472 N.E.2d 778 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1984
This cause came on to be heard upon appeal from the County Court of Clermont County.
On January 22, 1983, members of the Clermont County Sheriff's Department conducted a raid on a barn located near Felicity, Ohio, the suspected scene of a cockfight, and found such an event in progress. Several game birds and paraphernalia discovered at the site were confiscated. In addition, a large number of people were arrested and charged with violating R.C.
Counsel for appellants filed a motion to dismiss, claiming that the statute was unconstitutional, both on its face and as it was applied to the various appellants under the facts of this case. Appellants' motion was heard in the County Court of Clermont County and overruled. Appellants subsequently entered pleas of no contest and were found guilty as charged. This appeal concerns the convictions of one hundred twelve of the persons arrested and convicted. Two of the appellants were found guilty of maintaining property for use in cockfighting, eleven of the appellants *78 were found guilty of participating in cockfighting, and the remaining appellants were found guilty of being present at a cockfight. All appellants were fined.
Appellants filed a notice of appeal, asserting one assignment of error, that the trial court erred in overruling appellants' motion to dismiss.
Appellants contend that their motion to dismiss should have been granted because R.C.
R.C.
"No person shall knowingly engage in or be employed at cockfighting, bear-baiting, or pitting an animal against another; no person shall receive money for the admission of another to a place kept for such purpose; no person shall use, train, or possess any animal for seizing, detaining, or maltreating a domestic animal. Any person who knowingly purchases a ticket of admission to such place, or is present thereat, or witnesses suchspectacle, is an aider and abettor." (Emphasis added.)
A violation of R.C.
An analysis of the constitutionality of a statute begins with the general premise that a statute is entitled to a strong presumption of constitutionality. Peebles v. Clement (1980),
Appellants initially attack the constitutionality of R.C.
"As generally stated, the void-for-vagueness doctrine requires that a penal statute define the criminal offense with sufficient definiteness that ordinary people can understand what conduct is prohibited and in a manner that does not encourage arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement."
See, also, Hoffman Estates v. Flipside, Hoffman Estates, Inc.
(1982),
This standard for determining if a statute is vague has been adopted in Ohio in the case of State v. Phipps (1979),
"* * * a statute which either forbids or requires the doing of an act in terms so vague that men of common intelligence must necessarily guess at its meaning and differ as to its application, violates the first essential of due process of law."
See, also, State v. Young (1980),
Appellants argue that R.C.
"Any person who knowingly purchases a ticket of admission to such place, or is present thereat, or witnesses such spectacle, is an aider and abettor."
The first phrase of this sentence is directed towards those individuals who knowingly purchase a ticket of admission to "such place." When viewed in the entire context of the statute, the term "such place" appears to refer to a site or location being used or maintained for cockfights or other animal fights. This phrase does not present a problem of uncertainty since it is clear that it makes it an offense for an individual to pay the price of admission with the knowledge that he or she is purchasing a ticket for admission to a location being used for animal fights.
The remaining portion of the sentence presents a different situation. By its literal terms, it states that an individual's mere presence violates the statute. On the surface, there initially appears to be no problem with this particular segment of the statute. However, upon closer scrutiny, it becomes evident that there exists an ambiguity as to whether this specific prohibition restricts presence at a cockfight in progress or proscribes the mere presence of an individual at a facility used for cockfights, or designed or intended for such use, regardless of whether a fight is in progress at the time such individual is present.
In the case at bar, it appears that a cockfight event was in progress at the time the Clermont County Sheriff's Department conducted its raid although the record does not demonstrate whether cocks were then actually in combat. Be that as it may, such a factual distinction does not save the statute's failure to precisely define what type of conduct is prohibited since other courts have found legislation proscribing presence at a cockfight to be unconstitutional even when two birds were engaged in combat at the time of the arrest. See, e.g., State v. Abellano (1968), 50 Haw. Hawaii,
The statute also fails to specify whether the culpable mental state of "knowingly" only defines the act of purchasing an admission ticket or whether it also defines the acts of being present or witnessing a cockfight. In our opinion "knowingly," as mentioned in the statute, only applies to the purchase of a ticket for admission to an animal fight and is not a prerequisite mental state for the act of being present at an animal fight. This discrepancy is even more obvious when R.C.
Without further explanation or delineation in the statute, the phrase pertaining to presence is so imprecise that an individual of ordinary intelligence would be unable to determine what conduct is being prohibited. With such an unascertainable standard, the statute fails to define the offense of being present at a cockfight with the degree of sufficient certainty required to place an individual on notice as to what conduct or action on his or her part will result in a violation of the statute. We therefore hold that R.C.
As additional support for their argument that R.C.
Appellants in the case at bar argue that R.C.
We have already addressed the issue of whether the culpable mental state of "knowingly" as set forth in the last sentence of R.C.
The cruel and inhumane manner in which animals are treated when forced to engage in mutual combat, whether for profit or the personal amusement of the spectators, can neither be condoned nor tolerated. Likewise, it is the duty of the government to take those appropriate steps to curtail such activities and punish those who engage in and promote such activities. The animal fights statute is aimed at preventing cruelty to animals. Making it a crime to promote, participate in or be employed at a cockfight provides an effective basis for enforcing a policy against cruelty to animals without unnecessarily infringing on the freedom of association. However, the government, in an attempt to terminate and control such abusive treatment of animals, may not implement or establish laws which, while enforcing such governmental policy, also impermissibly infringe upon or burden an individual's constitutionally protected right of innocent associations. R.C.
We therefore conclude that the provision of R.C.
However, the convictions of the remaining appellants who were found guilty of maintaining property for use in cockfighting and of participating in cockfighting — Junior L. Wear, Betty Wear, Duke A. Blevins, Rockey J. Eaves, Julius M. Jackson, Dewey Lowson, Richard L. McQuitty, Keith L. Nickell, Derrick Sizemore, Gilbert B. Spaulding, William Stocker, Robert L. Wear, and Rufus Bex, Jr. — are hereby affirmed.
It is the order of this court that the judgment herein appealed from be, and the same hereby is, affirmed in part and reversed in part.
Judgment affirmed in part and reversed in part.
HENDRICKSON, P.J., KOEHLER and JONES, JJ., concur.