Mosley v. Eberlin, 08 Be 7 (12-12-2008)

2008 Ohio 6593
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 12, 2008
DocketNo. 08 BE 7.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2008 Ohio 6593 (Mosley v. Eberlin, 08 Be 7 (12-12-2008)) 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
Mosley v. Eberlin, 08 Be 7 (12-12-2008), 2008 Ohio 6593 (Ohio Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION *Page 2
¶{1} Plaintiff-appellant Dierre Mosley appeals from the decision of the Belmont County Common Pleas Court dismissing his habeas action. On appeal, he urges that he attached sufficient commitment papers in support of his petition and that the trial court erred in failing to realize that a lack of jurisdiction by the sentencing court is an exception for defendants who have an adequate legal remedy. For the following reasons, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.

STATEMENT OF THE CASE
¶{2} On September 13, 1983, after pleading guilty in Summit County Case Number CR-1983-06-0664, appellant was sentenced to consecutive sentences of five to twenty-five years for rape (the sexually oriented offense at issue herein) and four to fifteen years for kidnapping. These sentences were to run concurrently with Summit County Case Number CR-1983-02-0238, wherein appellant had pled guilty and had been sentenced to concurrent sentences of one to five years for breaking and entering and four to twenty-five years for aggravated burglary.

¶{3} According to appellant, he was paroled on June 1, 1990, after serving seven years. Within a year of his release on parole, appellant was arrested, resulting in Summit County Case Number CR-1991-05-1009. On August 8, 1991, he pled guilty to burglary and was sentenced to eight to fifteen years in prison. Whether his parole was also revoked at this time on his various offenses, most specifically the parole on the rape offense, becomes important due to the following enactment.

¶{4} On July 1, 1997, Chapter 2950, Ohio's sexual predator act, went into effect. It provided in pertinent part that an offender is subject to registration with the sheriff regardless of when the sexually oriented offense was committed, where the offender was sentenced for the sexually oriented offense to a prison term and where on or after July 1, 1997, the offender was released in any manner from the prison term. See R.C. 2950.04(A)(1)(a). See, also, former R.C. 2950.09(C) (if convicted of and sentenced to a sexually oriented offense prior to January 1, 1997 and if, on or *Page 3 after January 1, 1997, the offender is serving a term of imprisonment, the department of rehabilitation and corrections could notify the court that a sexual predator hearing was advisable).

¶{5} After enactment of Chapter 2950 and before appellant's December 1, 1998 release on parole, the Summit County Common Pleas Court ordered appellant conveyed to court for a sexual predator hearing in order to have appellant adjudicated a sexual predator on top of the automatic registration requirement for sexually oriented offenders. On October 20, 1998, that court classified appellant as a sexual predator and ordered him to report within seven days of his release from prison. He did not appeal this decision.

¶{6} Appellant states that he was returned to prison in March of 2000, apparently for violations of the sexual predator requirements, and he advises that he was not released again until July 2004. He was then arrested twice in 2005 for failure to register his change of address. On December 1, 2005, after pleading guilty to two felony charges of failure to register a change of address in violation of R.C. 2950.05(E), appellant was sentenced to two years on each count to run concurrently with each other. See Summit County Common Pleas Number CR-2005-06-1995. Because his parole had also been revoked due to these new convictions, he was not released from prison after serving the two years.

¶{7} Consequently, on February 6, 2008, appellant filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the Belmont County Common Pleas Court against the warden of the Belmont Correctional Institute, where he was being held. Appellant pointed out that the failure to register a change of address offense requires as an element that the person be required to register under R.C. 2950.04. He then alleged that only those being imprisoned for a sexually oriented offense after the July 1, 1997 effective date of Chapter 2950 could be forced to register upon release. He claimed that he was never imprisoned for a sexually oriented offense after his June 1, 1990 parole release, construing his imprisonment after July 1, 1997 as unrelated to the 1983 rape conviction. Based upon this claim, he concluded that the Summit County Common Pleas Court lacked jurisdiction to convict and sentence him for failure to register a change of address. *Page 4 ¶{8} He attached the following documents to his habeas petition: the September 1983 judgment entry sentencing him on the rape and kidnapping; the December 2005 judgment entry sentencing him on the failure to register a change of address convictions; a parole board screening document showing that his most recent parole revocation was based upon the failure to register offense; and, an October 2007 parole board decision showing that his parole revocation would continue and he would remain incarcerated even after the two-year concurrent sentences expired.

¶{9} The warden responded by filing a motion to dismiss appellant's habeas petition. Procedurally, the warden stated that appellant failed to attach all necessary commitment papers such as the sentencing entry in his initial 1983 conviction for breaking and entering and aggravated burglary, the 1991 sentencing entry for burglary and all other relevant parole revocation decisions (especially the revocation after the 1991 crime). Substantively, the warden alleged that appellant had an adequate remedy at law and that appellant was attempting to use habeas as a substitute for a direct appeal, post-conviction relief petition or a petition for a writ of mandamus.

¶{10} Appellant filed a memorandum in opposition arguing that the attached commitment papers were sufficient as he was incarcerated for, and his parole was revoked as a result of, the December 2005 sentence on his convictions for failure to register a change of address. Appellant then alleged that where a judgment is void for lack of jurisdiction, there is an exception to the adequate remedy at law test.

¶{11} On March 19, 2008, the trial court dismissed appellant's habeas petition. The court noted that habeas is not a substitute for other remedies and held that appellant was improperly attempting to use habeas in order to reverse alleged errors of a court that had jurisdiction. The court also found that appellant failed to attach all relevant commitment papers in violation of R.C. 2725.04(D). Appellant filed timely notice of appeal resulting in the case before us.

¶{12} Before proceeding to address appellant's assignments of error, we note that after the briefs were filed, appellant filed a change of address with this court showing that he was released from prison on June 10, 2008. A habeas petition generally becomes moot when the prisoner is released from prison. Crase v. Bradshaw, 108 Ohio St.3d 212,2006-Ohio-663, ¶ 5. See, also, Pewitt v. Lorain *Page 5 Correctional Institution (1992), 64 Ohio St.3d 470, 472.

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Bluebook (online)
2008 Ohio 6593, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mosley-v-eberlin-08-be-7-12-12-2008-ohioctapp-2008.