2003 Ohio 7023 | Ohio Ct. App. | 2003
{¶ 3} A psychologist later interviewed appellant for a total of 8.5 hours and spoke with other individuals about appellant. The psychologist's October 8, 1996 report noted that appellant's father subjected him to degrading, aggressive, and hostile actions. He also noted that appellant said his father had been making him work for him the past five years doing things such as building a house, pouring cement, and digging a lake. Although the psychologist concluded that "for the most part" the father did not physically harm appellant, he related that appellant informed him about some of the incidents described to police and a story about his father punching him. The psychologist described appellant as "an emotionally battered child," noting that he was subjected to "years of psychological terrorism" through threats and intimidation. He opined that the shooting was due to the years of damage to appellant's development and resulting inability to find an acceptable means of escape from the intolerable situation. The psychologist concluded that appellant's ability to plan and rationally direct his behavior was so impaired that he acted to survive.
{¶ 4} Appellant was bound over from the juvenile division to the general division and indicted on one count of aggravated murder with a firearm specification. On December 18, 1996, the state filed a motion in limine seeking to preclude all evidence on battered child syndrome. Appellant countered this motion, and the court heard arguments on the issue. As joint exhibits, the court reviewed the psychologist's report and appellant's statement to police. On February 10, 1997, the court granted the state's motion in a twenty-three page opinion and barred all evidence of self-defense based upon battered child syndrome.
{¶ 5} The trial court concluded that the evidence did not warrant the defense. The court summarized some facts by stating that the father was a disciplinarian who yelled when appellant did things wrong and had a bad temper. The court noted appellant's statement that he had much hate for his father. The court basically concluded that appellant was not a model child and that corporal punishment and threatening may have been the father's only options for dealing with him. The court declared that construing appellant's claims in the light most favorable to him, his father threw objects and occasionally became physical "but only to the extent of causing some bruises." The court pointed out that the father did not drink alcohol and did not threaten appellant with the weapon. (Although, according to appellant, his father did threaten to shoot him in the past). The court quotes appellant as saying, "I never ever thought he would kill me," but the court omits the remainder of the sentence which continues, "but he always said he would, but I mean, I believe that if he got mad enough, he would. I'll guarantee that."
{¶ 6} The court distinguished between abused and battered children. The court then stated that appellant was neither physically abused nor battered. The court also concluded that battered child syndrome does not include emotional, mental, or psychological abuse. The court then went through the elements of self-defense and concluded there was no evidence the father was the first aggressor, there was no evidence of an imminent attack, and appellant could have run away as he did the previous summer.
{¶ 7} In mid-March, the court was informed that a plea agreement had been reached. On April 22, 1997, appellant pled no contest to a reduced charge of murder with a firearm specification. He was sentenced to a three-year term of actual incarceration to be followed by an indefinite term of fifteen years to life in prison. The court also ordered appellant to spend twenty-four hours per year in solitary confinement on the anniversary of his father's death.
{¶ 8} Timely notice of appeal was filed. In December 1997, we notified counsel to prosecute the appeal or face dismissal of the case. In February 1998, we dismissed the appeal. In May 2001, we construed a pro se motion as an application for reopening, granted the application, and reopened the appeal which was not fully briefed until May 2002. In that appeal, counsel set forth three assignments of error. The first assignment of error alleged that the court erred in excluding evidence of battered child syndrome. The second assignment of error alleged that the court erred in imposing solitary confinement as part of the sentence. The third assignment of error claimed that prior appellate counsel was ineffective for failing to brief these issues and allowing the original appeal to get dismissed.
{¶ 9} As for the third assignment of error, we noted that the arguments within it were consumed by our analysis in the first two assignments of error. State v. Vaughn, 7th Dist. No. 683, 2002-Ohio-5046, at ¶ 28. This court sustained appellant's second assignment of error and thus modified the sentence to exclude solitary confinement. Id. at ¶ 25. However, we affirmed appellant's conviction after overruling his first assignment of error on the grounds that a ruling to exclude evidence of battered child syndrome is a ruling on a motion in limine rather than a ruling on a motion to suppress. Id. at ¶ 18-20, citing State v. Engle (1996),
{¶ 10} Appellant filed a timely motion to reopen the appeal based upon ineffective assistance of appellate counsel, urging that appellate counsel should have read the 1996 Engle case and raised the involuntariness of the plea as an assignment of error in the 2001 brief. The potential significance of Engle to appellant's appeal was mentioned by this court in a footnote in appellant's prior appeal where we stated:
{¶ 11} "We note that the Engle Court reversed on a separate assignment of error which explicitly alleged that the plea was notvoluntary or knowing; the Court found evidence on the record that demonstrated that the defendant, the court, the prosecutor, and defense counsel all believed that the pretrial ruling was preserved for appeal and that appealability `promise' was made to appellant on the record prior to his plea. Here, there are no such allegations before us." Id. at fn.1 (emphasis original).
{¶ 12} Based upon the arguments in appellant's application for reopening and the ruling in Engle, we ruled that appellant presented a genuine issue as to whether he received effective assistance of appellate counsel. State v. Vaughn (Dec. 12, 2002 J.E.), 7th Dist. No. 683. As such, we reopened the appeal. Id. In reopening, we warned that the Engle Court only vacated the plea in the direct appeal because the Court found evidence on the record. We noted that if the complete picture of voluntariness required resort to items outside the record, then the direct, reopened appeal is not the proper place for the arguments. The reopened appeal is now before us.
{¶ 14} In Nemeth, a sixteen-year-old male took his compound bow and shot his mother in the head and neck with five arrows as she lay sleeping on the couch. The trial court granted the state's motion in limine to preclude testimony on the battered child syndrome. At trial, the court again refused to admit the testimony and refused to instruct on voluntary manslaughter. The defense proffered the psychologist's testimony at the close of its case. The defendant was then convicted of murder. This court reversed and remanded, and the Supreme Court affirmed our reversal, stating that battered child syndrome was relevant and also admissible under Evid.R. 702. State v. Nemeth (Jan. 30, 1997), 7th Dist. No. 95JE32, affirmed in
{¶ 15} Expert evidence on battered child syndrome is admissible when it is relevant and meets the requirements of Evid.R. 702. Nemeth,
{¶ 16} The Nemeth Court noted that expert testimony on battered child syndrome helps dispel common misconceptions about the ability to escape, nonreporting of abuse, and "nonconfrontational killings" which "do not fit the general pattern of self-defense." Id. at 208. The expert testimony also helps explain the subjective beliefs held by the child concerning impending danger. Id.
{¶ 17} The Court explained that child abuse need not be excessive or debilitating physical violence to affect the emotional and psychological development of the child. Id. at 212. "Abuse also includes such psychological trauma as sensory overload * * * and verbal overload with insults, accusation, and indoctrination." Id. Abused children exhibit a specific set of symptoms at the occurrence of an interpersonal triggering event; the symptoms include excessive anxiety, abnormal expressions of aggression or impaired impulse control, and dissociation. Id. at 213. The syndrome is generally accepted in the scientific community, as is battered woman syndrome which has previously been recognized as a proper topic for expert testimony. Id. at 212-213.
{¶ 18} In its prior response brief, the state claimed that battered child syndrome was not relevant in this case. Under Evid.R. 401, evidence is relevant if it has "any tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of consequence to the determination of the action more probable or less probable than it would be without the evidence." Id. at 207. Evidence that supports a defendant's explanation of the events and establishes state of mind is "clearly relevant" to his defense. Id. (noting that battered child syndrome was relevant to determine issues such as prior calculation and design, purpose, initiator of aggression, and belief of imminent danger).
{¶ 19} Here, the psychologist's report opined that appellant was an "emotionally battered child" and made conclusions about appellant's reactions that may characterize the syndrome. The trial court's twenty-three page journal entry made many factual findings that are not properly made in ruling on a pretrial motion. The court made factual conclusions that only a jury or trial judge at a bench trial could make, such as credibility and weight. The court's only function in ruling on such a motion in limine is to determine admissibility of certain evidence by evaluating whether it is relevant and whether it fits into Evid.R. 702.
{¶ 20} In any case, the actual ruling on the motion in limine is not before this court at this time. Engle,
{¶ 22} "Appellant was denied due process of law when the trial court failed to fully determine whether appellant's no contest plea was knowingly, voluntarily, and intelligently made."
{¶ 23} "Appellant was deprived the effective assistance of appellate counsel under U.S. const. amend.
{¶ 24} Appellant urges that this case is analogous to Engle. He claims that the trial court gave defense counsel and appellant the impression that the pretrial exclusionary ruling was appealable because the court's entry renamed the motion in limine as a motion to suppress. Appellant notes that he pled no contest rather than guilty, which preserves pretrial rulings on suppression motions. Appellant also citesState v. Watson (Aug. 27, 1981), 10th Dist. No. 80-AP-880, where the appellate court vacated a plea based upon the defendant's erroneous assumption that he could have an admissibility of evidence issue determined on appeal. In that case, defense counsel stated at the plea hearing that defendant was pleading no contest to preserve the defendant's right to appeal.
{¶ 25} The state responds by citing Crim.R.11 and urging that the court complied with the requirements set forth in the rule. The state attempts to distinguish Engle by pointing out that the prosecutor in that case stated six times on the record that the defendant could appeal the pretrial ruling. The state contends that the record in this case does not establish that appellant was advised he could appeal the pretrial ruling.
{¶ 27} A plea must be voluntary, knowing, and intelligent. Crim.R. 11(C)(2) requires an oral dialogue in order for the trial court to fully determine the defendant's understanding of the consequences of his plea.Engle,
{¶ 28} "Based upon the prosecutor's statements to the court, it is beyond doubt that defense counsel had explained to his client the strategy of pleading to reduced charges and appealing the trial court's adverse rulings, rather than proceeding with a defense that had been stripped of its key elements. The trial court listened without uttering a word of correction." Id.
{¶ 29} The Court then favorably quoted the dissent from the appellate court case as follows:
{¶ 30} "Appellant's agreement to the plea bargain implies her understanding that she could appeal those issues. Likewise, though the trial court did not expressly confirm the prosecutor's representation of the availability of appeal on those issues, its failure to advise the prosecutor, defense attorney and/or the defendant to the contrary would be considered by most defendants to be a tacit affirmation/recognition of her ability to appeal those very issues." Id. at 528, quoting State v.Engle (Aug. 11, 1994), 5th Dist. No. 38-CA-OCT-92 (Hoffman, J. dissenting).
{¶ 31} The Supreme Court concluded that there could be no doubt that Engle's plea was predicated on the belief that she could appeal the trial court's grant of the state's motion in limine resulting in exclusion of evidence on battered woman syndrome. Id. The concurring opinion which received four votes and thus is also part of the majority opinion added:
{¶ 32} "[T]he trial court, the prosecutor, and the defense attorney all misled the defendant as to her right to appeal the court's ruling on the motion in limine. At best this demonstrates confusion on the part of these officers of the court and of the court itself as to the state of the law; at worst it shows an appalling lack of concern for the preservation of a fair system which accurately determines the guilt or innocence of accused parties. As the majority correctly holds, with inaccurate legal advice, appellant's plea could not have been made knowingly or intelligently. It was the duty of all officers of the court, that is, the prosecution, the defense attorney, and the trial court itself, to ensure that appellant understood the implication of her plea of no contest." Id. at 529-530 (Resnick, J. concurring).
{¶ 34} "More specifically, in criminal cases, a motion in limine may be used in two different ways. First, it can be the equivalent of a motion to suppress evidence. Second, it can be used as the means to prevent prejudicial questions and/or statements from being made until their admissibility can be determined later at trial. * * * The State's motion sub judice is more akin to one to suppress, or preclude, evidence relating to an entire subject area as a `matter of law'. If taken as a `motion to suppress', then this court assumes the role of `trier of fact' and is in the best position to resolve questions of fact." (Feb. 10, 1997 Judgment Entry and Opinion at page 3) (emphasis original). See, also, page 22 again calling the motion one of suppression.
{¶ 35} These statements were enough to cause confusion with regards to the status of the motion's label and the subsequent effect on the right to appeal. A ruling on a suppression motion is appealable by a defendant after a no contest plea, unlike a ruling on a motion in limine, which is only appealable by a defendant after the defendant proceeds through a trial. Engle,
{¶ 36} The fact that the trial court made a statement that implies the decision is appealable makes the case similar to Engle. In fact, here the trial court expressly stated an erroneous legal conclusion that would result in a belief that the decision is appealable after a no contest plea, whereas in Engle, the trial court was only said to have implicitly adopted the prosecutor's statement on appealability by failing to correct it. Furthermore, at the later plea hearing, the court denied appellant's motion to reconsider the ruling "suppressing the use of battered child syndrome * * *." (Tr. 4). (Emphasis added.) Finally, on page 2 of the judgment entry, the trial court stated that its decision could not be reversed on appeal absent an abuse of discretion.
{¶ 37} In addition to the trial court's misleading statements, it appears clear that counsel advised appellant that the ruling would be appealable after the plea. This can be seen in counsel's attempt to proffer evidence into the record for purposes of an appeal after the court's ruling. Further, after the plea and sentencing hearing, defense counsel asked the court to stay the sentence pending appeal. (Tr. 14). The court said it would consider the request. These final notes help confirm appellant's impression that the pretrial ruling was appealable. Although the trial court need not go beyond the parameters of Crim.R. 11, in a case such as this, where the trial court itself muddies the waters and causes trial counsel to fail to recognize that a plea would waive the ruling, the plea can be vacated.
{¶ 39} For the foregoing reasons, this case is hereby reversed and remanded to the trial court with instructions that appellant be permitted to withdraw his plea of no contest and proceed with trial.
Waite, P.J., and Donofrio, J., concur.