Gordon Stanley v. Melody L. Turner

6 F.3d 399, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 25688, 1993 WL 387592
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedOctober 1, 1993
Docket92-4145
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 6 F.3d 399 (Gordon Stanley v. Melody L. Turner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gordon Stanley v. Melody L. Turner, 6 F.3d 399, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 25688, 1993 WL 387592 (6th Cir. 1993).

Opinion

MILBURN, Circuit Judge.

Petitioner Gordon Stanley, an Ohio prisoner, appeals from the judgment of the district court dismissing his petition for a writ of habeas corpus filed pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. On appeal, the issues are (1) whether Ohio’s involuntary manslaughter statute, O.R.C. § 2903.04, contains a constitutionally satisfactory element of mental culpability, and (2) whether the trial jury was correctly instructed as to that element of the case. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

I.

On February 26,1988, in Chillicothe, Ohio, Raymond J. Pack, the superintendent of a vocational school, died as a result of petitioner’s crashing his automobile into the automobile in which Pack was a passenger. The evidence shows that petitioner had been closely following another vehicle operating at the posted speed limit of 35 mph. Suddenly, however, petitioner swerved across the double yellow line that forbids passing along that section of Kopp Street and accelerated past the vehicle ahead of him. At a high rate of speed, estimated by an expert at 52 mph, petitioner collided with the vehicle in which Pack was riding, spinning it 360 degrees and knocking it up onto the sidewalk. That vehicle, operated by Mrs. Pack, had just entered Kopp Street from a side street.

Petitioner Stanley was charged with involuntary manslaughter and aggravated vehicular homicide. As clarified by a bill of particulars, the involuntary manslaughter count charged petitioner with proximately causing the death of Raymond Pack while committing or attempting to commit any of four misdemeanors; viz., speeding in violation of O.R.C. § 4511.21, reckless operation of a motor vehicle in violation of O.R.C. § 4511.20, operating a motor vehicle without reasonable control in violation of O.R.C. § 4511.202, and crossing a double yellow line in violation of O.R.C. § 4511.31. The first three offenses are classified as misdemeanors under Ohio law, the fourth as a minor misdemeanor.

The jury convicted petitioner of involuntary manslaughter and vehicular homicide, the lesser included offense of aggravated vehicular homicide. The trial court sentenced petitioner Stanley to incarceration for between two and ten years. The Ohio Court of Appeals affirmed the conviction on direct appeal, and the Ohio Supreme Court denied petitioner’s motion for leave to appeal. Petitioner then brought this habeas action in the district court contending that his Fourteenth Amendment right to due process of law had been violated in that he was convicted of a felony that did not contain as one of its elements a culpable mental state. The district court entered judgment for defendant Warden Melody Turner, and this timely appeal followed.

II.

We review a district court’s ruling on a petition for habeas corpus de novo but with complete deference to such of the state court’s findings of fact as are supported by the evidence. Lundy v. Campbell, 888 F.2d 467, 469 (6th Cir.1989), cert. denied, 495 U.S. 950, 110 S.Ct. 2212, 109 L.Ed.2d 538 (1990). This case presents only questions of law.

Petitioner argues that the Ohio involuntary manslaughter statute violates the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment unless it is construed to include the element of mens rea or some element of criminal intent that requires proof of a culpable mental state beyond strict liability. On its face, O.R.C. § 2903.04(B) does not specify a particular culpable mental state as an element of the crime. It provides:

*402 No person shall cause the death of another as a proximate result of the offender’s committing or attempting to commit a misdemeanor.

There is no doubt but that Ohio, in enacting this law, elected to define involuntary manslaughter in terms of death caused by predicate offenses, thus intentionally rejecting the option of defining involuntary manslaughter in terms of reckless conduct. '

As relevant to our inquiry, involuntary manslaughter at common law was an unexcused, unintentional homicide resulting from the commission of a criminal act not amounting to a felony nor naturally tending to cause death or great bodily harm. Clark & Marshall, Crimes (1952) 353-354, Section 262. Essentially, that common-law unlawful act manslaughter concept was carried forward in Ohio’s statutory treatment of involuntary manslaughter until the adoption of the new criminal code in 1974.
When the new criminal code was introduced in the Ohio General Assembly, it included a reckless homicide provision as a substitute for the former statute which had punished conduct without reference to a specific culpable mental state. However, as the result of the legislative process, the reckless homicide provision was dropped in favor of a section retaining traditional unlawful act manslaughter concepts, in the form of the present involuntary manslaughter. statute. Goldsmith, Involuntary Manslaughter: Review and Commentary on Ohio Law (1979), 40 Ohio St.L.J. 569.

State v. Losey, 23 Ohio App.3d 93, 23 OBR 158, 491 N.E.2d 379, 381 (1985). The court in Losey went on to hold that the Ohio involuntary manslaughter statute was not unconstitutionally defective by virtue of a supposed failure to specify the degree of culpability necessary for conviction. It reasoned that the “criminal intent as an element of ... involuntary manslaughter is supplied by the criminal intent to do the underlying unlawful act of which the homicide is a consequence,” id., 491 N.E.2d at 384, and concluded that the Ohio General Assembly meant to adopt this “traditional concept of transferred intent ...” when it enacted the involuntary manslaughter statute. Id. Thus, the culpable mental state requisite to a conviction of involuntary manslaughter is the culpable mental state of the underlying misdemeanor.

In accordance with these principles, the trial court charged the jury that petitioner might be convicted of involuntary manslaughter if he “caused the death of Raymond J. Pack as a proximate result of committing one or more” of the misdemeanors specified in the indictment. J.A. 300. The court then properly defined the four underlying misdemeanors.

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Bluebook (online)
6 F.3d 399, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 25688, 1993 WL 387592, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gordon-stanley-v-melody-l-turner-ca6-1993.