478 N.E.2d 257 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1984
On May 27, 1983 defendant-appellee, Michael F. Ryan, was arrested and charged with driving a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcohol or drugs in violation of *151
R.C.
Prior to trial, appellee moved the trial court for an order requiring the state to elect between the two driving under the influence charges. On October 5, 1983 the trial court granted appellee's motion and ordered the state to elect one of the two charges and to proceed to trial only on that charge.
The state filed a motion in which it requested the court to reconsider the prior order to elect. On December 29, 1983 the court denied the state's motion to reconsider and again ordered the prosecutor to elect.
On January 12, 1984 the case was called for trial. The prosecutor informed the court that the state intended to present evidence on both of the charges. At this point, the trial judge dismissed both charges for failure to comply with the court order to elect and for want of prosecution.2 From this judgment, the state of Ohio has taken this timely appeal pursuant to R.C.
Specifically, the state contends that it has a statutory right to try these two particular offenses together, absent a showing of prejudice by appellee. For the reasons outlined in this decision, we find the state's assignment of error to be well-taken.
We are initially confronted with appellee's assertion that the state has no right to appeal the lower court's dismissal. We disagree. R.C.
"A prosecuting attorney * * * may appeal as a matter or [of] right any decision of a trial court in a criminal case * * * which decision grants a motion to dismiss all or any part of an indictment, complaint, or information * * *."
In a criminal case, an appeal, if proper, should be based on a judgment or final order. See R.C.
We begin by pointing out that R.C.
An indictment or information may charge two or more different offenses, connected together in their commission, or two or more different offenses of the same class of crimes under separate counts, and the prosecutor is not required to elect between the different offenses or counts. R.C.
Appellee contends that the offenses in the case at bar must be separated pursuant to Crim. R. 14 because joinder necessarily prejudices his chances for acquittal. Specifically, appellee, who has the burden of affirmatively demonstrating the existence of prejudice, State v. Torres (1981),
We feel that the state's evidence in the instant case would not be so complex that the average juror would be unable properly to decide the factual issues involved or segregate the proof. With respect to the violation of R.C.
In theory, admitting evidence of the intoxilyzer result would not prejudice appellee in regard to the R.C.
In the case sub judice, other than the claim of inherent
prejudice due to the joinder of the two charges, the record is devoid of any affirmative demonstration of prejudice by appellee. We hold that the state may try charges of violating R.C.
The assignment of error having been ruled upon, it is the decision of this court that the judgment herein appealed from be, and the same hereby is, reversed and the cause remanded for trial.3
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
PALMER, P.J., and DOAN, J., concur.
"(A) No person shall operate any vehicle, streetcar, or trackless trolley within this state if any of the following apply:
"(1) The person is under the influence of alcohol or any drug of abuse, or the combined influence of alcohol and any drug of abuse;
"* * *
"(3) The person has a concentration of ten-hundredths of one gram or more by weight of alcohol per two hundred ten liters of his breath;"