594 N.E.2d 1087 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1991
This is an appeal from a judgment entered by the Athens County Common Pleas Court dismissing the petition for post-conviction relief filed by Michael T. White, defendant-appellant.
Appellant assigns the following errors in his initial pro se brief.1 *552
Appellant assigns the following error through his appointed attorney:
"The trial court erred in denying defendant-appellant's first assignment of error in his petition for post-conviction relief on grounds that appellant's two felonies do not constitute a single act or transaction."
On November 29, 1983, an Athens County Grand Jury returned an indictment against appellant charging him with one count of aggravated burglary, two counts of aggravated robbery, and one count of felonious assault, with firearm specifications on each count. Appellant subsequently entered a plea of not guilty to the charges in the indictment, and following a jury trial, the jury returned verdicts finding appellant guilty of all charges specified in the indictment. On April 20, 1984, the trial court entered a judgment reflecting the jury verdicts and sentenced appellant on the aggravated burglary and felonious assault counts along with the firearm specifications with respect to those counts. The sentences with respect to the firearm specifications were three years of actual incarceration each, with such terms to be served consecutively to each other and also to be served prior to and consecutive to the other sentences. *553
On appeal from the April 20, 1984 trial court judgment of conviction and sentence, this court affirmed the judgment.State v. White (May 23, 1986), Athens App. No. 1230, unreported, 1986 WL 6048. On December 27, 1989, appellant filed a pro se
petition for post-conviction relief pursuant to R.C.
Appellant's first pro se assignment of error and his first assignment of error as briefed by his appointed appellate counsel raise the same issue and will be considered jointly. They assert that appellant was entitled to post-conviction relief where he was sentenced to consecutive terms of actual incarceration for firearm specifications to the offenses of aggravated burglary and felonious assault since both offenses arose from a single act or transaction.
R.C.
"(B) If an offender is convicted of, or pleads guilty to,two or more felonies and two or more specifications charging himwith having a firearm on or about his person or under his control while committing the felonies, each of the three-yearterms of actual incarceration imposed pursuant to this sectionshall be served consecutively with, and prior to, the life sentences or indefinite terms of imprisonment imposed pursuant to section
Accordingly, pursuant to R.C.
"We have examined the unreported cases in Ohio regarding the meaning of `same act or transaction.' Essentially, the reviewing courts have held that the word `transaction,' used in R.C.
Appellee asserts that the phrase "same act or transaction" in R.C.
"Notwithstanding the fact that the offenses of felonious assault and aggravated robbery committed by appellant were of dissimilar import and committed with a separate animus, we find that, under the circumstances of this case, both felonies were part of the same transaction, as contemplated by the General Assembly. Had the General Assembly intended to embody in R.C.
Consequently, we agree with appellant's contention that the "same act or transaction" determination should not be made in reference to the separate animus test of R.C.
In Walker, the Tenth Appellate District, in a case following its Crawford decision, upheld the imposition of two three-year terms of actual incarceration for firearm specifications to aggravated robbery and felonious assault *555
charges where the defendant robbed an individual in a restaurant of her purse at gunpoint and, while leaving the restaurant, fired at a police officer. The Walker court applied theCrawford definition of "same act or transaction" and determined that the two felonies were not the "same act or transaction" pursuant to R.C.
"Here, appellant's separate offenses were committed in sequence and occurred in close proximity to one another. They were not, however, logically connected, nor did they arise out of a common objective. One may commit an aggravated robbery, and surrender to pursuing officers. If one turns and fires on those pursuing officers, that is an entirely separate offense."
Similarly, in Lowe, the Third Appellate District held, by utilizing the dictionary definitions of the terms "act" and "transaction" and additionally relying upon R.C.
Appellant argues that the trial court's reliance onWalker and Lowe was erroneous since both cases improperly applied the R.C.
In the case at bar, appellant broke into the house of Garnet Fletcher with a firearm on or about his person and, following his commission of the crime of aggravated burglary, shot at Athens Police Officer Ernest Antle, thereby committing the felonious assault offense. Although both offenses were committed in sequence and in close proximity to one another, they did not necessarily arise from a common objective, i.e., the single objective of the aggravated burglary was to deprive Fletcher of her property whereas the objective of the felonious assault was to escape capture. Walker, supra; Lowe, supra; cf. Crawford,supra (felonious assault and aggravated robbery offenses were the same act or transaction where during the robbery, the defendant shot the person he was attempting to rob); Moore,supra (aggravated robberies were the same act or transaction where a defendant stole both *556 cash register proceeds from the store and personal property and money from the store manager); Fudge, supra (aggravated robbery and attempted murder offenses were the same act or transaction where the defendant had forced the victim at gunpoint to turn over his money to the defendant and then the defendant attempted to murder the victim).
Accordingly, since the two felonies that were committed by appellant were not committed with a similar "purpose directed toward a single objective," Crawford, supra, the trial court did not err in rejecting appellant's assertion in his petition for post-conviction relief that his consecutive sentences for the two related firearm specifications were in contravention of R.C.
Appellant's pro se second assignment of error asserts that the trial court erred in dismissing his petition for post-conviction relief because, at trial, the state failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that appellant had on or about his person or under his control an operable firearm.
R.C.
In the instant case, Fletcher, Athens Patrolman Kenneth Romine, and Athens Police Captain Clyde Beasley testified as to the presence of a bullet hole in Fletcher's bedpost that could not be accounted for by the shots fired by law enforcement officers. Patrolman Gary Crabtree testified to having heard a shot within the Fletcher residence while appellant was inside the Fletcher residence and that he saw appellant exit the house with a gun in his hand. Finally, Officer Antle testified that appellant, upon fleeing the Fletcher home, fired shots at him, one of which caused a bullet hole in his boot and injury to his foot. Pursuant to Gaines and Murphy, supra, this was sufficient evidence of operability to support the firearm specification convictions.2 Accordingly, in that the trial court did not err in dismissing appellant's *557 petition for post-conviction relief, appellant's pro se second assignment of error is overruled, and the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.3
Judgment affirmed.
STEPHENSON, P.J., and GREY, J., concur.