Cleveland v. Gatens ( 2021 )


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  • [Cite as Cleveland v. Gatens, 
    2021-Ohio-313
    .]
    COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO
    EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    COUNTY OF CUYAHOGA
    CITY OF CLEVELAND,                                  :
    Plaintiff-Appellant,                :
    No. 109406
    v.                         :
    JENNIFER GATENS,                                    :
    Defendant-Appellee.                 :
    JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION
    JUDGMENT: REVERSED AND REMANDED
    RELEASED AND JOURNALIZED: February 4, 2021
    Criminal Appeal from the Cleveland Municipal Court
    Case Nos. 2018 TRC 32078
    Appearances:
    Barbara A. Langhenry, City of Cleveland Law Director, Aqueelah
    Jordan, Chief Prosecutor, and Michael J. Ferrari, Assistant
    Prosecuting Attorney, for appellant.
    MICHELLE J. SHEEHAN, J.:
    Appellant city of Cleveland appeals from a decision of the Cleveland
    Municipal Court that dismissed OVI and reckless operation charges against appellee
    Jennifer Gatens. A dismissal by the court of the charges without findings of fact and
    reasons for the dismissal pursuant to Crim.R. 48 requires reversal of the court order,
    and this matter is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    Background
    Gatens was arrested for OVI and related traffic offenses on September
    10, 2017. During processing at the jail, she was found to have a bag of marijuana
    and a smoking pipe on her person. An OVI charge and related traffic offenses were
    filed at the Cleveland Municipal Court, and six months later, a grand jury indicted
    her for a felony offense of illegal conveyance. After the grand jury indictment, the
    city dismissed the traffic charges in the municipal court on April 23, 2018. Two
    months later, the felony case in the common pleas court was dismissed at the
    prosecutor’s request. On November 2, 2018, the city refiled the OVI and reckless
    operation charges in the municipal court. Gatens moved to dismiss, and after a
    hearing, the municipal court dismissed the case without a decision explaining why
    it dismissed the case.
    The record before us does not include the prior municipal case or the
    common pleas court case, both having been dismissed. The record only consists of
    the refiled municipal court traffic case charging Gatens for OVI and reckless
    operation. From the limited record, we discern the following facts.
    On September 10, 2017, around 4:00 a.m., Gatens was stopped by
    Trooper Kay of the Ohio State Highway Patrol for reckless operation. According to
    the city, Trooper Kay first saw Gatens’s vehicle approaching his patrol vehicle at a
    high rate of speed. After she passed his vehicle on the left, she slowed down and
    then began to increase her speed. Trooper Kay tried to catch up with Gatens’s
    vehicle; his vehicle reached a speed of 102 m.p.h. at one point. He eventually caught
    up with her vehicle and initiated a traffic stop. Trooper Kay observed an open bottle
    of an alcoholic drink in Gatens’s hand and saw a dazed look on her face. Her eyes
    were glassy, and her speech was slow and loud.
    Trooper Kay requested that Gatens perform several field sobriety tests.
    After she failed the tests, he arrested her for OVI. She was first transported to the
    Ohio State Highway Patrol Post in Cleveland and then to the jail. During the booking
    process at the jail,1 a plastic bag containing marijuana and a glass smoking pipe were
    found on Gatens’s person. According to the city, before she was processed, Gatens
    was informed that if she had anything hidden on her and attempted to enter the jail
    with it, she could be charged with a felony, but Gatens denied having any contraband
    with her despite the drugs and pipe that were ultimately discovered. Gatens’s
    urinalysis later tested to be positive for marijuana and cocaine. Her urine alcohol
    level was .107. Trooper Kay’s report regarding the incident also noted an intent to
    file a felony charge of illegal conveyance through the Cuyahoga County Prosecutor’s
    office.
    On September 12, 2017, citations of OVI and several other
    misdemeanor offenses stemming from the traffic stop were filed against Gatens in
    the municipal court under two case numbers (Cleveland M.C. Nos. 2017 TRC 27130
    and 2017 CRB 19916). On March 19, 2018, Gatens filed a motion to suppress.
    1
    The city alleged that Gatens was transported to the Cleveland City Jail but Gatens
    alleged she was transported to the Cuyahoga County Jail.
    On April 5, 2018, an indictment was filed charging Gatens with illegal
    conveyance in violation of R.C. 2921.36(A)(2), a felony of the third degree. On April
    19, 2018, Gatens appeared in the common pleas court for an arraignment in the case.
    She pleaded not guilty.
    The record for the two municipal court cases is not before us, but it
    appears that the municipal court held a hearing on April 23, 2018, the day scheduled
    for the motion to suppress. According to Gatens, at this hearing the prosecutor
    requested the cases be dismissed and the court granted the request. In the docket
    sheet of 2017 TRC 27130, there is the following notation in the journal entry
    dismissal on the case: “Nolled at prosecutor’s request. [Prosecutor] advised 7 days
    remain on this case. Possible indictment felony charge pending.”
    On June 19, 2018, the common pleas court dismissed the charge of
    illegal conveyance upon the state’s request. The court’s journal entry stated, “Case
    is dismissed. State moves for a dismissal without objection from the defense.”
    On November 2, 2018, the charges of OVI and reckless operation
    were refiled at the municipal court under Cleveland M.C. No. 2018 TRC 32078 (the
    instant case). At the arraignment on November 20, 2018, Gatens pleaded not guilty.
    The case then was continued several times at her request. On February 5, 2019, she
    failed to appear and a capias was issued. She was arrested on June 24, 2019.
    Subsequently, the hearing for the case was continued several more times, primarily
    at her request.
    On November 13, 2019, Gatens filed two motions to suppress, one
    concerning the urine test results and the other concerning other evidence in this
    case. A hearing on the motion was scheduled for December 9, 2019. On that day,
    the prosecutor asked for a continuance on the ground that the city would like to file
    a brief in response to Gatens’s motion to suppress. Gatens’s counsel objected on the
    ground that the charges against Gatens were initiated more than two years ago in
    September 2017.
    The court decided to take testimony at the hearing and allowed the
    prosecutor to file a brief opposing the motion to suppress after the hearing. At one
    point at this hearing, a side bar was held off the record and, after the side bar, the
    transcript reflects that Gatens’s counsel asked the court to allow counsel to discuss
    the “options” with her client and to decide whether Gatens would accept “the offer.”
    The court concluded the proceeding by stating that it would schedule a hearing for
    the motion to suppress and a “motion to dismiss.”            The court also stated
    “[d]efendant to file motion by January first.” It is unclear from the transcript the
    nature of the motion to be filed by Gatens.
    On December 31, 2019, Gatens filed a motion to dismiss. The city
    filed a brief in opposition. While Gatens’s motion references Crim.R. 48(B), 1(B),
    and 5(B) as grounds for dismissal, her brief primarily set forth arguments based on
    Crim.R. 1(B) and 5(B). The city argued Crim.R. 5(B) did not apply in this case
    because the felony offense of illegal conveyance and the misdemeanor OVI offense
    “did not arise out of the same act or transaction.”
    On January 16, 2020, the trial court held a hearing on Gatens’s
    motion to dismiss. After the hearing, the trial court dismissed the case but did not
    issue a decision explaining the basis of the dismissal. The court docket states simply
    “ON THE COURT’S MOTION, THIS CASE/TICKET IS DISMISSED.”
    The city now appeals.2 It raises the following three assignments of
    error for our review:
    The trial court abused its discretion when it granted appellee’s motion
    to dismiss based primarily on Crim.R. 5.
    The trial court abused its discretion in dismissing the case as dismissal
    is not a remedy for a Crim.R. 5 failure to bind over misdemeanor
    cases.
    Crim.R. 48(B) also does not apply to this case.
    We address the three assignments of error jointly for ease of discussion.
    Crim.R. 5(B) Inapplicable in This Case
    Under the first and second assignments of error, the city argues the
    trial court abused its discretion in dismissing the case pursuant to Crim.R. 5. While
    the court’s docket does not reflect the court dismissed this case based on
    Crim.R. 5(B), the city construes the dismissal to have been based on Crim.R. 5(B)
    and argues the court abused its discretion in applying Crim.R. 5(B) to dismiss this
    2  R.C. 2945.67(A) governs the state’s right to appeal in criminal proceedings.
    Pursuant to the statute, the state may appeal as of right an order that grants a motion to
    dismiss all or any part of an indictment, complaint, or information. See In re A.J.S., 
    120 Ohio St.3d 185
    , 
    2008-Ohio-5307
    , 
    897 N.E.2d 629
    , ¶ 30. Furthermore, a dismissal order
    under Crim.R. 48(B) is a final appealable order. State v. Elqatto, 10th Dist. Franklin No.
    11AP-914, 
    2012-Ohio-4303
    , ¶ 12. Gatens did not file a brief on appeal.
    case. While the city is correct that Crim.R. 5(B) is not applicable in this case, the
    record does not reflect the trial court applied Crim.R. 5(B) to dismiss this case.
    Crim.R. 5(B)(1) provides, in relevant part, as follows:
    In felony cases a defendant is entitled to a preliminary hearing unless
    waived in writing. If the defendant waives preliminary hearing, the
    judge or magistrate shall forthwith order the defendant bound over to
    the court of common pleas. Except upon good cause shown, any
    misdemeanor, other than a minor misdemeanor, arising from the
    same act or transaction involving a felony shall be bound over or
    transferred with the felony case.
    The rule provides that a misdemeanor, other than a minor
    misdemeanor, arising from the same act involving a felony, shall be transferred to
    the common pleas court with the felony case. The rule ensures that all charges
    arising out of “the same act or transaction” are adjudicated together.
    In her motion to dismiss, Gatens argued the illegal conveyance felony
    offense and OVI misdemeanor offense arose from “the same act or transaction” and
    therefore the OVI charge should have been transferred to the common pleas court
    and it could not be adjudicated in the municipal court. Before the trial court and on
    appeal, the city argues that Crim.R. 5(B) is not applicable in this case. The city
    argues the rule is not applicable because of the procedural history of this case and
    because the felony offense of illegal conveyance did not arise out of the same
    transaction as the misdemeanor offense of OVI.
    We do not reach the question of whether the illegal conveyance
    offense and the OVI offense arose from the “same act or transaction” because
    Crim.R. 5(B) does not apply in this case due to its procedural history. Crim.R. 5(B)
    only applies to situations where the state files related felony and misdemeanor
    charges in the municipal court.          The rule requires that, in such cases, the
    misdemeanor charges are to be bound over with the related felony charges. See
    State v. Desarro, 7th Dist. Columbiana No. 
    19 CO 0009
    , 
    2020-Ohio-335
    , ¶ 10, citing
    State v. Murray, 12th Dist. Clermont No. CA2016-01-005, 
    2016-Ohio-7364
    . The
    rule does not address the situation, such as this case, where the misdemeanor
    charges are filed in municipal court and the grand jury returns a separate indictment
    on related felony charges. 
    Id.,
     citing Murray. Here, no felony was ever charged in
    the municipal court; therefore, Crim.R. 5(B) is inapplicable. Desarro at ¶ 14.
    However, our reading of the record does not reflect that the trial court
    dismissed this case based on Crim.R. 5(B). Rather, based on its statements at the
    hearing and the notation at the docket, it appears that the court dismissed the case
    “on the court’s own motion,” and pursuant to its inherent authority under
    Crim.R. 48(B).
    Dismissal Pursuant to Crim.R. 48(B)
    While Gatens’s motion to dismiss referenced three criminal rules —
    Crim.R. 1(B),3 5(B), and 48(B) — the brief accompanying the motion did not provide
    3 Crim.R. 1(B) sets forth the general principle that the criminal rules “are intended
    to provide for the just determination of every criminal proceeding. They shall be
    construed and applied to secure the fair, impartial, speedy, and sure administration of
    justice, simplicity in procedure, and the elimination of unjustifiable expense and delay.”
    Gatens argued in the brief that the circumstances surrounding this case warranted a
    dismissal under this rule.
    an argument predicated on Crim.R. 48(B). The city argued in its brief a dismissal
    pursuant to Crim.R. 48(B) was not warranted in this case.
    Crim.R. 48(B) permits the court to dismiss a case, but requires that
    “[i]f the court over objection of the state dismisses an indictment, information, or
    complaint, it shall state on the record its findings of fact and reasons for the
    dismissal.”
    “[A] judge may dismiss a case pursuant to Crim.R. 48(B) if a dismissal
    serves the interests of justice.” State v. Busch, 
    76 Ohio St.3d 613
    , 615, 
    669 N.E.2d 1125
     (1996). In Busch, the municipal court granted the request of a domestic
    violence victim to dismiss the case. The Supreme Court of Ohio found the dismissal
    within the trial court’s discretion pursuant to Crim.R. 48. The court indicated
    several relevant factors in determining whether a dismissal served the interests of
    justice in a domestic violence case (“the seriousness of the injuries, the presence of
    independent witnesses, the status of counseling efforts, whether the complainant’s
    refusal to testify is coerced, and whether the defendant is a first-time offender”). Id.
    at 616. It, however, stressed that Crim.R. 48(B) does not limit the reasons for which
    a judge may dismiss a case. Id. at 615. In finding the dismissal proper, the court
    noted that “the trial court used its judicial power to do its best with a matter which
    no longer seemed to fit the court system.” Id. at 616. See also, e.g., State v. Watkins,
    10th Dist. Franklin No. 02AP-659, 
    2003-Ohio-668
    .
    Here, at the hearing regarding the motion to dismiss, the trial court
    heard the recitation of the procedural history of the case. The traffic charges were
    first filed in the municipal court in September 2017. Six months later, Gatens was
    indicted by the grand jury for illegal conveyance; it was unknown whether the OVI
    offense had also been presented to the grand jury. Several weeks later, at a
    suppression hearing in the municipal court for the traffic charges, the city dismissed
    them; a notation in the dismissal entry indicated only seven days remained for the
    traffic charges before the speedy trial time would run. Subsequently, the state
    dismissed the felony case in the common pleas court under unknown circumstances.
    Four months later, the city refiled the misdemeanor OVI and reckless operation
    charges.
    The city prosecutor stated at the hearing that the city’s dismissal of
    the municipal court case was not a calculated tactical decision made in bad faith but
    rather due to a mistaken belief that a felony OVI charge would be brought in the
    common pleas court to be tried together with the illegal conveyance offense.
    The trial court appears to have found it troubling that the OVI charge
    was dismissed seven days before the running of the speedy trial time and was refiled
    later after the felony case in the common pleas court was dismissed.4 The court
    commented that the city refiled the OVI case after the prosecution of the felony case
    in the common pleas court turned out to be unsuccessful and it characterized the
    4 The court did not further elaborate on this issue, and we note that the speedy trial
    time is tolled (but not reset) during the period between a dismissal of a charge and
    subsequent refiling of the charge. State v. Bonarrig, 
    62 Ohio St.2d 7
    , 12, 
    402 N.E.2d 530
    (1980). Further, speedy trial requirements were never discussed as a basis for the
    dismissal in this case.
    city’s refiling after the dismissal of the common pleas court case to be a “second bite
    of the apple.” The trial court alluded to Crim.R. 48 and noted that Crim.R. 48
    permits a dismissal “in the interest of justice.”
    We review the trial court’s dismissal of a criminal charge under
    Crim.R. 48(B) in this case for an abuse of discretion. Busch, 76 Ohio St.3d at 616,
    
    669 N.E.2d 1125
    ; Elqatto, 10th Dist. Franklin No. 11AP-914, 
    2012-Ohio-4303
    , at
    ¶ 17; State v. Anguiano, 2d Dist. Darke No. 2011 CA 9, 
    2012-Ohio-2094
    , ¶ 10.5
    While the trial court has the inherent authority to dismiss the case
    pursuant to Crim.R. 48(B) and Busch, Crim.R. 48(B) requires that the court “shall
    state on the record its findings of fact and reasons for the dismissal.”
    The findings of fact and reasons for the dismissal are necessary in
    order to allow meaningful review of the assignments of error. State v. Bound, 
    43 Ohio App.2d 44
    , 
    332 N.E.2d 366
     (8th Dist.1975). In this case, the city acted within
    its right and timely refiled the OVI case in the municipal court after the common
    pleas court case was dismissed. The trial court dismissed the case without issuing a
    decision stating its findings of fact and reasons for the dismissal.
    5  The city claims the standard of review in this case is de novo, citing State v.
    Romage, 
    2012-Ohio-3381
    , 
    974 N.E.2d 120
     (10th Dist.). A review of that case indicates
    Romage does not concern Crim.R. 48(B). Rather, the trial court there dismissed the
    criminal case after finding the criminal statute at issue unconstitutional. The de novo
    standard was appropriate in that case because appellate review of a question of law is de
    novo. Wiltberger v. Davis, 
    110 Ohio App.3d 46
    , 51-52, 
    673 N.E.2d 628
     (10th Dist.1996).
    See also State v. Lear, 6th Dist. Lucas No. L-17-1261, 
    2018-Ohio-1874
    , ¶ 10 (ordinarily we
    review a trial court’s decision to dismiss a criminal complaint under an abuse-of-
    discretion standard; however, where the court’s decision raises a question of law, we
    review de novo).
    We recognize a written decision reducing the court’s analysis for the
    dismissal may not be necessary if the transcript of the proceedings clearly identifies
    the rationale for the trial court’s ruling. Cleveland v. Stoutemire, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga
    No. 88257, 
    2007-Ohio-721
    , ¶ 8-9 (the failure to reduce the rationale to writing was
    harmless error). See also State v. Graham, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 108053,
    
    2019-Ohio-4353
    , and State v. McCullough, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 105959,
    
    2018-Ohio-1967
    .        Here, however, the trial court did not clearly articulate the
    reasons for the dismissal, other than expressing its dismay that the case had been
    pending in various courts for over two years without a resolution. Our review of the
    record, however, reflects that Gatens herself contributed to the majority of the delay
    by requesting numerous continuances and failing to appear, requiring a capias to be
    issued at one point.
    While Crim.R. 48(B) provides the trial court with the inherent
    authority to dismiss a criminal complaint if it serves the interests of justice, the trial
    court in this case did not provide a clear basis on the record before dismissing the
    OVI offense, as is required by the rule. As such, the dismissal was an abuse of
    discretion. The first and second assignments of error lack merit, and the third
    assignment of error is sustained to the extent discussed above. The trial court’s
    judgment is reversed, the charges are reinstated, and the case is remanded for
    further proceedings.
    Judgment reversed and the case remanded.
    It is ordered that appellant recover of appellee 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.
    A certified copy of this entry shall constitute the mandate pursuant to Rule 27
    of the Rules of Appellate Procedure.
    ____________________________
    MICHELLE J. SHEEHAN, JUDGE
    KATHLEEN ANN KEOUGH, P.J., and
    EILEEN A. GALLAGHER, J., CONCUR
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 109406

Judges: Sheehan

Filed Date: 2/4/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/4/2021