State v. Davis ( 2014 )


Menu:
  • [Cite as State v. Davis, 2014-Ohio-4212.]
    Court of Appeals of Ohio
    EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    COUNTY OF CUYAHOGA
    JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION
    No. 100849
    STATE OF OHIO
    PLAINTIFF-APPELLEE
    vs.
    JAMES DAVIS
    DEFENDANT-APPELLANT
    JUDGMENT:
    AFFIRMED IN PART, MODIFIED IN PART,
    REMANDED
    Criminal Appeal from the
    Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas
    Case No. CR-13-574488-A
    BEFORE: Rocco, J., Celebrezze, P.J., and Kilbane, J.
    RELEASED AND JOURNALIZED: September 25, 2014
    -i-
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT
    Robert L. Tobik
    Cuyahoga County Public Defender
    By: Paul Kuzmins
    Assistant Public Defender
    310 Lakeside Avenue, Suite 200
    Cleveland, Ohio 44113
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
    Timothy J. McGinty
    Cuyahoga County Prosecutor
    By: Erin Stone
    Assistant Prosecuting Attorney
    The Justice Center
    1200 Ontario Street
    Cleveland, Ohio 44113
    KENNETH A. ROCCO, J.:
    {¶1} Defendant-appellant James Davis appeals from the sentence imposed on him
    after he entered guilty pleas to one count of attempted aggravated arson with a notice of
    prior conviction and to three counts of criminal child enticement.
    {¶2} Davis presents three assignments of error. He claims that: (1) the trial
    court’s justification for imposing a maximum prison term for his attempted aggravated
    arson conviction has no basis in fact; (2) the use of a notice of prior conviction to enhance
    his sentence was unconstitutional because it refers to a juvenile adjudication; and, (3) the
    trial court lacked authority to order that he have no contact with the victims.
    {¶3} This court cannot agree with Davis’s first two claims. However, this court
    has previously determined that the claim Davis makes in his third assignment of error has
    merit. Therefore, Davis’s sentence is affirmed in part and modified in part, and this case
    is remanded to the trial court to issue a corrected journal entry of sentence.
    {¶4} Davis was indicted in this case on thirteen counts. He was charged with nine
    counts of aggravated arson, one count of unlawful possession of a dangerous ordnance, to
    wit: a Molotov cocktail, and three counts of criminal child enticement. Each of Counts 1
    through 9 contained a notice of prior conviction for Davis’s “convict[ion for] Aggravated
    Arson * * * in the Mahoning County Court of Common Pleas Juvenile Division, [Case
    No.] 2008-JA-00365 * * * .” Davis pleaded not guilty to the charges.
    {¶5} After a period of discovery, Davis agreed to accept the state’s plea offer. As
    outlined by the prosecutor, the state would amend Count 1 to add the attempt statute and
    all nine victims and would dimiss the remaining counts in exchange for Davis’s guilty
    plea to the amended Count 1 and to the three counts of criminal child enticement. The
    prosecutor specified that the notice of prior conviction would remain in the amended
    Count 1.
    {¶6} The trial court conducted a thorough Crim.R. 11 hearing. Prior to asking
    Davis for his guilty pleas, the trial court requested Davis to acknowledge that the notice
    of prior conviction in the amended Count 1 was for his 2008 “conviction” in the
    Mahoning County juvenile court. Defense counsel stipulated to that adjudication, but
    “objected for the record to the terminology it’s in. It’s inappropriate. It’s incorrect.
    It’s not necessary.”
    {¶7} After accepting Davis’s guilty pleas and dismissing the remaining counts, the
    trial court found Davis guilty of the four charges. The trial court then referred Davis for
    both a presentence investigation report and a psychiatric assessment. When the case was
    called for sentencing, the trial court noted that it had received both reports.
    {¶8} The prosecutor outlined the facts underlying Davis’s convictions by
    explaining that Davis instructed three juveniles between the ages of 8 and 10 on “how to
    make a Molotov cocktail, [Davis] walked to a vacant house, gave a lighter to the
    8-year-old, who lit the Molotov cocktail that the 10-year-old brother was holding, and
    then [Davis] told the 10-year-old to throw it on the back porch.”1 The prosecutor stated
    that the fire caused “extreme damage” to the vacant house and also damaged the house
    next door, in which six people were present at the time.
    {¶9} In speaking on his client’s behalf, Davis’s counsel conceded that Davis’s
    actions had “the potential for harm here not only to those other kids, but to the people in
    the neighborhood * * * .” Defense counsel, however, directed the trial court’s attention
    to the psychological assessment, and noted that the doctor who examined Davis indicated
    Davis met “the diagnostic criteria for post traumatic stress disorder,” which led him to
    “get angry and become[ ] involved in physical altercations.”
    {¶10} In pronouncing sentence, the trial court noted the “purposes and principles
    of felony sentencing,” then looked at Davis’s “criminal history,” beginning in 2008 with a
    “delinquency adjudication for aggravated arson,” 2010 convictions for aggravated
    menacing and assault, failures to comply with terms of probation, a 2011 conviction for
    obstructing official business, and a conviction for criminal mischief, with another failure
    to comply with terms of probation. The court also noted that the fire created by throwing
    a Molotov cocktail into a vacant house could have spread even further than it did, thus
    injuring or possibly killing others.
    {¶11} Based upon the serious nature of the offenses, the trial court imposed a term
    of eight years on Count 1; the sentence on Count 1 was to be served concurrently with
    1 The quote is taken verbatim from the transcript of Davis’s sentencing
    hearing; the mistakes in punctuation are the court reporter’s.
    concurrent terms of six months for each of the criminal child enticement counts. In its
    journal entry, the trial court also included a “notice” to the Ohio Department of
    Rehabilitation and Correction that Davis should have “no contact with victim(s).”
    {¶12} Davis appeals from his sentence with three assignments of error.
    I. The imposition of the maximum term of incarceration is clearly and
    convincingly contrary to law where the trial court relied on aggravating factors not
    supported in the record.
    II. R.C. 2929.13(F)(6) and R.C. 2901.08 are unconstitutional as it [sic] is applied
    to the Appellant where the statute [sic] permits a juvenile adjudication to enhance the
    penalty for the Appellant’s underlying adult convictions.
    III. The trial court erred in ordering the Appellant to have no contact with the
    victim [sic] during Appellant’s incarceration.
    {¶13} Davis argues in his first assignment of error that his sentence must be
    reversed because the trial court’s three primary underlying justifications for imposing
    the maximum term on Count 1, i.e., the economic harm suffered by the victims, Davis’s
    criminal history, and the possibility of physical harm to persons in the neighborhood, are
    unsupported in the record. This court finds Davis’s argument unpersuasive.
    {¶14} Pursuant to R.C. 2953.08(G)(2), an appellate court may vacate the sentence
    and remand the matter to the sentencing court for resentencing only if the appellate court
    “clearly and convincingly finds” that the sentence is contrary to law. A sentence is not
    clearly and convincingly contrary to law where the trial court considered the purposes and
    principles of R.C. 2929.11 as well as the factors listed in R.C. 2929.12, properly applied
    postrelease control, and imposed a sentence within the permissible statutory range. State
    v. A.H., 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 98622, 2013-Ohio-2525, ¶ 10.
    {¶15} A sentencing court “has discretion to determine the most effective way to
    comply with the purposes and principles of sentencing.” R.C. 2929.12(A). Moreover, a
    sentencing court has “full discretion to impose a prison sentence within the statutory
    range.” State v. Mathis, 
    109 Ohio St. 3d 54
    , 2006-Ohio-855, 
    846 N.E.2d 1
    , paragraph
    three of the syllabus. Therefore, “the trial court is not obligated, in the exercise of its
    discretion, to give any particular weight or consideration to any sentencing factor.” State
    v. Holin, 
    174 Ohio App. 3d 1
    , 2007-Ohio-6255, 
    880 N.E.2d 515
    , ¶34 (11th Dist.).
    {¶16} In this case, the record indicates the trial court gave due consideration to the
    germane statutory factors. The trial court was aware of the surrounding circumstances of
    the incident and of Davis’s mental problems.
    {¶17} This court declines to second-guess the trial court’s assessment that the
    prosecutor’s report of considerable damage to the unoccupied house and additional
    damage to the occupied house constituted “serious” economic harm. Similarly, the trial
    court’s review of Davis’s criminal history and his tendency to commit crimes that caused
    physical harm provided a reasonable basis to assume Davis required a stern punishment
    for these latest offenses.2 Finally, defense counsel conceded that demonstrating how to
    2 In this context, this court notes that a month prior to Davis’s juvenile
    adjudication, Davis’s older brother Michael set a house fire that resulted in
    Michael’s convictions on six counts of aggravated murder and 19 counts of
    aggravated arson.     State v. Davis, 7th Dist. Mahoning No. 08 MA 236,
    2011-Ohio-292. Michael’s accelerant of choice apparently was the Molotov cocktail.
    create a Molotov cocktail and then encouraging others to throw it into a vacant house
    were actions that had the potential to jeopardize lives in the neighborhood.
    {¶18} The trial court, therefore, did not abuse its considerable discretion in
    sentencing Davis to the maximum term for his conviction for attempted aggravated arson.
    Davis’s first assignment of error is overruled.
    {¶19} In his second assignment of error, Davis argues that R.C. 2901.08(A) is
    unconstitutional. 3 Davis, however, never raised the issue in the trial court, thus, this
    court declines to address it in this appeal. State v. Awan, 
    22 Ohio St. 3d 120
    , 
    489 N.E.2d 277
    (1986), at the syllabus.
    {¶20} Davis argues in his third assignment of error that the trial court lacked the
    authority to order that he have “no contact” with the victims in the journal entry of
    sentence. This issue currently is pending before the Ohio Supreme Court in State v.
    Anderson, 2014-Ohio-2725. Until the Ohio Supreme Court decides the issue, this court
    will continue to follow its own precedent as set forth in State v. Rogers, 8th Dist.
    
    Id. at ¶
    92. The detective who investigated those crimes testified that Michael’s
    brothers “Scott and James, had been suspects in a previous arson in the
    neighborhood.” 
    Id. at ¶
    23. This information came from a neighbor, Enrique
    Ayala, who testified that three weeks prior to the arson in question, the Davis
    brothers “set a fire on his front porch.” 
    Id. at ¶
    55. At the sentencing hearing,
    defense counsel stated that the report from the court psychiatric clinic opined that
    Davis suffered from various psychological disorders “associated with witnessing a
    house fire that was deliberately started by his older brother and which killed six of
    his neighbors.” One wonders whether this assessment would have been affected
    had the clinic been aware of all of the circumstances of Michael Davis’s case.
    3 Butsee State v. Parker, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 97841, 2012-Ohio-4741,
    discretionary appeal not allowed, State v. Parker, 
    134 Ohio St. 3d 1471
    ,
    2013-Ohio-553, 
    983 N.E.2d 370
    .
    Cuyahoga Nos. 97093 and 97094, 2012-Ohio-2496, ¶ 34, and State v. Holly, 8th Dist.
    Cuyahoga No. 95454, 2011-Ohio-2284, ¶ 21. Because this court has determined that the
    trial court cannot issue a “no contact” order when imposing a prison sentence, Davis’s
    third assignment of error is sustained. 
    Id. at ¶
    22-23.
    {¶21} Consistent with authority bestowed by R.C. 2953.08(G), this court vacates
    that portion of Davis’s sentence. 
    Id. The remainder
    of Davis’s sentence is affirmed in its
    entirety.
    {¶22} Davis’s sentence is affirmed in part and modified in part, and this case
    remanded for the trial court to correct the sentencing journal entry to eliminate the
    indefinite “no contact” order.
    It is ordered that appellee and appellant share the costs herein taxed.
    The court finds there were reasonable grounds for this appeal.
    It is ordered that a special mandate issue out of this court directing the common
    pleas court to carry this judgment into execution. Case remanded to the trial court for
    correction and for execution of sentence.
    A certified copy of this entry shall constitute the mandate pursuant to Rule 27 of
    the Rules of Appellate Procedure.
    _____________________________________
    KENNETH A. ROCCO, JUDGE
    FRANK D. CELEBREZZE, JR., P.J., and
    MARY EILEEN KILBANE, J., CONCUR
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 100849

Judges: Rocco

Filed Date: 9/25/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/19/2016