631 N.E.2d 1117 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1993
Appellant James Turner was charged with and convicted of receiving stolen property. The complaint charged that on January 13, 1992, he disposed of a Roth pump belonging to Ford Motor Company ("Ford"). Initially deemed a felony, the charge was reduced to a first-degree misdemeanor.
An employee of Ford received information on December 31, 1991, from an agent of the Ohio Department of Liquor Control that a pump belonging to Ford was located on appellant's father-in-law's property. The agent had received this information from appellant's brother-in-law. The Ford employee and two police officers went to the described location in January 1992 and found a Roth pump which had attached a serial number identical to a pump previously purchased by Ford. Ford did not realize the pump was missing, in part, because it kept records concerning such items for no more than six and one-half years. Ford did provide various documents and testimony at trial to demonstrate that the pump had been purchased and received in 1980.
In this appeal, appellant raises three assignments of error for our review. Appellant first contends that the trial court erred to his prejudice in denying his motion to dismiss the misdemeanor charge on statute-of-limitations grounds.1 Appellant also assigns as error the trial court's denial of his Crim.R. 29 motion to dismiss the misdemeanor charge due to the asserted insufficiency of the evidence. In his third assignment of error, appellant argues that the trial court erred to his prejudice when it overruled his motion for a mistrial. We overrule all three assignments of error.
R.C.
That same logic leads us to conclude that, in cases not involving child abuse, a family member, such as the brother-in-law here, should be excepted as a "discoverer" because a family member does not fall within the ambit of discovering persons anticipated by the legislature, in R.C.
For the above reasons, we hold that although appellant's brother-in-law testified that he knew appellant had disposed of the pump in approximately 1986, but had told no one until several years later, the discovery of the corpus delicti in the case sub judice occurred when Ford learned of the illegal disposal of its pump in January 1992. It was at that time that "any competent person other than appellant or anyone equally at fault with him" had knowledge of the corpus delicti of a crime. Because the corpus delicti remained undiscovered until January 1992, appellant's prosecution was not barred by the statute of limitations.4 *157
We also overrule appellant's second assignment of error, which postulates that the trial court erred by denying his Crim.R. 29 motion to dismiss on the ground of insufficiency of the evidence. We hold that any claim of error regarding the denial of appellant's motion for acquittal pursuant to Crim.R. 29 was waived by his failure to renew the motion at the close of all the evidence. Dayton v. Rogers (1979),
Furthermore, we conclude that the court did not abuse its discretion in denying appellant's motion for a mistrial based upon the prosecutor referring to other items found in appellant's possession which allegedly belonged to Ford. The trial court instructed the jury that opening statements and closing arguments were not evidence, that stricken statements were not evidence and were to be ignored, and that any testimony concerning other property taken from the van or home of the appellant was to be disregarded as evidence and not to be considered for any purpose. Such curative instructions amply protected the appellant's right to a fair trial.
Accordingly, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
KLUSMEIER, P.J., and GORMAN, J., concur.