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[Cite as
State v. Ingels
,
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT OF OHIO HAMILTON COUNTY, OHIO APPEAL NO. C-160864 : STATE OF OHIO,
TRIAL NOS. B-9802147 B-9800321 : Plaintiff-Appellee, O P I N I O N. : vs. : EARL INGELS, :
Defendant-Appellant. Criminal Appeal From: Hamilton County Court of Common Pleas Judgments Appealed From Are: Affirmed, and Cause Remanded in B-9800321 Date of Judgment Entry on Appeal: February 28, 2018
Joseph T. Deters , Hamilton County Prosecuting Attorney, and Paula E. Adams , Assistant Prosecuting Attorney, for Plaintiff-Appellee,
Earl Ingels , pro se. *2 C UNNINGHAM , Presiding Judge. Defendant-appellant Earl Ingels presents on appeal four assignments
of error that, distilled to their essence, challenge the Hamilton County Common Pleas Court’s judgments overruling his “Motion[s] to Set Aside a Void Violent Sexual Predator Sanction.” We remand for resentencing on the kidnapрing offenses charged in counts one and three of the indictment in the case numbered B-9800321, because those sentences are void when R.C. Chapter 2971 did not confer upon the trial court the authority to enhance the sentences based оn specifications that Ingels was a “sexually violent predator.” In 1998, following a joint trial on the charges contained in the
indictments in the cases numbered B-9800321 and B-9802147, Ingels was convicted
on five counts of kidnapping, two counts of gross sexual impositiоn, and a single
count of attempted kidnapping. We affirmed those convictions on direct appeal.
State v. Ingels,
1st Dist. Hamilton Nos. C-980673 and C-980674,
The Motion In his 2016 “Motion to Set Aside a Void Violent Sexuаl Predator
Sanction,” filed in each of the cases numbered B-9802147 and B-9800321, Ingels
sought “correct[ion]” of the sentences imposed for the kidnapping offenses charged
in counts one and three of the indictment in the case numbered B-9800321, on the
ground thаt those sentences are void because the trial court lacked the statutory
authority to impose them. Citing the Ohio Supreme Court’s decision in
State v.
Smith
,
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determination that the claimed error did not render his sentences void.
See Ingels
,
1st Dist. Hamilton No. C-100297,
No Statutory Authority to Enhance the Kidnapping Sentences The kidnapping charges in counts one and three of the indictment in the case numbered B-9800321 each carried a sexual-motivation specification and a sexually-violent-predator specification. With respect to each offense, the jury found that Ingels had acted with a sexual motivation, and the trial court found that Ingels was a “sexually violent predator” for purposes of the sentencing-enhancement provisions of R.C. Chapter 2971. Thus, the trial court, pursuant to R.C. 2971.03(A)(3), enhanced Ingels’s sentences for the sexually motivated kidnappings, imposing for each offense a prison term of nine years to life, instead of a definite prison term of up to ten years prescribed for first-degree-felony kidnapping. See R.C. 2929.14(A)(1).
{¶7} R.C. 2971.03, in relevant part, mandates an enhanced sentence upon a guilty verdict or plea on a kidnapрing charge if the offender also “is convicted of or pleads guilty to both a sexual motivation specification and a sexually violent predator specification that were included in the * * * count in the indictment * * * charging that offense.” R.C. 2971.03(A). R.C. 2971.01(H)(1), аs it provided in 1998 when Ingels was sentenced, defined a “sexually violent predator” as “a person who has been convicted of or pleaded guilty to committing , on or after January 1, 1997, a sexually violent offense and is likely to engage in the future in one or more sexually violent offenses.” (Emphasis added.) In 2005, the General Assembly amended the statute to define a “sexually violent predator” as “a person who, on or after January 1, 1997, commits a sexually violent offense and is likely to engage in the futurе in one or more sexually violent offenses.” (Emphasis added.) R.C. 2971.01(H)(1). The 2005 amendment was prompted by the Ohio Supreme Court’s
2004 decision in
State v. Smith,
104 Ohio St.3d 106,
for the sexually motivated kidnappings based upon its finding, in support of the accompanying sexually-violent-predator specifications, that Ingels was a “sexually *6 violent predator.” But the court’s finding that Ingels was a “sexually violеnt predator” was based on the conduct underlying the sexually-violent-offense charges contained in the indictments in the cases numbered B-9800321 and B-9802147; its “sexually violent predator” finding was not, as former R.C. 2971.01(H)(1) had required, based on a sexually-violent-offense “сonviction * * * that [had] existed prior to the * * * indictment” in the case numbered B-9800321, charging the sexually-violent-predator specifications. Accordingly, R.C. Chapter 2971, as it provided when Ingels was sentenced, did not confer upon the trial court the authority to enhance his sentences for the sexually motivated kidnappings.
The Kidnapping Sentences Are Subject to Correction as Void
The Ohio Supreme Court in
State v. Williams
, 148 Ohio St.3d 403,
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The Eighth Appellate District concluded to the contrary in addressing
a
Smith
claim in its 2006 decision in
State v. Waver
, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 87495,
Nor is it persuasive. For the purpose of determining whether a
Smith
error renders a
sentence void, we perceive no significance in the Supreme Court’s use of the word
“erred” in declaring its holding. The void-or-voidable issue was not before the
Supreme Court in because the case was before the court on direct appeal,
requiring no more to “remedy” the sentencing error than to hold that “the trial court
erred” and to order that Smith be resentenced. But a void-or-voidable inquiry is not
superfluous when, as here and in
Waver
, it is undertaken in a collateral proceeding.
To the contrary, the determination in a collateral proceeding of whether an
unauthorized sentenсe is void effectively determines whether the court may
“remedy” the error at all.
See Fischer
, 128 Ohio St.3d 92,
Appellate Districts affirming the rejection of
Smith
claims advanced in
postconviction motions. The Tenth District in
State v. Haynes
, 10th Dist. Franklin
No. 14AP-276,
the controlling authority of a higher court, leaving to the higher court the prerogative
of overruling its own decision.
See Johnson v. Microsoft Corp.
, 156 Ohio App.3d
249,
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by the common pleas court under its jurisdiction to correct a void judgment.
See
State ex rel. Cruzado v. Zaleski
, 111 Ohio St.3d 353,
We Remand and Certify a Conflict Therefore, we affirm the common plеas court’s judgments overruling
Ingels’s 2016 motions. But we remand this case to the common pleas court for resentencing, consistent with the law and this opinion, on the kidnapping offenses charged in counts one and three of the indictment in the case numbеred B-9800321. And because this disposition conflicts with the decisions of the Eighth District in Waver , the Ninth District in Ditzler , and the Tenth District in Haynes , we certify to the Ohio Supreme Court, upon the authority conferred by Article IV, Section 3(B)(4) of the Ohio Constitution, the following question: “Is a sentence imposed under former R.C. Chaptеr 2971 void, and thus correctable at any time, when the finding that the offender was a ‘sexually violent predator’ was not, as former R.C. 2971.01(H)(1) had required, based on a sexually-violent-offense conviction that had existed prior to the indictment charging the sexually-violent- predator specification.”
Judgments accordingly. Z AYAS and D ETERS , JJ. , concur.
Please note:
The court has recorded its own entry on the date of the release of this opinion.
