748 N.E.2d 105 | Ohio Ct. App. | 2000
The facts and procedural history of the case are as follows. In January 1999, the appellant, a juvenile, admitted to one count of sexual battery. The appellant was sentenced to a term of probation. As a condition of his probation, the appellant was ordered to serve a period of time under house arrest. As a condition of his house arrest, the appellant was ordered to proceed directly to and from school.1
On the evening of January 7, 2000, Melissa McLeland, age seventeen, reported to the Celina Police Department that she had been the victim of a rape. McLeland informed the authorities that earlier that morning the appellant, on his way to school, picked her up at her home and raped her.
Later that evening, Angie Gehle, the appellant's probation officer, and David Slusser, Chief of Police of the Celina Police Department, visited the appellant's *482 home.2 The appellant informed Officer Gehle that he had driven straight to school and did not engage in sexual intercourse. During another interview with Officer Gehle on January 11, 2000, the appellant insisted that he had driven straight to school on the morning of January 7, 2000.
On January 21, 2000, the appellant admitted to Officer Gehle that he had lied to her regarding the events of January 7, 2000. The appellant informed Officer Gehle that he had picked up McLeland at her home and, shortly thereafter, the two had engaged in sexual intercourse.
On February 4, 2000, a complaint was filed against the appellant alleging him to be a delinquent child. The appellant was charged with one delinquency count of falsification, in violation of R.C.
By judgment entry filed on May 11, 2000, the appellant's motion was overruled and he was found delinquent on one count of falsification. The appellant was sentenced to a term of imprisonment of sixty days.5
McLeland eventually retracted the rape allegation and admitted to one count of falsification. McLeland was sentenced to a term of imprisonment of thirty days.
The appellant now appeals, asserting three assignments of error for our review. Because the appellant's first and second assignments of error are interrelated, we will address them simultaneously.
In his first and second assignments of error, the appellant essentially maintains that the trial court erred in overruling his motion to dismiss. In essence, the appellant asserts that the trial court erred in failing to apply the "exculpatory no" exception to the facts of the case herein. For the following reasons, we do not agree.
In the case before us, the appellant was found delinquent on one count of violating R.C.
"(A) No person shall knowingly make a false statement, or knowingly swear or affirm the truth of a false statement previously made, when any of the following applies:
"* * *
"(3) The statement is made with purpose to mislead a public official in performing the public official's official function."
In Columbus v. Fisher (1978),
According to the court in Fisher, R.C.
In Dayton v. Rogers (1979),
In State v. Bailey (1994),
The Bailey court also discussed the "exculpatory no" exception. The court stated as follows:
"[F]ederal case law has created the protection of an `exculpatory no' exception. See United States v. Rodriguez-Rios (C.A.5, 1994),
The court, however, declined to address the "exculpatory no" doctrine on the basis that the doctrine did not extend to the facts of the case.
In State v. Lazzaro (1996),
The Lazzaro court concluded that the making of an unsworn false oral statement to a public official with the purpose to mislead, hamper, or impede the investigation of a crime was punishable conduct within the meaning of both R.C.
Having affirmatively established that an unsworn false oral statement made for the purpose of impeding an officer's investigation constitutes punishable conduct under Ohio's falsification statute, we need only ascertain whether the *485 statements made by the appellant to Officer Gehle are subject to the "exculpatory no" doctrine.
The decisions in Bailey and Lazzaro have led at least one Ohio court to presume that given the appropriate set of facts the Supreme Court of Ohio will embrace the "exculpatory no" exception. The appellant urges this court to follow the reasoning and holding of the Fifth District Court of Appeals in State v. Marshall (Feb. 25, 1998), Fairfield App. No. 97CA52, unreported, 1998 WL 401849. In Marshall, the defendant had been accused of raping a woman. Prior to his arrest, the defendant gave a taped statement to the police denying that he had any sexual contact with the victim. At trial, the defendant testified on his own behalf. During his testimony, the defendant admitted that he had lied to the police, but that he had engaged in consensual sexual intercourse with the alleged victim. The jury ultimately returned a not-guilty verdict.
The defendant was nonetheless charged with falsification, in violation of R.C.
We find, however, on the authority of Brogan v. United States (1998),
The court invalidated the long-standing "exculpatory no" doctrine, which had been interpreted by numerous federal courts to exclude liability for a suspect's mere denial of wrongdoing, on the basis that the plain language of Section 1001 admits of no exceptions for such statements made in response to an investigator's questioning. The court stated emphatically and unequivocally that "[c]ourts may not create their own limitations on legislation, no matter how alluring the policy arguments for doing so * * *." Id. at 408,
The Brogan court also found unpersuasive the defendant's assertions that the statute would become an instrument of prosecutorial abuse, stating that "[t]he * * * principal grievance * * * lies not with the hypothetical prosecutors but with [the legislature], which has decreed the obstruction of a legitimate investigation to be a separate offense, and a serious one." Id. at 405,
The language of Ohio's falsification statute, like that of the federal statute, is clear and unequivocal. As we previously stated, the history of R.C.
For all of the foregoing reasons, we find that the appellant could not avail himself of the "exculpatory no" exception. Thus, we uphold the appellant's conviction for knowingly making a false statement with the purpose to mislead his probation officer, a public official within the meaning of R.C.
Accordingly, the appellant's first and second assignments of error are overruled.
In his third and final assignment of error, the appellant maintains that the trial court erred in sentencing him to a term of imprisonment of sixty days. For the following reasons, we do not agree.
Initially, we note that the standard for determining whether a trial court erred in imposing a sentence for a misdemeanor offense is that of an abuse of discretion. State v. Benvenuto (Mar. 28, 2000), Auglaize App. Nos. 2-99-35 and 2-99-36, unreported, 2000 WL 327228; State v. Faye (May 4, 2000), Wyandot App. Nos. 16-99-08 and 16-99-09, unreported, 2000 WL 566741; State v. Garfield (1986),
The crime of falsification is a misdemeanor of the first degree. See R.C.
Accordingly, the appellant's third and final assignment of error is overruled.
Judgment affirmed.
SHAW, J., concurs.
WALTERS, J., concurs in judgment only.