2003 Ohio 7105 | Ohio Ct. App. | 2003
{¶ 3} Another witness, Renee Mason, was driving down Kemper Lane when both Campbell and Vandergriff entered the street in front of her vehicle. She described how Campbell, who was running after Vandergriff, pulled her to the ground. Both persons, she testified, were "covered in blood," although later she was able to see that it was Campbell who was bleeding from the neck. She testified that another woman intervened to attend to Campbell, whose wounds had robbed him of his strength and made him unable to get up from the pavement. Vandergriff, she testified, did not flee but watched as the other woman screamed for help. Mason called the 911 operator on her cellular phone.
{¶ 4} Another witness, Loyce Page, was also in a car and saw Campbell and Vandergriff scuffling on the ground in the street. Asked who was the aggressor, Page replied, "Well, when I saw — oh, when I saw him breaking loose from her, then it looked as if she was the aggressor. It looked like she cut him. I don't know." Page did state, however, that when she first saw the two scuffling, it appeared that Campbell was the aggressor, with Vandergriff pinned beneath his weight as they struggled.
{¶ 5} Eddie Neal testified that he viewed the incident from across the street. According to Neal, the fight began when Campbell refused Vandergriff's request for a cigarette lighter. Neal stated that he heard both cursing and screaming. He then described Vandergriff breaking the orange-juice bottle and Campbell trying to defend himself. He denied seeing Campbell strike or physically assault Vandergriff. As the fight was described by Neal, "He [Campbell] asked her to give him her lighter. And she said, no, I'm not giving you no damn lighter, and busted the bottle while he was trying to walk away from her, and hit him with the bottle. She tried to run from him, and he was trying to defend himself. And he grabbed her, and they both fell in the middle of the street."2
{¶ 6} Police officers arrived promptly. Vandergriff approached one of the officers and told her, "I didn't mean to do it. I cut him." She explained how Campbell had thrown a cup of his own urine in her face. After being told by the officer to sit down, she continued to talk, expressing her frustration at Campbell hitting her and insisting that she had not meant to "do it." The officer who stayed with her testified that she thought that Vandergriff was intoxicated, as indicated by her jitteriness, volubility, and inability to focus on the subject at hand Because she did not smell alcohol upon her person, the officer, based upon her experience, theorized that Vandergriff was intoxicated with crack cocaine. Vandergriff was then examined by medical personnel and taken by ambulance to a hospital where she received stitches for a cut on her hand According to the officer with her, Vandergriff continued to express her concern for Campbell's condition.
{¶ 7} The deputy coroner testified that Campbell's blood on autopsy was found to have an alcohol concentration of .142. (The autopsy was performed some 17 hours after death, thus allowing Vandergriff's defense to establish that the actual level may have been higher at the time of death and even higher at the time of the stabbing.) Cocaine metabolites were also found in his system. The deputy coroner described the wound that killed Campbell as extending through the external jugular, the left sternocleidomastoid muscle, the left internal jugular, the superior thyroid cartilage, the greater horn of the thyroid cartilage, and the back of the larynx, and ending on the right aspect of the fourth cervical vertebral body. According to the deputy coroner, such a wound was not consistent with a glancing blow but more like "holding onto a hammer and striking something, that kind of force." Upon cross-examination, however, he conceded that it was possible, but "not likely," that Campbell stumbling forward into the full force of the bottle had caused the severity of the lethal wound. The deputy coroner identified two other non-lethal wounds, one a brush wound and the other a stab wound. He stated that Campbell died from "hemorrhagic shock, from bleeding out from these wounds."
{¶ 8} The defense presented only one witness, the emergency-medicine physician who attended to Vandergriff. She described Vandergriff's injury as a "web space laceration at the base of [the] thumb of her right hand, about two centimeters in length." She characterized the wound as "fairly superficial." The physician testified that she prescribed a dosage of Ativan due to Vandergriff's agitated state. Upon cross-examination, the physician stated that Vandergriff did not at any time present complaints regarding injuries to her face or head. She stated that she could not recall seeing any such injuries, and that if Vandergriff had had any such injuries that required treatment, she would have administered the necessary medical care.
{¶ 11} The court found, nonetheless, that a minimum sentence of three years would demean the seriousness of the offense that had resulted in the loss of a life. The court further found that a minimum sentence would not adequately protect the public given Vandergriff's history of failing to comply with drug-treatment programs. Accordingly, the court sentenced her to an eight-year prison term.
{¶ 13} Although questioning both the sufficiency and the weight of the evidence, Vandergriff readily admits in her brief that her argument with respect to her claim of self-defense goes more to weight than to sufficiency. She asserts that the preponderance of the evidence demonstrated all the elements necessary to establish that she had acted in self-defense when she inflicted a lethal blow to Campbell's neck, severing his jugular.
{¶ 14} As this court has noted, "In order to establish a right of self-defense involving deadly force, the defendant must establish three elements: (1) that the defendant was not at fault in creating the situation; (2) that the defendant had a bona fide belief that he was in imminent danger of death or great bodily harm and that the only means of escape was in the use of force; and (3) that the defendant had not violated any duty to retreat or avoid the danger." State v. Miller,
{¶ 15} As to the duty to retreat, it is well settled that one cannot defend himself with lethal force peremptorily. Rather, a person must first avail himself of any reasonable means of retreat, at least when attacked outside the confines of his own home. State v. Thomas
(1997),
{¶ 16} In the present case, there were obviously many aggravating, as well as mitigating, circumstances. The victim's behavior toward Vandergriff was, without a doubt, despicable. But simply because Campbell acted as he did and assaulted her did not justify Vandergriff resorting to the extreme measure of killing him unless she was able to demonstrate by the preponderant weight of the evidence that the situation did not occur by any fault of her own and that her "only means" of avoiding death or great bodily harm was to use lethal force, meaning that there was no way she could have defused the situation earlier by walking away or retreating, or defended herself by striking non-lethal blows.
{¶ 17} As the trial court observed, there were many facets to the evidence in this case. Testimony established that Vandergriff's relationship with Campbell was often confrontational and argumentative, as well as physically violent. They had apparently been fighting for days, as evidenced by Campbell kicking Vandergriff out of his house the night before. It is unclear why they could not have managed to stay out of each other's way the next day, but for some reason they both ended up on the same street, fighting.
{¶ 18} Although Neal's testimony may have raised some doubt, it appears from Martin's testimony that Campbell struck Vandergriff with blows strong enough to stagger her backwards. The force of these blows was of crucial significance, since it was upon them, and the risk they presented to her, that Vandergriff claimed the right of lethal self-defense. Even if the blows were strong enough to stagger Vandergriff, as Martin testified, it is unclear how forceful such blows actually were if Vandergriff was jittery and intoxicated on crack cocaine, as one of the officers also testified, when she absorbed their impact. When she was examined at the hospital soon thereafter, Vandergriff did not, significantly, present any complaints of facial injury, nor were any injuries immediately visible to the emergency personnel who treated her. The lack of any visible injury (bruises, contusions, lacerations, dislodged teeth and the like) supported the trial court's conclusion that while some degree of non-lethal force would have been justified to ward off such blows, the preemptive use of lethal force was not.
{¶ 19} Vandergriff argues that the law in Ohio only requires that she have had a bona fide subjective belief that the blows by Campbell threatened serious bodily harm or death, not necessarily that they objectively posed such a threat. See State v. Mabry (1982),
{¶ 20} Further, there was sufficient evidence to support the trial court's conclusion that the blow that killed Campbell was not an inadvertent consequence of a purely defensive act. As noted, the trial court rejected the defense claim that the lethal wound to the neck was a sideways or glancing blow based upon the testimony of the deputy coroner, as well as the autopsy photographs. This evidence strongly indicated that Vandergriff deliberately directed the blow downward, into Campbell's neck, with a large degree of force, thus giving rise to a reasonable inference that the use of deadly force was not accidental or inadvertent.
{¶ 21} Finally, it is difficult to extract from the conflicting testimony a firm conclusion that Vandergriff satisfied her duty of retreating before resorting to the use of lethal force. Although she had been struck twice, her reaction was to pick up an orange-juice bottle and break it to be used as weapon. Arming oneself for protection is not the same thing as retreating from the battle. As noted, Vandergriff did not testify, and although no inference of guilt could be drawn from this, her silence left the record without any real explication of her thought process, in other words, whether she felt at that point that she could not afford to turn her back, or whether she had bravely, if not foolishly, elected to stand her ground. Although Vandergriff did eventually turn and attempt to run away, this occurred only after she had stabbed Campbell when he swung at her despite the fact that she was brandishing the bottle to ward him off.
{¶ 22} In sum, we cannot say on this difficult record that the weight of the evidence established all the elements of self-defense with the necessary degree of cogency. Because this case involved a killing, the question was far more complex than whether Vandergriff had a right to defend herself. Clearly she did. The much harder inquiry was whether she had a right to defend herself by killing Campbell. The law put the burden on her to establish this, and on this record we cannot say the trial court erred by concluding that she had failed to do so.
{¶ 23} Finally, Vandergriff argues that the evidence was insufficient to show that she knowingly caused the death of Campbell for the purposes of finding her guilty of voluntary manslaughter under R.C.
{¶ 24} The testimony of the deputy coroner was sufficient evidence of a deliberate, forceful blow to Campbell's neck so that the trial court could reasonably conclude that Campbell had knowingly caused his death. A person is presumed to intend the reasonable consequences of his actions, including the forceful plunging of the sharp end of a broken bottle into the jugular area of a person's neck. The fact that Vandergriff may have immediately regretted the action and expressed concern for Campbell's survival does not alter this conclusion. Nor does the fact that she may have been under the influence of crack cocaine, which, on this record, has not been shown to have negated her capacity to understand the nature of her own actions. As for the claim of borderline retardation, the record of the trial does not contain sufficient information to support the conclusion that her mental capacity would have prevented her from acting knowingly.
{¶ 25} Vandergriff's first assignment of error is overruled.
{¶ 27} In State v. Comer,
{¶ 28} Accordingly, Vandergriff's second assignment of error is overruled. The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
Gorman, P.J., Hildebrandt and Winkler, JJ.