State v. Bright

2025 Ohio 725
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 3, 2025
Docket2024CA00116
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2025 Ohio 725 (State v. Bright) 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. Bright, 2025 Ohio 725 (Ohio Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Bright, 2025-Ohio-725.]

COURT OF APPEALS STARK COUNTY, OHIO FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

STATE OF OHIO : JUDGES: : Hon. Craig R. Baldwin, P.J. Plaintiff-Appellee : Hon. Andrew J. King, J. : Hon. David M. Gormley, J. -vs- : : VANESSA ANNE BRIGHT : Case No. 2024CA00116 : Defendant-Appellant : OPINION

CHARACTER OF PROCEEDING: Appeal from the Court of Common Pleas of Stark County 2024 CR 0911

JUDGMENT: Affirmed

DATE OF JUDGMENT: March 3, 2025

APPEARANCES:

For Plaintiff-Appellee For Defendant-Appellant

Kyle L. Stone George Urban Prosecuting Attorney 116 Cleveland Ave. NW, Suite 808 By: Christopher A. Piekarski Canton, Ohio 44702 Assistant Prosecuting Attorney 110 Central Plaza South, Suite 510 Canton, Ohio 44702-1413 Gormley, J.

{¶1} At her sentencing hearing on a felony charge of assault in Stark County,

Vanessa Bright was placed on community-control supervision and was ordered to abstain

from the use of illegal drugs and alcohol and to stay away from bars. She argues here

that those conditions are unconnected to the crime and that they therefore ought not be

part of her supervision requirements. Because Bright did not object to the sentence in

the trial court, however, our review is limited to a plain-error analysis, and we readily

conclude that the sentence clears that low bar. The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.

Facts and Procedural History

{¶2} On April 19, 2024, City of Alliance police officer Bob Rajean noticed a truck

parked on property belonging to Bright. With the help of a computer in his police cruiser,

Officer Rajean learned that the truck belonged to Bright and that a warrant for her arrest

had been issued.

{¶3} Officer Rajean then knocked on the door to Bright’s home. Bright opened her

door, and Officer Rajean attempted to place her under arrest. While she was being taken

into custody, Bright struck Officer Rajean, bit his arm, and attempted to flee.

{¶4} Bright was indicted on one count of assault with a specification that the victim

was a peace officer who had been performing his official duties. At the conclusion of her

jury trial on that felony charge in June 2024, Bright was found guilty, and she was

sentenced the same day.

{¶5} The trial court sentenced Bright to three years of community control. As part

of Bright’s community-control sentence, the trial court ordered Bright to abstain from all alcohol and drugs and to avoid any establishment where the sale of alcohol is the primary

source of business. It is these community-control conditions that Bright challenges here.

Bright’s Failure to Object in the Trial Court Leaves Her with Little Recourse Here

{¶6} In her sole assignment of error, Bright claims that the trial court abused its

discretion by imposing a prohibition on alcohol and drug use as a condition of Bright’s

community-control sentence.

{¶7} Bright did not, however, object to the community-control conditions that were

imposed at her sentencing hearing. An error “that was not called to the attention of the

trial court at a time when the error could have been avoided or corrected by the trial court”

is deemed forfeited absent plain error. State v. Haudenschild, 2024-Ohio-407, ¶ 15 (5th

Dist.). See also Crim.R. 52(B) and State v. Whitaker, 2022-Ohio-2840, ¶ 166 (“because

Whitaker failed to object to the imposition of consecutive sentences at the sentencing

hearing, he has forfeited this issue, absent plain error”).

{¶8} To be sure, had the trial judge announced the sentence and then abruptly left

the courtroom without giving the parties a chance to raise objections to the judge’s ruling,

Bright could not be faulted now for having stayed silent then. See, e.g., United States v.

Ralston, 110 F.4th 909, 919 (6th Cir. 2024) (noting that federal district courts “are required

to ask the parties during the sentencing hearing whether they have any objections to the

sentence that has been imposed”); U.S. v. Bostic, 371 F.3d 865, 872 (6th Cir. 2004)

(where a trial court fails to provide the parties with an opportunity to object to the sentence,

the parties “will not have forfeited their objections and thus will not be required to

demonstrate plain error on appeal[]”). {¶9} Here, the trial judge — by asking the parties, after the sentence was

announced, if they had “[a]nything further” to say — gave Bright a meaningful opportunity

to express the concerns that Bright now raises here. Neither Bright’s trial counsel nor

Bright herself objected to the sentence. We, therefore, review Bright’s community-control

sentence for plain error.

We See No Plain Error in the Sentence

{¶10} To constitute plain error, an error “must be on the record, palpable, and

fundamental, so that it should have been apparent to the trial court without objection.”

State v. Dunlap, 2004-Ohio-6652, ¶ 34 (8th Dist.). “Notice of plain error under Crim.R.

52(B) is to be taken with the utmost caution, under exceptional circumstances and only

to prevent a manifest miscarriage of justice.” State v. Long, 53 Ohio St.2d 91 (1978),

paragraph three of the syllabus.

{¶11} Under Ohio law, a sentencing court in a felony case “may directly impose a

sentence that consists of one or more community control sanctions[.]” R.C.

2929.15(A)(1). As part of those sanctions, a trial court “may impose any other conditions

of release under a community control sanction that the court considers appropriate[.]” Id.

Sentencing courts “thus [have] broad discretion . . . in imposing community-control

sanctions.” State v. Talty, 2004-Ohio-4888, ¶ 10. Sanctions available to a sentencing

court include “[a] term of drug and alcohol use monitoring[.]” R.C. 2929.17(H).

{¶12} The authority to impose community-control conditions is not, however,

absolute. Talty at ¶ 11. Restrictions imposed as part of a community-control sentence

“cannot be overly broad so as to unnecessarily impinge upon the probationer’s liberty.”

State v. Jones, 49 Ohio St.3d 51, 52 (1990), citing State v. Maynard, 47 Ohio App.3d 76, 77 (6th Dist. 1988). In determining whether a community-control condition is appropriate,

courts must “consider whether the condition (1) is reasonably related to rehabilitating the

offender, (2) has some relationship to the crime of which the offender was convicted, and

(3) relates to conduct which is criminal or reasonably related to future criminality and

serves the statutory ends of probation.” Id. at 53.

{¶13} In a recent case, we found that a trial court’s imposition of a community-

control sentence that included a ban on the use of medical marijuana by the defendant

— who was being sentenced for the crime of attempted felonious assault — was an abuse

of discretion where nothing in the record indicated that drugs or alcohol were involved in

the offense. State v. Lynn, 2023-Ohio-4429, ¶ 49 (5th Dist.). We observed that “[s]everal

Ohio courts have required some nexus between an offender’s crime and drug or alcohol

abuse in order to uphold an alcohol-related community-control condition.” Id. at ¶ 48.

The defendant in that case, we note, did object to the no-medical-marijuana condition in

the trial court, thus availing himself of an abuse-of-discretion standard of review in this

court. Id. at ¶ 6.

{¶14} No evidence was introduced at Bright’s trial suggesting that drugs or alcohol

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2025 Ohio 725, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bright-ohioctapp-2025.