In re L.F.

2012 Ohio 302
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 30, 2012
Docket10CA009880
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

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Bluebook
In re L.F., 2012 Ohio 302 (Ohio Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

[Cite as In re L.F., 2012-Ohio-302.]

STATE OF OHIO ) IN THE COURT OF APPEALS )ss: NINTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COUNTY OF LORAIN )

IN RE: L.F. C.A. No. 10CA09880

APPEAL FROM JUDGMENT ENTERED IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS COUNTY OF LORAIN, OHIO CASE No. 09JD25789

DECISION AND JOURNAL ENTRY

Dated: January 30, 2012

BELFANCE, Presiding Judge.

{¶1} Appellant, L.F., appeals from a judgment of the Lorain County Court of Common

Pleas, Juvenile Division, that adjudicated him a delinquent child for committing two counts of

gross sexual imposition pursuant to R.C. 2907.05(A)(4). For the reasons set forth below, we

reverse and remand the judgment of the trial court.

I.

{¶2} During early January 2009, Z.F., then nine years old, was playing a computer

game with his father and older half-brother, when the father reminisced about when he had

punished the older child for accessing pornographic websites on the family’s computer. The

father explained that he had been able to trace the boy’s internet activity on the computer

because each computer records a history of the websites it accesses. Immediately after that

discussion, Z.F. told his father about an incident that he remembered from the prior summer 2

during which two of his cousins, eight-year-old J.F. and fifteen-year-old L.F.,1 were viewing a

pornographic website and “sucking wieners.” After his father asked him if anything else had

happened, Z.F. further disclosed that L.F. had him sit on his lap while L.F. had his pants off.

Z.F.’s mother immediately contacted Lorain County Children Services and J.F.’s mother.

{¶3} The next day, Z.F. and J.F. were separately interviewed by a children services

caseworker, with some follow-up questioning by a police detective who sat in the room during

each interview. Aside from Z.F. and J.F. each stating that the three cousins went with a laptop

computer to J.F.’s bedroom, where L.F. pulled up a pornographic website, the statements of Z.F.

and J.F. varied sharply about anything else that happened in the room. Specifically, each child

recounted entirely different versions of where L.F. touched each of them. Despite the

inconsistencies in the witnesses’ statements, the Lorain County Prosecutor’s Office later filed a

complaint, alleging that L.F. was a delinquent child because he committed acts against Z.F. and

J.F. that would constitute gross sexual imposition if committed by an adult. The matter

proceeded to an adjudicatory hearing.

{¶4} When Z.F. and J.F. testified at the adjudicatory hearing, they continued to

contradict each other and each boy detailed the incident differently than he had before,

contradicted himself as he testified, and responded to numerous questions with the answer, “I

don’t know.” Neither witness neither explained the sequence of events in J.F.’s bedroom, nor

did either testify about what L.F. said or how he behaved before, during, or after the alleged

incidents. Nevertheless, the trial court found that L.F. had committed two counts of gross sexual

imposition by having sexual contact with Z.F. and J.F.

1 J.F. and Z.F. are first cousins; L.F. is their first cousin, once removed. 3

{¶5} Pursuant to Juv.R. 29(F)(3), L.F. requested written findings of fact and

conclusions of law, which the trial judge later issued. Through its findings of fact and

conclusions of law, the trial judge implicitly indicated that he did not believe the statements or

testimony about L.F. “sucking [J.F.’s] wiener,” but he did believe other statements and testimony

of Z.F. and J.F. that L.F. took J.F.’s hand by the wrist and forced him to touch L.F.’s penis and

that L.F. touched his penis to J.F.’s buttocks and Z.F.’s leg. L.F. appeals and raises two

assignments of error.

II.

ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR I

THE TRIAL COURT VIOLATED L.F.’S RIGHT TO DUE PROCESS UNDER THE FIFTH AND FOURTEENTH AMENDMENTS TO THE UNITED STATES CONSTITUTION, ARTICLE I, SECTION 16 OF THE OHIO CONSTITUTION, AND JUV.R. 29(E)(4) WHEN IT ADJUDICATED L.F. DELINQUENT OF GROSS SEXUAL IMPOSITION ABSENT PROOF OF EVERY ELEMENT OF THE CHARGE AGAINST HIM BY SUFFICIENT, COMPETENT, AND CREDIBLE EVIDENCE.

{¶6} L.F.’s first assignment of error challenges the sufficiency of evidence supporting

his delinquency adjudication. Although juvenile delinquency cases are technically civil in

nature, this Court applies the same sufficiency and manifest weight standards of review in a

juvenile delinquency case that it applies in an adult criminal appeal due to the “‘inherently

criminal aspects’ of delinquency proceedings * * *.” In re Z.B., 9th Dist. No. 09CA0039-M,

2010-Ohio-1345, ¶ 6; In re R.D.U., 9th Dist. No. 24225, 2008-Ohio-6131, ¶ 6.

{¶7} Although L.F.’s argument focuses primarily on contradictions between the

testimony of Z.F. and J.F. and challenges their credibility as witnesses against him, this Court’s

sufficiency review does not allow us to assess “whether the state’s evidence is to be believed,”

but instead requires us to determine “whether, if believed, the evidence against a defendant 4

would support a [delinquency adjudication].” State v. Thompkins, 78 Ohio St.3d 380, 390

(Cook, J., concurring). The relevant inquiry is whether, after viewing the evidence in a light

most favorable to the State, any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of

the crime proven beyond a reasonable doubt. In re M.M., 6th Dist. Nos. L-10-1267, L-10-1309,

and L-10-1310, 2011-Ohio-2962, ¶ 17, citing Thompkins at 386 (1997). This Court conducts its

sufficiency review de novo. State v. Williams, 9th Dist. No. 24731, 2009-Ohio-6955, ¶ 18, citing

Thompkins at 386.

{¶8} L.F. was adjudicated delinquent based on two counts of violating R.C.

2907.05(A)(4), which provides that “[n]o person shall have sexual contact with another [or] * * *

cause another * * * to have sexual contact with the offender * * * when * * * [t]he other person *

* * is less than thirteen years of age[.]” R.C. 2907.01(B) defines “sexual contact” as “any

touching of an erogenous zone of another, including without limitation the thigh, genitals, [or]

buttock * * * for the purpose of sexually arousing or gratifying either person.”

{¶9} The evidence before the trial court consisted of the testimony of J.F. and Z.F and

the statements that they made to others. Through their prior statements and testimony at the

hearing, J.F. and Z.F. stated that L.F. had committed several acts of inappropriately touching

them, including that L.F. had exposed his penis and forced J.F. to touch it with his hand, touched

his penis to the outside of J.F.’s jeans on his buttocks, and touched Z.F.’s pants with his exposed

penis. Also, J.F.’s testimony on cross-examination and Z.F.’s prior statements included brief

allegations that L.F. had performed fellatio on J.F.

{¶10} Because the State presented evidence that L.F. had touched each boy with his

exposed penis or required them to touch his penis, there was sufficient evidence that he

committed the requisite touching to constitute two acts of sexual contact because he caused each 5

of them to touch his genitals, an erogenous zone explicitly identified in R.C. 2907.01(B). R.C.

2907.05(A)(4). The State was also required to demonstrate that L.F. committed the acts of

touching “for the purpose of sexually arousing or gratifying either person.” R.C. 2907.01(B).

This Court has held that the trier of fact must infer from the evidence whether the defendant’s

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