In this criminal case, defendant seeks reconsideration of our disposition in State v. Hernandez, 308 Or. App. 783, 481 P.3d 959 (2021). In that case, we agreed with defendants arguments with respect to the motion to suppress, and therefore reversed and remanded Counts 2, 3, and 4. Id. at 791-92, 481 P.3d 959. We further vacated and remanded Counts 1 and 6 for the trial court to reconsider defendants mid-trial request to waive a jury trial. Id. at 792-93, 481 P.3d 959. The tagline provides: “Convictions on Counts 2, 3, and 4 reversed and remanded; convictions on Count 1 and 6 vacated and remanded; otherwise affirmed.” Defendant now seeks clarification of that tagline and our disposition on appeal. In defendants view, because we reversed or vacated “all counts of conviction,” it was unclear what the purpose of the last portion of the tagline—“otherwise affirmed”—meant. A close reading of the judgment on appeal provides the answer.
It is true, as defendant observes, that our disposition reversed or vacated “all counts of conviction” arising out of the judgment. The judgment, however, disposed of more than just the counts that resulted in a conviction. As noted in our opinion, and as defendant acknowledges in his petition for reconsideration, the trial court granted defendants motion for judgment of acquittal as to Count 5. See id. at 785 n. 1, 481 P.3d 959. The judgment on appeal incorporates the trial courts disposition on that count, and thus our tagline resolving the appeal should also explicitly provide a disposition for that portion of the judgment.
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Although it could be left unsaid that the judgment of acquittal on Count 5 is undisturbed by our decision, we conclude that the better practice is for the tagline to affirmatively provide a disposition for all of the counts resolved by the judgment on appeal. As we have previously observed, a “criminal defendant does not appeal specific ‘counts’ or convictions; appeal is taken from a judgment in a criminal proceeding.” State v. Muyingo, 226 Or. App. 327, 330, 203 P.3d 365, rev. den., 346 Or. 364, 213 P.3d 578 (2009) (emphasis in original). In this case, given that no party suggests that the portion of the judgment documenting the trial courts disposition on Count 5 was a scriveners error or defective in some way, the “otherwise affirmed” part of our tagline closes the loop such that the tagline taken as a whole provides a disposition for all of the counts resolved by the judgment on appeal.
Petition for reconsideration allowed; former disposition adhered to.
FOOTNOTES
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. In a different context, we observed that the Uniform Criminal Judgment (UCJ) includes a section for counts that are disposed of with no conviction, which can help avoid confusion in later proceedings. See State v. Chesnut, 283 Or. App. 347, 351 n. 4, 388 P.3d 1237 (2017) (describing the UCJ); see also ORS 137.071(2)(f) (providing that a judgment in a criminal action must, among other requirements, “[s]pecify clearly the courts determination for each charge in the information, indictment or complaint”).
PER CURIAM