State v. Bailey, Unpublished Decision (6-21-2002)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 21, 2002
DocketAppeal No. C-010641, Trial No. C-01CRB-9340.
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Bailey, Unpublished Decision (6-21-2002) (State v. Bailey, Unpublished Decision (6-21-2002)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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State v. Bailey, Unpublished Decision (6-21-2002), (Ohio Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION.
In this case, we are confronted with the issue of just how far the First Amendment protects sexually inappropriate comments to the opposite sex, and under what circumstances a person's refusal to desist, when he knows his comments are offensive to the listener, crosses the line between protected speech and disorderly conduct under R.C. 2917.11(A)(5). The twenty-nine-year-old defendant-appellant, Brian Bailey, argues that his admittedly "dumb" sexually-oriented comments to a female teenager, even after she had asked him to leave her alone, were protected free speech under the First Amendment, and that his physical conduct following her around a public fitness complex in order to make such comments, — was too innocuous to rise to the level of criminal conduct. We disagree and thus affirm.

The Prosecution's Case

Lauren Wulker was at the Mercy HealthPlex in Anderson Township on January 25, 2001, between seven and eight o'clock at night, with her mother, Janie. At the time, Lauren was sixteen years old, wearing a McNicholas High School sweatshirt with her last name on it. While her mother worked out in the gym, Lauren went to the track. After Lauren began stretching before running, Bailey, an unmarried stockbroker, approached her and struck up a conversation about her participation in high-school soccer. Bailey then ran a lap or two while Lauren continued to stretch. When he was through, Bailey approached her again and asked if she could "do the splits."

Lauren testified that the question caught her off guard. Instead of answering the question directly, she left to go run laps. As she ran, Lauren noticed that Bailey, who was sitting on a bench, "watched me from one end of the track to the other." After running, she stopped to cool off. Bailey approached her again and challenged her to a race. She testified that she then jogged to the other end of the track to get away from him, and that Bailey ran after her and continued to try to make conversation. It was at that point, Lauren testified, that she turned her back to him and told him to get away from her.

Bailey, however, did not leave her alone. Rather, according to Lauren, he asked her if she had a boyfriend, what his name was, and if he ever pressured her into doing things "like doing it." Lauren testified, "I just said, no, you know, and just kind of tried to walk away again. His response was, `Oh, that's because you're a good little girl, and mom raised you good.' And then he said, `You know, you're just a little puppy dog. What are you, sixteen?' And then he said, `Well, you know, in my eyes, girls mature a lot faster than guys, so you're really eighteen or nineteen.'"

Lauren responded to this harangue by once again asking Bailey to leave her alone. She testified that she again attempted to walk away, but that Bailey followed, continuing to ask her uninvited personal questions. As she was walking, Bailey repeated her name and the name of her school, and then told her that he was going to "look for her" in the news and "watch for [her] at school." Lauren testified that by this point she had become "scared." In her words, "I didn't expect a 28- or 29-year-old man to approach me and ask me sexually inappropriate questions." She described feeling "violated," "alarmed," and "confused." She also testified that Bailey's behavior made her feel "paranoid" because she interpreted his words to mean that Bailey would come looking for her at school.

Lauren testified that she then left the track area to join her mother in the weight room. She testified that Bailey also went into the weight room, and that every time she went to a different weight machine, "I could see him looking at me." She stated, "I could see him, like, following — like not so much as like right behind me, but just like inching his way closer to what machine I was on."

At that point, after consulting with a friend, Lauren told her mother about Bailey's behavior, and that she was scared and wanted to leave. Janie Wulker described Lauren as "shaking" and on "the verge of tears." After speaking to several employees of the HealthPlex, Janie then confronted Bailey on the stairwell, grabbing him by the arm. According to Janie, Bailey told her that he was just "playing" with Lauren, and then he accused her, Janie, of being "crazy," "sick," and a "lesbian." Janie responded by telling Bailey that he was the one who was sick, and she then reported the incident to the authorities.

Bailey's Disavowal

Testifying in his defense, Bailey admitted asking Lauren if she could "do the splits," but described it as a mutual "challenge" while they were talking and stretching together. He denied that the question appeared to upset her and described their conversation, throughout the evening, as consisting of "general flirtations." Indeed, on cross-examination, Bailey testified that, in his view, Lauren was flirting with him. He denied ever knowing Lauren's age. Asked about his alleged statement that he would be looking for Lauren in the news and at school, he testified that he meant that he would try to follow her athletic career in the newspaper. He denied that Lauren ever asked her to leave, and he described her attitude toward him as "respectful." He denied following her or asking her if she had a boyfriend. According to Bailey, he went into the weight room before Lauren and did not take notice of her, or do anything to her, after she started working out on the machines. He testified that Janie grabbed his arm on the stairwell, accusing him of being a "pervert." He admitted that he called her "crazy," but he denied calling her a lesbian.

The Complaint and the Conviction

Janie Wulker filed a complaint against Bailey in the Hamilton County Municipal Court, alleging that he had caused alarm to another by creating a condition that was "physically offensive * * * by an act that served no purpose." Her affidavit accompanying the complaint alleged that Bailey had "accosted" her daughter and "followed [her] throughout the HealthPlex after being told to leave her alone." The complaint also asserted that Bailey had made "sexually inappropriate * * * verbal remarks" and had stated that he would be "looking for her" on the news and at her high school.

A trial was held to the bench. At the conclusion of the evidence, Bailey renewed a motion for acquittal under Crim.R. 29. The trial court found Bailey guilty of disorderly conduct in violation of R.C. 2917.11, without specifying in its journal the particular subsection that it had found to be applicable. From the bench, however, the trial court indicated that it had found Bailey guilty under both subsections (A)(2) and (A)(5). Those subsections, respectively, prohibit a person from causing inconvenience, annoyance, or alarm by "offensively coarse utterances" or "unwarranted or grossly abusive language," or by creating a "condition that is physically offensive to persons * * * by an act that serves no lawful or reasonable purpose of the offender."

Discussion

In his first assignment of error, Bailey argues that the trial court erred by denying his motion for acquittal. Review of the denial of his motion requires us to construe the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution. See State v. Wolf (1988), 51 Ohio App.3d 215,555 N.E.2d 689. For the purposes of our analysis, therefore, we must accept the version of events proffered by Lauren and Janie Wulker.

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Bailey, Unpublished Decision (6-21-2002), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bailey-unpublished-decision-6-21-2002-ohioctapp-2002.