City of Dayton v. Davis

735 N.E.2d 939, 136 Ohio App. 3d 26, 1999 Ohio App. LEXIS 5549
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 24, 1999
DocketC.A. Case No. 17507. T.C. Case No. 98 CR 9505.
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 735 N.E.2d 939 (City of Dayton v. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Dayton v. Davis, 735 N.E.2d 939, 136 Ohio App. 3d 26, 1999 Ohio App. LEXIS 5549 (Ohio Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

Frederick N. Young, Judge.

Defendant-appellant, Gilbert A. Davis, appeals his convictions on one count of menacing by stalking in violation of R.C. 2903.211, and one count of aggravated menacing in violation of R.C.G.O. 135.05(A). 1 In his sole assignment of error, he claims both convictions were unsupported by sufficient evidence and against the manifest weight of the evidence. We affirm.

According to the evidence presented by the prosecution, the defense.having presented none, the events culminating in Davis’s convictions have their genesis in 1996, when he was a second-year law student at the University of Dayton School of Law (“UDSL”). In October of that year, he began dating a first-year law student, Johanna Barba, in spite of the fact that he was married and living with his wife and son at the time. According to the evidence produced at trial, Barba and Davis’s relationship continued until the beginning of December 1997, at which time Davis demanded that Barba either cease studying with her classmate, Dan Perrico, or end her relationship with Davis. Barba chose to do the latter, then left the Dayton area over the winter break from school. While away, she was able to access her e-mail account provided to all students at UDSL. She received an unknown number of e-mails from Davis in which he stated he was starving himself to death and described the pain he would suffer in the process of doing so.

Upon her return to UDSL, Davis apologized profusely amid tears, and begged Barba to give him another chance, promising that he would be less controlling and more supportive of her academic endeavors. The relationship resumed, but after approximately one month, Barba determined that its quality was no different than before, and she told Davis it was over. Shortly thereafter, on the night of February 22 or the early morning hours of February 23, 1998, Davis attempted suicide by ingesting a combination of alcohol and drugs.

In the days, weeks, and months following his suicide attempt, Davis sent Barba numerous e-mails telling her that he had been researching her home town in New Jersey and regularly spending time in a park near Barba’s apartment. Near the *29 end of April 1998, Davis also sent e-mails to Barba’s parents in New Jersey, and a friend of Barba’s at UDSL, Susan Branstetter. No explicit threats of harm to Barba were made in any of the e-mails, but Davis’s tone in them fluctuated between despair over the break-up, anger, threats to commit suicide, a desire to see Barba in pain, and blaming Barba for ruining Davis’s life. Davis also included in his e-mails to Barba details of her television viewing and social activities, which he could only have known by watching her, and a link to a web site he had created. Davis stated he was willing to make the details of his relationship with Barba public at UDSL in order to, as he put it, get his side of the story out.

The e-mail messages Davis sent to Barba put her in such fear for her safety that she changed her phone number and gave her new number only to her closest friends with a plea that they not give it to anyone else. She took to pushing her dresser across her door when she went to sleep and kept pepper spray by her bed. Barba also had motion detectors installed in her apartment and developed the habit of calling her friend, Branstetter, to let her know when she was coming and going from her apartment, in case anything should happen to her. In addition, she contacted either the University of Dayton Police Department (“UD police”) or the Kettering Police Department numerous times concerning Davis’s e-mails and an incident where he apparently came to Barba’s apartment to leave a ring on her door. In March 1998, the police warned Davis to stay away from Barba’s apartment, and on April 8, 1998, Barba filed á complaint with the UD police.

Davis’s web page, which he created under the name “Gadbuddhaa,” portrayed, among other things, the image of Barba’s head transforming into a skull amidst flames, dripping blood, and charging horses ridden by robed skeletons. Interspersed with these images were quotations from the Bible and other sources in which the common theme was love, death, and destruction. On another web page, Davis had posted pictures of Barba’s home town in New Jersey, although when questioned by UD police officer Harry Sweigart, Davis denied ever having been to the town.

Barba accessed Davis’s web site on April 10, 1998, after having heard about its contents from her friends at UDSL. Recalling instances where Davis had described violent acts he had been involved in, his penchant for pointing out where television criminals had gone wrong in the commission of their crimes, and the timbre of his e-mails, Barba was convinced after viewing the web site that Davis was going to kill her. To her, the web site was a manifestation of a violent ideation against her rather than the suicidal thoughts Davis had previously exhibited. Branstetter and UDSL Professor Thomas Hagel noticed that Barba *30 was frightened, unnerved, and appeared to be a terrorized person during the spring of 1998.

Soon after viewing Davis’s web site, Barba moved into a hotel because of her fear of Davis. She remained there until she had completed her final examinations at UDSL in May, then immediately departed for New Jersey to complete her law school education there.

As a result of the complaint filed by Barba with the UD police, Davis was charged with three counts of aggravated menacing in violation of R.C.G.O. 135.05(A), three counts of menacing by stalking in violation of R.C. 2903.211, and eight counts of telephone harassment in violation of R.C.G.O. 137.03(B). The prosecutor subsequently dismissed all but one count of aggravated menacing, one count of menacing by stalking, and three counts of telephone harassment. At the close of the prosecution’s case in chief, the trial court granted Davis’s Crim.R. 29 motion on the telephone harassment counts, but denied it as to the other counts. Thus, only one count of aggravated menacing and one count of menacing by stalking went to the jury, which returned guilty verdicts on both counts. On October 20,1998, the trial court sentenced Davis to a term of one hundred eighty days on each count, to be served consecutively at the Dayton Human Rehabilitation Center. The same day, Davis filed his timely notice of appeal and requested that he be permitted to post bond pending appeal, and the trial court granted his request.

Davis presents two arguments in his sole assignment of error, which is set forth as follows:

“The trial court erred in denying defendant-appellant’s motion for acquittal made pursuant to Crim.R. 29, in that the verdict of the jury was based on insufficient evidence and was against the manifeist [sic ] weight of the evidence.”

In his first argument under his assigned error, Davis contends the trial court erred by overruling his Crim.R. 29 motion for acquittal as to the aggravated menacing and menacing by stalking convictions because they were unsupported by sufficient evidence. The Ohio Supreme Court has recently addressed the legal concept of the sufficiency of evidence. In State v. Thompkins (1997), 78 Ohio St.3d 380, 386, 678 N.E.2d 541

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Bluebook (online)
735 N.E.2d 939, 136 Ohio App. 3d 26, 1999 Ohio App. LEXIS 5549, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-dayton-v-davis-ohioctapp-1999.