State v. Vitantonio , 2013 Ohio 4100 ( 2013 )


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  • [Cite as State v. Vitantonio, 
    2013-Ohio-4100
    .]
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    ELEVENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    LAKE COUNTY, OHIO
    STATE OF OHIO,                                   :      OPINION
    Plaintiff-Appellee,             :
    CASE NO. 2012-L-144
    - vs -                                   :
    JOHN GEORGE VITANTONIO,                          :
    Defendant-Appellant.            :
    Criminal Appeal from the Painesville Municipal Court, Case No. 12CRB01834.
    Judgment: Reversed and conviction vacated.
    Edward C. Powers, Painesville City Prosecutor, 270 East Main Street, Suite 360,
    Painesville, OH 44077 (For Plaintiff-Appellee).
    Dominic J. Vitantonio, Argie, D’Amico & Vitantonio, 6449 Wilson Mills Road, Mayfield
    Village, OH 44143-3402 (For Defendant-Appellant).
    TIMOTHY P. CANNON, P.J.
    {¶1}     Appellant, John George Vitantonio, appeals the judgment of conviction
    entered by the Painesville Municipal Court, after a bench trial, on one count of
    obstructing official business, a second-degree misdemeanor in violation of R.C.
    2921.31. Appellant’s conviction was premised upon his failure to immediately answer
    the persistent knocking of law enforcement investigating a disturbance call at his
    apartment.       On appeal, appellant argues the verdict is not supported by sufficient
    evidence and is also against the manifest weight of the evidence. Given the absence of
    an affirmative act, the elements of obstructing official business have not been proven
    beyond a reasonable doubt.        Accordingly, appellant’s conviction is based upon
    insufficient evidence and must be vacated. The judgment is therefore reversed.
    {¶2}   Appellant was charged with one count of obstructing official business.
    The matter proceeded to a bench trial where the following was adduced through
    testimony.
    {¶3}   In the early morning hours of August 18, 2012, Karlyle Huntington, a
    resident at Brentwood Apartments, called the City of Painesville Police Department to
    file a complaint concerning a domestic disturbance from appellant’s apartment, her
    neighbor. Ms. Huntington explained she heard appellant and his girlfriend having an
    argument and two children yelling and crying.      Ms. Huntington testified that, after
    phoning the police, she went to appellant’s apartment and informed him she felt
    compelled to notify the authorities. According to Ms. Huntington, appellant apologized
    for the commotion.
    {¶4}   Painesville Police Sergeant Michael Slocum arrived with backup units to
    investigate the disturbance call. Sergeant Slocum first interviewed Ms. Huntington, who
    directed the officer to the apartment door from which the noise previously emanated. It
    is unclear whether Ms. Huntington notified Sergeant Slocum that she spoke with
    appellant. Sergeant Slocum knocked at appellant’s door and announced his presence,
    hearing no noise or commotion from inside the apartment. Sergeant Slocum then went
    outside and observed a light inside appellant’s apartment turn off. Returning inside the
    building, Sergeant Slocum sought the aid of Diana Reed, property manager at
    Brentwood Apartments. Ms. Reed attempted the master key to unlock appellant’s door;
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    however, the locks on the apartment door had been changed. After knocking and
    attempting entry for approximately 15 minutes, a female opened the door and the
    officers investigated the disturbance. Appellant explained he was asleep and did not
    hear the knocks on his door.          Appellant, though cooperative with the officer’s
    investigation, was charged with obstructing official business for failing to open the door.
    {¶5}   Upon consideration of the evidence, the trial court found appellant guilty of
    the charge and sentenced him to 30 days in jail, with 20 days suspended and the
    remaining 10 days subject to an optional community work program in lieu of jail.
    Appellant was also placed on community control for six months and ordered to pay a
    $100 fine. According to a notation on the entry, the sentence was stayed pending
    disposition of the appeal. On November 1, 2012, appellant filed a motion for a new trial
    pursuant to Crim.R. 33(A)(4) based upon insufficient evidence at trial. On the same
    day, appellant filed a motion to arrest judgment. On November 15, 2012, the trial court
    denied both motions.
    {¶6}   On December 12, 2012, appellant filed his notice of appeal. We note
    appellant’s appeal is timely as his motion for a new trial based upon insufficient
    evidence, made after the entry of conviction, tolled the time for an appeal pursuant to
    App.R. 4(B)(3)(b).
    {¶7}   Appellant asserts two assignments of error. Appellant’s first assignment
    of error states:
    There is insufficient evidence to support the judgment of the trial
    court in finding Appellant guilty of the crime of obstructing official
    business, where the basis of the conviction is a finding (1) that
    Appellant failed and/or refused to answer the door to his apartment
    in response to the persistent knocking of police officers who were
    responding to a complaint, made by Appellant’s neighbor, of a
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    disturbance at Appellant’s premises, and (2) that the knocking
    police officers were possessed with exigent circumstances to enter
    into the premises.
    {¶8}   In his first assignment of error, appellant claims there is insufficient
    evidence by which to support his conviction of obstructing official business.
    {¶9}   At the outset, appellant did not technically make a Crim.R. 29 motion for
    acquittal during trial. There is a split of authority—both intra-district and inter-district—
    concerning whether the failure to make a Crim.R. 29 motion for acquittal results in
    waiver of the issue of sufficiency on appeal. See State v. Heiney, 11th Dist. Portage
    No. 2006-P-0073, 
    2007-Ohio-1199
    , ¶11 (detailing the split of authority though ultimately
    concluding defendant did not waive sufficiency argument).            However, appellant’s
    counsel interrupted the trial court and argued at the close of all evidence that the
    elements of the charge were not met, citing to extensive case law requiring an overt act
    to sustain a conviction of obstructing official business. Thus, though not expressly
    referring to Crim.R. 29, appellant effectively requested acquittal on the grounds that the
    elements were not met as a matter of law. Appellant, also in the lower court, filed a
    Crim.R. 33(A)(4) motion for a new trial based upon insufficient evidence which, though
    technically distinct from a Crim.R. 29 motion by way of its remedy, nonetheless tests the
    legal sufficiency of the conviction. For these reasons, we cannot conclude appellant
    waived the issue of sufficiency on appeal.
    {¶10} The test for determining the issue of sufficiency is “whether, after viewing
    the evidence in a light most favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of fact could
    have found the essential elements of the crime proven beyond a reasonable doubt.”
    State v. Jenks, 
    61 Ohio St.3d 259
     (1991), paragraph two of the syllabus, citing Jackson
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    v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 315 (1979). Thus, the claim of insufficient evidence invokes a
    question of due process, the resolution of which does not allow for a weighing of the
    evidence. State v. Lee, 11th Dist. Lake No. 2010-L-084, 
    2011-Ohio-4697
    , ¶9.
    {¶11} R.C. 2921.31 sets forth the charge of obstructing official business.        It
    states, in relevant part:
    {¶12} “(A) No person, without privilege to do so and with purpose to prevent,
    obstruct, or delay the performance by a public official of any authorized act within the
    public official’s official capacity, shall do any act that hampers or impedes a public
    official in the performance of the public official’s lawful duties.”
    {¶13} Here, the purported “act” that allegedly impeded law enforcement in the
    performance of their duty to investigate the reported domestic disturbance was, in fact,
    a non-act: appellant’s failure to open his apartment door.             With respect to R.C.
    2921.31(A), we previously held that “an individual cannot be found guilty of obstructing
    official business by doing nothing because the statute specifically requires an offender
    to act,” citing to case law throughout Ohio. State v. Brown, 11th Dist. Lake No. 2006-L-
    064, 
    2006-Ohio-6872
    , ¶29. One such case cited with approval in Brown is analogous to
    the case sub judice. In Columbus v. Michel, 
    55 Ohio App.2d 46
     (10th Dist.1978), the
    Tenth Appellate District concluded the defendant’s refusal to open the door to his home
    at the request of police officers investigating a domestic disturbance call did not
    constitute an act sufficient for an obstructing official business conviction under
    Columbus City Code 2315.03(A), which mirrors R.C. 2921.31. Id. at 48. The Tenth
    District concluded:
    The court is not unmindful of the situation faced by the officers. It
    would appear that under the facts of the instant case the officers
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    would have been justified in breaking open the door of the
    apartment to determine whether anyone was injured in the
    apartment. However, defendant’s failure to open the door to the
    apartment is not made a crime under Columbus City Code 2315.03.
    Id.
    {¶14} Similarly, in Lakewood v. Simpson, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 80383, 2002-
    Ohio-4086, the Eighth Appellate District examined Lakewood Codified Ordinance
    525.07 which prohibits obstructing official business in identical language as R.C.
    2921.32. Id. at ¶15. There, the defendant dialed 9-1-1 and hung up. Dispatch sent law
    enforcement units to the address and called back the listed number. The defendant
    explained to dispatch that he dialed 9-1-1 in error. The police arrived at the defendant’s
    apartment door and persistently knocked.          The defendant refused them entry,
    explaining through the door that everything was fine and they were not needed. Id. at
    ¶2-4.   The Eighth District, though noting that exigent circumstances authorized the
    officers to eventually make a warrantless entry into the apartment, concluded that the
    defendant’s “refusal to respond to the building entrance buzzer, open his door at the
    officers’ request, or consent to their entry are not affirmative acts, but omissions, and
    L.C.O. 525.07 does not, and cannot prohibit a failure to act.” Id. at ¶15-16. The Eighth
    District explained that obstructing official business clearly “does not criminalize a minor
    delay, annoyance, irritation or inconvenience.” Id. at ¶16.
    {¶15} Similarly here, we are faced with a circumstance where appellant refused
    to respond to the persistent knocking of law enforcement: a failure to act, not in and of
    itself an affirmative act. Counsel for appellant acknowledged at oral argument that there
    were exigent circumstances that permitted the police to enter the premises. However,
    this merely means appellant was without privilege to refuse entry and the police could
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    forcibly enter.   Consistent with the express language of the statute, as well as the
    above-framed case law, the only issue to decide here is whether, beyond a reasonable
    doubt, appellant performed any act that hampered or impeded law enforcement in their
    investigation of the call, with purpose to do so. Missing from the evidence before the
    trial court was any act appellant committed to impede the investigation.
    {¶16} Moreover, “the State must prove not only the commission of an overt act
    done with an intent to obstruct the officers, ‘but it also must prove that [the defendant]
    succeeded in actually hampering or impeding them.’”         State v. Crowell, 
    189 Ohio App.3d 468
    , 
    2010-Ohio-4917
     (2d Dist.), ¶12, quoting State v. McCoy, 2d Dist.
    Montgomery No. 22479, 
    2008-Ohio-5648
    , ¶16. Here, appellant’s act of refusing entry
    was, at most, an inconvenience for the officers who had to seek out a key and ultimately
    consider breaking down the door. However, the door opened approximately 15 minutes
    after the officer began knocking and announcing his presence, at which time the officers
    investigated the nature of the disturbance and ensured the safety of the occupants.
    {¶17} We therefore conclude that, even when viewed in a light most favorable to
    the prosecution, the elements of obstructing official business have not been met. This
    holding should not be construed to dilute law enforcement’s ability to ardently
    investigate domestic disputes when there is a reasonable belief that someone is in
    imminent danger, has been injured, or is in need of immediate assistance. The eerie
    calm following a reported domestic disturbance, coupled with a light going off in the
    apartment and no response at the door, provided exigent circumstances to enter the
    apartment in this case. Appellant was without privilege to refuse entry, and the record
    indicates law enforcement was indeed prepared to forcibly enter the apartment;
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    however, consistent with Michel and Simpson, supra, this satisfies but one element of
    the statute criminalizing obstruction and is not dispositive of all other elements.
    {¶18} Appellant’s first assignment of error has merit.
    {¶19} Appellant’s second assignment of error states:
    The judgment of the trial court in finding Appellant guilty of the
    crime of obstructing official business is against the manifest weight
    of the evidence, where the basis of the conviction is a finding (1)
    that Appellant failed and/or refused to answer the door to his
    apartment in response to the persistent knocking of police officers
    who were responding to a complaint, made by Appellant’s
    neighbor, of a disturbance at Appellant’s premises, and (2) that the
    knocking police officers were possessed with exigent
    circumstances to enter into the premises.
    {¶20} The disposition of appellant’s first assignment of error renders the
    assignment of error concerning manifest weight of the evidence moot.
    {¶21} In light of the foregoing, the judgment of the Painesville Municipal Court is
    reversed. Appellant’s conviction for obstructing official business is hereby vacated.
    THOMAS R. WRIGHT, J.,
    COLLEEN MARY O’TOOLE, J.,
    concur.
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