State v. Petrone , 2013 Ohio 1138 ( 2013 )


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  • [Cite as State v. Petrone, 
    2013-Ohio-1138
    .]
    COURT OF APPEALS
    STARK COUNTY, OHIO
    FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    STATE OF OHIO                                  :     JUDGES:
    :
    :     Hon. Patricia A. Delaney, P. J.
    Plaintiff-Appellee        :     Hon. W. Scott Gwin, J.
    :     Hon. John W. Wise, J.
    -vs-                                           :
    :     Case No. 2012CA00096
    ROBERT W. PETRONE                              :
    :
    :
    Defendant-Appellant        :     OPINION
    CHARACTER OF PROCEEDING:                           Appeal from the Stark County Court of
    Common Pleas, Case No. 2010CR1481
    JUDGMENT:                                          AFFIRMED
    DATE OF JUDGMENT ENTRY:                            March 18, 2013
    APPEARANCES:
    For Appellant:                                       For Appellee:
    NICHOLAS SWYRYDENKO                                  JOHN D. FERRERO, JR.
    137 South Main St.                                   STARK COUNTY PROSECUTOR
    Suite 206                                            KATHLEEN O. TATARSKY
    Akron, OH 44308                                      110 Central Plaza South, Suite 510
    Canton, OH 44702-1413
    [Cite as State v. Petrone, 
    2013-Ohio-1138
    .]
    Delaney, P.J.
    {¶1} Appellant Robert W. Petrone appeals from the April 18, 2012 Judgment
    Entry of the Stark County Court of Common Pleas overruling his motion for leave to
    file a motion for new trial on the basis of newly-discovered evidence. Appellee is the
    State of Ohio.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    {¶2} This case arose on September 19, 2010 when appellant shot Kevin
    Ciptak multiple times in the driveway of a tree farm in Jackson Township, Stark
    County, Ohio. Appellant was ultimately convicted of one count of felonious assault
    with a gun specification, and was acquitted of one count of attempted murder.
    {¶3} We have thoroughly reviewed the entire record as we are required to do
    when reviewing a trial court’s decision upon a motion for new trial. In appellant’s first
    direct appeal, we related the circumstances of the parties’ relationships and the facts
    leading up to the shooting of Kevin Ciptak.             State v. Petrone, 5th Dist. No.
    2011CA00067, 
    2012-Ohio-911
    . The facts as related here focus more specifically on
    those relevant to appellant’s motion for leave to file a delayed motion for new trial.
    The Events of September 19, 2010
    {¶4} Appellant and his wife, Sue Petrone, have been separated since 2006.
    Both attended high school with Kevin Ciptak. After the separation, Sue Petrone and
    Ciptak had an on-and-off dating relationship.           Appellant and Sue Petrone have
    children together and although they live in separate households, they live on the same
    street in the same subdivision in Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, about six houses away from
    each other.
    Stark County, Case No. 2012CA00096                                                     3
    {¶5} On September 19, 2010, Ciptak went to Brubaker’s Pub to watch the
    Cleveland Browns game that started at 1:00 p.m. Sue Petrone came to meet Ciptak
    late in the game and the two got into an argument. Sue Petrone left Brubaker’s;
    Ciptak stayed briefly to pay his bill.
    {¶6} Upon leaving the bar, Ciptak decided to drive by Sue Petrone’s home to
    “smooth things over” after the argument. Sue Petrone was home but had her house
    “buttoned up” to look as though no one was home. Ciptak drove by and continued on
    past appellant’s house.
    {¶7} Appellant was outside, having come home early from the Browns game.
    Ciptak later said he waved at appellant; appellant said Ciptak “gave him the finger.”
    Either way, shortly after Ciptak drove by, appellant decided to follow him.
    {¶8} Ciptak was traveling to a tree farm on Strausser Road in Jackson
    Township, Ohio. He planned to tag trees he needed later for a landscaping job. His
    route from Cuyahoga Falls took him south on Route 8. In downtown Cuyahoga Falls,
    he first noticed appellant in his vehicle behind him.       Ciptak proceeded south on
    Interstate 77, and appellant followed. Ciptak exited at Arlington Road with appellant
    still behind him. Ciptak ignored appellant, assuming at some point he would turn
    back. Ciptak came to a church parking lot on Arlington Road and pulled in to attempt
    to get appellant “off his back.” Appellant did not follow him into the lot, and instead
    proceeded straight on Arlington.         Ciptak turned around in the rear of the church
    parking lot and exited.
    {¶9} Ciptak saw appellant waiting for him at the next intersection. Appellant
    again fell in behind Ciptak, following him from a distance of 5 to 8 car lengths south on
    Stark County, Case No. 2012CA00096                                                    4
    Arlington Road. Ciptak drove to Strausser and turned right, pulling into the tree farm a
    short distance up the road. Appellant continued straight on Strausser and did not
    follow Ciptak into the driveway.
    {¶10} Ciptak drove down the long, narrow lane of the tree farm, observing
    dense trees, a residence, and a barn. No one was around and Ciptak didn’t feel
    comfortable getting out to tag trees as he had planned to do. When he reached the
    barn, he backed up and turned around to head back out the driveway.
    {¶11} He met appellant in his vehicle coming down the driveway. The two
    trucks stopped, “head to head.”        Appellant’s vehicle was about 6 to 8 feet away.
    Ciptak put his truck in park and got out, screaming, “What are you trying to do? What
    do you want?” Ciptak walked in front of his truck.
    {¶12} Appellant’s driver’s door was open. Ciptak later testified he saw the door
    open and saw a gun pointed at him, but appellant never said a word. Ciptak looked at
    the gun and heard a popping sound. He fell to the ground, and felt enormous pain.
    The Neighbor’s Account
    {¶13} Donna Allen lives at 8821 Strausser Road NW, Massillon (Jackson
    Township), which is next door to Haines Tree Farm. Allen’s property is separated
    from the tree farm by a wooden fence and a line of mature white pines. Her driveway
    is parallel to the tree farm driveway.
    {¶14} On September 19, 2010, Allen was in a barn on her property, next to the
    line of white pines, grooming her horses.        Allen heard a truck in the tree farm
    driveway, which was slightly unusual because it was Sunday. She heard someone
    Stark County, Case No. 2012CA00096                                                      5
    yelling “What do you want, m-fer” several times.        Immediately after that, as Allen
    described it, she heard five or six gunshots very quickly.
    {¶15} Allen had stepped out of her barn to ask the unknown persons to keep it
    down because her kids were around, but when she heard the gunshots, she went
    back into the barn, gathered her kids, and directed her husband to call 911.
    {¶16} Allen saw a white truck with a utility cap, later identified as appellant’s
    vehicle, quickly back out of the tree farm driveway. Her husband went to the tree farm
    to check out the scene and told her someone was hurt.            Allen and her husband
    administered first aid to Ciptak, whom they found on the ground alive and conscious
    but seriously injured.
    The Aftermath of the Shooting
    {¶17} When first responders arrived, Ciptak was able to tell them he had been
    shot by appellant. Ciptak was hospitalized for three weeks, having been shot in the
    hand, biceps, and stomach. He has lasting nerve damage to his hand and at the time
    of trial was still in occupational therapy.
    {¶18} Appellant, meanwhile, fled the area immediately after the shooting. He
    stopped in Cuyahoga Falls and briefly made contact with his wife and daughter,
    alarming Sue Petrone when he told her “it’s over.” She was not yet aware Ciptak had
    been shot when appellant gave her the combination to a safe before leaving in his
    truck.     She found this unusual and feared appellant was suicidal.            Appellant
    subsequently traveled to Colorado and Texas before ultimately surrendering at the
    Jackson Township Police Department.
    Stark County, Case No. 2012CA00096                                                         6
    The Forensic Evidence
    {¶19} Appellee called forensic scientist Michael Short of the Stark County
    Crime Lab as an expert witness at trial. The forensic evidence indicated Ciptak’s
    clothing contained a number of bullet defects. His shirt contained three: one at the
    lower hem to the right of the center (bullet entrance); an L-shaped defect on lower left
    front of shirt to the left of center (bullet exit); and an elongated defect slightly below
    and to the left of the second defect (bullet exit). Ciptak’s shorts contained a bullet
    defect in the front, exhibiting the physical effects of a bullet exit: a linear defect with
    fibers protruding from the inside out, as though stretched by passage of the bullet.
    {¶20} Short further testified over objection that Ciptak’s wounds were
    consistent with the conclusions he drew from the clothing.           Appellee’s Exhibit 3A
    depicted the wound to Ciptak’s abdominal region, an “elongated, irregular defect”
    typical of an exit wound. Appellee’s Exhibit 3B depicted the wound to his hip/buttock
    region. Short testified this injury is a circular defect indicative of the circular defect in
    the back of the shirt.
    The Trial Testimony of Dr. Boutsicaris
    {¶21} Dr. Peter S. Boutsicaris is a trauma surgeon at Mercy Medical Center
    who treated Ciptak on September 19, 2010.           Boutsicaris noted an open bleeding
    wound to the left lower abdomen spurting blood; a bleeding gunshot wound to the left
    upper arm; and a gunshot wound to the right hand. When Boutsicaris encountered
    Ciptak initially, the patient was “extremely critically ill” and was going into shock. He
    was brought into surgery immediately. Ciptak would otherwise have died of blood loss
    Stark County, Case No. 2012CA00096                                                     7
    due to the active bleeding in his belly. Boutsicaris testified that multiple surgeons
    worked on Ciptak to get his injuries under control.
    {¶22} Boutsicaris testified he is a trauma surgeon and as such his primary
    focus in treating a patient is doing what is necessary to save a life. He does, however,
    try to “guess” which way a bullet may have traveled inside the body for purposes of
    treatment to determine what may have been injured in the bullet’s path. In this case,
    Ciptak sustained an injury to his right back side and left lower abdomen which he
    attributed to the path of a single bullet. At the time of treatment, entrance versus exit
    was not relevant to Boutsicaris’ immediate lifesaving measures and thus his notes
    were not precise. He emphasized that he is not trained in forensics.
    {¶23} At trial, however, Boutsicaris testified on direct he had reviewed the x-
    rays again on the morning of trial, commenting that his notes were conflicting so he
    wanted to take another look.         He stated he reviewed Ciptak’s CAT scan from
    September 20 and determined the bullet entered back to front, right to left, based
    upon several factors: bone fragments pushing inward toward the belly, two metal
    fragments in the middle of the belly, placement of the buttock wound higher than the
    belly wound, and the general positioning of the wounds consistent with the hand
    wounds.
    {¶24} Boutsicaris repeatedly stated his conclusions were based upon
    supposition:
    * * * *.
    [Dr. Boutsicaris:] So—and the other thing I paid attention to is on
    the CAT scan, it’s like looking at a slice –a bunch of sliced
    Stark County, Case No. 2012CA00096                                                      8
    bologna where you’re looking at the body in slices going from top
    to bottom.
    And the one wound, the pelvic wound, the one—or the upper
    buttock was up high, and the one on the belly was down low which
    means the bullet would go high to low.
    Well, assuming two adults are involved in something and a person
    tends to shoot at waist level or higher, the natural tendency if a
    bullet’s going to enter is if it’s going to hit the buttock, it’s going to
    go and it’s like a downward pathway. So you got a bullet going
    downward unless the person was on the ground shooting upwards
    which doesn’t make sense.
    So the probabilities if two people are standing, bullet entering the
    buttock, going downward and the bullet and the fragments,
    everything points towards the entry being the pelvis on the right
    side and exiting the left abdomen.
    [Prosecutor:] Okay. So, in other words, back to front?
    [Dr. Boutsicaris:] Back to front.
    [Prosecutor:] And right to left?
    [Boutsicaris:] Right. And that goes along with the hand injuries,
    too.
    [Prosecutor:] And that is in spite of the fact that the records refer
    to entry and exit both ways?
    Stark County, Case No. 2012CA00096                                                9
    [Boutsicaris:]    Yeah, I would say I was wrong in my initial
    impression because I—the guy comes in, I’m looking at the
    bleeding through the front and I’m not measuring the holes. And
    usually people get shot facing each other. So that’s, you know,
    supposition.
    [Prosecutor:] Okay. If you were to learn that a forensic expert
    had analyzed other evidence and come to the conclusion it was
    back to front—
    [Defense Trial Counsel:] Objection, Your Honor.
    The Court: Overruled.
    [Prosecutor:] --would you have any reason to disagree with that I
    guess based on your analysis of the medical records?
    [Dr. Boutsicaris:] I don’t have an opinion on that because I’ve
    never really had to analyze forensic evidence in comparison to
    what I do in my practice. So I’ve no experience in that so I really
    can’t say what I would say. I would have to look at the report to
    see if it fit my medical opinion.
    * * * *.
    Appellant Claims He Fired in Self-Defense
    {¶25} Appellant testified on his own behalf at trial and presented a theory of
    self-defense. He related an incident in 2008 in which Ciptak approached him at an
    outdoor public event, asked what his problem was, and said he (Ciptak) was a “big
    powerful man.” No physical confrontation occurred.
    Stark County, Case No. 2012CA00096                                                  10
    {¶26} Regarding the incident on September 19, 2010, appellant said it began
    when Ciptak drove past his house and gave him the finger. Appellant decided he
    wanted to talk to Ciptak and admittedly followed him. Appellant claimed that when
    Ciptak pulled into the church parking lot, he did not intend to stalk him further but
    remained in the area because he, too, planned to check out a work site in the Jackson
    Township area.     He admitted, though, that he saw Ciptak pull into the tree farm
    driveway, and he pulled into the neighboring driveway, turned around, and then
    entered the tree farm driveway himself.
    {¶27} Appellant claimed he came slowly down the driveway and saw Ciptak as
    he crested a small hill, coming at him. Appellant said Ciptak “lunged” at him, catching
    him by surprise. Appellant stopped. Ciptak got out of his truck but appellant remained
    inside his. Appellant said Ciptak cursed at him, screaming, crossed in front of his
    vehicle and came up on appellant’s driver’s side. Appellant said “Leave me and my
    family alone,” but Ciptak came up to his door. Appellant claimed he told Ciptak to
    back off but Ciptak persisted and reached into appellant’s door, which was partly
    open. Appellant testified he grabbed his pistol, calm but cautious, describing Ciptak
    as enraged. Appellant testified that when Ciptak reached into the truck, he pulled the
    trigger, firing three shots without deliberation.
    {¶28} Appellant further stated after the shots were fired, Ciptak was able to
    turn and run back to his vehicle. Appellant thought he was going to grab a weapon
    and so appellant backed out of the driveway and left. He claimed to have no idea his
    shots struck Ciptak; he didn’t intend to physically confront Ciptak and only fired the
    gun to scare him. He did not call for help.
    Stark County, Case No. 2012CA00096                                                      11
    {¶29} Appellant described his flight after the shooting as a trip to “get his head
    clear.” He said he turned his cell phone off because he didn’t want to talk to anyone,
    and was unaware Ciptak had been wounded.             He had problems with his truck in
    Houston but did eventually turn himself in to the Jackson Township Police
    Department.
    Indictment, Conviction, Appeal, and Motion for Leave to File
    Delayed Motion for New Trial
    {¶30} Appellant was charged by indictment with one count of attempted murder
    [R.C. 2903.02(A)/2923.02(A), a felony of the first degree] with a firearm specification
    [R.C. 2941.145] and one count of felonious assault by means of a deadly weapon or
    dangerous ordnance [R.C. 2903.11(A)(2), a felony of the second degree] with a
    firearm specification [R.C. 2941.145]. Appellant entered pleas of not guilty and the
    case proceeded to jury trial, whereupon appellant was found not guilty of attempted
    murder with a firearm specification and guilty of felonious assault with a firearm
    specification. The trial court sentenced appellant to an aggregate prison term of eight
    years.
    {¶31} Appellant appealed from the judgment entry of his conviction and
    sentence, raising five assignments of error. We affirmed the conviction in State v.
    Petrone, 5th District No. 2011CA00067, 
    2012-Ohio-911
    , appeal not allowed, 
    132 Ohio St.3d 1463
    , 
    2012-Ohio-3054
    , 
    969 N.E.2d 1231
    .
    {¶32} On February 17, 2012, appellant filed an “Application for Leave to File
    Delayed Motion for New Trial (Hearing Requested)” on the grounds of newly-
    discovered evidence. As new evidence, appellant cited “the analysis of the medical
    records of [victim] Mr. Ciptak and the opinion therefrom stated in the affidavit of Daniel
    Stark County, Case No. 2012CA00096                                                             12
    J. Spitz, M.D., a Forensic Pathologist and Toxicologist, and the testimony that Dr.
    Spitz would offer based upon his review and analysis of the substantial medical
    evidence regarding….[Ciptak’s injuries].”          Appellant asserted the evidence was
    discovered in the course of preparation for civil litigation. Appellant summarized the
    newly-obtained evidence thusly: “In his affidavit, Dr. Spitz concludes…that to a
    reasonable degree of medical/scientific certainty, the stomach-to-bullet wound
    received by Ciptak entered from the stomach and exited through the buttock, in
    diametric opposition to Dr. Boutsakaris’s (sic) testimony at trial.” Application for Leave
    to File Delayed Motion for New Trial (Hearing Requested), 5. Dr. Spitz’s affidavit
    asserts it is based upon his review of exhibits from the underlying criminal case,
    including the photographs of Ciptak, Ciptak’s medical records, his radiologic records, a
    “trial testimony summary,” and portions of the trial testimony of Ciptak and Dr.
    Boutsicaris. The motion also includes an article from the JAMA, April 28, 1993, Vol.
    269, No. 16, entitled “Clinicians’ Forensic Interpretations of Fatal Gunshot Wounds
    Often Miss the Mark.”
    {¶33} The State responded with a motion in opposition and appellant replied.
    {¶34} On April 18, 2012, the trial court overruled appellant’s motion.
    {¶35} Appellant hereby appeals from the trial court’s judgment entry.
    {¶36} Appellant raises one1 Assignment of Error:
    1
    Appellant makes two additional arguments, not separately assigned as error, and barred by
    res judicata. He alleges the trial court improperly instructed the jury with respect to self-
    defense and the Castle Doctrine, and asserts he received ineffective assistance of trial
    counsel for, e.g., failure to obtain an expert witness to contradict Dr. Boutsicaris, failing to
    request a continuance, and failing to object to the trial court’s jury instructions. We decline to
    substantively address these arguments not properly before us. See App.R. 12(A)(1)(b);
    16(A)(3)
    Stark County, Case No. 2012CA00096                                                   13
    {¶37} “I. THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN DENYING APPELLANT’S MOTION
    FOR LEAVE TO FILE A MOTION FOR NEW TRIAL, AND IN THUS DENYING
    REVIEW OF THE SUBSTANTIVE AND LEGAL MERITS OF A MOTION FOR NEW
    TRIAL.”
    I.
    {¶38} Appellant argues the trial court erred in denying his motion for leave to
    file a motion for new trial. We disagree.
    {¶39} Crim.R. 33 governs new trials. A motion for a new trial made pursuant to
    Crim.R. 33 is addressed to the sound discretion of the trial court, and may not be
    reversed unless we find an abuse of discretion. State v. Schiebel, 
    55 Ohio St.3d 71
    ,
    
    564 N.E.2d 54
     (1990). An abuse of discretion implies that the trial court's judgment is
    arbitrary, unreasonable, or unconscionable. State v. Sage, 
    31 Ohio St.3d 173
    , 
    510 N.E.2d 343
     (1987).
    {¶40} Under Crim.R. 33(A)(6), a new trial may be granted when “new evidence
    material to the defense is discovered, which the defendant could not with reasonable
    diligence have discovered and produced at the trial.” Subsection (B) of Crim.R. 33
    states, in relevant part, as follows:
    Application for a new trial shall be made by motion which, except
    for the cause of newly discovered evidence, shall be filed within
    fourteen days after the verdict was rendered, or the decision of the
    court where a trial by jury has been waived, unless it is made to
    appear by clear and convincing proof that the defendant was
    unavoidably prevented from filing his motion for a new trial, in
    Stark County, Case No. 2012CA00096                                                      14
    which case the motion shall be filed within seven days from the
    order of the court finding that the defendant was unavoidably
    prevented from filing such motion within the time provided herein.
    “[A] party is ‘unavoidably prevented’ from filing a motion for a new trial if the party had
    no knowledge of the existence of the ground supporting the motion and could not have
    learned of that existence within the time prescribed for filing the motion in the exercise
    of reasonable diligence.” State v. Walden, 
    19 Ohio App.3d 141
    , 145-146, 
    483 N.E.2d 859
     (1984).
    {¶41} In this case, appellant based his motion on allegedly newly-discovered
    evidence. Crim.R. 33(B) provides that motions for new trial on account of newly-
    discovered evidence shall be filed within one hundred twenty days after the day upon
    which the verdict was rendered or from the trial court's decision unless “it is made to
    appear by clear and convincing proof that the defendant was unavoidably prevented
    from the discovery of the evidence upon which he must rely.” Thus, an untimely
    motion for new trial based on newly discovered evidence must show, by clear and
    convincing proof, that the defendant was “unavoidably prevented” from discovering the
    new evidence. State v. Fortson, 8th Dist. No. 82545, 
    2003-Ohio-5387
     at ¶ 10.
    {¶42} Appellant’s argument to the trial court and upon appeal centers upon
    whether the third bullet to strike Ciptak entered from the front (stomach region) or back
    (hip/buttock region). Appellant argues this was the crucial issue for the jury’s rejection
    of appellant’s self-defense argument. However, we disagree that the third-bullet issue
    was the pivotal issue in the case; the jury could easily have rejected appellant’s self-
    serving testimony about Ciptak reaching into the truck, and his theory of self-defense
    Stark County, Case No. 2012CA00096                                                       15
    overall, on a number of bases.       If we concede for the sake of argument that the
    forensic testimony was the linchpin of the case that appellant maintains, we must
    agree with the trial court and find appellant has failed to demonstrate by clear and
    convincing evidence that he had “no knowledge of the existence of the ground
    supporting the motion for a new trial and could not have learned of the existence of
    that ground within the time prescribed for filing the motion for new trial in the exercise
    of reasonable diligence.”
    {¶43} Appellant has not demonstrated why he could not have learned of Spitz’s
    opinion, or the possible fallacies in the opinions of trauma surgeons, within the time
    limitations of Crim.R. 33.    Appellant has not explained why it took him until the
    preparation of his civil defense to rebut the forensic evidence presented by the State
    in his criminal trial.
    {¶44} We further find appellant’s proffered evidence does not warrant the
    granting of a new trial. To warrant the granting of a motion for a new trial on the
    ground of newly discovered evidence, it must be shown that “the new evidence (1)
    discloses a strong probability that it will change the result of a new trial if granted; (2)
    has been discovered since the trial; (3) is such as could not in the exercise of due
    diligence have been discovered before the trial; (4) is material to the issues; (5) is not
    merely cumulative to former evidence; and (6) does not merely impeach or contradict
    the former evidence.” State v. Petro, 
    148 Ohio St. 505
    , 
    76 N.E.2d 370
     (1947),
    syllabus. We are required to review the issue of newly-discovered evidence from the
    record as a whole, and having done that, we disagree with appellant that the proffered
    affidavit of Dr. Spitz constitutes newly-discovered evidence within the meaning of
    Stark County, Case No. 2012CA00096                                                   16
    Crim.R. 33 as Dr. Spitz’ affidavit and accompanying journal article merely impeach or
    contradict the State’s forensic evidence.
    {¶45} Accordingly, the trial court’s decision is neither unreasonable, arbitrary,
    nor unconscionable, and the trial court did not abuse its discretion in overruling
    appellant’s motion for leave to file a delayed motion for new trial.
    {¶46} Appellant’s sole assignment of error is overruled. The judgment of the
    Stark County Court of Common Pleas is affirmed.
    By: Delaney, P.J.
    Gwin, J. and
    Wise, J. concur.
    HON. PATRICIA A. DELANEY
    HON. W. SCOTT GWIN
    HON. JOHN W. WISE
    PAD:kgb
    [Cite as State v. Petrone, 
    2013-Ohio-1138
    .]
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR STARK COUNTY, OHIO
    FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    STATE OF OHIO                                   :
    :
    :
    Plaintiff-Appellee         :
    :
    -vs-                                            :   JUDGMENT ENTRY
    :
    ROBERT W. PETRONE                               :
    :
    :   Case No. 2012CA00096
    Defendant-Appellant         :
    For the reasons stated in our accompanying Opinion on file, the judgment of the
    Stark County Court of Common Pleas is affirmed. Costs assessed to Appellant.
    HON. PATRICIA A. DELANEY
    HON. W. SCOTT GWIN
    HON. JOHN W. WISE
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2012CA00096

Citation Numbers: 2013 Ohio 1138

Judges: Delaney

Filed Date: 3/18/2013

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/30/2014