In Re Lutseck, Unpublished Decision (12-29-2000)
This text of In Re Lutseck, Unpublished Decision (12-29-2000) (In Re Lutseck, Unpublished Decision (12-29-2000)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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.
Opinion
OPINION
On April 26, 1999, a complaint was filed against appellant, Jessica Lutseck, in the Trumbull County Court of Common Pleas, Juvenile Division, accusing her of disorderly conduct, in violation of R.C.
The matter was contested at a hearing held on July 6, 1999. At the hearing, Officer Brian Darbey of the Vienna Township Police Department testified that, on April 15, 1999, he went to appellant's house to investigate a possible hit-skip automobile accident involving appellant. According to Officer Darbey, when he got to the front door, appellant told him, "All you are is a mother fucking pig and we don't want you in our residence." She then proceeded to continuously yell "pig, mother fucking pig," while he tried to speak to her mother. Officer Darbey and appellant's mother agreed that he would come back later, when appellant's father was there. He testified that after he got in his car to leave, appellant ran up to the car and yelled at him, "All you are is a mother fucking pig and you're against me." Officer Darbey testified that he felt alarmed and threatened by appellant's behavior and comments and felt that she was going to attack him.
Appellant testified that the incident involving the hit-skip accident was not her fault and was the result of a dispute with members of the Kohn family who had previously assaulted her. She testified that she was frustrated because the Kohn family had repeatedly harassed her but police and school officials did nothing to stop them. Appellant testified that she only started yelling at Officer Darbey because she was upset that he would not listen to her side of the story. The charges for leaving the scene of an accident were eventually dismissed.
On July 9, 1999, the trial court found the charges filed against appellant to be true and adjudicated her a delinquent child. The court determined that appellant's "language and behavior was sufficient to prompt an immediate retaliatory breach of the peace by a reasonable person, removing the language from the realm of protected speech." Appellant raises the following assignment of error:
"The Ohio disorderly conduct statute, Ohio Revised Code, Section
2917.11 is unconstitutional as enforced by the Trumbull County Court of Common Pleas, Juvenile Division in this matter."
At issue in the current appeal is whether the words spoken by appellant are punishable as disorderly conduct or protected as free speech. Appellant asserts that she was merely exercising her First Amendment right to criticize a police officer. This argument has been raised frequently in litigation and has been categorized under the label of "fighting words."
In Ohio, the leading case on this subject is Cincinnati v. Karlan
(1974),
In response, the Supreme Court of Ohio held that "* * * persons may not be punished for speaking boisterous, rude or insulting words, even with the intent to annoy another, unless the words by their very utterance inflict injury or are likely to provoke the average person to an immediate retaliatory breach of the peace (citations omitted)." Karlan, 39 Ohio St.2d at paragraph one of the syllabus. It defined "fighting words" as "epithets, used in a public place and willfully directed at those who can hear them [that] are likely to provoke the average person to an immediate retaliatory breach of the peace * * *." Id. at paragraph two of the syllabus.
In State v. Wood (1996),
The judgment of the Trumbull County Court of Common Pleas, Juvenile Division is affirmed.
___________________ NADER, P.J.
O'NEILL, J., MAHONEY, J., Ret., Eleventh Appellate District, sitting by assignment, concur.
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