State v. Brown

539 N.E.2d 1159, 43 Ohio App. 3d 39, 1988 Ohio App. LEXIS 536
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 24, 1988
DocketC-870212
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 539 N.E.2d 1159 (State v. Brown) 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. Brown, 539 N.E.2d 1159, 43 Ohio App. 3d 39, 1988 Ohio App. LEXIS 536 (Ohio Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

Black, J.

The dispositive question in this appeal is whether the statute barring prosecutions of felonies (other than aggravated murder or murder), unless commenced within six years, R.C. 2901.13, is a statute of repose so that a court has no jurisdiction over the prosecution of a felony six years after it was committed, or a statute setting forth limitations of time within which a prosecution must be commenced, the effect of which can be waived by a defendant by a plea of guilty. In brief, we hold that R.C. 2901.13 creates limitations that can be waived, and in this case were waived, by the defendant’s guilty plea.

The body of Roxie Cass, age ninety-five, was discovered in her ransacked apartment on Linn Street in Cincinnati on January 3,1978, and the coroner’s report stated that the cause of her death was a homicide. A fingerprint of an unknown person was found in the apartment. More than eight years later, on September 19,1986, an officer in the Cincinnati Criminalistics Unit advised the Cincinnati Homicide *40 Squad that the fingerprint matched that of defendant-appellant Charles C. Brown. (The sparse record does not disclose when the identity of the fingerprint was discovered.) The defendant was arrested and confessed to having been implicated with another man in the homicide, conceding that they had entered the apartment illegally, hit the victim, stolen her Jeanie card, and used the card to withdraw $150 from her account.

The defendant was indicted on five counts on October 15, 1986. The first two counts charged felony murder, the first count while committing aggravated robbery and the second count while committing aggravated burglary. The third count charged aggravated robbery, the fourth aggravated burglary, and the fifth theft of the credit card. Among various pretrial motions, the defendant moved to dismiss the last three counts on the ground that the prosecution of those three felonies was barred by R.C. 2901.13. After an evidentiary hearing, the motion was overruled. On the day the case was set for trial, the defendant offered a plea of guilty to felony murder while committing aggravated robbery (first count) and aggravated robbery (third count). Among warnings and information given him, the defendant was warned that his guilty plea waived his right to appeal the overruling of his motion to dismiss. The guilty plea was duly accepted, and the defendant was sentenced to consecutive indeterminate terms of imprisonment for the two offenses.

On appeal, the defendant contends in his single assignment of error that the trial court erred when it overruled his motion to dismiss the third count charging aggravated robbery. 1 The prosecution’s first response is that the defendant cannot raise that contention on appeal because he waived it when he offered his guilty plea. It is abundantly clear that a plea of guilty waives all defects in the case except the lack of subject-matter jurisdiction of the court (assuming, of course, the regularity and constitutionality of the plea itself and the procedure by which it was accepted by the court). Ross v. Court (1972), 30 Ohio St. 2d 323, 59 O.O. 2d 385, 285 N.E. 2d 25. Thus we must address a question of first impression in Ohio: Is R.C. 2901.13 a statute of repose that eliminates or nullifies the criminal charge in its entirety, thus removing from Ohio courts subject-matter jurisdiction over any and all prosecution of the charge, or is it a statute that does no more than fix the period within which prosecutions for felonies and misdemeanors may be brought, without eliminating the charges, in the nature of a statute of limitations in civil actions? 2 Another way to state the question is to ask whether the General Assembly intended R.C. 2901.13 to be “* * * an act of grace by which a sovereign sur *41 renders its right to prosecute,” thus affording defendants complete immunity by the passage of time. Akron v. Akins (1968), 15 Ohio App. 2d 168, 171, 44 O.O. 2d 299, 301, 239 N.E. 2d 430, 432.

Recently, this court said:

“The interpretation of a statute is the determination of what the statute means. The interpretation starts and ends with the words chosen by the legislature, but it is not limited to the words alone, because the whole context of the enactment must be considered.
“The process of interpretation requires (1) a decision about the purpose to be attributed to the statute and (2) a decision about the meaning of the legislature’s words that will carry out that purpose. The words have a double function: they serve as guides to discovery of the purpose, and they serve as limitations on the extent of the statute’s applications. The words must be taken in their usual, normal or customary meaning.” State v. Cravens (1988), 42 Ohio App. 3d 69, 72, 536 N.E. 2d 686, 689.

R.C. 2901.13 reads in full:

“(A) Except as otherwise provided in this section, a prosecution shall be barred unless it is commenced within the following periods after an offense is committed:
“(1) For a felony other than aggravated murder or murder, six years',
“(2) For a misdemeanor other than a minor misdemeanor, two years;
“(3) For a minor misdemeanor, six months.
“(B) If the period of limitation provided in division (A) of this section has expired, prosecution shall be commenced for an offense of which an element is fraud or breach of a fiduciary duty, within one year after discovery of the offense either by an aggrieved person, or by his legal representative who is not himself a party to the offense.
“(C) If the period of limitation provided in division (A) of this section has expired, prosecution shall be commenced for an offense involving misconduct in office by a public servant as defined in section 2921.01 of the Revised Code, at any time while the accused remains a public servant, or within two years thereafter.
“(D) An offense is committed when every element of the offense occurs. In the case of an offense of which an element is a continuing course of conduct, the period of limitation does not begin to run until such course of conduct or the accused’s accountability for it terminates, whichever occurs first.
“(E) A prosecution is commenced on the date an indictment is returned or an information filed, or on the date a lawful arrest without a warrant is made, or on the date a warrant, summons, citation, or other process is issued, whichever occurs first. A prosecution is not commenced by the return of an indictment or the filing of an information unless reasonable diligence is exercised to issue and execute process on the same. A prosecution is not commenced upon issuance of a warrant, summons, citation, or other process, unless reasonable diligence is exercised to execute the same.
“(F) The period of limitation shall not run during any time when the corpus delicti remains undiscovered.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
539 N.E.2d 1159, 43 Ohio App. 3d 39, 1988 Ohio App. LEXIS 536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-brown-ohioctapp-1988.