Defendant punched a man. For that conduct, a jury convicted him of fourth-degree assault, ORS 163.160, rejecting defendants claim of self-defense. On the states request, and over defendants objection, the trial court instructed the jury on the provocation limitation of self-defense contained in Uniform Criminal Jury Instruction (UCrJI) 1109: “The defendant is not justified in using physical force on another person if he provoked the use of unlawful physical force by that other person with the intent to cause physical injury or death to the other person.”
On appeal, defendant assigns error to the delivery of that instruction. He contends that there was no evidence to support it, pointing out that there was no evidence that defendant provoked the victim. In response, the state does not defend the delivery of the instruction. Instead, it contends that any error was harmless on this record. In support of that argument, it points to our decision in State v. Longoria, 300 Or. App. 495, 454 P.3d 813 (2019), revd on other grounds, 366 Or. 549, 466 P.3d 60 (2020), in which we concluded that the delivery of UCrJI 1109 under similar circumstances was erroneous but harmless. Id. at 499-503, 454 P.3d 813.
Having considered the record, we conclude that the trial court erred in delivering the instruction because there is no evidence to support it. We nonetheless conclude that the error was harmless for reasons similar to those stated in Longoria. The instruction correctly stated the law, so it did not mislead the jury as to the law; it simply gave an “unnecessarily complete” statement of the law of self-defense. Id. at 502, 454 P.3d 813 (emphasis in original). As was the case in Longoria, there was no evidence presented that would tend to make the jury think that the instruction applied to the facts before it; neither partys version of events involved a provocative use of force by defendant, so there is little likelihood that the jury would have perceived one, or viewed the self-defense limitation described in UCrJI 1109 as applicable. The states version of events was, in essence, that defendant punched the victim out of the blue. Defendants version of events was, in essence, that the victim was acting aggressively toward him and came at him. Provocation by defendant was not a part of either narrative. In addition, the instruction played no role in either partys theory of the case, as presented to the jury in closing arguments, and the jury was not asked to apply the instruction or given any reason to think that it would apply absent a version of events involving provocation by defendant. Under those circumstances, as in Longoria, there is little likelihood that the trial courts delivery of the legally correct, but factually irrelevant, instruction on provocation had any likelihood of affecting the jurys rejection of defendants claim of self-defense.
Affirmed.
PER CURIAM