State Ex Rel. Davis v. Cleary

602 N.E.2d 1183, 77 Ohio App. 3d 494, 1991 Ohio App. LEXIS 6523
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 30, 1991
DocketNo. 61370.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 602 N.E.2d 1183 (State Ex Rel. Davis v. Cleary) 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
State Ex Rel. Davis v. Cleary, 602 N.E.2d 1183, 77 Ohio App. 3d 494, 1991 Ohio App. LEXIS 6523 (Ohio Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

Krupansky, Chief Justice.

Relator, Christopher Davis, commenced this mandamus action against respondent, Judge Patricia Cleary of the Court of Common Pleas of Cuyahoga County, to compel her to vacate his sentences for various firearm specifications as well as an indefinite sentence. The gravamen of his claim is that the judge did not follow the law of the case doctrine when she resentenced him after this court remanded the case. Judge Cleary has moved to dismiss the mandamus, and in response Davis has moved for summary judgment. For the following reasons, this court grants the judge’s motion to dismiss, denies Davis’s dispositive motion and dismisses the writ.

This case arises out of Davis’s convictions for three counts of aggravated robbery, two counts of kidnapping, two counts of grand theft and one count of felonious assault, all with penalty-enhancing specifications. These convictions were for three separate armed robberies of women awaiting service at drive-through windows of fast food restaurants between October 24, 1987, and December 11, 1987. In the first incident Davis and his accomplice put a gun to Olwen Herold’s head while she waited in line and forced their way into her car. They then compelled her to drive away, while they rummaged through her purse looking for a bank card in order to withdraw money from her account. When they discovered she did not have a bank card, they ordered her out of her car and drove away.

In the second incident Davis and his accomplice again forced entry into a car by putting a gun to Sandra Wingfield’s neck. This time their victim had a bank withdrawal card, and they forced her to give them $300 from her account. Again they ordered the owner out of her own car and drove away. In the third incident, the accomplice approached the victim’s car and threatened her with a gun. When she opened the door to let him in, he pushed the seat forward and the victim accelerated to get away. The accomplice wounded her in the head. The police apprehended Davis and his accomplice shortly after the third incident. At the time of the arrest, the police recovered a gun.

*496 At trial Herold and Wingfield positively identified Davis as one of the assailants. 1 However, they could not identify the gun confiscated after the third incident as the gun which was used on them. The accomplice testified against Davis because he had entered into a plea bargain in which charges from the first two incidents were nolled in exchange for his testimony. Although Davis presented an alibi defense, the judge found him guilty on each count and all but two of the specifications. Specifically, Count 8 (grand theft of Olwen Herold’s car) carried both firearm and violence specifications. On this count the judge found him guilty of the firearm specification, but not guilty on the violence specification.

The trial court sentenced Davis to consecutive terms of ten to twenty-five years’ imprisonment for each aggravated robbery conviction, plus three consecutive terms of three years’ imprisonment on the attendant gun specifications. The trial court further sentenced him to concurrent terms of ten to twenty-five years on the kidnapping counts and six to fifteen years for felonious assault. The court also imposed indefinite sentences of three to ten years for both counts of grand theft, plus three years for each remaining gun specification.

On appeal, State v. Davis (Dec. 21, 1989), Cuyahoga App. No. 56296, unreported, 1989 WL 155154, this court affirmed Davis’s convictions, but reversed some of the sentences, several of which were the gun specifications for counts 3-8. In a previous decision, State v. Gaines (1989), 46 Ohio St.3d 65, 545 N.E.2d 68, the Ohio Supreme Court had ruled that prior to imposition of the three years’ actual incarceration for possession of a firearm, the state must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the firearm was operable or could readily be made so. Furthermore, the Supreme Court had held that the evidence (witnesses’ observations of the unfired gun) was insufficient to establish that the gun was operable. Therefore, this court in Davis’s appeal held that because neither of the two victims in counts 3-8 offered evidence that the gun drawn on them was operable, the state failed to prove the firearm specification beyond a reasonable doubt.

Additionally, this court ruled that an indefinite sentence for Count 8 was improper. Under R.C. 2929.11(G), an indefinite sentence may not be imposed unless the indictment contains a violence specification. This court reasoned that because the trial court found Davis not guilty of the violence specification, this indefinite sentence should be vacated. Accordingly, this court *497 reversed the indefinite sentence for Count 8 and the firearm specifications contained in Counts 3-8 and remanded the cause for resentencing.

On March 7,1990, between the time of the remand and the resentencing, the Ohio Supreme Court issued State v. Murphy (1990), 49 Ohio St.3d 206, 551 N.E.2d 932, in which it explicitly modified Gaines. The court reaffirmed the principle that the state must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the firearm was operable. However, this could now be established by a totality of the circumstances test, such as the description of the gun by eyewitnesses, the manner in which it was used, and threats made by the perpetrator.

Subsequently, Judge Cleary resentenced Davis. Relying upon Murphy, she reimposed the original sentence. She apparently reasoned Murphy essentially “reversed” this court’s decision in Davis’s appeal and allowed her to reinstate the firearm specifications and the entire original sentence.

Davis now argues that this court issued a clear mandate to the common pleas court to vacate the sentences for the gun specifications and the indefinite sentence. This mandate became final when the state failed to appeal the decision to the Ohio Supreme Court. In other words the decision then became the law of the case. At that time Judge Cleary had no discretion but to follow the mandate, and she exceeded her authority when she relied upon Murphy to reimpose the initial sentence. Therefore, the mandamus should issue because Judge Cleary had a clear legal duty to resentence pursuant to this court’s mandate.

Although the courts of Ohio have recently reaffirmed the continued vitality of the law-of-the-case doctrine, they have also consistently noted that intervening decisions of superior courts present an exception to the doctrine. In State ex rel. Potain v. Mathews (1979), 59 Ohio St.2d 29, 32, 13 O.O.3d 17, 18, 391 N.E.2d 343, 345, the Ohio Supreme Court held: “A lower court has no discretion, absent extraordinary circumstances, to disregard the mandate of a superior court in a prior appeal in the same case. An example of such a circumstance would be where a holding of the Court of Appeals is inconsistent with an intervening decision by this court.” In 1984 the Ohio Supreme Court reiterated this principle in the syllabus of the case, Nolan v. Nolan

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Bluebook (online)
602 N.E.2d 1183, 77 Ohio App. 3d 494, 1991 Ohio App. LEXIS 6523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-davis-v-cleary-ohioctapp-1991.