Cleveland v. Moore ( 2013 )


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  • [Cite as Cleveland v. Moore, 2013-Ohio-2899.]
    Court of Appeals of Ohio
    EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    COUNTY OF CUYAHOGA
    JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION
    No. 98534
    CITY OF CLEVELAND
    PLAINTIFF-APPELLEE
    vs.
    PATRICK MOORE
    DEFENDANT-APPELLANT
    JUDGMENT:
    AFFIRMED
    Criminal Appeal from the
    Cleveland Municipal Court
    Case No. 2011 CRB 020626
    BEFORE: Keough, J., Stewart, A.J., and S. Gallagher, J.
    RELEASED AND JOURNALIZED:                     July 3, 2013
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT
    Mary Elaine Hall
    645 Leader Building
    526 Superior Avenue, East
    Cleveland, Ohio 44114
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
    Barbara Langhenry
    Director of Law
    By: Verlinda Powell
    Assistant City Prosecutor
    The Justice Center, 8th Floor
    1200 Ontario Street
    Cleveland, Ohio 44113
    KATHLEEN ANN KEOUGH, J.:
    {¶1} Defendant-appellant, Patrick Moore, appeals from the judgment of the trial
    court finding him guilty of menacing by stalking and aggravated trespass. For the
    reasons that follow, we affirm.
    I. Factual and Procedural Background
    {¶2} Moore was charged in Cleveland Municipal Court with telephone
    harassment, aggravated trespass, and menacing by stalking. He pleaded not guilty and
    the matter proceeded to a bench trial.
    {¶3} Moore’s then-estranged (now ex) wife, Dora Moore, testified at trial that
    Moore moved out of the marital home in May 2011. She said that despite a protection
    order, in June 2011, Moore called her repeatedly over several days and left harassing
    messages on her answering machine.       The prosecutor played two audiotapes of the
    messages at trial.
    {¶4} Dora testified that Moore also stalked her several times in early June. She
    testified further that on June 11, Moore came to her house at approximately 6 a.m. and
    asked for something from the house. When she told him to get a police escort, he
    threatened to commit suicide. Moore left after about ten minutes, but later that day
    called Dora several times and left harassing messages.
    {¶5} Dora said that Moore came to her house again the next day at approximately
    7 a.m. and stood in the backyard, demanding his belt. Dora threw the belt out of the
    window, but then Moore demanded his shoes. Dora said her son took a box of shoes
    outside to Moore, who then began throwing them at the house. Moore left but then
    called Dora several times later that day demanding furniture and other items from the
    home.
    {¶6} Dora testified that several days later, Moore drove by her as she was
    walking down the street, parked his car, and then walked toward her while holding out a
    letter for her. She avoided him by walking on the other side of the street; later that day,
    Moore called Dora many times threatening suicide.
    {¶7} Malden Sarin, Moore’s stepson, testified that when Moore came to the
    house on June 11 and 12, 2011, he and the neighbor videotaped Moore “to show that he
    was showing up at our home without the police.” The prosecutor played the videos at
    trial.
    {¶8} The trial court subsequently ruled that the audiotapes were inadmissible but
    admitted the videotapes (two DVDs, exhibit Nos. 3 and 4). The trial court granted
    Moore’s Crim.R. 29(A) motion for acquittal in part, dismissing the telephone harassment
    charges. The court then found Moore guilty of menacing by stalking and aggravated
    trespass, and sentenced him on both counts to 151 days incarceration, to be served
    concurrently, a $1,000 fine (suspended), and three years active probation. The court also
    ordered that he have no contact with Dora Moore.
    {¶9} This court subsequently granted Moore’s motion for leave to file a delayed
    appeal and contemporaneously denied the city’s motion to dismiss Moore’s untimely
    appeal as moot. This court also granted Moore’s subsequent request for an extension of
    time to transmit the record because the court reporter needed more time to locate trial
    exhibit Nos. 3 and 4 (the DVDs). In August 2012, the municipal court filed the record in
    this matter but the DVDs were not included with the record. In September 2012, Moore
    filed an App.R. 9(E) motion asking this court to order the municipal court to supplement
    the record to include the missing audiotapes and DVDs.1 This court granted Moore’s
    motion in part and remanded the matter to the trial court to locate the items missing from
    the record.
    {¶10} On October 22, 2012, the municipal court held a hearing regarding the
    missing items. At the hearing, the city prosecutor gave the audiotapes to the court
    reporter for inclusion in the record, even though they had not been admitted as evidence
    at trial. The prosecutor said that the city did not have the DVDs, however, because they
    had been entered into evidence at trial.
    {¶11} The municipal court chief court reporter explained that court reporters watch
    video proceedings of the trials from their offices and then later transcribe the proceedings
    from the video. She stated that a court reporter had watched the video of the trial
    proceedings in this matter and transcribed the record from the video but had been unable
    to locate the DVDs. The trial court encouraged the court reporter to continue looking for
    the DVDs.
    App.R. 9(E), regarding correction or modification of the record, provides that “[i]f anything
    1
    material to either party is omitted from the record by error or accident * * * the court of appeals * * *
    may direct that omission * * * be corrected, and if necessary that a supplemental record be certified
    and transmitted.”
    {¶12} On November 2, 2012, the municipal court held another hearing regarding
    the missing DVDs. The chief court reporter testified that when she and the deputy chief
    bailiff watched the “security video” of the trial after the October 22nd hearing, they saw
    where the DVDs had been placed in the courtroom during the trial. They then found the
    DVDs in the courtroom and took them to the city prosecutor, who viewed the DVDs,
    which were marked as exhibit Nos. 3 and 4, and confirmed they were the videos that had
    been used at trial.
    {¶13} The municipal court subsequently transmitted transcripts of the October
    22nd and November 2nd hearings, as well as the audiotapes and DVDs, to this court.
    II. Analysis
    {¶14} In his single assignment of error, Moore argues that the municipal court
    violated his procedural due process rights because it did not order the court reporter to
    transmit or transcribe the “security video” of the trial proceedings showing the
    introduction of the DVDs. Moore contends that because the record is not complete, his
    convictions should be overturned and the city should be barred from retrying him under
    the doctrine of res judicata.
    {¶15} Initially, we reject the city’s argument that Moore’s appeal should be
    dismissed as untimely filed. The city asserts that Moore filed a notice of appeal on May
    10, 2012, and a motion for leave to file a delayed appeal on June 19, 2012. The city
    contends that these filings violated App.R. 5(A)(2), which requires that an appellant
    seeking a delayed appeal file a motion for leave with the court of appeals and,
    concurrently with the motion, a notice of appeal with the trial court and appeals court.
    {¶16} The city’s argument is without merit. The city raises the same arguments in
    its merit brief that it raised in its motion to dismiss Moore’s appeal for untimely filing of
    the notice of appeal — arguments that this court rejected when it granted Moore’s motion
    to file a delayed appeal and overruled the city’s motion.
    {¶17} We also find no merit to Moore’s assertion that his procedural due process
    rights were violated by the municipal court’s failure to include the “security video” of the
    proceedings in the supplemental record. The “security video” that Moore refers to is in
    fact the video of the trial, which the court reporter transcribed and made part of the
    appellate record. 2 The municipal court subsequently provided the missing audiotapes
    and DVDs, as well as transcripts of the hearings it had regarding the missing exhibits, as
    part of the record on appeal. Accordingly, the record is complete and Moore could have
    challenged any alleged errors in the trial court proceedings from this record.
    {¶18} Moore’s citation to In re Holmes, 
    104 Ohio St. 3d 664
    , 2004-Ohio-7109, 
    821 N.E.2d 568
    , adds nothing to his due process argument. In In re Holmes, the appellate
    court affirmed the trial court’s judgment on the basis that it did not have a complete and
    adequate record.     The Ohio Supreme Court reversed the appellate court judgment,
    The transcript of the November 2, 2012 hearing demonstrates that when the court reporter
    2
    referred to the videotape that she and the bailiff watched as the “security video,” the trial judge
    questioned, “What was the video?” The court reporter responded, “The video was of the hearing of
    the trial.”
    however, because it found that the appellant had requested a complete transcript of the
    lower court proceedings for inclusion in the record on appeal, but the court reporter had
    failed to include the trial court exhibits with the transcripts. 
    Id. at ¶
    8, 21. The Supreme
    Court held that it was not an appellant’s duty to supervise the actions of a trial court clerk
    to ensure the proper transmission of the record and, further, that App.R. 9(E) can be used
    to order the correction of an incomplete record. 
    Id. at ¶
    18-19.
    {¶19} Here, unlike in Holmes, this court remanded the matter and ordered the
    municipal court to complete the record. The municipal court held two hearings and did,
    in fact, locate the missing items. Transcripts of those hearings, along with the missing
    items, were then transmitted to this court, making the record complete.
    {¶20} Moore’s citation to State v. Bethune, 9th Dist. No. 02CA0091-M,
    2003-Ohio-2338, is similarly unavailing. In Bethune, the state appealed the trial court’s
    grant of a defendant’s motion to suppress. The record on appeal consisted solely of the
    certified videotape of the motion to suppress hearing. The appellate court noted that
    App.R. 9(A), regarding the record on appeal, states that:
    A videotape recording of the proceedings constitutes the transcript of
    proceedings other than hereinafter provided, and, for purposes of filing,
    need not be transcribed into written form. * * * When the transcript of
    proceedings is in the videotape medium, counsel shall type or print those
    portions of such transcript necessary for the court to determine the
    questions presented, certify their accuracy, and append such copy of the
    portions of the transcripts to their briefs. (Emphasis added.)
    The appellate court found that the state did not provide the court with a typed or printed
    transcript of the relevant portions of the videotape proceeding, in accordance with the
    rule, and hence, that it did not have an adequate record on appeal.
    {¶21} Moore argues that in light of Bethune, the city should have appended the
    actual videotape of the lower court proceedings to the transcripts of the proceedings taken
    from those videotapes.      But the rule does not require that both the videotape and
    transcripts be transmitted; rather, it states that when the clerk submits only a videotape as
    the record of the proceedings, counsel must transcribe those portions of the videotape that
    are necessary for the appellate court’s determination of the issues and attach those
    transcribed portions to their briefs.     In this case, the municipal court clerk filed a
    transcript of the lower court’s videotape proceedings. Hence, there was no requirement
    that the clerk or the city also transmit the actual videotape.
    {¶22} We also find no merit to Moore’s argument that the actual “security video”
    should have been included in the record to prove that the DVDs were not altered during
    the time they were missing. As noted earlier, the “security video” is the video of the
    trial, so it would not indicate anything about what happened to the DVDs after the trial.
    Furthermore, Moore makes no allegation that the DVDs were in fact altered. The chief
    court reporter testified that she found the DVDs in the courtroom exactly where they had
    been placed during the trial, and the trial court transmitted the DVDs as part of the
    supplemental record in compliance with its duties under App.R. 9(E).            There is no
    reason to speculate that the DVDs were altered in any manner and hence no reason to
    require the trial court to submit the actual video as part of the record.
    {¶23} Finally, we disagree with Moore’s assertion that the “constant and
    continuing delays” by the municipal court in providing a complete appellate record denied
    him his due process right to an appeal. The record reflects that the municipal court took
    the matter of the incomplete record very seriously and did not unnecessarily delay when
    this court remanded the matter with instructions to locate the missing items.
    Furthermore, this court granted Moore’s motion for leave to file a delayed appeal, his
    motion for an extension of time to file the record, and his App.R. 9(E) motion asking that
    we direct the municipal court to find the missing items. Under such circumstances, we
    find no denial of due process. The record was complete upon the submission of the
    DVDs and the transcripts of the hearings on remand, and Moore could have challenged
    any alleged trial court errors from this record.
    {¶24} Because Moore has failed to demonstrate that the lack of the “security
    video” denied him due process, we overrule the assignment of error and affirm the trial
    court’s judgment.
    {¶25} Affirmed.
    It is ordered that appellee recover from appellant 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 municipal
    court to carry this judgment into execution. The defendant’s conviction having been
    affirmed, any bail pending appeal is terminated. Case remanded to the trial court for
    execution of sentence.
    A certified copy of this entry shall constitute the mandate pursuant to Rule 27 of
    the Rules of Appellate Procedure.
    KATHLEEN ANN KEOUGH, JUDGE
    MELODY J. STEWART, A.J., and
    SEAN C. GALLAGHER, J., CONCUR
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 98534

Judges: Keough

Filed Date: 7/3/2013

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/30/2014