State ex rel. McKenney v. Jones (Slip Opinion) ( 2022 )


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  • [Until this opinion appears in the Ohio Official Reports advance sheets, it may be cited as State
    ex rel. McKenney v. Jones, Slip Opinion No. 
    2022-Ohio-583
    .]
    NOTICE
    This slip opinion is subject to formal revision before it is published in an
    advance sheet of the Ohio Official Reports. Readers are requested to
    promptly notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of Ohio, 65
    South Front Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215, of any typographical or other
    formal errors in the opinion, in order that corrections may be made before
    the opinion is published.
    SLIP OPINION NO. 
    2022-OHIO-583
    THE STATE EX REL. MCKENNEY, ADM. JUDGE, ET AL. v. JONES, ADM. JUDGE,
    ET AL.
    THE STATE EX REL. WILLIAMS, JUDGE, ET AL. v. JONES, ADM. JUDGE, ET AL.
    [Until this opinion appears in the Ohio Official Reports advance sheets, it
    may be cited as State ex rel. McKenney v. Jones, Slip Opinion No.
    
    2022-Ohio-583
    .]
    Prohibition—Mandamus—Appointment                  of   counsel     for    indigent     criminal
    defendants—To the extent that municipal-court judges sought to invalidate
    an agreement for the appointment of counsel, the wrong parties were
    named, because the parties to the agreement were not the common-pleas-
    court judges—Municipal-court judges lacked standing to challenge the
    appointment of counsel in the common pleas court, because the aggrieved
    parties were the indigent defendants or the unpaid attorneys—When a local
    rule is ambiguous, a common pleas court cannot have a clear legal duty to
    repeal it—Writs denied.
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    (Nos. 2020-1405 and 2021-0043—Submitted December 7, 2021—Decided
    February 28, 2022.)
    IN MANDAMUS and PROHIBITION.
    ________________
    Per Curiam.
    {¶ 1} In these consolidated cases, the relators, four Summit County
    Municipal Court judges,1 seek writs of prohibition and mandamus against the
    respondents, the Summit County Court of Common Pleas and its administrative
    judge, Amy Corrigall Jones. For the reasons set forth herein, we deny the requests
    for writs.
    I. BACKGROUND
    {¶ 2} By statute, a municipal court has jurisdiction over certain portions of
    a felony case. R.C. 1901.20(B). Specifically, a municipal court has jurisdiction to
    conduct preliminary hearings and other necessary hearings prior to a criminal
    defendant’s indictment or prior to a probable-cause determination (after each of
    these, jurisdiction is transferred exclusively to the court of common pleas). 
    Id.
     A
    municipal-court judge has the power “to exercise any other powers that are
    necessary to give effect to the jurisdiction of the court.” R.C. 1901.13(A)(1). These
    cases concern a dispute over the appointment of counsel for indigent defendants
    who appear in municipal court before they are bound over to the common pleas
    court on a felony charge.
    {¶ 3} The Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution confers on
    any indigent defendant charged with a felony a constitutional right to appointed
    counsel. Gideon v. Wainwright, 
    372 U.S. 335
    , 
    83 S.Ct. 792
    , 
    9 L.Ed.2d 799
     (1963).
    In addition, Crim.R. 44(A) provides that when a defendant charged with “a serious
    1. The relators in case No. 2020-1405 are Barberton Municipal Court Administrative Judge Todd
    McKenney and Judge Jill Flagg Lanzinger and the relators in case No. 2021-0043 are Akron
    Municipal Court Judges Annalisa S. Williams and David Hamilton.
    2
    January Term, 2022
    offense” is unable to obtain counsel, “counsel shall be assigned to represent the
    defendant at every stage of the proceedings from their initial appearance before a
    court through appeal as of right,” unless the defendant knowingly, intelligently, and
    voluntarily waives the right to counsel.
    {¶ 4} The evidence establishes that at least one of the relators appoints
    counsel to represent indigent felony defendants in cases originating in arraignment
    “when the right to counsel attache[s].” The municipal court maintains a list of
    qualified attorneys from which appointments for indigent defendants are made.
    {¶ 5} The process by which common-pleas-court judges appoint counsel in
    cases pending in their own court is more complicated. In Ohio, a county may
    choose from different methods for appointing counsel for indigent defendants in its
    jurisdiction, one of which is to create a “county public defender commission.” R.C.
    120.13(A).     A county public-defender commission may then contract with a
    qualified nonprofit organization for that entity to provide legal representation to
    indigent defendants. R.C. 120.14(F).
    {¶ 6} In 1977, Summit County created a county public-defender
    commission.       Effective January 1, 2021, the commission entered into a
    professional-services agreement with the Legal Defender’s Office of Summit
    County (“the office”), a private corporation providing legal representation. See
    Summit County Ordinance No. 2021-007 (authorizing the commission to enter into
    an agreement with the office).
    {¶ 7} Under section 1(A)(2) of the agreement, the office must provide legal
    services to any indigent defendant2 in the municipal courts in Summit County.
    Section 1(A)(3) of the agreement specifically provides that the office will provide
    representation at the “initial appearance of [indigent defendants] for whom a
    2. The agreement uses the term “Eligible Person,” which it defines as a person unable to pay for
    counsel as determined under various statutes. See section 1(A)(4).
    3
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    criminal complaint alleging a felony violation has been filed prior to being bound
    over to Common Pleas Court.”
    {¶ 8} The common pleas court’s local rules provide that the court’s
    designated assignment judge will appoint counsel for all defendants charged with a
    felony in Summit County and eligible for appointed counsel. Loc.R. 21.09(A)(1)
    and (4) of the Court of Common Pleas of Summit County, General Division. “Upon
    appointment, the attorney shall perform basic duties as warranted by the facts of
    the case * * *.” Loc.R. 21.09(B)(4). The rules require that “any lawyer appointed
    in municipal court” be notified of the identity of counsel appointed by the
    assignment judge. Loc.R. 21.09(A)(3). In an email to the county’s municipal-court
    judges about the process, the common pleas court’s administrative judge explained
    that a public defender represents the indigent defendant at the initial arraignment,
    pursuant to the public defender’s contract with the county; thereafter, the common
    pleas court would appoint private counsel to handle the representation through
    indictment and the remainder of the criminal proceedings. The administrative
    judge also explained that the common-pleas-court judges would not approve fee
    applications for counsel appointed by the municipal courts.
    {¶ 9} Citing these local rules, the office of the county executive asked the
    municipal-court judges to stop appointing counsel for indigent unindicted felony
    defendants. According to the county, the agreement supersedes the municipal
    court’s local rules: under those rules, municipal courts may appoint counsel to
    indigent defendants “in need of an attorney,” but because the administrative judge
    of the common pleas court declared that representation by a public defender is now
    available after an arraignment, indigent defendants would no longer be “in need”
    of counsel. Therefore, the county deems municipal-court appointments of private
    counsel to be a “misuse of public funds” and will no longer “waste taxpayer money
    to compensate an attorney when the representation is already provided for in the
    contract with the Legal Defender Office.”
    4
    January Term, 2022
    II. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    {¶ 10} Barberton Municipal Court Administrative Judge Todd McKenney
    and Judge Jill Flagg Lanzinger filed a complaint for writs of mandamus and
    prohibition on November 16, 2020, to prevent the appointment of counsel by the
    common-pleas-court judges while a case is pending in municipal court. We
    referred the case to mediation. 
    160 Ohio St.3d 1463
    , 
    2020-Ohio-5393
    , 
    157 N.E.3d 786
    . The mediation stay was lifted, and the case returned to the docket, on
    December 29, 2020. 
    160 Ohio St.3d 1512
    , 
    2020-Ohio-6923
    , 
    159 N.E.3d 1153
    .
    {¶ 11} Akron Municipal Court Judges Annalisa S. Williams and David
    Hamilton filed a similar complaint on January 11, 2021. We consolidated the two
    cases, 
    161 Ohio St.3d 1418
    , 
    2021-Ohio-182
    , 
    161 N.E.3d 708
    , and the relators filed
    amended complaints seeking two forms of relief. They demanded a writ of
    prohibition to prevent the common-pleas-court judges from attempting to regulate
    or interfere with the appointment of counsel in felony cases pending in the
    municipal court, on the theory that these appointments interfered with the
    jurisdiction of the municipal-court judges. And they sought a writ of mandamus
    compelling the common-pleas-court judges to repeal their local rules purporting to
    allow them to appoint counsel in municipal-court cases.3
    {¶ 12} Judge Jones and the common pleas court filed an answer in each
    case, along with a motion for judgment on the pleadings. On June 30, 2021, we
    denied the motion for judgment on the pleadings and granted an alternative writ.
    
    163 Ohio St.3d 1487
    , 
    2021-Ohio-2097
    , 
    169 N.E.3d 1262
    . In addition to the
    evidence and brief submitted by the parties, we have received amicus curiae briefs
    3. The amended complaint in case No. 2020-1405 appears to also seek to compel the common-pleas-
    court judges to withdraw any appointments they may have made in municipal-court cases.
    However, as discussed below, this request receives no attention in the relators’ briefs.
    5
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    from the Legal Defender’s Office and the Office of the Ohio Public Defender
    opposing relief.
    III. LEGAL ANALYSIS
    A. The relators make three requests in seeking a writ of prohibition
    {¶ 13} To state a claim for a writ of prohibition, a relator must allege the
    exercise of judicial power, the lack of authority for the exercise of that power, and
    the lack of an adequate remedy in the ordinary course of the law. State ex rel. Elder
    v. Camplese, 
    144 Ohio St.3d 89
    , 
    2015-Ohio-3628
    , 
    40 N.E.3d 1138
    , ¶ 13. However,
    if the absence of jurisdiction is patent and unambiguous, a relator need not establish
    the third prong, the lack of an adequate remedy at law. State ex rel. Sapp v. Franklin
    Cty. Court of Appeals, 
    118 Ohio St.3d 368
    , 
    2008-Ohio-2637
    , 
    889 N.E.2d 500
    , ¶ 15.
    {¶ 14} In their consolidated merit brief, the municipal-court judges discuss
    at length the concept of “vertical representation,” which they define as “the same
    attorney represent[ing] a client from when jeopardy attaches until it ceases.” They
    contrast this with “horizontal representation,” which occurs “when different
    lawyers represent poor people at different stages of the proceedings.”            The
    municipal-court judges argue that Ohio law requires vertical representation. They
    further argue that the right of indigent criminal defendants to vertical representation
    is being threatened in three ways.
    {¶ 15} First, the municipal-court judges argue that the agreement between
    the commission and the office ensures horizontal representation: a lawyer from the
    office will appear only at the defendant’s initial court appearance, after which new
    counsel will be appointed. According to the municipal-court judges, the provision
    in the agreement limiting attorneys from the office to a single court appearance is
    invalid and “[t]he remedy is to invalidate the portion of the contract respecting
    limited felony representation.”
    {¶ 16} Second, the municipal-court judges complain that after felony
    defendants are bound over to the common pleas court, the common-pleas-court
    6
    January Term, 2022
    judges appoint new counsel of their own choosing to replace counsel initially
    appointed by the municipal-court judges. The municipal-court judges ask us “[to]
    hold that if a felony case is initiated in a municipal court and that court appoints a
    licensed attorney who meets or exceeds the standards for reimbursement for
    representing a particular indigent defendant, then that lawyer will continually
    represent the client in all related successive proceedings, including defense of a
    subsequent indictment in common pleas court, absent specific cause otherwise,
    such as an ethical conflict or irreconcilable attorney-client dispute.” (Emphasis
    sic.)
    {¶ 17} Finally, the municipal-court judges argue that the common-pleas-
    court judges should not appoint counsel for defendants while the defendants’ cases
    are still pending in municipal court; they premise this argument on principles of
    vertical representation more than on alleged interference with the jurisdiction of the
    municipal court.    In the section of their merit brief specifically addressing
    prohibition, the municipal-court judges request a writ “prohibiting respondents
    from (a) appointing counsel in any cases pending in municipal court and (b)
    subsequently appointing different counsel than may have been appointed by a
    municipal court absent specific cause otherwise.”
    1. The relators’ request for a writ of prohibition declaring a clause of the
    agreement unenforceable
    {¶ 18} Pursuant to R.C. 120.16(A)(1), a county public defender must
    provide representation to indigent defendants who are charged with the commission
    of an offense, in violation of a state statute, when the penalty includes a possible
    loss of liberty. R.C. 120.16(B) provides that the county public defender “shall
    provide the legal representation authorized by division (A) of this section at every
    stage of the proceedings following arrest, detention, service of summons, or
    indictment.” The municipal-court judges contend that R.C. 120.16(B) imposes a
    duty of vertical representation on all county public defenders. And the municipal-
    7
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    court judges contend that because a private entity that contracts with the county
    public defender must “[c]omply with all statutory duties and other laws applicable
    to county defenders,” R.C. 120.14(F)(3), the private entity—in these cases, the
    office—is equally subject to a duty of vertical representation. And as noted above,
    they contend that section 1(A)(3) of the agreement between the commission and
    the office, which allows only a single limited appearance by an attorney, violates
    this statutory duty.
    {¶ 19} R.C. 120.14(F) authorizes a county public-defender commission to
    contract with a nonprofit organization “to provide all or any part of the services that
    a county public defender is required or permitted to provide.” Far from requiring
    vertical representation, the statute plainly contemplates that the county may
    contract with the office to provide representation for only a portion of a case.
    Regardless, to the extent that the municipal-court judges seek to invalidate the
    agreement or control how obligations under the contract will be performed, they
    have named the wrong parties in this litigation. The parties to the agreement are
    the county public-defender commission and the office, not the Summit County
    Court of Common Pleas and Judge Jones.
    {¶ 20} Moreover, in challenging a specific term of the agreement, the
    municipal-court judges have strayed from their prohibition case and are instead
    seeking a declaratory judgment regarding the meaning of the agreement and a
    prohibitory injunction to prevent its enforcement. We have no original jurisdiction
    to provide such relief. See State ex rel. Esarco v. Youngstown City Council, 
    116 Ohio St.3d 131
    , 
    2007-Ohio-5699
    , 
    876 N.E.2d 953
    , ¶ 8.
    {¶ 21} We also note that the municipal-court judges did not raise the issue
    of the enforceability of section 1(A)(3) of the agreement in their amended
    complaint. In State ex rel. Massie v. Gahanna-Jefferson Pub. Schools Bd. of Edn.,
    
    76 Ohio St.3d 584
    , 589, 
    669 N.E.2d 839
     (1996), we recognized the unfairness of
    8
    January Term, 2022
    considering a new claim when the respondent had no notice of the claim at the time
    it submitted its evidence.
    {¶ 22} For all these reasons, we deny the request for a writ of prohibition
    declaring section 1(A)(3) of the agreement unenforceable.
    2. The relators’ request for a writ of prohibition preventing the removal of the
    municipal-court-appointed counsel
    {¶ 23} Second, the municipal-court judges claim that once indigent criminal
    defendants facing felony charges are bound over to the common pleas court, the
    common-pleas-court judges are (1) removing counsel the municipal-court judges
    have appointed, (2) appointing new counsel to represent the defendants, and (3)
    refusing to approve fee requests submitted by the former counsel.
    {¶ 24} Under R.C. 120.33(A)(2), a common pleas court has authority to
    appoint counsel for indigent persons in proceedings over which the court has
    jurisdiction. This statute does not prohibit a common pleas court from appointing
    different counsel from the one assigned at a preindictment arraignment. Continuity
    of counsel may be the better practice, but it is not required by the statute. Moreover,
    the relators before us lack standing to challenge the appointment of counsel in the
    common pleas court or that court’s alleged refusal to pay fees incurred by prior
    counsel: the aggrieved parties would be the indigent defendants or the unpaid
    attorneys, not the municipal-court judges.
    3. The relators’ request for a writ of prohibition preventing the common-pleas-
    court judges from appointing counsel to represent indigent defendants while
    their cases are pending in municipal court
    {¶ 25} The municipal-court judges brought this litigation to stop the
    practice of common-pleas-court judges appointing counsel to appear on behalf of
    indigent criminal defendants in municipal court. However, the municipal-court
    judges have not proved that this practice is actually taking place.
    9
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    {¶ 26} In her affidavit, Judge Jones attests that the common-pleas-court
    judges “do not issue orders appointing counsel until a case is bound over, a common
    pleas case number is assigned, and the matter is pending in the Summit County
    Common Pleas General Division.” Judge Jones does not deny that attorneys from
    the office are appearing in municipal court but contends that those attorneys are not
    doing so based on appointments by common-pleas-court judges. Rather, the
    attorneys are appearing pursuant to the terms of the county’s agreement with the
    office, an agreement to which the common-pleas-court judges are not parties.
    {¶ 27} In response, the relators have submitted nine volumes of exhibits.
    The first exhibit is an affidavit of Montrella S. Jackson, court administrator for the
    Akron Municipal Court. Jackson attests that from November 4, 2020, to July 20,
    2021, she received more than 1,700 emails, which were attached to her affidavit,
    from the common pleas court identifying an attorney appointed to represent a
    defendant in cases in which the municipal court had conducted arraignments and
    appointed counsel. According to Jackson, “[e]ach email notice either listed the
    attorney retained or a new attorney appointed by Summit County Common Pleas.”
    {¶ 28} However, the relators provide no context for these emails. The first
    email, for example, announces the appointment of counsel for a defendant in
    municipal case No. 20CRA09043. But there is no evidence in the record to indicate
    whether, as of the date of the email (November 25, 2020), that case was still pending
    in municipal court or whether the defendant had been bound over to the common
    pleas court. And the same is true of the other emails. It is not the role of this court
    to “search the record or formulate legal arguments on behalf of the parties,” State
    v. Quarterman, 
    140 Ohio St.3d 464
    , 
    2014-Ohio-4034
    , 
    19 N.E.3d 900
    , ¶ 19, much
    less to conduct research to develop evidence the parties did not submit.
    {¶ 29} A court “speaks only through its journal and not by oral
    pronouncement,” Schenley v. Kauth, 
    160 Ohio St. 109
    , 
    113 N.E.2d 625
     (1953),
    paragraph one of the syllabus, or in this case, not by emails or press releases.
    10
    January Term, 2022
    Because no orders have been submitted as evidence that show that the common
    pleas court appointed attorneys in cases other than in the common-pleas-court
    cases, the precise conduct that this court is being asked to prohibit is not clearly
    identified.
    {¶ 30} No statute grants either municipal courts or courts of common pleas
    exclusive jurisdiction over felony matters prior to an indictment, see R.C.
    1901.20(B) and 2931.03.        The municipal court has jurisdiction to conduct
    preliminary hearings in felony cases preindictment, R.C. 1901.20(B), but the
    common pleas court also has original jurisdiction over criminal charges, R.C.
    2931.03. Thus, the relators have not established that the common-pleas-court
    judges lack authority to proceed under their local rules. And if, as the amended
    complaint filed by Judges McKenney and Lanzinger alleges, the assignment judge
    in the common pleas court is appointing private counsel within 24 hours of the
    initial municipal-court felony arraignment, such practice would seem to further the
    goals of the vertical representation espoused by the relators: if a new attorney is to
    be appointed for the duration of the case in the common pleas court, it makes sense
    for the defendant to know who that attorney is as soon as possible so that the client
    can communicate with counsel and counsel can begin to investigate and work on
    the client’s behalf.
    {¶ 31} While we deny the requested writ of prohibition, we emphasize the
    importance of providing competent and effective counsel to indigent criminal
    defendants at all stages of their cases. Courts—in this instance, a municipal court
    and a court of common pleas—that have jurisdiction at various steps in the same
    case should work together cooperatively to provide a system for the representation
    of indigent criminal defendants that will result in competent representation and fair
    proceedings throughout the adjudication of defendants’ cases. And while courts
    must ensure that a defendant’s right to counsel is satisfied, the responsibility in the
    first instance to provide competent counsel belongs to a county public-defender
    11
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    commission. No court should interfere with that process absent indications or
    evidence in a particular case that counsel may not be serving the indigent criminal
    defendant’s need for representation.
    {¶ 32} We deny the relators’ request for a writ of prohibition.
    B. The relators are not entitled to a writ of mandamus
    {¶ 33} Finally, the relators seek a writ of mandamus compelling the
    respondents to “lift or rescind any ‘local rule’ or ‘orders’ (or interpretations of those
    orders) purporting to (1) govern felony proceedings pending in the Akron or
    Barberton municipal courts or (2) enable the common pleas court judges to annul
    preexisting attorney-client relationships forged by the judicial branch through a
    municipal court appointing counsel when the fundamental right to counsel first
    attached.” To be entitled to a writ of mandamus, a party must establish by clear
    and convincing evidence a clear legal right to the requested relief, a clear legal duty
    on the part of a respondent to provide the requested relief, and the lack of an
    adequate remedy in the ordinary course of the law. State ex rel. Love v. O’Donnell,
    
    150 Ohio St.3d 378
    , 
    2017-Ohio-5659
    , 
    81 N.E.3d 1250
    , ¶ 3.
    {¶ 34} We deny the request for a writ of mandamus. The relators object to
    Loc.R. 21.09(A) of the Court of Common Pleas of Summit County, General
    Division, which provides that the common pleas court’s designated assignment
    judge will appoint counsel for all defendants charged with a felony in Summit
    County and eligible for appointed counsel. Contrary to the relators’ allegation, the
    rule does not expressly state that the common pleas court will appoint counsel in
    cases pending in municipal court. The rule is susceptible to the interpretation
    offered by the respondents that appointments occur only after the case is transferred
    to the common pleas court. And if the rule is ambiguous, then the common pleas
    court cannot have a clear legal duty to repeal it.
    12
    January Term, 2022
    IV. CONCLUSION
    {¶ 35} Based on the evidence and the arguments of the parties, we deny the
    requests for writs of prohibition and mandamus.
    Writs denied.
    O’CONNOR, C.J., and KENNEDY, FISCHER, DEWINE, DONNELLY, and
    STEWART, JJ., concur.
    BRUNNER, J., concurs in judgment only, with an opinion.
    _________________
    BRUNNER, J., concurring in judgment only.
    {¶ 36} Relators, Barberton Municipal Court Administrative Judge Todd
    McKenney, and Judge Jill Flagg Lanzinger in case No. 2020-1405 and Akron
    Municipal Court Judges Annalisa S. Williams and David Hamilton in case No.
    2021-0043, brought this action to stop respondents, the Summit County Court of
    Common Pleas and its administrative judge, Amy Corrigall Jones, from appointing
    counsel for indigent criminal defendants in cases in municipal courts. This court
    finds that the municipal-court judges have not established that common-pleas-court
    judges are in fact making such appointments and that nothing in the local rules
    clearly states that the common-pleas-court judges may do so.
    {¶ 37} I concur in judgment only, because I do not find the facts to be as
    unequivocal as expressed in the majority opinion. The municipal-court judges
    submitted more than 2,000 pages of emails sent from the common pleas court to a
    municipal-court administrator identifying attorneys appointed for defendants in
    cases that arose in the municipal court. The administrator submitted an affidavit
    stating that each of the emails “either listed the attorney retained or a new attorney
    appointed by Summit County Common Pleas.” Having determined that relators
    have not provided enough context to understand the timing or purpose of the emails,
    the majority states that it will not “ ‘search the record or formulate legal arguments
    on behalf of the parties.’ ” Majority opinion, ¶ 28, quoting State v. Quartermain,
    13
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    
    140 Ohio St.3d 464
    , 
    2014-Ohio-4034
    , 
    19 N.E.3d 900
    , ¶ 19. The majority’s
    statement could be understood as suggesting that there is no evidentiary value to
    the emails supporting relators’ claims.
    {¶ 38} While the emails (on a cursory review of their contents) may not be
    direct evidence that the common-pleas-court judges appointed attorneys to
    represent defendants in municipal court, certain inferences may be drawn from
    them. A number of the emails were sent to the municipal court and inform that
    court of the name of the attorney who has been appointed in the case, with that
    attorney’s name also listed as the municipal-court attorney. Specifically, the
    subject line in each of the emails submitted by the municipal-court administrator is
    “ATTORNEY APPOINTMENT,” and each email begins, “Notice of SCCP
    APPOINTMENT.” The first email was sent on November 25, 2020, and states,
    “JORDAN E. KNABB HAS BEEN APPOINTED TO REPRESENT THE ABOVE
    DEFENDANT BY SCCP ASSIGNMENT JUDGE: AMY CORRIGALL JONES.”
    It then states, “MUNICIPAL ATTORNEY: JORDAN E. KNABB.”                         (All
    capitalizations sic.)
    {¶ 39} Thus, while the evidence offered by relators may not involve an
    entry or order from the common pleas court appointing the attorneys in the
    municipal-court case, it supports—to a greater or lesser degree, depending on the
    view of the trier of fact—the municipal court judges’ allegations that the common-
    pleas-court judges were attempting to exercise authority in the municipal courts.
    {¶ 40} Conversely, I agree with the majority in that a court “speaks only
    through its journal and not by oral pronouncement,” Schenley v. Kauth, 
    160 Ohio St. 109
    , 111, 
    113 N.E.2d 625
     (1953), or in this case, by emails or press releases. I
    also agree that the common-pleas-court judges established a process by which the
    contract between the county public-defender commission and the Legal Defender’s
    Office of Summit County would be carried out not only in their court but also in
    the municipal courts, refusing to authorize any other attorneys than those stated in
    14
    January Term, 2022
    the emails to be paid, leaving the municipal court with no other feasible way to
    appoint counsel. Finally, I agree that because there do not appear to be any orders
    from the common pleas court appointing attorneys in cases other than in the
    common-pleas-court cases, the precise conduct that this court is being asked to
    prohibit is not clearly identified. I would further note that given that neither
    municipal courts nor courts of common pleas have exclusive jurisdiction over
    felony matters prior to an indictment, see R.C. 1901.20(B) and 2931.03, I cannot
    say the common-pleas-court judges lack authority to proceed under their
    promulgated local rules.
    {¶ 41} In the end, it is every court’s duty to individuals accused of a crime,
    and to the state, that federal and state constitutional requirements for fair trials must
    be observed and guaranteed. Courts must constitutionally provide competent
    counsel in criminal proceedings to those who are indigent, and this must be central
    to the process, with territorial differences and interests subordinated to this singular
    purpose.
    _________________
    Mayle, L.L.C., Andrew R. Mayle, Ronald J. Mayle, and Benjamin G.
    Padanilam, for relators in case No. 2021-0043.
    The Pattakos Law Firm, L.L.C., Peter Pattakos, and Rachel Hazelet, for
    relators in case No. 2020-1405.
    Isaac, Wiles & Burkholder, L.L.C., Mark Landes, Donald C. Brey, C.
    Awele Nwajei, and Madeline Shanahan, for respondents.
    Timothy Young, Ohio Public Defender, for amicus curiae Office of the
    Ohio Public Defender, in support of respondents in case No. 2020-1405.
    Kushner & Hamed Co., L.P.A., Phillip S. Kushner, Michael R. Hamed, and
    Brandon Mordue, for amicus curiae Summit County Legal Defender’s Office, in
    support of respondents.
    _________________
    15