THE STATE EX REL. LARKINS, APPELLEE, v. BAKER, WARDEN, APPELLANT.
No. 95-278
SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
September 6, 1995
73 Ohio St.3d 658 | 1995-Ohio-144
Submitted June 21, 1995 | APPEAL from the Court of Appeals for Richland County, No. 94 CA 83.
{¶ 1} In October 1986, following a bench trial in the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas, the trial judge found appellee, Ronald Larkins, guilty of aggravated murder, aggravated robbery, and attempted murder. The trial court sentenced Larkins to life imprisonment among other things. In October 1994, Larkins filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the Court of Appeals for Richland County, naming appellant, Dennis A. Baker, Warden of the Mansfield Correctional Institution, as respondent. Larkins claimed the trial court lacked jurisdiction to conduct his bench trial because Larkin‘s written waiver of his right to a jury trial was never filed or made a part of the case record.
{¶ 2} The parties stipulated to the following pertinent facts. Prior to the start of Larkins‘s bench trial, he executed a written waiver of his right to a jury trial in open court and handed the written waiver to the trial judge. Although the executed written waiver was physically located in the case file, it did not bear any file stamp by the clerk of the common pleas court indicating that it had been filed. The docket sheets of Larkins‘s criminal case did not indicate that any jury trial waiver had been filed. It was the judge‘s normal practice to receive the executed jury trial waiver and place it in the case file. In October 1986, the common pleas
{¶ 3} On January 18, 1995, the court of appeals granted Larkins a writ of habeas corpus. The court of appeals determined that the trial court had failed to strictly comply with
{¶ 4} The cause is now before this court upon an appeal as of right.
David H. Bodiker, Ohio Public Defender, Kort Gatterdam and David Hanson, Assistant Public Defenders, for appellee.
Betty D. Montgomery, Attorney General, and Charles L. Wille, Assistant Attorney General, for appellant.
PFEIFER, J.
{¶ 5} We determine today that a writ of habeas corpus will not lie where a criminal defendant has waived his right to a jury trial by executing a written waiver, where the waiver is handed to the trial judge and placed in the court‘s case file, but is not file stamped. A writ of habeas corpus will lie in certain extraordinary circumstances where there is an unlawful restraint of a person‘s liberty and there is no adequate legal remedy. State ex rel. Pirman v. Money (1994), 69 Ohio St.3d 591, 593, 635 N.E.2d 26, 29. A most common situation in which habeas corpus relief is available is when the sentencing court lacks jurisdiction.
{¶ 6} The pertinent statutory provisions provide:
“In all criminal cases pending in courts of record in this state, the defendant may waive a trial by jury and be tried by the court without a jury. Such waiver by a defendant, shall be in writing, signed by the defendant, and filed in said cause and made a part of the record thereof. ***” (Emphasis added.)
“In any case in which a defendant waives his right to trial by jury and elects to be tried by the court under
section 2945.05 of the Revised Code , any judge of the court in which the cause is pending shall proceed to hear, try, and determine the cause in accordance with the rules and in like manner as if the cause were being tried before a jury. ***” (Emphasis added.)
{¶ 7} In the absence of strict compliance with
{¶ 8} Similarly, in the case at bar, the record contains no evidence that Larkins‘s written waiver was ever formally filed and thereby made a part of the record in his criminal case. The common pleas court did not strictly comply with
{¶ 9} However, the dispositive issue is whether this failure to strictly comply with
{¶ 10} We now reexamine Dallman and Tate under these limited facts. These cases held that failure to comply with
{¶ 11}
{¶ 13} Of greater import is the express language of
{¶ 14} Based on the foregoing, the failure to strictly comply with
{¶ 15} Accordingly, the judgment of the court of appeals granting the writ of habeas corpus is reversed.
Judgment reversed.
DOUGLAS, RESNICK, F.E. SWEENEY and COOK, JJ., concur.
MOYER, C.J., and WRIGHT, J., dissent.
WRIGHT, J., dissenting.
{¶ 16} The majority holds that even though the trial court did not strictly comply with the jury trial waiver requirements set forth in
{¶ 17} The majority relies on an interpretation of
{¶ 18}
{¶ 19} Even though
{¶ 20} The majority‘s opinion also lacks a reasoned basis for overruling many years of case law by holding that the failure to file the jury trial waiver and make it part of the record does not create a jurisdictional defect. In 1979, after stressing the importance of the right to a trial by jury, we held that compliance with
{¶ 21} A final problem with the majority‘s opinion is that it leaves defendants, lawyers, and the courts of this state with no meaningful test for determining what errors with respect to jury trial waivers constitute jurisdictional defects. The majority simply states that the interpretation of
MOYER, C.J., concurs in the foregoing dissenting opinion.
