City of Hamilton v. Barnett, Unpublished Decision (8-3-1998)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 3, 1998
DocketCase No. CA97-11-222.
StatusUnpublished

This text of City of Hamilton v. Barnett, Unpublished Decision (8-3-1998) (City of Hamilton v. Barnett, Unpublished Decision (8-3-1998)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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City of Hamilton v. Barnett, Unpublished Decision (8-3-1998), (Ohio Ct. App. 1998).

Opinions

OPINION
Defendant-appellant, Kenneth Barnett, appeals his convictions in the City of Hamilton Municipal Court for drug abuse and drug paraphernalia, in violation of the Codified Ordinances of the City of Hamilton, Sections 513.03 and 513.12, respectively. Appellant was fined $150 plus costs and sentenced to thirty days in jail. The jail time was suspended and appellant was given two years of reporting probation.

Appellant and three roommates were tenants of 833 Main Street, in the City of Hamilton, Butler County, Ohio. On or about September 6, 1997, the property owner, Sandra Kopp (Kopp) served the occupants with eviction notices. On the afternoon of September 9, 1997, at the request of his mother, Kopp, Doug Zeek (Zeek), a police officer for the City of Hamilton, arrived at 833 Main Street to forcibly evict appellant. At the time, Zeek was off duty and dressed in street clothes, but nevertheless had his duty gun with him. Zeek and appellant's versions of the events that followed are incongruous.

Zeek testified that he knocked on the door of 833 Main Street and identified himself as Kopp's son and a City of Hamilton Police Officer. "At that point he [appellant] opened the door and motioned. I came in." Zeek testified that "the place smelled like marijuana." Zeek testified that when he told appellant to leave the premises, appellant repeatedly refused, stating "he had no where to go." When Zeek went into the kitchen to call for a marked unit, he watched as appellant walked into the living room and over to an ashtray by the couch. Zeek testified that appellant either stepped on or kicked the ashtray under the couch. Zeek also testified that appellant then "took something, a tin and put it underneath the cushion." When Zeek requested that appellant return to the kitchen to wait for the other police officers, appellant responded "fuck you," and ran downstairs into the basement. In testimony, Zeek admitted that he drew his gun, stood at the top of the stairs, and requested that appellant come back upstairs. When appellant reached the top of the stairs, Zeek grabbed appellant's belt, put him against the wall, holstered his [Zeek's] gun, and searched appellant. During the search, Zeek testified that appellant began to struggle and squirm. Zeek then wrestled appellant to the floor, handcuffed his wrists, and placed him under arrest for criminal trespass.

Appellant testified that upon hearing a knock at the door, he "opened it approximately two inches and it came flying open." Appellant testified that Zeek then pushed his way into the house. Contrary to Zeek's testimony, appellant testified that when Zeek told him to get out, he refused to leave without first packing his belongings. Appellant stated that as he began to walk away from Zeek:

he caught up to me from behind and grabbed me by the hair and pushed me into the wall. He told me to get my hands up * * * and he put the muzzle of his gun into my back. * * * He started to kick my legs. * * * He reached around and got me in a head lock. Jerked me up off the ground about three times. Spun me around and I landed on my back on the floor. Had pinned my right arm beneath me. * * * [H]e began punching me in the back of the head. He hit me approximately six or seven times. * * * He told me to remain on the floor. As far as I knew, he still had his gun. I was terribly upset. He told me if I moved or said a word he would shoot me.

When the other police officers arrived, appellant was taken to the squad car. Zeek and another officer searched the property. Zeek recovered a hemostat and part of a hand-rolled marijuana cigarette in the ashtray. Under the couch cushion, in a tin cookie canister, Zeek discovered a baggie containing 2.13 grams of marijuana, rolling papers, a scale, and another hemostat. The canister also contained two video rental cards bearing appellant's name.

At trial, appellant presented evidence that in addition to himself, his roommates used the living room as a common area. Furthermore, appellant's roommates testified that they still had personal belongings in the house at the time of his arrest.

In addition to the original charge of criminal trespass, appellant was subsequently charged with: (1) drug abuse, (2) drug paraphernalia, and (3) resisting arrest. A bench trial took place on October 9, 1997. Prior to trial, the prosecutor indicated that he did not wish to prosecute the charge of criminal trespass and a Nolle Prosequi was entered. The record also reveals that no pretrial motion to suppress the evidence seized by Zeek was filed by appellant's counsel.

After the presentation of evidence, the trial court found that "since he was a tenant" appellant had "the legal right to be at the house" and therefore, was not trespassing. Additionally, because Zeek admitted that he initially arrested appellant only for criminal trespass, and the court found appellant was not trespassing, the court found appellant "Not Guilty of Resisting Arrest." The court then stated:

Officer Zeek was invited into the house by the defendant and Officer Zeek's discovery of the contents of the cookie canister and the roach and hemostat on the floor was legal. The Court would also point out that the introduction of all of this evidence was done without objection of Defense Counsel. All of the exhibits were introduced without objection of Defense Counsel. Defense Counsel also had opportunity to file a Motion to Suppress but saw fit not to do so. Therefore, this Court finds defendant Guilty of Drug Abuse and Possession of Drug Paraphernalia.

The trial court sentenced appellant as detailed above. Appellant appeals, raising three assignments of error.

In his first assignment of error appellant contends:

THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN ADMITTING EVIDENCE SEIZED AS A RESULT OF AN INVALID ARREST.

Appellant contends that because he was found not guilty of the only charge for which he was originally arrested (i.e., criminal trespass), and the only justification for the search in which the incriminating evidence was seized, the trial court erred in admitting such evidence at trial. Essentially, appellant makes a Fourth Amendment argument and urges this court to find that the incriminating evidence was improperly admitted.

We wish to note at the outset that we do not condone the warrantless seizure of evidence absent a lawful arrest, exigent circumstances, consent from the accused, or the discovery of evidence in plain view. However, due to certain procedural defects in this case, we cannot find that the trial court erred in admitting the seized evidence.

Crim.R. 12(B) addresses the timing and necessity of filing pretrial motions. Specifically, the rule provides:

"[t]he following must be raised before trial: * * * (3) Motions to suppress evidence, * * *." Crim.R. 12(G) then provides that "[f]ailure by the defendant * * * to make requests which must be made prior to trial, * * * shall constitute waiver thereof, but the court for good cause shown may grant relief from the waiver." (Emphasis added.)

While considering the question of whether a criminal defendant has complied with the requirements of Crim.R. 12, the Ohio Supreme Court has stated, "* * * Constitutional rights may be lost as finally as any others by a failure to assert them at the proper time." State v. Wade (1978), 53 Ohio St.2d 182, 190, (citations omitted). "Absent a pretrial motion to suppress, objections to evidence on constitutional grounds are deemed waived. See Crim.R. (B)(3) and (G)." State v. Savage (1980),1 Ohio App.3d 13

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Bluebook (online)
City of Hamilton v. Barnett, Unpublished Decision (8-3-1998), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-hamilton-v-barnett-unpublished-decision-8-3-1998-ohioctapp-1998.