446 N.E.2d 1161 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1982
This is an appeal by defendant-appellant, Steven Urvan (defendant), from the refusal to dismiss a charge of grand theft. The ground for the motion was double jeopardy.
The judgment is reversed and the defendant discharged.
On three or four weekends in September 1979, Strawbridge observed the defendant and his family selling Permatex products from his van at a flea market in Summit County. During the last weekend of the month, a Warrensville Heights police officer accompanied several investigators from Bonaventure to defendant's home in Medina County on the pretext of purchasing horses. The visit revealed that there were Permatex products on the defendant's property.
A Medina County judge issued a search warrant for defendant's home and "surrounding curtilege [sic]" on October 1, 1979. It was executed that day by officers from the Hinckley and Warrensville Heights police departments. Permatex products were seized.
On October 2, 1979, defendant's office at Permatex was searched by employees of Bonaventure. The employees found bills of lading to several companies. Later that day, defendant was arrested and released on his own recognizance.
On October 10, 1979, Warrensville Heights police recovered a small quantity of Permatex products from the docks of ICX1 in Cuyahoga County. Five days later, twenty-one skids and eighty cartons of Permatex products worth approximately $30,000, were recovered from the docks of the Ryder Trucking Company in Cuyahoga County. These products allegedly had been placed there prior to October 1, 1979.
The Medina County prosecutor filed an Information in case No. 6497 on November 13, 1979, charging that the defendant received stolen property, valued at $150 or more, on October 1, 1979, in violation of R.C.
By journal entry filed December 6, 1979, defendant's case was deactivated by the Medina County Court of Common Pleas. Defendant was placed in a pretrial diversion program authorized under R.C.
In late December 1979, or early January 1980, Detective Stephen Hatras, Warrensville Heights Police Department, called the Medina County prosecutor's office after learning that the defendant had "possibly been referred to the first offender program." The prosecutor's office referred Hatras to Dr. Santamaria. Hatras testified that he told Dr. Santamaria about the recovery of $30,000 worth of products on October 10th and 15th. There was also evidence that Santamaria had been told of the seizure by Hatras in December 1979 or January 1980. Hatras did not present the information to the prosecutor.
Dr. Santamaria had his first appointment with the defendant on January 23, 1980. He signed the contract for diversion with the defendant on March 5, 1980. Neither the Medina County prosecutor nor defense counsel signed. Although only receiving had been charged, the offenses listed on the contract were grand theft and receiving stolen property. Dr. Santamaria acknowledged that the contract had been typed up prior to his receiving any material from the Medina County Court of Common Pleas. However, Dr. Santamaria received a copy of the Information sometime after January 23, 1980, and the diversion contract was signed on March 5, 1980.
This means the state's agent, Dr. Santamaria, prepared and secured the execution of the diversion agreement in his official capacity as head of the Medina County Pretrial Diversion Programafter he had an opportunity to review the defendant's file sent to him from the prosecutor's office and after he had been informed of the seizures in Cuyahoga County.
The second to last paragraph of the diversion contract provided:
"As final terms of this contract, I have been assured by all signers of this *154 document that successful fulfillment of the terms outlined above will result in nolle of the charges specified herein. Further, it is my understanding that required journal entries and court proceedings will be handled within thirty days of program completion, and at no time thereafter will I be subject toarbitrary prosecution or additional court appearances on chargescovered by this agreement." (Emphasis added.)
On July 11, 1980, defendant was arraigned in Cuyahoga County and entered a plea of not guilty. A motion to dismiss on the grounds of double jeopardy was filed October 22, 1980, and overruled on February 27, 1981, but not filed for journalization until March 9, 1981.
Defendant appealed assigning one error:
"The trial court erred in finding the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amentdment [sic] not applicable where the defendant has entered into a contractual agreement with the prosecutor the completion of the terms of which agreement bars further prosecution, where the materials pertinent to a subsequent indictment were part of the subject material of the charges nolled, and where subsequent authority had completed their investigation prior to and had knowledge of *155 defendant's being placed on the First Offender Program."
For reasons adduced below, the assignment has merit.
A denial of a motion to dismiss on grounds of double jeopardy is a final appealable order. State v. Thomas (1980),
It is clear that the offense or offenses involved in this case occurred at least in some part in both Medina and Cuyahoga Counties. Therefore it is clear that jurisdiction could be exercised by either county. It is significant for the present disposition that Medina County acted first and assumed the agency for Ohio in pursuing the defendant. It is also of moment that Medina County had an early diversionary program under the optional statute and Cuyahoga County did not. *156
The defendant was charged by Information with receipt of stolen property in Medina County. Under an agreement with that county he completed an early diversionary program. However, since Medina County had subject matter jurisdiction and took action first, by acting as it did, it preempted venue and jurisdiction for the whole matter unless the state has authority to divide and distribute responsibility for prosecuting each of several crimes among its county agencies. It does not, Brown v. Ohio, supra. And even if the actions could be split only one could be fully pursued. For the Supreme Court of Ohio has said:
"Although receiving is technically not an included offense of theft, it is, under R.C.
Thus, when Medina County took jurisdiction, that county elected to charge defendant only with the receipt of stolen property and by doing so elected on behalf of the state to pursue only one of the two allied offenses involved, i.e., receipt of stolen property rather than grand theft.
Medina County also chose to put the defendant into the early diversion program which, under R.C.
In this case when the state, through its agent Medina County, chose early diversion for the defendant and when he satisfied the terms of the program, he was entitled to receive and did receive a nolle of the charge to which the agreement applied. Moreover, if the program is to make logical sense and traffic at all in fair treatment, the state's election to pursue the crime of stolen property forecloses its right to undertake pursuit of the grand theft charge through a second agent (Cuyahoga County). Jeopardy must attach as a result of the activity of the first (Medina County). This conclusion comports both with fairness and the double jeopardy mandate of Brown v. Ohio, supra.
Deliberate splitting up of the crime of internal theft from Permatex followed by successive prosecution from county to county is one exemplification of the hazard the Double Jeopardy Clause was designed to prevent. Negligence or oversight on the part of Cuyahoga County does not legalize the consequences.
On the facts here the defendant's hazard is as real if caused by negligence as it would be if caused intentionally. For his liberty was invaded while he was in the diversion program. To participate he had to agree to the terms established by the prosecuting attorney on behalf of the *157 state of Ohio at the risk of facing trial on the diverted charge. Moreover, he had to waive such substantive rights as constitutional and statutory speedy trial.11 And he contends, not without reason, that he thought he was clearing both charges.12
Here the state is attempting to pursue separate charges stemming from one course of criminal conduct in different counties in either of which the venue could be laid. Whether the state acts by design or inadvertence makes no difference. The law condemns both. For the effect is to harass the defendant and frustrate statutory policy.
For the state to be allowed to split venue and bring a second prosecution on a charge (which at best the state had deliberately elected not to pursue14) after all the terms of the diversion contract have been met, violates the spirit and the letter of constitutional Double Jeopardy policy and the spirit of the legislative policy of the state as represented in the venue and allied offense statutes.
Judgment reversed and defendant discharged.
JACKSON, C.J., and CORRIGAN, J., concur.
"(B) Whoever violates this section is guilty of receiving stolen property, a misdemeanor of the first degree. If the value of the property involved is one hundred fifty dollars or more, or if the property involved is any of the property listed in section
The program may be adopted by a county prosecutor and operated pursuant to standards approved in a journal entry of the common pleas court. The offender must be deemed an improbable repeater by the prosecutor, R.C.
"(1) Without the consent of the owner or person authorized to give consent;
"(2) Beyond the scope of the express or implied consent of the owner or person authorized to give consent;
"(3) By deception;
"(4) By threat.
"(B) Whoever violates this section is guilty of theft. If the value of the property or services stolen is less than one hundred fifty dollars, a violation of this section is petty theft, a misdemeanor of the first degree. If the value of the property or services stolen is one hundred fifty dollars or more, or if the property stolen is any of the property listed in section
"(C) When the offense involved the unlawful taking or receivingof property or the unlawful taking or enticing of another, theoffender may be tried in any jurisdiction from or into which theproperty or victim was taken, received, or enticed.
"* * *
"(H) When an offender, as part of a course of criminal conduct,commits offenses in different jurisdictions, he may be tried forall such offenses in any jurisdiction in which one such offenseor any element thereof occurred. Without limitation on the evidence which may be used to establish such course of conduct, any of the following is prima facie evidence of a course ofcriminal conduct:
"(1) The offenses involved the same victim, or victims of the same type or from the same group.
"(2) The offenses were committed by the offender in his sameemployment, or capacity, or relationship to another.
"(3) The offenses were committed as part of the same transaction or chain of events, or in furtherance of the same purpose orobjective.
"(4) The offenses were committed in furtherance of the same conspiracy.
"(5) The offenses involved the same or a similar modusoperandi.
"(6) The offenses were committed along the offender's line oftravel in this state, regardless of his point of origin or destination." (Emphasis added.)
"[P]re-trial diversion is not a mere extension of the charging process. The statutory scheme may not be invoked until after indictment. The plan of diversion, or the denial thereof,follows indictment and comes after the prosecutor has fully discharged all discretionary functions and after the prosecutorial die has been cast.
"* * *
"It is judicial in character in that it involves a procedural alternative to prosecution and a disposition by normal methods."Dearborne v. State (Tenn. 1978),
The record is not clear as to when, if ever, prior to July 7, 1980, Dr. Santamaria knew that the prosecutor understood the diversion program to apply only to the charge of receiving stolen property. Santamaria testified that when Urvan completed the program he, Santamaria, wrote a report June 11 with recommendations.
On July 7, twenty-six days later, after Urvan had received notice about his indictment in Cuyahoga County, Dr. Santamaria testified that he was working on a final report and had to phone the prosecutor to determine what charges had been the subject of the diversion program and the nolle recommended.
This testimony of the state's administrator of the program is consistent with Urvan's testimony that at the time the diversion contract was made it applied to both charges.