing program was not appealable under ORS 138.050 because it did 8 not contain a disposition as defined in ORS 138.053: ORS 138.050 "does not encompass 9 review of orders that occur before the judgment of conviction"); State v. Zell, 89 Or App 10 394, 749 P2d 1196 (1988) (reaching same conclusion concerning challenge to conviction 11 under earlier version of the statute). 12 Were it not for Cloutier, in this case, we probably would need to confront 13 the tension in our own case law concerning ORS 138.050 and decide whether the present 14 case is more like Stubbs and Eaton, which permitted challenges to the court's jurisdiction 15 to enter the judgment being appealed (although those cases, unlike this one, concerned 16 the lawfulness of sentences rather than convictions), or more like the line of cases 17 beginning with Clevenger, which, as noted, do not allow a defendant to challenge the 18 conviction itself after a plea of guilty or no contest. As explained below, however, the 19 court in Cloutier has provided a definitive answer. 20 21 In Cloutier, after reviewing the history of the statute described above, the court went on to address whether it had jurisdiction over the defendant's appeal under 12 1 ORS 138.050(1)(a). In that case, as in the present case, the defendant had executed a plea 2 agreement in order to enter a diversion program. 351 Or at 70. Thereafter, the defendant 3 failed to complete his diversion and, in sentencing the defendant for DUII, the court 4 imposed a fine in excess of the mandatory minimum but within the statutory limits, 5 noting that it was doing so because he had pleaded "no contest at the time of entering 6 diversion." Id. On appeal, the defendant sought to challenge the lawfulness of the fine 7 on constitutional grounds, arguing that imposition of the fine violated the Due Process 8 Clause of the United States Constitution. Thus, the court addressed the question whether 9 the defendant's due process challenge was cognizable on the ground that it concerned a 10 disposition that exceeded the maximum allowable by law. In holding that it did not, after 11 reviewing the enactment history and legislative history of ORS 138.050, as well as its 12 prior cases, the court provided the following analysis of the pertinent text in context: 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 "ORS 138.050 authorize[s] a defendant to appeal a 'disposition' instead of a 'sentence.' ORS 138.053(1) then specifies the five types of 'dispositions' that are appealable. The first two of the five types of appealable dispositions are the imposition of a sentence, ORS 138.053(1)(a), and the suspension of the imposition of any part of a sentence, ORS 138.053(1)(b). The latter three types of appealable dispositions concern imposing conditions of probation, ORS 138.053(1)(c), extending a period of probation, ORS 138.053(1)(d), or imposing a sentence upon revocation of probation, ORS 138.053(1)(e). On an appeal of a disposition of the first two types, the scope of the appellate court's review authority is limited to whether the disposition '[e]xceeds the maximum allowable by law' or '[i]s unconstitutionally cruel and unusual.' ORS 138.050(3). 25 26 27 28 29 "But, on an appeal of a disposition of the latter three types, '[n]otwithstanding ORS 138.040 and [ORS] 138.050,' the appellate court may review more broadly for any 'colorable claim of error in the proceeding from which the appeal is taken.' ORS 138.053(3) (emphasis added). If defendant were correct that a disposition 'exceeds the maximum 13 1 2 3 4 5 6 allowable by law' because of any error in the proceeding in which the disposition was imposed, then the expanded review authority that is specified in ORS 138.053(3) becomes surplusage, as the appellate court would already possess such authority under ORS 138.050. Indeed, defendant's proposed reading of the statute makes the introductory phrase, '[n]otwithstanding ORS 138.040 and [ORS] 138.050' meaningless." 7 351 Or at 99-100 (emphasis and brackets in Cloutier). Ultimately, in Cloutier, the court 8 concluded that the defendant's challenge was not cognizable under ORS 138.050 because 9 the defendant had not asserted that the disposition exceeded a "maximum expressed by 10 means of legislation." Id. at 104. 11 That analysis in Cloutier provides a direct answer to the initial question 12 posed in this case: Is a conviction a "disposition" for purposes of ORS 138.050? As 13 analyzed in Cloutier, it is not. A "disposition" is one of the five things listed in ORS 14 138.053(1).3 Thus, although the judgment being appealed in the present case does 15 contain a disposition--it imposes probation--the question whether that disposition 16 "[e]xceeds the maximum allowable by law," as that term has been interpreted in Cloutier, 3 ORS 138.053(1) contains the following five specifics: "(a) Imposition of a sentence on conviction. "(b) Suspension of imposition or execution of any part of a sentence. "(c) Extension of a period of probation. "(d) Imposition or modification of a condition of probation or of sentence suspension. "(e) Imposition or execution of a sentence upon revocation of probation or sentence suspension." 14 1 has not been raised in the present case. That is, defendant does not argue that the 2 probationary sentence imposed in this case "exceeds a maximum expressed by means of 3 legislation[.]" Cloutier, 351 Or at 104. Defendant's sole argument is that no 4 "disposition" at all was appropriate in the present case, because no conviction should 5 have been entered. 6 We recognize that our analysis in this case, following Cloutier, may call 7 into question the analyses in some, although not all, of our prior cases discussed above. 8 In particular, we note that Cloutier is consistent with our cases such as Brown, 225 Or 9 App at 208, Anderson, 215 Or App at 647, and Woodard, 121 Or App at 485, indicating 10 that a defendant who appeals pursuant to ORS 138.050 may not challenge the validity of 11 the conviction to which he or she pleaded. We need not, at this juncture, attempt to 12 determine which, if any, of our other prior cases are consistent with various aspects of 13 Cloutier.4 Suffice it to say that, in light of the legislative history and the statutory 14 analysis set out in Cloutier, we are convinced that our prior cases holding that the validity 15 of a conviction may not be challenged in an appeal pursuant to ORS 138.050 are sound 16 and that this case is not materially distinguishable from those cases. Because the 17 gravamen of defendant's argument here concerns whether any conviction should have 4 In particular, we note that the court in Cloutier, a misdemeanor case, opined that review of sentences for felonies is "governed by ORS 138.222. ORS 138.040 and ORS 138.050 now apply only to appeal and review of sentences for misdemeanor offenses." Cloutier, 351 Or at 91. The present case, like Cloutier, involves a misdemeanor. A number of our prior cases interpreting ORS 138.050, however, involved felonies. An examination of each of those cases in light of what the Cloutier court had to say about ORS 138.222 is beyond the scope of what we need to decide in the present case. 15 1 2 been entered, his appeal must be dismissed. Appeal dismissed. 16

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