State v. Kilby , 2013 Ohio 5340 ( 2013 )


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  • [Cite as State v. Kilby, 2013-Ohio-5340.]
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR MONTGOMERY COUNTY, OHIO
    STATE OF OHIO                                        :
    Plaintiff-Appellant                          :            C.A. CASE NO.      25650
    v.                                                   :            T.C. NO.    2011-9469
    MARY KILBY                                           :            (Appeal from Common
    Pleas Court, Juvenile Division)
    Defendant-Appellee                           :
    :
    ..........
    OPINION
    Rendered on the      6th       day of         December          , 2013.
    ..........
    R. LYNN NOTHSTINE, Atty. Reg. No. 0061560, Assistant Prosecuting Attorney, 301 W.
    Third Street, 5th Floor, Dayton, Ohio 45422
    Attorney for Plaintiff-Appellant
    RICHARD HEMPFLING, Atty. Reg. No. 0029986, 15 W. Fourth Street, Suite 100, Dayton,
    Ohio 45402
    Attorney for Defendant-Appellee
    ..........
    DONOVAN, J.
    {¶ 1} This matter is before the Court on the Notice of Appeal of the State of
    Ohio,
    filed February 22, 2013. The State appeals from the February 7, 2013 decision of the
    Juvenile Court that granted Mary Kilby’s motion to dismiss one count of failure to report
    child abuse or neglect. We hereby reverse the judgment of the juvenile court.
    {¶ 2}    Kilby was initially indicted, on November 17, 2011, in the Montgomery
    County Court of Common Pleas, for one count of failing to provide for a functionally
    impaired person, in violation of R.C. 2903.16(B)(recklessly), a felony of the fourth degree,
    and one count of failure to report child abuse or neglect, in violation of R.C.
    2151.421(A)(1)(a), a misdemeanor of the first degree. On November 21, 2011, Kilby was
    charged by way of complaint in juvenile court, with one count of failure to report child abuse
    or neglect. On November 22, 2011, the charge of failure to report child abuse or neglect
    pending in the court of common pleas was nolled without prejudice, due to the charge being
    refiled in juvenile court.   On April 11, 2012, Kilby was indicted in the court of common
    pleas on one count of failing to provide for a functionally impaired person, in violation of
    R.C. 2903.16(A)(knowingly), a felony of the fourth degree.
    {¶ 3}     On September 14, 2012, Kilby entered no contest pleas to one count of
    failing to provide for a functionally impaired person, in violation of R.C. 2903.16(A), and
    one count of failing to provide for a functionally impaired person, in violation of R.C.
    2903.16(B).     On October 25, 2012, Kilby was sentenced to five years of community
    control sanctions.
    {¶ 4}    On October 29, 2012, following a status conference, the Juvenile Court
    issued an Entry and Order Setting Dates for Submission of Briefs, which provides that an
    “oral motion to dismiss was made by defense counsel on the grounds of double jeopardy.
    3
    Defense counsel argues that the case in Juvenile Court should merge with the case in the
    General Division, in which sentence has previously been issued by Judge Huffman.” The
    juvenile court directed the parties to brief the double jeopardy issue.
    {¶ 5}    In her memorandum in support of her motion to dismiss, Kilby asserted that
    her conviction in the General Division barred her prosecution in juvenile court because the
    test for allied offenses of similar import, pursuant to State v. Johnson, 
    128 Ohio St. 3d 153
    ,
    2010-Ohio-6314, 
    942 N.E.2d 1061
    , has been met.            Kilby directed the juvenile court’s
    attention to the Bill of Particulars filed by the State in the General Division, which she
    attached to her memorandum. The Bill of Particulars provides as follows:
    ***
    The conduct of the defendant alleged to constitute the offenses in both
    counts is as follows: Between March 17, 2010 through March 1, 2011, the
    defendant was a licensed registered nurse employed by Care Star and charged
    with the responsibility in that employment position of managing Makayla’s
    care under her care plan and/or All Services Plan ensuring that her care plan
    and/or All Services Plan was being followed, including personally visiting
    and assessing Makayla Norman in Makayla’s home at 707 Taylor Street in
    Dayton, Montgomery County, Ohio, every six months, in order to ensure both
    Makayla’s health and safety and that Makayla’s other caretakers were in
    compliance     with   Makayla’s     care plan and/or All           Services Plan.
    Fourteen-year-old Makayla Norman was a lifelong mentally handicapped
    quadriplegic with cerebral palsy who could not stand, walk, speak, or
    4
    swallow food. She was totally dependent on her caretakers, of which the
    defendant was one. As far back as March 17, 2010 - almost a year before
    Makayla’s death - the defendant was alerted to the deplorable living
    conditions of the home in which Makayla was living at 707 Taylor Street.
    The defendant, as a registered nurse assigned to Makayla’s case, also
    understood medically Makayla’s physical diagnosis, the physical ailments
    that could come with such diagnoses, the nature of what those diagnoses
    required in terms of her medical care and treatment, and also the importance
    of Makayla’s proper care by her caretakers. She was also the assigned case
    manager of Makayla’s care plan and/or All Services Plan and knew what that
    entailed for ensuring that Makayla received the treatment, care, goods and
    services that she was supposed to receive under Medicaid.
    The defendant’s last personal visit with and assessment of Makayla at
    707 Taylor Street occurred on February 24, 2011, just five days prior to
    Makayla’s death. The defendant did not provide or seek out any treatment,
    service, or goods for (or even report to local authorities) Makayla’s visible
    signs of neglect and deplorable living conditions at that time, nor did the
    defendant care for any of the numerous visible physical injuries and signs of
    neglect to Makayla herself, including: Makayla having an extremely
    emaciated face and body, weighing only 28 pounds at autopsy; unbandaged
    bedsores all over her body; some filled with feces and dirt and some showing
    scarring; adult lice in her hair and eyebrows; long-standing dirt that could not
    5
    be entirely washed off with a scrubbing at the coroner’s office; a two-inch
    impacted rectum; an interior pelvic area obstructed by a dilated colon filled
    with feces which had begun to block one of her kidneys; teeth riddled with
    plaque and a build up of thick dry secretions on her tongue due to a lack of
    daily oral care; and pneumonia in both lungs - any, some or all of which the
    defendant, as a trained and experienced registered nurse familiar with
    Makayla’s condition and charged with the responsibility of ensuring that
    Makayla was receiving the care she should have received under her care plan
    and/or All Services Plan as well as Medicaid, should have detected during the
    defendant’s personal visit just five days prior to Makayla’s death. The cause
    of death was determined to be nutritional and medical neglect, with the death
    being contributed to by complications of cerebral palsy. The manner of
    death was ruled a homicide.
    ***
    Therefore, notwithstanding the defendant’s knowledge, training, and
    employment position as a registered nurse and case manager for Makayla
    Norman, the defendant recklessly and knowingly failed to provide treatment,
    care, goods, and/or services to Makayla which resulted in serious physical
    harm and Makayla’s death on March 1, 2011. That is, the defendant, as a
    registered nurse and caretaker to Makayla, failed to follow up and/or act
    adequately on reports of deplorable conditions in the home from when she
    was alerted to a problem with the home March 17, 2010 to Makayla’s death
    6
    on March 1, 2011, failed to adequately assess Makayla and her living
    conditions in visits during that time frame, failed to detect the visible signs of
    neglect to Makayla and resulting medical danger to Makayla in her last
    assessment just five days before Makayla’s death, and failed to care for
    Makayla under the care plan and/or All Services Plan as well as ensure that
    other caretakers were caring for Makayla - all of which she had the training
    and responsibility to do as a registered nurse and case manager with Care Star
    assigned to Makayla.
    {¶ 6}    Regarding the assertion that Makayla was dependent upon her, Kilby
    asserted as follows:
    Hence, the allegations that Mrs. Kilby was a “caretaker,” and Makayla
    Norman was a “functionally impaired person” as required under R.C.
    2903.16(A). These facts, of course, also would constitute elements required
    to be proven in this Court with regard to the charge under R.C. 2151.421, i.e.,
    that Mrs. Kilby was a “registered nurse,” “acting in an official or professional
    capacity,” and that Makayla was “a child under eighteen years of age or a
    mentally retarded, developmentally disabled, or physically impaired child
    under twenty-one years of age.”
    {¶ 7}      Kilby further asserted as follows:
    The Bill of Particulars goes on to graphically describe, in the words of
    the State, “deplorable living conditions” in Makayla’s home, as well as
    “numerous visible physical injuries and signs of neglect to Makayla herself,”
    7
    and that Mrs. Kilby knew or should have known of the existence of these
    matters. This, of course, satisfies not only the “knowingly” element of the
    felony offense, but also the requirement under R.C. 2151.421 that the
    offender “knows or has reasonable cause to suspect” that the child is an
    abused or neglected child.
    As for the “conduct” described in the Bill of Particulars, i.e., the failure to
    provide “treatment, care, goods, or service . . . necessary to maintain the health or
    safety” of Makayla, the state is less precise. Nevertheless, the State’s theory
    clearly included an assertion that at or following Mrs. Kilby’s last visit to
    Makayla’s home on February 24, 2011, she “did not provide or seek out any
    treatment, services, or goods for (or even report to authorities) Makayla’s visible
    signs of neglect and deplorable living conditions at that time . . .” * * * Further at
    page 6 of its Sentencing Memorandum filed on October 23, 2012, * * * when
    arguing causation, the S[t]ate asserted and explained that “[a]t a minimum, the
    defendant caused Makayla to suffer physical pain between February 25 and March
    1, 2011 by not calling authorities to get her admitted to a hospital.” This, of
    course clearly corresponds with the remaining allegations of the prosecution in
    this Court, i.e., that Mrs. Kilby failed to report abuse or neglect to the proper
    authorities, thereby causing harm to Makayla.
    Finally, lest there be any doubt that the instant charge of failing to report
    abuse or neglect was subsumed within the previous conviction for failing to
    provide for a functionally impaired person, the S[t]ate’s only sentencing request is
    8
    very instructive. At the conclusion of that Sentencing Memorandum, the State
    had this to say:
    The State would also ask that the defendant be required to
    lecture nurses about the dangers of evading and ignoring their duty
    to report child abuse and/or neglect, particularly when there are
    clear signs of the need to do so.
    {¶ 8}    According to Kilby’s memorandum, the “forgoing amply demonstrates that it is
    possible to commit both offenses with the same conduct (here, failure to act), that the evidence
    would, in fact show the same conduct, and that there would not and could not be any showing of
    a separate ‘animus’ or state of mind.”
    {¶ 9} The State responded in part as follows:
    * * * The charge of Failing to Provide for a Functionally Impaired Person
    accuses the defendant of being the person not to provide the care to Makayla
    Norman over the course of the indictment period from March 2010 to the date of
    the defendant’s last visit to the home of Makayla on February 24, 2011. At her
    last home-visit and examination/assessment of Makayla on February 24, 2011, the
    defendant had the medical training as a registered nurse to identify and treat
    bedsores, an impacted rectum, lice living in Makayla’s hair, eyelashes and
    eyebrows, among other physical ailments.           The defendant further had the
    experience and training to look for the beginning signs of pneumonia or existing
    pneumonia.     The defendant further had the experience and training to clean
    Makayla’s numerous open wounds and filthy body. However, the defendant
    9
    provided none of this care to Makayla, nor arranged to have additional medical
    care provided to Makayla to help with these conditions.
    In the count of Failing to Report Child Abuse and Neglect, the defendant is
    charged with not reporting the egregious neglect of Makayla Norman by other
    defendants on February 24, 2011, specifically. In essence, she is charged with not
    picking up the phone to report to the children’s services bureau or local law
    enforcement what should have been obvious the minute the defendant walked in
    the door of 707 Taylor Street on February 24, 2011, and saw the horrific state of
    Makayla’s body and living conditions.         For this defendant specifically, the
    conditions of the home alone should have
    been reason to make the mandatory report since in March 2010 she had personally
    put Makayla’s mother, daily nurse Mollie Parsons as well as the agency for which
    Mollie Parsons worked on notice that the home conditions were not acceptable to
    her.
    {¶ 10} The State asserted that each failure to act, namely failing to minister to Makayla’s
    needs and failing to contact authorities, “constituted separate conduct.” The State asserted that
    Kilby’s failure to provide care “is a separate decision and act than failing to pick up the phone to
    report the neglect to Makayla caused by Makayla’s mother and her daily nurse, among others on
    February 24, 2011 specifically.” According to the State, the fact that Kilby’s “failure to report
    the neglect of Makayla had the additional benefit of covering up her own failure to provide care
    and services, does not change the fact that the animus behind the failure to provide care and
    services and failure to report were separate and distinct.” The State asserted that “the offense of
    10
    Failing to Provide for a Functionally Impaired Person is not an allied offense of Failing to Report
    Child Abuse or Neglect under Johnson,” and that “an offender may commit the offense of Failing
    to Report Child Abuse or Neglect for a Functionally Impaired person but still make a phone call
    to report the neglect caused by another individual. Further, an offender may commit the offense
    of Failure to Report Child Abuse or Neglect without even having a duty to themselves provide
    care.” The State asserted that both “the conduct and the animus are separate.”
    {¶ 11} The State distinguished the matter herein from State v. Bridgeman, 2d Dist.
    Champaign No. 2010 CA 16, 2011-Ohio-2680.               Therein, Bridgeman was convicted of
    aggravated burglary, aggravated robbery, and grand theft as a result of a bank robbery. 
    Id., ¶ 11.
    He was sentenced to a total of 13 years, namely 10 years for the burglary, robbery and theft
    charges to be served concurrently to each other and consecutively to a three-year firearm
    specification on the aggravated robbery. This Court applied Johnson and determined as follows:
    Under the facts of this case, it is apparent that the charges of aggravated
    robbery, aggravated burglary, and grand theft are allied offenses of similar import.
    The grand theft charge was based on the theft of $8,218; Bridgeman was not
    accused of stealing anything beyond the money from the bank. The aggravated
    robbery charge arose from Bridgeman's use of a deadly weapon in committing the
    grand theft. Bridgeman committed aggravated burglary by trespassing at the bank,
    by force and with a deadly weapon, while bank employees were present and with
    the purpose to commit grand theft and/or aggravated robbery. In short, all of the
    charges stem from Bridgeman's conduct of entering the bank to conduct a robbery,
    threatening the employees with a firearm, demanding money, and leaving the bank
    11
    with $8,218. Bridgeman committed multiple offenses through a single course of
    conduct and with a single state of mind. Therefore, the three counts should have
    been merged prior to sentencing. 
    Id., ¶ 54.
    {¶ 12} The State asserted that “the Bridgeman court has added language to the Johnson
    case that simply doesn’t exist.”    The State asserted that “Kilby’s crimes are not as intertwined
    as Bridgeman’s,” and that each of Kilby’s “actions was based on a decision to achieve a
    different goal. None was necessary in order to complete the other crime. None are a predicate
    or lesser-included of the other.”     According to the State, to “change        Johnson into now
    categorizing [Kilby’s] behavior as a ‘course of conduct’ rather than the original language of
    ‘conduct’ would reward - if not encourage - criminals to push their illegal behavior to excess,
    making their conduct equal in the eyes of the law to those who commit just one crime,” and
    demean the serious nature of the two crimes.
    {¶ 13} The State directed the juvenile court’s attention to State v. Overton, 10th Dist.
    Franklin No. 09AP-858, 2011-Ohio-4204, in which the Tenth District held that, while it is
    possible to commit felonious assault and child endangerment by the same conduct, Overton failed
    to establish that his offenses resulted from the same conduct, since “there were two separate
    incidents of abuse, the strike to the head and the blows to the chest,” and the “incidents were
    separated in time.” 
    Id., ¶ 15.
    It was significant to the court that the State relied upon “the blows
    to the chest as the basis for the felonious assault conviction,” while the “argument for child
    endangering, by contrast, was only based on the fact that appellant struck [the victim], without
    indicating whether this was the blow to the head * * * or the later blows to the chest.” 
    Id. According to
    the Tenth District, there “was sufficient evidence for the jury to conclude that
    12
    appellant committed child endangering through child abuse by striking [the victim] in the head *
    * * ,” such that the offenses were not subject to merger. 
    Id., ¶ 16.
    {¶ 14} The State asserted as follows:
    Addressing Johnson’s first question of whether it is possible to commit
    one offense and commit the other with the same conduct, the answer is no.
    Although each of the defendant’s acts involved the same victim, each of the
    crimes was separate conduct and separate incidents of failure to act.
    However, even if this Court should determine that the defendant’s offenses
    can be committed by the same conduct, then the State asserts that when the Court
    addresses the separate question of whether or not the defendant’s offenses were a
    single act, committed with a single state of mind, that the answer is no - the
    defendant’s acts were not a single act, and they were not committed with a single
    state of mind. Because the facts of this specific case do not answer Johnson’s
    two questions in the affirmative, then the offenses are not allied offenses of
    similar import and should not be merged.
    {¶ 15}    Regarding Kilby’s reliance upon the Sentencing Memorandum submitted in the
    General Division, the State asserted that “the State’s Memorandum did not address the charge
    before this juvenile court,” and that its request that Kilby be required to lecture nurses “in no way
    addressed or conceded the issue of merger.” The State asserted that Kilby’s “arguments that
    the State’s Memorandum weighs in favor of merger should be disregarded.”
    {¶ 16} The State asserted that the fact that the legislature granted exclusive jurisdiction
    to the juvenile court over the offense of failing to report child abuse or neglect “gives more
    13
    weight to the State’s position that the crimes are not allied offenses.”
    {¶ 17} Finally, the State asserted that, even if the offenses are subject to merger, “the
    proper remedy would not be dismissal of the count. * * * The State should be allowed to pursue
    the defendant’s accountability for this charge - through a plea or trial.”
    {¶ 18} In reply to the State’s memorandum, Kilby asserted that the State “appears to
    argue that while the felony offense involved a year long failure by Mrs. Kilby to do anything
    about Makayla’s condition, it did not include the alleged failure to report her condition on one
    specific date within that time period.”      Kilby asserted that the State’s position ignores its
    “original theory of the felony case as set forth in the Bill of Particulars and Sentencing
    Memorandum attached to Mrs. Kilby’s Motion to Dismiss.”                She asserted that a separate
    prosecution for failing to report child abuse or neglect violates the Double Jeopardy Clause, since
    “‘where . . . a person has been . . . convicted for a crime which has various incidents included in
    it, he cannot be a second time tried for one of those incidents without being twice put in jeopardy
    for the same offense.’” (citation omitted). Finally, in response to the State’s position that even if
    these offenses should merge, the Complaint should not be dismissed, Kilby asserted that “as a
    practical matter, a mere finding of guilt on the offense charged in this Complaint has serious
    ramifications in terms of civil liability as well,” since R.C. 2151.421(M) provides that a violation
    of R.C. 2141.421(A) subjects the offender to compensatory and exemplary damages.
    {¶ 19} In its Entry granting Kilby’s motion to dismiss, the juvenile court determined that
    “the two charges of Failure to Provide for a Functionally Impaired Person and Failure to Report
    Abuse and Neglect are allied offenses of similar import pursuant to O.R.C. § 2941.25.” The
    court found that “as the two offenses are allied offenses of similar import, the Defendant cannot
    14
    be convicted of both.” The court then found as follows:
    * * * Pursuant to O.R.C. § 2941.25 and Ohio Supreme Court precedent,
    the Court finds that it is possible to commit the offenses of Failure to Provide for a
    Functionally Impaired Person and Failure to Report Child Abuse or Neglect with
    the same conduct. The Court finds the offenses were based on the following
    conduct: the Defendant, as a registered nurse, caretaker, and person acting in an
    official or professional capacity failed to provide care for Makayla Norman; the
    Defendant failed to identify and treat bedsores, an impacted rectum, lice,
    pneumonia, open wounds; and the Defendant failed to report the egregious neglect
    of Makayla Norman. This Court finds that the State has relied upon the same
    conduct of the Defendant to prove Failure to Provide for a Functionally Impaired
    Person and Failure to Report Child Abuse or Neglect. This Court further finds that
    while the State argues that these offenses are separate and occurred at two
    different instances, one from March 2010 to February 24, 2011, and the other
    specifically on February 24, 2011, the Court fails to recognize how the
    Defendant’s conduct as it pertains to Failure to Report Child Abuse and Neglect
    can be confined to one specific date. The Court finds that in her capacity as a
    registered nurse and supervisor, the Defendant was to personally assess Makayla
    Norman every six (6) months, over the course of the entire indictment period.
    Furthermore, this Court finds that over the course of the indictment period, the
    same conduct resulted in the Defendant committing the offenses. Moreover, this
    Court finds the Defendant’s Failure to Report Child Abuse and Neglect of
    15
    Makayla Norman resulted in and formed the predicate offense of Failure to
    Provide for a Functionally Impaired Person. The Court finds that the conduct that
    qualified as a Failure to Report Child Abuse and Neglect resulted in the
    Defendant’s Failure to Provide Care for a Functionally Impaired Person.
    Therefore, the Court finds the offenses are allied offenses of similar import. The
    Court finds with the Defendant having been convicted of Failure to Provide for a
    Functionally Impaired Person, the charge before this Court must be and hereby is
    DISMISSED.
    {¶ 20} The State asserts one assignment of error as follows:
    THE JUVENILE COURT ERRED BY DISMISSING THE COMPLAINT
    CHARGING MARY KILBY WITH FAILURE TO REPORT CHILD ABUSE
    AND NEGLECT IN VIOLATION OF R.C. 2151.421(A)(1)(a) ON DOUBLE
    JEOPARDY GROUNDS WHERE PROSECUTION OF KILBY FOR THAT
    CRIME - SUBSEQUENT TO HER CONVICTIONS FOR FAILURE TO
    PROVIDE FOR A FUNCTIONALLY IMPAIRED PERSON IN VIOLATION OF
    R.C.    2903.16    -   WOULD       NOT     SUBJECT       HER     TO     MULTIPLE
    PUNISHMENTS, NOR SUCCESSIVE PROSECUTIONS, FOR A SINGLE
    OFFENSE.
    {¶ 21} The State asserts that “the crimes at issue herein were not predicated upon the
    same conduct committed by Mary Kilby, but rather were the result of different conduct: her
    failure to provide proper medical and physical care to Makayla, as opposed to her failure to report
    the abuse or neglect of Makayla that was committed by others who were responsible for her
    16
    care.”
    {¶ 22} Kilby again relies upon the references in the Bill of Particulars and Sentencing
    Memorandum regarding Kilby’s failure to report, and she asserts that “such references can only
    mean that in connection with the felony prosecution for failure to provide care or services, the
    State’s theory was that there was a continuing course of conduct (or inaction) that included both
    the failure to provide direct physical care for Makayla and the failure to report the living
    conditions and other signs of neglect to authorities.”
    {¶ 23}    In State v. Yeldell, 2d Dist. Montgomery Nos. 25198, 25209, 2013-Ohio-1918, ¶
    5, quoting State v. Sturgell, 2d Dist. Darke No. 1751, 2009-Ohio-5628, ¶ 10, this Court noted
    that “‘The Double Jeopardy Clause protects against a second prosecution for the same offense,
    after acquittal or conviction, and against multiple punishments for the same offense.’”
    {¶ 24} R.C. 2941.25 provides as follows:
    (A) Where the same conduct by defendant can be construed to constitute
    two or more allied offenses of similar import, the indictment or information may
    contain counts for all such offenses, but the defendant may be convicted of only
    one.
    (B) Where the defendant’s conduct constitutes two or more offenses of
    dissimilar import, or where his conduct results in two or more offenses of the
    same or similar kind committed separately or with a separate animus as to each,
    the indictment or information may contain counts for all such offenses, and the
    defendant may be convicted of all of them.
    {¶ 25} As this Court has previously noted:
    17
    “R.C. 2941.25 codifies the double jeopardy protections in the federal and
    Ohio Constitutions, which prohibit courts from imposing cumulative or multiple
    punishments for the same criminal conduct unless the legislature has expressed an
    intent to impose them. R.C. 2941.25 expresses the legislature’s intent to prohibit
    multiple convictions for offenses which are allied offenses of similar import per
    paragraph (A) of that section, unless the conditions of paragraph (B) are also
    satisfied.” State v. Barker, 
    183 Ohio App. 3d 414
    , 2009-Ohio-3511, ¶ 22, citing
    State v. Rance, 
    85 Ohio St. 3d 632
    , 1999-Ohio-291, overruled on other grounds by
    State v. Johnson, 
    128 Ohio St. 3d 153
    , 2010-Ohio-6314. State v. Bridgeman, 2d
    Dist. Champaign No. 2010 CA 16, 2011-Ohio-2680, ¶ 50.
    {¶ 26} As this Court further noted:
    * * * The Johnson court overruled Rance “to the extent that it calls for a
    comparison of statutory elements solely in the abstract under R.C. 2941.25.”
    Johnson at ¶ 44. Now, “[w]hen determining whether two offenses are allied
    offenses of similar import subject to merger under R.C. 2941.25, the conduct of
    the accused must be considered.” 
    Id. Johnson states
    that “the intent of the General Assembly is controlling.”
    
    Id. at 46.
      “We determine the General Assembly’s intent by applying R.C.
    2941.25, which expressly instructs courts to consider the offenses at issue in light
    of the defendant’s conduct.”      
    Id. The trial
    court must determine prior to
    sentencing whether the offenses were committed by the same conduct. The court
    no longer must perform any hypothetical or abstract comparison of the offenses at
    18
    issue in order to conclude that the offenses are subject to merger. 
    Id. at ¶
    47. “In
    determining whether offenses are allied offenses of similar import under R.C.
    2941.25(A), the question is whether it is possible to commit one offense and
    commit the other with the same conduct, not whether it is possible to commit one
    without committing the other. If the offenses correspond to such a degree that the
    conduct of the defendant constituting commission of one offense constitutes
    commission of the other, then the offenses are of similar import.” 
    Id. at ¶
    48
    (internal citation omitted).
    “If the multiple offenses can be committed by the same conduct, then the
    court must determine whether the offenses were committed by the same conduct,
    i.e., a ‘single act, committed with a single state of mind.’” 
    Id. at ¶
    49 (citation
    omitted). “If the answer to both questions is yes, then the offenses are allied
    offenses of similar import and will be merged.” 
    Id. at ¶
    50. “Conversely, if the
    court determines that the commission of one offense will never result in the
    commission of the other, or if the offenses are committed separately, or if the
    defendant has separate animus for each offense, then, according to R.C.
    2941.25(B), the offenses will not merge.” 
    Id. at ¶
    51.
    Bridgeman, at ¶s 51-53.
    {¶ 27} R.C. 2903.16(A) provides as follows: “No caretaker shall knowingly fail to
    provide a functionally impaired person under the caretaker’s care with any treatment, care, goods,
    or service that is necessary to maintain the health or safety of the functionally impaired person
    when this failure results in physical harm or serious physical harm to the functionally impaired
    19
    person.”
    {¶ 28} R.C. 2151.421(A)(1)(a) provides as follows:
    No person described in division (A)(1)(b) of this section who is acting in
    an official or professional capacity and knows, or has reasonable cause to suspect
    based on facts that would cause a reasonable person in a similar position to
    suspect, that a child under eighteen years of age or a mentally retarded,
    developmentally disabled, or physically impaired child under twenty-one years of
    age has suffered or faces a threat of suffering any physical or mental wound,
    injury, disability, or condition of a nature that reasonably indicates abuse or
    neglect of the child shall fail to immediately report that knowledge or reasonable
    cause to suspect to the entity or persons specified in this division.
    R.C. 2151.421(A)(1)(b) provides that division (A)(1)(a) applies to a person who is a “registered
    nurse; * * *; visiting nurse; other health care professional * * *.” R.C. 2151.421(A)(1)(a)
    provides that a person required to make a report “shall make it to the public children services
    agency or a municipal or county peace officer in the county in which the child resides or in which
    the abuse or neglect is occurring or has occurred.” R.C. 2151.421(C) provides: “Any report
    made pursuant to division (A) * * * of this section shall be made forthwith either by telephone or
    in person and shall be followed by a written report, if requested.” R.C. 2151.421(D)(1) requires
    a peace officer, upon receipt of report, to “refer the report to the appropriate children services
    agency.”    R.C. 2151.421(F)(1) provides that “the public children services agency shall
    investigate, within twenty-four hours, each report of child abuse or child neglect * * * to
    determine the circumstances surrounding the injuries, abuse, or neglect or the threat of injury,
    20
    abuse, or neglect, the cause of the injuries, abuse, neglect, or threat, and the person or persons
    responsible.”
    {¶ 29} We initially note that the juvenile court misstated the dates in the indictments.
    The indictment period for the felony offense was “between the dates of March 17, 2010 through
    March 1, 2011,” the date of Makayla’s death, while the indictment period for the misdemeanor
    offense is “on or about the 24th day of February 2011.”
    {¶ 30} Kilby was convicted of failure to provide treatment, care, goods, or service for a
    functionally impaired person under her care that is necessary to maintain the health and safety of
    the functionally impaired person. We initially note that the Bill of Particulars regarding that
    charge is focused upon Kilby’s conduct in failing to “care for any of the numerous physical
    injuries and signs of neglect to Makayla herself,” such that serious physical harm to Makayla
    resulted (emphasis added). We cannot conclude, as Kilby asserts, that the parenthetical, merely
    incidental reference in the Bill of Particulars to Kilby’s failure to report to authorities establishes
    that the misdemeanor offense is encompassed by the felony, such that double jeopardy attaches.
    We also note that R.C. 2903.16 does not identify a predicate offense, and we conclude that the
    trial court erred in determining that Kilby’s failure to report child abuse and neglect “resulted in
    and formed the predicate offense,” of her failure to provide for a functionally impaired person.
    {¶ 31}    Further, we conclude that Kilby’s reliance upon the Sentencing Memorandum is
    not persuasive; its purpose, unlike the Bill of Particulars, was not to provide Kilby with detail
    regarding the conduct constituting the felony offense in preparation for trial. Rather, the purpose
    was to provide the court with all the details of Makayla’s death. In a sentencing memorandum
    advocating a particular sentence, the State may reference other criminal conduct allegedly
    21
    committed by the defendant which is pending in another court.
    {¶ 32} Most importantly, we cannot conclude that the felony offense of which Kilby was
    convicted and the misdemeanor charge, pursuant to R.C. 2151.421, correspond to such a degree
    that Kilby’s conduct in failing to personally minister care to Makayla by, for example, treating
    the obvious unbandaged wounds all over the child’s body, constitutes a failure to make a
    statutorily mandated report, by telephone or in person, to a peace officer or children services, for
    purposes of initiating an investigation to determine the cause of and responsibility for Makayla’s
    evident neglect. In other words, the offenses are not of similar import but rather were committed
    by distinct instances of failing to act, namely as Makayla’s case manager of her personal
    caretakers, and separately as a statutorily mandated reporter. This conclusion is buttressed by
    the fact that R.C. 2903.16 did not require Kilby to make a report regarding Makayla’s abuse or
    neglect, while R.C. 2151.421 mandated that she make such a report. One is an omission in
    rendering medical assistance, the other a crime of omission in not contacting the appropriate
    authorities.
    {¶ 33} Finally, we note that subsequent to oral argument, the Ohio Supreme Court
    decided State v. Washington, Slip Opinion No. 2013-Ohio-4982, which addresses merger,
    however nothing in Washington changes our analysis.
    {¶ 34} Having determined that Kilby’s offenses were committed separately, such that
    her subsequent prosecution for failing to report child abuse or neglect is not barred by double
    jeopardy protections and not subject to merger, we hereby sustain the State’s sole assignment of
    error. The judgment of the trial court is reversed and vacated, and the matter is remanded for
    proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    22
    ..........
    FAIN, P.J. and WELBAUM, J., concur.
    Copies mailed to:
    R. Lynn Nothstine
    Richard Hempfling
    Hon. Anthony Capizzi
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 25650

Citation Numbers: 2013 Ohio 5340

Judges: Donovan

Filed Date: 12/6/2013

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/3/2016