OLMSTED TOWNSHIP, APPELLANT, v. RITCHIE, APPELLEE.
No. 2022-0262
Supreme Court of Ohio
July 25, 2023
172 Ohio St.3d 39, 2023-Ohio-2516
Submitted February 28, 2023. CERTIFIED by the Court of Appeals for Cuyahoga County, Nos. 110107 and 110108, 2022-Ohio-124.
KENNEDY, C.J.
{¶ 1} The Eighth District Court of Appeals certified this case to this court after it determined that its judgment conflicts with judgments of the Fourth, Seventh, Ninth, and Eleventh District Courts of Appeals. We determined that a conflict exists and ordered the parties to brief the following question:
“[Does]
R.C. 2929.25(D)(4) authorize[ ] a trial court to impose a jail term for a violation of a condition of a community-control sanction when the original sentence was directly imposed underR.C. 2929.25(A)(1)(a) and no suspended jail time was reserved as contemplated underR.C. 2929.25(A)(1)(b) , regardless of notice having been provided underR.C. 2929.25(A)(3)(c) [?]”
{¶ 2}
{¶ 3} We disagree with the court of appeals’ construction of
{¶ 4} Consequently, we answer the certified question in the affirmative and reverse the contrary judgment of the Eighth District Court of Appeals.
Facts and Procedural History
{¶ 5} In September 2018, in two separate cases, appellee, Chad Ritchie, pleaded no contest to several first-degree misdemeanors: two counts of operating a vehicle while under the influence of alcohol (“OVI“), two counts of endangering children, two counts of domestic violence, and one count each of driving with a suspended license, failure to maintain control of a motor vehicle, and failure to reinstate a license. After merging allied offenses and dismissing one OVI count, the trial court imposed sentences of 30 days in jail for each of four counts, suspended fines, and a five-year period of community-control sanctions. It ordered the jail terms to be served consecutively for an aggregate term of 120 days. For
{¶ 6} In September 2020, the trial court granted Ritchie‘s motion to modify his sentence to credit against the 120-day jail-term time he had served for convictions in a separate case. The trial court‘s entry allowing his four 30-day jail sentences to run concurrently with the prison sentence he had already served included the final phrase, “Leaving a 150 day jail sentence on each count.” Ritchie moved the trial court to correct the entry, asserting that the court could not impose an additional jail term for a community-control violation, because he had already served the 120-day jail term imposed on him. The trial court corrected a clerical error in the entry and changed the disputed phrase to “leaving 150 days of jail available to sentence on each count,” but it otherwise denied the motion, stating: “The Court shall correct the record to amend the case numbers. The request to delete 150 days of jail remaining on each case is denied.”
{¶ 7} Ritchie appealed, but the Eighth District remanded the cases for the trial court to file an entry in each case that resolved all counts in a single document. See State v. Baker, 119 Ohio St.3d 197, 2008-Ohio-3330, 893 N.E.2d 163, ¶ 17 (holding that “[o]nly one document [as opposed to multiple documents considered together] can constitute a final, appealable order“), modified in part on other grounds by State v. Lester, 130 Ohio St.3d 303, 2011-Ohio-5204, 958 N.E.2d 142, paragraph one of the syllabus. The trial court complied, and the case returned to the court of appeals.
{¶ 8} The Eighth District noted that the trial court “did not suspend the additional 150 days that could have been imposed when it sentenced Ritchie on each of the misdemeanor counts.” 2022-Ohio-124, 181 N.E.3d 649, ¶ 10. It therefore rejected the trial court‘s conclusion that 150 days of jail time for each
{¶ 9} The Eighth District certified that its judgment conflicts with judgments of the Fourth, Seventh, Ninth, and Eleventh Districts on the following question of law:
“[Does]
R.C. 2929.25(D)(4) authorize[ ] a trial court to impose a jail term for a violation of a condition of a community-control sanction when the original sentence was directly imposed underR.C. 2929.25(A)(1)(a) and no suspended jail time was reserved as contemplated underR.C. 2929.25(A)(1)(b) , regardless of notice having been provided underR.C. 2929.25(A)(3)(c) [?]”
166 Ohio St.3d 1483, 2022-Ohio-1284, 186 N.E.3d 814, quoting the court of appeals’ February 15, 2022 entry.
Law and Analysis
Statutory Interpretation
{¶ 10} This certified conflict presents an issue of statutory interpretation, which is a question of law that we review de novo, State v. Pariag, 137 Ohio St.3d 81, 2013-Ohio-4010, 998 N.E.2d 401, ¶ 9. As we explained long ago, “[t]he
Community-Control Sanctions
{¶ 11}
{¶ 12} When the trial court imposes a community-control sanction, it must inform the defendant at sentencing that a violation of a condition of community control could result in an extended or more restrictive community-control sanction as well as the imposition of “a definite jail term from the range of jail terms authorized for the offense under section 2929.24 of the Revised Code.”
{¶ 13} Lastly,
{¶ 14} Reading these provisions together reveals that unless otherwise provided by law, a trial court handing down a sentence on a misdemeanant may impose a jail term within the statutory range provided in
{¶ 15} Here, the court of appeals concluded that a trial court may punish a violation of a condition of a community-control sanction with incarceration only if time remains on the jail term that the trial court initially imposed at sentencing. However, if
{¶ 16} Here, the statutory maximum jail term that the trial court could have imposed for each of Ritchie‘s first-degree misdemeanor offenses is 180 days.
Conclusion
{¶ 17} Under
Judgment reversed and trial-court order reinstated.
DONNELLY, STEWART, BRUNNER, and DETERS, JJ., concur.
DEWINE, J., dissents, with an opinion joined by FISCHER, J.
DEWINE, J., dissenting.
{¶ 18} There is an elephant in the room. We don‘t have the authority to decide this case. Chad Ritchie has not suffered any present injury. He simply seeks
{¶ 19} Ritchie asked the court of appeals, and now asks this court, for a pronouncement as to the maximum sentence that he might receive for a future community-control violation. The majority answers Ritchie‘s question, opining that the trial court did not err “in calculating the jail time that it could impose for a violation of a condition of the community-control sanction.” (Emphasis added.) Majority opinion, ¶ 16. In doing so, the majority ignores the firmly enshrined principle that we lack the authority to decide cases that “rest[] on contingent events that may never occur at all,” State ex rel. Jones v. Husted, 149 Ohio St.3d 110, 2016-Ohio-5752, 73 N.E.3d 463, ¶ 21 (lead opinion). In the process, it seemingly reverses a long line of appellate cases from across the state that hold that claims like Ritchie‘s—claims that attempt to challenge a potential future sentence for a community-control violation—are not ripe for review. One wonders what will result.
A lot of ifs
{¶ 20} The question at the center of this appeal is a hypothetical one: If Ritchie violates the terms of his probation, and if a violation complaint is filed against him, and if he is found to have violated his probation, and if the trial court decides to sentence Ritchie to jail for that violation, how much jail time may the trial court impose? The majority answers the question with an advisory opinion about the misdemeanor-sentencing statute. What it provides might ultimately end up being helpful advice to Ritchie‘s judge, and it may be of assistance to other judges in Ohio. But rendering advice about hypothetical cases is not the business of this court.
{¶ 21} Recall the facts of Ritchie‘s case. Ritchie was sentenced for four misdemeanors and ordered to serve 30 days in jail on each charge, to be served consecutively, and five years of probation. The court subsequently issued a judgment entry indicating that if Ritchie violated community control, he could be
{¶ 22} Ritchie appealed, asking that the language be stricken altogether. The Eighth District acknowledged that there was a ripeness problem, stating: “We recognize that no jail time has actually been imposed for a violation of community control sanctions, which presents a ripeness concern.” 2022-Ohio-124, 181 N.E.3d 649, ¶ 10, fn. 2. But then, without further discussion, the court proceeded to decide the case anyway. The entirety of its analysis of the ripeness issue is this sentence: “Nonetheless, we find any error in the modification of Ritchie‘s sentence is ripe for review.” Id. Having brushed by its stated concerns about ripeness, the court of appeals ordered “correction of the trial court‘s entry to reflect [that] no jail time remains,” id. at ¶ 21.
{¶ 23} So what we are left with is a question about the potential sentence available for a potential community-control violation. Before we can answer that question, though, we need to address the elephant that the court of appeals closed its eyes to and that the majority ignores completely: our constitutional authority to decide this case.
We decide only cases in which someone has suffered an actual injury
{¶ 24} Our authority is limited. The Ohio Constitution limits this court and inferior courts to the exercise of the “judicial power.”
{¶ 26} A concern about a future injury will satisfy the ripeness requirement only when the injury is “certainly impending” or there is at least a “substantial risk” that the harm will occur. Susan B. Anthony List at 158, quoting Clapper v. Amnesty Internatl. USA, 568 U.S. 398, 409, 414, 133 S.Ct. 1138, 185 L.Ed.2d 264 (2013), fn. 5. But when a claim “rests on contingent events that may never occur at all,” the claim is not ripe for review. Jones, 149 Ohio St.3d 110, 2016-Ohio-5752, 73 N.E.3d 463, at ¶ 21 (lead opinion); see also Trump at 535, quoting Texas v. United States, 523 U.S. 296, 300, 118 S.Ct. 1257, 140 L.Ed.2d 406 (1998) (to be justiciable, a claim must be ” ‘ripe‘—not dependent on ‘contingent future events that may not occur as anticipated, or indeed may not occur at all’ “).
{¶ 27} This point is illustrated by our decision in State ex rel. Jones v. Husted, 146 Ohio St.3d 1412, 2016-Ohio-3390, 51 N.E.3d 658. That case arose after several signatures submitted in support of a statewide ballot initiative had been invalidated. See Jones 149 Ohio St.3d 110, 2016-Ohio-5752, 73 N.E.3d 463, at ¶ 11. The petitioners sought to restore signatures that had been invalidated because they were concerned that a separate lawsuit filed by opponents of the ballot initiative might lead to additional signatures being disqualified and therefore cause the initiative to drop below the required-signature threshold for placement on the ballot. See id. at ¶ 11-12. This court summarily dismissed the challenge “as premature.” Jones, 146 Ohio St.3d 1412, 2016-Ohio-3390, 51 N.E.3d 658. We
{¶ 28} Like the situation in Jones, Ritchie‘s claim hinges on contingent events that may never occur. Ritchie is not challenging a sentence that has been imposed on him. What he is challenging is a notation in a judgment entry about the upper limit of the sentence he might receive if he violates his community control in the future. But the upper limit of the potential sentence will become an issue only if Ritchie commits a future community-control violation and is found guilty of that violation. If that happens, the trial court must “sentence[] the offender anew and must comply with the relevant sentencing statutes.” State v. Fraley, 105 Ohio St.3d 13, 2004-Ohio-7110, 821 N.E.2d 995, ¶ 17 (construing analogous felony-sentencing statutes). And at that point, the trial court is free to impose a jail term that is less than the “150 days of jail available to sentence on each count” indicated in Ritchie‘s judgment entry or not impose a jail term at all.
{¶ 29} Thus, four contingent events must occur before Ritchie suffers any injury in fact. First, Ritchie must engage in prohibited conduct. Second, a violation complaint must be filed. Third, the court must find Ritchie in violation. And fourth, the judge must decide that jail time is appropriate for that violation. Thus, it is purely speculative whether Ritchie will suffer any injury.
The majority uproots an established body of lower-court caselaw
{¶ 30} Ohio‘s appellate courts have had little difficulty seeing what the majority misses. These courts have widely held that claims similar to Ritchie‘s—claims that seek to challenge a notification about a sentence that may be imposed in the future for a community-control violation—are not ripe for review. See, e.g., State v. Poppe, 3d Dist. Auglaize No. 2-06-23, 2007-Ohio-688, ¶ 14 (“an appeal of a reserved sentence of imprisonment that is part of a sentence of community control is not ripe until an actual sentencing order imposes the prison term for community control violation“); State v. Daniel, 11th Dist. Trumbull No. 2014-T-0044, 2015-Ohio-3826, ¶ 9 (same); State v. Wilson, 1st Dist. Hamilton No. C-061000, 2007-Ohio-6339, ¶ 4-6 (same); State v. Wilson, 5th Dist. Muskingum No. CT 2005-0031, 2006-Ohio-3541, ¶ 8 (“this Court has held that appeals challenging potential periods of incarceration for violation of community control sanctions are not ripe until an actual sentencing order imposes a prison term for such violation“); State v. Williams, 2d Dist. Greene No. 2012-CA-43, 2014-Ohio-725, ¶ 15 (“when a trial court imposes a sentence of community control with a reserve prison sentence, an appeal of the prison sentence does not become ripe until after a defendant actually
If Poppe violates his community control sanctions, a subsequent sentencing hearing would need to be conducted. Thus, we are constrained from giving advice concerning a potential controversy that may never occur. If, and when, Poppe is sentenced to a term of incarceration for violation of his community control sanctions, he can appeal that sentencing order * * *.
(Citations omitted.) Poppe at ¶ 17.
{¶ 31} The apparent effect of the majority opinion is to overrule this line of precedent sub silentio. The majority does so without the benefit of adversarial briefing on the standing issue and without providing any explanation of why the lower courts were wrong. One has to wonder what future complications will result. What happens to all those defendants on community control across the state who in accordance with well-established precedent failed to pursue in a direct appeal a challenge to a sentence that was reserved in case of a future violation? Have they now forfeited their opportunity to do so? Is any challenge barred by res judicata? Stay tuned.
Conclusion
{¶ 32} I would not ignore the elephant. There‘s no hiding the obvious: this case involves contingent events that may never occur. I would do what the court of appeals should have done: I would dismiss this case on standing and ripeness grounds. And I would vacate the decision of the court of appeals for the same reasons. Because the majority does otherwise, I dissent.
FISCHER, J., concurs in the foregoing opinion.
Baker Dublikar, James F. Mathews, and Brittany A. Bowland, for appellant.
Patituce & Associates, L.L.C., Joseph C. Patituce, and Megan M. Patituce, for appellee.
