STATE OF OHIO, PLAINTIFF-APPELLEE vs. DOUGLAS DANIEL ESPER, JR., DEFENDANT-APPELLANT
No. 105069
Court of Appeals of Ohio, EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT, COUNTY OF CUYAHOGA
August 3, 2017
[Cite as State v. Esper, 2017-Ohio-7069.]
JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION; JUDGMENT: REVERSED AND REMANDED; Criminal Appeal from the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas, Case No. CR-16-604280-A; BEFORE: Keough, A.J., Kilbane, J., and McCormack, J.
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT
Mark Stanton
Cuyahoga County Public Defender
By: Cullen Sweeney
Deputy Public Defender
310 Lakeside Avenue, Suite 200
Cleveland, Ohio 44113
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
Michael C. O‘Malley
Cuyahoga County Prosecutor
By: Margaret Kane
Mary McGrath
Assistant Prosecuting Attorneys
The Justice Center, 9th Floor
1200 Ontario Street
Cleveland, Ohio 44113
{¶1} Appellant, Douglas Daniel Esper, Jr., appeals his convictions. For the reasons that follow, we reverse his sentence and remand for resentencing.
{¶2} In March 2016, Esper was named in a three-count indictment charging him with felonious assault and two counts of child endangering. According to the indictment and the bill of particulars, the charges stemmed from an incident that occurred on February 19, 2016, and resulted in serious physical harm to Esper‘s four-month-old son.
{¶3} Esper pleaded guilty to felonious assault, in violation of
{¶4} After hearing arguments pertaining to merger, the trial court determined that Esper committed the two offenses with a separate animus, concluding that the two offenses did not merge for sentencing. Accordingly, the trial court sentenced Esper to eight years for felonious assault to be served consecutively to three years for child endangering, for a total prison term of eleven years. Esper appeals, raising two assignments of error.
{¶5} In his first assignment of error, Epser contends that the trial court erred by convicting and sentencing him to consecutive sentences on allied offenses of similar import.
{¶7} In State v. Ruff, 143 Ohio St.3d 114, 2015-Ohio-995, 34 N.E.3d 892, the Ohio Supreme Court held that courts considering whether there are allied offenses that merge into a single conviction under
{¶8} In this case, Esper pleaded guilty to felonious assault in violation of
{¶9} The state and the trial court relied upon this court‘s decision in State v. Porosky, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 94705, 2011-Ohio-330, in finding that these offenses were not allied offenses and did not merge. This reliance is misplaced.
{¶11} Moreover, Porosky is factually distinguishable because Porosky pleaded guilty to felonious assault and child endangering in violation of
Porosky first harmed his son (felonious assault) and then endangered him by failing to seek medical attention for the baby for approximately 12 hours * * *. Thus, even if child endangering and felonious assault could be considered allied offenses under the Johnson framework, in this case, the offenses do not merge since Porosky committed them with a separate animus.
{¶12} As explained by the Legislative Service Commission,
{¶14} Accordingly, and as the defense points out, the trial court‘s reliance on Porosky might be correct if Esper had pleaded guilty to both causing an injury to his son that resulted in serious physical harm (felonious assault) and to violating his parental duty of care to obtain proper medical care (child endangering in violation of
{¶15} In this case, the record reflects that Esper‘s conduct that gave rise to the felonious assault charge was the same conduct that gave rise to the endangering children charge under
{¶16} Accordingly, we find that the trial court erred in failing to merge Count 1, felonious assault, and Count 2, endangering children in violation of
{¶17} Judgment reversed, and case remanded for the trial court to merge the felonious assault and child endangering charges. The state shall elect upon which charge the trial court should impose the sentence.
It is ordered that appellant recover from appellee costs herein taxed.
The court finds there were reasonable grounds for this appeal.
A certified copy of this entry shall constitute the mandate pursuant to Rule 27 of the Rules of Appellate Procedure.
KATHLEEN ANN KEOUGH, ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE
MARY EILEEN KILBANE, J., CONCURS;
TIM McCORMACK, J., DISSENTS WITH SEPARATE OPINION
STATE OF OHIO vs. DOUGLAS DANIEL ESPER, JR.
No. 105069
Court of Appeals of Ohio, EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
{¶18} I write to ratify the sentencing work product of the trial judge in this criminal case, which is the subject of this appeal. Herein, we find both a deeply disturbing assault of life-threatening battery against a 12-week old infant and separately seven subsequent days of knowing, purposeful, and further abuse through life-endangering failure to address and then to misrepresent the basis of the increasingly critical condition of the victim infant. Both forms of abuse suffered by the infant, which were spread over multiple days, resulted from separate acts of criminal conduct of the appellant.
{¶19} The trial court established that the appellant‘s violent felonious assault conduct was separate from the subsequent abuse that two distinct criminal violations were committed against the 12-week-old infant. The felonious assault against the infant resulting in permanent brain damage occurred on February 19, 2016. The infant will
{¶20} The knowing, conscious, deceitful, and purposeful prolonging of suffering and endangering of the life of the infant on each day, February 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, and 25 constitutes separate conduct, separate animus, and separate import. First the felonious assault on February 19 threatened the life and viability of the infant. Subsequently, the deceitful acts of the appellant lying to emergency care personnel led to the purposeful withholding of critical care resulting in the significant decline of the infant‘s condition and further deterioration that directly endangered the infant victim‘s life. The trial court made these distinctions and should be affirmed.
