477 N.E.2d 656 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1984
The defendant-appellant, Frankie L. Williams, while operating a motor vehicle on April 17, 1983, was cited by police for violation of three separate offenses under the state motor vehicle laws, all said to have arisen from the instant operation: (1) operating a motor vehicle while under a license suspension, contrary to R.C.
Then, on August 10, 1983, the defendant appeared before a judge of the same court on the third of the three charges, operating a vehicle without a valid operator's license. Again waiving counsel and entering a no contest plea, the defendant was found guilty and sentenced to imprisonment of one hundred eighty days, all but twelve of which were suspended, a $500 fine and costs, and two years of probation. The defendant then secured counsel, who timely filed a motion for relief from this latter conviction, designated "Defendant's Motion For, In the Alternative, (1) Arrest of Judgment, or (2) Withdrawal of No Contest Plea, After Sentence, or (3) For New Trial." Essentially, this motion *106
argued for relief after judgment based on the manifest inconsistency between the earlier conviction for driving under asuspension, which assumes the existence of a valid, albeit suspended, operator's license, and the instant conviction for operating without a valid license. This motion was overruled, and the instant appeal resulted. A single assignment of error is presented for review, in which defendant asserts error in the judgment and sentence for violation of R.C.
The defendant was initially convicted of violating R.C.
"No person whose license or registration or non-resident'soperating privilege has been suspended or revoked under sections
The defendant's subsequent conviction, the subject of this appeal, was under R.C.
"No person * * * shall operate any motor vehicle upon a highway * * * unless such person, upon application, has been licensed as an operator or chauffeur by the registrar of motor vehicles under section
Facially, the two statutes would appear to describe wholly separate and disparate offenses: the latter proscribes operation without a license; the former forbids operation when a license has been suspended. The defendant argues that one cannot, by definition, be guilty at the same time of operating a vehicle under a suspended license and operating a vehicle without a license. Under these circumstances, he insists, the offenses are clearly mutually exclusive. If the defendant on April 17, 1983, possessed an otherwise valid operator's license, which clearly appears to have been the case,1 and driving privileges thereunder had earlier been suspended, as defendant concedes, the appropriate charge was R.C.
Indeed, the state's grievance against the defendant for the instant single act was effectively concluded by the initial court proceedings on May 18, 1983, when he was found guilty of and was sentenced for operating his vehicle under suspension contrary to R.C.
The state argues, however, that R.C.
The state objects to the application of principles of resjudicata and/or collateral estoppel to the instant case, pointing out that the precedents for application of these doctrines involve cases, unlike the present, where the defendant was earlier acquitted of an offense. For obvious reasons, this sequence of events will generally be the rule, but the use of that aspect of the double jeopardy rule called collateral estoppel in cases like the instant one is certainly not unprecedented. See, e.g., State v. Emery (1958),
We conclude that the defendant's assignment of error is meritorious and accordingly reverse the judgment below, *108 and order the defendant discharged therefrom.
Judgment reversed.
KEEFE, P.J., and KLUSMEIER, J., concur.