737 N.E.2d 574 | Ohio Ct. App. | 2000
We conclude that the State failed to present sufficient evidence to prove the allegations in the complaint charging Scruggs with Menacing by Stalking. Accordingly, the judgment of the trial court is Reversed, and Scruggs is ordered Discharged.
Scruggs's conduct continued into 1998. In April and May, 1998, Scruggs would call Morris white trash, and tell her, "I'm going to make you pay," and "I'm going to get you," three or four times per week. Scruggs threatened to kill Morris four to five times during this period. On April 29, 1998, Morris heard Scruggs tell one of her children and other neighborhood children, "you sorry little bastards; you broke my window; I'm going to blow your brains out." On May 27, 1998, the Trotwood police arrested Scruggs on disorderly conduct charges2, after being contacted by several of her neighbors. As she was being led away, Scruggs threatened Morris and others that she would come back, and "blow their brains out." On May 29, 1998, Morris went down to the police station and filed a complaint against Scruggs. Armed with the complaint, the police again arrested Scruggs, and again, as she was being led away, Scruggs threatened Morris and others by saying she would come back, and "blow [their] brains out."
A jury trial was held on the Menacing by Stalking charge against Scruggs on March 5, 1999. Morris testified to the facts related above. During the trial, defense counsel objected to the introduction of any testimony regarding events that occurred before May 22, 1998, on the ground that the complaint alleged that Scruggs had committed the offense "on or about May 29, 1998." The trial court overruled defense counsel's objections and permitted the State to introduce testimony concerning events as far back as July, 1997. The jury convicted Scruggs, and the trial court sentenced her accordingly.
Scruggs appeals from her conviction and sentence for Menacing by Stalking.
*634I. OHIO'S MENACING BY STALKING STATUTE IS VOID FOR VAGUENESS AND THEREFORE IS UNCONSTITUTIONAL.
II. THE VERDICT AGAINST MRS. SCRUGGS WAS NOT SUPPORTED BY THE SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE.
III. THE VERDICT AGAINST MRS. SCRUGGS WAS AGAINST THE MANIFEST WEIGHT OF THE EVIDENCE.
In her Second Assignment of Error, Scruggs argues that the verdict against her was not supported by sufficient evidence. We agree.
R.C.
Initially, Scruggs argues that in order for the State to prove the "pattern of conduct" element, the State was obligated to show that Scruggs had committed two separate acts, on two different days. Scruggs argues that because the complaint filed against her alleged that the pattern of conduct occurred on one date, i.e., May 29, 1998, the State was unable to meet its burden of proving every element of the offense of Menacing by Stalking. We find this argument unpersuasive.
R.C.
The evidence showed that Scruggs had made threats to her neighbors and their children on May 27, 1998. The Trotwood police were contacted on that date, and Scruggs was arrested for disorderly conduct. As she was being led away, Scruggs told Morris and her neighbors that "she was going to come back * * * and blow [their] heads off." On May 29, 1998, the evidence showed that Morris went to the Trotwood police station and swore out a complaint against Scruggs. Later that evening, the police came by and arrested Scruggs once more, this time, on Morris's complaint. As she was being led away by the police, Scruggs again told Morris that "she was going to come back * * * and blow [their] heads off." However, the prosecutor failed to have Morris provide any testimony regarding the event which prompted her to go down to the police station to file a complaint against Scruggs. Without an amendment to the complaint, the threats *635 that Scruggs made to Morris after she had been arrested on the complaint filed by Morris cannot count as one of the "two or more actions or incidents" needed to establish the pattern of conduct element charged in the complaint. Thus, assuming that the threats made by Scruggs to Morris on May 27th constitute one action or incident that occurred "on or about May 29, 1998," the State failed to prove the pattern of conduct element, because it never proved that a second action or incident took place, prior to Scrugg's May 29th arrest, pursuant to Morris's complaint.
The State placed into evidence a significant amount of testimony showing that a number of incidents took place between Scruggs, and Morris and her children, between July, 1997 and May 29, 1998. The prosecutor introduced this evidence to establish "the two or more actions or incidents" needed to make up the pattern of conduct element. The trial court, over defense counsel's objections, admitted the evidence for this purpose. This constituted error. While the State may introduce evidence of "uncharged misconduct" or "other acts," in order to prove, among other things, that a defendant's seemingly innocent acts, in reality, amounted to knowing attempts to cause mental distress, those other acts cannot be used to establish the "two or more actions or incidents" requirement of the pattern of conduct element. See State v. Bilder (1994),
The State could have avoided the result reached in this case if it had simply set forth the date of the offense in the complaint as having occurred between July, 1997 and May 29, 1998, or if it had simply adduced testimony from Morris regarding the incident on May 29th, which led her to file a complaint against Scruggs. Because the State failed to prove the allegation set forth in the *636 complaint, the judgment of the trial court must be reversed, and Scruggs must be discharged.
Accordingly, Scrugg's Second Assignment of Error is sustained. As a result of our disposition of Scrugg's Second Assignment of Error, Scrugg's First and Third Assignments of Error are moot, and we need not decide them. See App.R. 12(A)(1)(c).
GRADY, P.J., and WOLFF, J., concur.
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HON. CONNIE S. PRICE