470 N.E.2d 162 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1983
This cause came on to be heard upon an appeal from the County Court of Clermont County.
On November 22, 1982, defendant-appellant, Thomas D. Hohman, visited the Batavia Nursing and Convalescent Inn ("BNCI"), located in Clermont County, Ohio. Appellant, a labor organizer with the AFL-CIO, from Wisconsin, was accompanied by an employee of BNCI and several other individuals who were former employees of BNCI. Appellant was present for the ostensible purpose of visiting some of the home's resident patients.
There was undisputed evidence that appellant was in the home during its normal visiting hours. Employees of BNCI testified that they saw appellant in various parts of the home, including the snack bar where several employees were present. Appellant was seen talking to some of the employees, and allegedly announced to the employees that they were all invited to a union meeting.
Helen Sharon, the assistant administrator of BNCI, testified that she informed appellant that he had no permission to be in the building and she requested that he leave. Appellant claimed that he had written invitations from several resident patients requesting a visit. Appellant did not personally know any of the residents who requested a visit and the invitations were secured by Ruth Lawson, the BNCI employee who accompanied appellant during his visit. Lawson testified that appellant did in fact visit with two of the residents who had invited him. The length of appellant's visit lasted no more than ten or fifteen minutes. Appellant and his party then left BNCI.
Based on a complaint filed by the administrator of BNCI, appellant was charged with criminal trespass in violation of R.C.
"The trial court erred in finding defendant guilty of trespass."
Ohio's criminal trespass statute provides in part that no person, without privilege to do so, shall knowingly enter *143
or remain on the land or premises of another. R.C.
The state has the burden of establishing all material elements of a crime by proof beyond a reasonable doubt. State v. Adams
(1980),
Appellant claims he was present at BNCI at the request of several of the home's resident patients. BNCI falls within the statutory definition of "[h]ome" as set forth in R.C.
We cannot ignore the fact that evidence offered by appellant indicated that his presence was requested by several of BNCI's residents. While we may question appellant's obviously ulterior motives for visiting BNCI, such considerations are not relevant to the issue of whether or not appellant's presence was privileged or unprivileged under R.C.
The case at bar is unlike those situations where criminal trespass statutes have been used to prevent non-employees from entering industrial and commercial working places to engage in union-related activities. See Lawson Milk Co. v. Retail ClerksUnion (1977),
In addition, R.C.
The assignment of error properly before this court having been ruled upon as heretofore set forth, it is the order of this court that the judgment herein appealed from be, and the same hereby is, reversed and the appellant is discharged.
Costs to be taxed in compliance with App. R. 24.
Judgment reversed.
KOEHLER and JONES, JJ., concur.
HENDRICKSON, P.J., dissents. *144