State v. Solomon , 2012 Ohio 4884 ( 2012 )


Menu:
  • [Cite as State v. Solomon, 
    2012-Ohio-4884
    .]
    COURT OF APPEALS
    MORROW COUNTY, OHIO
    FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    JUDGES:
    STATE OF OHIO                                 :       Hon. Patricia A. Delaney, P.J.
    :       Hon. W. Scott Gwin, J.
    Plaintiff-Appellee   :       Hon. William B. Hoffman, J.
    :
    -vs-                                          :
    :       Case No. 2012-CA-7
    WILLIAM SOLOMON, III                          :
    :
    Defendant-Appellant       :       OPINION
    CHARACTER OF PROCEEDING:                          Criminal appeal from the Morrow County
    Court of Common Pleas, Case No.
    2008CR-0132
    JUDGMENT:                                         Affirmed
    DATE OF JUDGMENT ENTRY:                           October 18, 2012
    APPEARANCES:
    For Plaintiff-Appellee                            For Defendant-Appellant
    CHARLES S. HOWLAND                                DENNIS PUSATERI
    JOCELYN STEFANCIN                                 250 East Broad Street, Ste. 1400
    60 East High Street                               Columbus, OH 43215
    Mt. Gilead, OH 43338
    [Cite as State v. Solomon, 
    2012-Ohio-4884
    .]
    Gwin, J.
    {¶1}    Defendant-appellant, William R. Solomon, III [“Solomon”] appeals the
    revocation of his community control and imposition of a five-year prison term following
    an evidentiary hearing in the Morrow County Court of Common Pleas. Plaintiff-appellee
    is the State of Ohio.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    {¶2}    Solomon was indicted by the Morrow County Grand Jury for one count of
    Domestic Violence. Because of prior convictions for domestic violence, the crime was a
    felony of the third degree. On May 9, 2008, Solomon pled guilty to the indictment. He
    was placed on community control sanctions for a period of five years. The terms and
    conditions of supervision included standard conditions and 11 special conditions of'
    supervision.
    {¶3}    A motion to revoke community control sanctions was filed on December
    10, 2010. The motion alleged that Solomon violated community control by (1)
    committing a new crime (Solomon was indicted for Domestic Violence on August 26,
    2010), (2) failing to report to his probation officer, and (3) consuming alcohol.
    {¶4}    On December 23, 2010, the court held a probable cause hearing. The
    court found Solomon to be indigent, continued the matter, and ordered that an attorney
    be appointed to represent Solomon.
    {¶5}    On May 3, 2011, Solomon acting pro se filed a motion to withdraw his
    former plea. The state filed a response to the motion on May 19, 2011. The motion was
    denied by Judgment Entry filed May 27, 2011.
    Morrow County, Case No. 2012-CA-7                                                          3
    {¶6}   On September 30, 2011, Solomon with counsel waived his right to a
    probable cause hearing. The trial court set October 21, 2011 for an evidentiary hearing
    on the motion to revoke Solomon’s community control sanctions. On October 21, 2011,
    the trial court granted Solomon’s motion for a continuance and rescheduled the
    evidentiary hearing for November 16, 2011. On that date, the trial court re-scheduled
    the hearing because Solomon’s attorney was ill. The court scheduled the matter for a
    hearing on November 22, 2011.
    {¶7}   At the hearing evidence was presented that Solomon complied with all 28
    terms and conditions of community control between the time of his placement on May 8,
    2009 and his failure to report to his probation officer on August 9, 2010.
    {¶8}   Solomon testified that his failure to report was during a time when his
    medical card had expired, he was trying to ration his psychotropic medications by taking
    one-third of his daily dosage. He claimed he was bedridden and incapacitated with
    anxiety that resulted in a hospitalization.
    {¶9}   Solomon testified that he and his wife called in to his probation officer
    when he was unable to make post-August 9 meetings. He also testified that on two
    previous occasions he was permitted to call in rather than report because of health
    issues. One was when he was recovering from eye surgery, the other when he was
    suffering with what was apparently H1N1 viral influenza.
    {¶10} Solomon's probation officer was a career deputy sheriff and police officer.
    He testified that call-ins were never permitted because all his probationers are required
    to report in person, and essentially took the position that "the rules are the rules." He did
    not know “off the top of his head” the frequency with which he made Solomon provide
    Morrow County, Case No. 2012-CA-7                                                     4
    urine screens for drugs and alcohol. The probation officer further testified that
    Solomon did not notify him that he was charged with a new offense. Solomon, acting as
    his own attorney, was acquitted after a jury trial of the new charge.
    {¶11} As to the charge of consumption of alcohol, the probation officer testified
    that at some prior court proceeding Solomon had told him he had relapsed and been
    drinking. Solomon testified that he told the probation officer he had “was self-
    medicating” and was drinking non-alcoholic beer.
    {¶12} At the conclusion of the hearing, the court found that Solomon had
    violated the terms and conditions of his community control. The court imposed the
    previously suspended sentence of five years in prison.
    ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
    {¶13} Solomon raises one assignment of error,
    {¶14} “I.   THE   TRIAL    COURT      ERRED      BY   REVOKING    DEFENDANT-
    APPELLANT'S COMMUNITY CONTROL, BY HOLDING A PROBATIONER WITH
    MULTIPLE AND SERIOUS MENTAL ILLNESSES TO THE SAME STANDARDS OF
    UNDERSTANDING, CAPABILITY AND COMPLIANCE THAT WOULD REASONABLY
    APPLY TO A MENTALLY HEALTHY PERSON, BY EXPECTING SUCH PERSON TO
    RESPOND TO THE SAME SUPERVISION METHODS AND STANDARDS AS WOULD
    A MENTALLY HEALTHY PERSON, AND BY FAILING TO CONDUCT REASONABLE
    INQUIRY INTO WHETHER ANY VIOLATIONS OF COMMUNITY CONTROL WERE
    WILLFUL, ALL IN VIOLATION OF THE DUE PROCESS AND EQUAL PROTECTION
    PROVISIONS OF THE UNITED STATES AND OHIO CONSTITUTIONS.”
    Morrow County, Case No. 2012-CA-7                                                   5
    Analysis
    Community control sanctions essentially replace the concept of
    “probation” in Ohio's criminal justice system. See generally Griffin & Katz,
    Ohio Felony Sentencing Law 394-396, §§ S.2-T5.4 (1988 Ed.). Although
    similar in their operational effect, community control sanctions differ a
    great deal from probation in many ways including the manner by which
    violations of those controls are handled. Judge Griffin and Professor Katz
    explain this difference in their treatise as follows:
    “Prior to 1995 Senate Bill 2, it was quite appropriate for a judge to
    treat probation as a contract for leniency. The judge imposed but
    suspended a prison sentence-the presumed proper punishment for the
    crime of conviction. Probation was conditioned on good behavior. Violation
    of that probation was a breach of contract with the sentencing judge. For
    the breach, the judge could properly impose the suspended prison
    sentence-even for the most trivial violation of probation.
    “Under Senate Bill 2, a sentence to a community control sanction is
    not a contract for good behavior that automatically is punishable by prison
    if it is violated. The community control sanction that is imposed is the
    appropriate sentence for the crime of conviction. That sanction was the
    one that should have adequately punished the offender for his misconduct
    and should have adequately protected the public from future crime by the
    offender. The sentence should have been reasonably calculated to
    achieve those overriding purposes. Just as the Parole Board can no
    Morrow County, Case No. 2012-CA-7                                                     6
    longer extend a sentence as a revised punishment for the felony which
    sent the offender to the penitentiary, so the court which imposes
    punishment for a violation of a community control sanction cannot punish
    the offender again for the crime that gave rise to the community control
    sanction. The sanction for the violation of the community control sanction
    should be the sanction that is commensurate with the seriousness of the
    violation and adequately protects the public from future crime by the
    offender and others.” Id. at 426-427, § T5.36 (Emphasis added.)
    (Footnotes deleted.).
    State v. Gilliam (June 10, 1999), 4th Dist. No. 98CA30, 
    1999 WL 740248
    , at *3(June 10,
    1999).
    {¶15} A community control revocation hearing is not a criminal trial. State v.
    White, 5th Dist. No.2009–CA–00111, 2009–Ohio–6447. The state therefore need not
    establish a community control violation by proof beyond a reasonable doubt. White,
    supra at ¶ 13; State v. Ritenour, 5th Dist. No.2006AP010002, 2006–Ohio–4744 at ¶ 36;
    State v. Spencer, 5th Dist. No. 2005–CA–15, 2006–Ohio–5543 at ¶ 12; State v. Henry,
    5th Dist.. No. 2007–CA–0047, 2008–Ohio–2474. The Supreme Court of Ohio has
    recently confirmed that when reviewing the manifest weight of the evidence, an
    appellate court conducts the same analysis in both criminal and civil cases. Eastley v.
    Volkman, 
    132 Ohio St.3d 328
    , 2012–Ohio–2179, 
    972 N.E.2d 517
    , ¶ 12.
    {¶16} The right to continue on community control depends on compliance with
    community control conditions and “is a matter resting within the sound discretion of the
    court.” State v. Garrett, 5th Dist. No. 2010 CA 00210, 2011–Ohio–691 at ¶ 13; State v.
    Morrow County, Case No. 2012-CA-7                                                             7
    Schlecht, 2nd Dist. No. 2003–CA–3, 2003–Ohio–5336, citing State v. Johnson, 2nd
    Dist. No. 17420, 
    2001 WL 561312
    (May 25, 2001).
    {¶17} Once a court finds a defendant violated the terms of probation, the
    decision whether to revoke probation lies within the court's sound discretion. State v.
    White, supra at ¶ 14. (Citing State v. Ritenour, supra at ¶ 37). (Internal Citations
    omitted). Thus, a reviewing court will not reverse a trial court's decision absent an abuse
    of discretion. State v. Sheets, 
    112 Ohio App.3d 1
    , 
    677 N.E.2d 818
    (1996); State v.
    Ritenour, supra at ¶ 37. An abuse of discretion connotes more than an error in law or
    judgment;   it   implies   that   the   court's   attitude   is   unreasonable,   arbitrary   or
    unconscionable. State v. Maurer, 
    15 Ohio St.3d 239
    , 253, 
    473 N.E.2d 768
    (1984).
    {¶18} The weight to be given to the evidence and the credibility of the witnesses
    are issues for the trier of fact. State v. Jamison, 
    49 Ohio St.3d 182
    , 
    552 N.E.2d 180
    ,
    certiorari denied (1990), 
    498 U.S. 881
    , 
    111 S.Ct. 228
    , 
    112 L.Ed.2d 183
    . Reviewing
    courts should accord deference to the trial court's decision because the trial court has
    had the opportunity to observe the witnesses' demeanor, gestures, and voice inflections
    which cannot be conveyed to us through the written record, Miller v. Miller, 
    37 Ohio St.3d 71
    , 
    523 N.E.2d 846
    (1988).
    {¶19} Solomon argues, in essence, that his mental health problems constitute a
    mitigating factor. See, State v. Wolfe, Stark App. No. 2008–CA–00064, 2009–Ohio–
    830.
    {¶20} In State v. Bleasdale, 
    69 Ohio App.3d 68
    , 
    590 N.E.2d 43
    (1990) the
    defendant was given a suspended sentence, was placed on probation on the condition
    that he is accepted by, and successfully complete a specific drug program. The
    Morrow County, Case No. 2012-CA-7                                                          8
    defendant was ultimately terminated from the program after he was diagnosed as
    suffering from several mental disorders and the staff determined that it was not
    equipped to deal with the mental problems that the defendant exhibited. After a
    probable cause hearing, the trial court revoked the defendant's probation and reinstated
    his sentence of confinement. On appeal, the Eleventh District Court of Appeals
    determined that the trial court had abused its discretion in revoking the defendant's
    probation because the defendant had not willfully or intentionally violated the conditions
    of his probation. Rather, the court stated, the defendant had been cooperating with the
    program but was terminated “due to the program's inability to properly minister his
    case.” 
    Id. at 72
    .
    {¶21} Crim. R. 32.3 does not require that a probation violation be willful. As the
    Eleventh District stated in State v. Stockdale (Sept. 26, 1997), 11th Dist. No. 96–L–172,
    “there is nothing in Crim. R. 32.3 ... that mandates that the state must introduce
    evidence that the probation violation was willful.” Accord, State v. Miller, 6th Dist. No. F-
    05-016, 
    2006-Ohio-4810
    , at ¶ 15 (“There is no requirement that the state prove
    willfulness before the court can revoke a defendant's community control.”) (citations
    omitted); State v. Wolfson, 4th Dist. No. 03CA25, 
    2004-Ohio-2750
    , at ¶ 12 (“the State
    only had to prove that Wolfson violated the terms of her community control sanctions,
    not that she had a mens rea of ‘willfulness,’ before the court could revoke Wolfson's
    community control sanctions”); State v. Norris, 5th Dist. No. 2010CA0070, 2010-Ohio-
    6007, ¶ 20.
    {¶22} In the case at bar, the facts supporting the revocation of appellant's
    community control sanctions are clearly distinguishable from those in Bleasdale. In this
    Morrow County, Case No. 2012-CA-7                                                         9
    case, the court revoked Solomon’s community control solely based on his voluntary
    conduct, not based on conditions over which he had no control.
    {¶23} The only evidence that Solomon could not report to his probation officer
    due to his mental illness came from Solomon; no medical or other testimony was
    submitted to corroborate or substantiate the nature and extent of any disability.
    {¶24} Ultimately, “the reviewing court must determine whether the appellant or
    the appellee provided the more believable evidence, but must not completely substitute
    its judgment for that of the original trier of fact ‘unless it is patently apparent that the
    fact-finder lost its way.’” State v. Pallai, 7th Dist. No. 07 MA 198, 2008–Ohio–6635, ¶
    31, quoting State v. Woullard, 
    158 Ohio App.3d 31
    , 2004–Ohio–3395, 
    813 N.E.2d 964
    ,
    ¶ 81. In other words, “[w]hen there exist two fairly reasonable views of the evidence or
    two conflicting versions of events, neither of which is unbelievable, it is not our province
    to choose which one we believe.” State v. Dyke, 7th Dist. No. 99 CA 149, 2002–Ohio–
    1152, at ¶ 13, citing State v. Gore, 
    131 Ohio App.3d 197
    , 201, 
    722 N.E.2d 125
    (1999).
    {¶25} The weight to be given to the evidence and the credibility of the witnesses
    are issues for the trier of fact. State v. DeHass, 
    10 Ohio St.2d 230
    , 
    227 N.E.2d 212
    (1967), paragraph one of the syllabus; State v. Hunter, 
    131 Ohio St.3d 67
    , 2011–
    Ohio–6524, 
    960 N.E.2d 955
    , ¶ 118. Accord, Glasser v. United States, 
    315 U.S. 60
    , 80,
    
    62 S.Ct. 457
    , 
    86 L.Ed. 680
     (1942); Marshall v. Lonberger, 
    459 U.S. 422
    , 434, 
    103 S.Ct. 843
    , 74 L.Ed .2d 646 (1983).
    {¶26} The judge as the trier of fact was free to accept or reject any and all of the
    evidence offered by the parties and assess the witness's credibility. “While the [judge]
    may take note of the inconsistencies and resolve or discount them accordingly * * * such
    Morrow County, Case No. 2012-CA-7                                                       10
    inconsistencies do not render defendant's conviction against the manifest weight or
    sufficiency of the evidence”. State v. Craig, 10th Dist. No. 99AP–739, 
    1999 WL 29752
    (Mar 23, 2000) citing State v. Nivens, 10th Dist. No. 95APA09–1236, 
    1996 WL 284714
    (May 28, 1996). Indeed, the [judge] need not believe all of a witness' testimony, but may
    accept only portions of it as true. State v. Raver, Franklin App. No. 02AP–604, 2003–
    Ohio–958, ¶ 21, citing State v. Antill, 
    176 Ohio St. 61
    , 67, 
    197 N.E.2d 548
     (1964); State
    v. Burke, 10th Dist. No. 02AP–1238, 2003–Ohio–2889, citing State v. Caldwell (1992),
    
    79 Ohio App.3d 667
    , 
    607 N.E.2d 1096
     (4th Dist.1992). Although the evidence may have
    been circumstantial, we note that circumstantial evidence has the same probative value
    as direct evidence. State v. Jenks, supra.
    {¶27} In Cross v. Ledford, 
    161 Ohio St. 469
    , 477, 
    120 N.E.2d 118
     (1954), the
    Supreme Court further cautioned,
    The mere number of witnesses, who may support a claim of one or
    the other of the parties to an action, is not to be taken as a basis for
    resolving disputed facts. The degree of proof required is determined by
    the impression which the testimony of the witnesses makes upon the trier
    of facts, and the character of the testimony itself. Credibility, intelligence,
    freedom from bias or prejudice, opportunity to be informed, the disposition
    to tell the truth or otherwise, and the probability or improbability of the
    statements made, are all tests of testimonial value. Where the evidence is
    in conflict, the trier of facts may determine what should be accepted as the
    truth and what should be rejected as false. See Rice v. City of Cleveland,
    
    114 Ohio St. 299
    , 
    58 N.E.2d 768
    .
    Morrow County, Case No. 2012-CA-7                                                    11
    161 Ohio St. at 477–478. (Emphasis added).
    {¶28} We agree that the trial judge should take into consideration all factors,
    including physical and mental examinations, in the reevaluation and reassessment of
    the correctness of the sentence upon a revocation of community control. See State v.
    Qualls, 
    50 Ohio App.3d 56
    , 
    552 N.E.2d 957
    (1988). However, Solomon's argument that
    it was unfair to not extend yet another attempt at treatment is without merit. The trial
    court has no such requirement imposed upon it. See State v. Wolfe, supra; State v.
    Wheat, Stark App. No. 2007 CA 00165, 2008–Ohio–671 at ¶ 21.
    {¶29} The court, according to the record, considered Solomon's mental condition
    as a factor before imposing sentence.
    {¶30} Solomon’s sole assignment of error is overruled and the judgment of the
    Morrow County Court of Common Pleas is affirmed.
    By Gwin, J.,
    Delaney, P.J., and
    Hoffman, J., concur
    _________________________________
    HON. W. SCOTT GWIN
    _________________________________
    HON. PATRICIA A. DELANEY
    _________________________________
    HON. WILLIAM B. HOFFMAN
    WSG:clw 0926
    [Cite as State v. Solomon, 
    2012-Ohio-4884
    .]
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR MORROW COUNTY, OHIO
    FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    STATE OF OHIO                                    :
    :
    Plaintiff-Appellee   :
    :
    :
    -vs-                                             :       JUDGMENT ENTRY
    :
    WILLIAM SOLOMON III.                             :
    :
    :
    Defendant-Appellant      :       CASE NO. 2012-CA-7
    For the reasons stated in our accompanying Memorandum-Opinion, Solomon’s sole
    assignment of error is overruled and the judgment of the Morrow County Court of
    Common Pleas is affirmed.
    _________________________________
    HON. W. SCOTT GWIN
    _________________________________
    HON. PATRICIA A. DELANEY
    _________________________________
    HON. WILLIAM B. HOFFMAN