State v. Byrnes

2025 Ohio 3177
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 5, 2025
Docket2025 CA 00007
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Ohio 3177 (State v. Byrnes) 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. Byrnes, 2025 Ohio 3177 (Ohio Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Byrnes, 2025-Ohio-3177.]

COURT OF APPEALS LICKING COUNTY, OHIO FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

STATE OF OHIO, Case No. 2025 CA 00007

Plaintiff - Appellee Opinion & Judgment Entry

-vs- Appeal from the Court of Common Pleas of Licking County, CAROLINA BYRNES, Case No. 2024 CR 00162

Defendant - Appellant Judgment: Affirmed

Date of Judgment: September 5, 2025

BEFORE: Craig R. Baldwin; Kevin W. Popham; David M. Gormley, Judges

APPEARANCES: Kenneth W. Oswalt, for Plaintiff-Appellee; Brian A. Smith, for Defendant-Appellant.

Gormley, J.

{¶1} Defendant Carolina Byrnes challenges the sentence that she received after

she pled guilty to one fifth-degree-felony theft charge and one first-degree-misdemeanor

theft charge. Byrnes argues that the trial judge was barred from imposing a prison term

on her for her non-violent felony offense, and she contends that the 12-month jail

sentence that she was ordered to serve exceeded the six-month maximum jail sentence

that can be imposed as part of a community-control sentence. The prosecution in turn

argues that a prison term could be imposed for the F5 theft, and Byrnes’s 12-month jail

sentence, according to the prosecution, was in fact a prison sentence that Byrnes was

required to serve in a county jail because of the TCAP program. We agree with the

prosecution’s view, and we affirm the trial court’s judgment. The Key Facts

{¶2} Byrnes’s guilty pleas to one F5 theft charge and one M1 theft charge

stemmed from her efforts to sell to multiple people a pole barn that she did not own. At

Byrnes’s sentencing hearing, the trial judge noted that Byrnes had been under

community-control supervision when she committed the theft offenses for which she was

being sentenced. The judge imposed a 12-month jail sentence for the F5 theft as well as

a concurrent 180-day jail sentence for the M1 theft. Byrnes now challenges the trial

judge’s decision.

We Decline to Dismiss Byrnes’s Case Under R.C. 2953.08(A)(2)

{¶3} The state argues first that we should dismiss Byrnes’s appeal because she

failed to seek our court’s permission for the appeal under R.C. 2953.08(A)(2).

{¶4} That statutory provision says that a defendant who is sent to prison for a

low-level felony offense is entitled to challenge that sentence in an appeal, but the statute

adds a caveat. No right to appeal exists, the provision says, “[i]f the [trial] court specifie[d]

that it found one or more of the factors in division (B)(1)(b) of section 2929.13 of the

Revised Code to apply relative to the defendant.” R.C. 2953.08(A)(2). The trial court, at

the sentencing hearing, mentioned one of those factors — Byrnes’s commission of the

F5 theft offense when she was already under community-control supervision for a

different offense — and so Byrnes, the state argues, ought to have sought permission to

pursue her appeal rather than proceeding as if she had a right to appeal. Because she

never sought or secured permission for this appeal, we should dismiss it, in the state’s

view. {¶5} This argument is not one that requires deep thought on our part because

Byrnes argues here that her sentence is “contrary to law,” and a criminal defendant

making such a claim is, under R.C. 2953.08(A)(4), entitled to pursue an appeal. For that

reason, we readily conclude that Byrnes had no obligation to seek our permission for her

appeal, and we decline to dismiss it as an improper one under R.C. 2953.08(A)(2).

Our Review is Limited to Plain Error

{¶6} In her sole assignment of error, Byrnes claims that a community-control

sentence was, under R.C. 2929.13(B)(1)(a), the only possible sentence that the trial court

could impose for her F5 theft offense, and she then cites R.C. 2929.16(A)(2) to support

her view that her 12-month jail sentence for that offense runs afoul of the six-month cap

set by that latter provision.

{¶7} Byrnes did not, however, object to her sentence at the conclusion of her

sentencing hearing, and she did not call to the trial judge’s attention the alleged legal

errors that she now asks us to fix. “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. Bright, 2025-Ohio-725, ¶ 7 (5th Dist.),

quoting State v. Haudenschild, 2024-Ohio-407, ¶ 15 (5th Dist.); see also Crim.R. 52(B).

{¶8} Here, the trial judge — by asking the parties several times, after the

sentence was announced, if they “ha[d] any questions” or if there was “anything else”

either party wanted to address — afforded Byrnes a meaningful opportunity to express

the concerns that Byrnes now raises here. Neither Byrnes herself nor her trial counsel

objected to the sentence. We, therefore, review Byrnes’s sentence solely for plain error. The Trial Judge Had Discretion to Impose a Prison Sentence

{¶9} To rise to the level of 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.”

Bright at ¶ 10, quoting 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.

{¶10} R.C. 2929.13(B)(1)(a) — subject to exceptions listed in division (B)(1)(b) —

requires a trial court to impose a community-control sanction or a combination of

community-control sanctions on an offender who is convicted of or pleads guilty to a

felony of the fourth or fifth degree that is not an offense of violence if all of the following

apply: (1) the offender has not previously been convicted of or pleaded guilty to a felony

offense; (2) the most serious charge against the offender at the time of sentencing is a

felony of the fourth or fifth degree; and (3) the offender has not been convicted of or

pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor offense of violence that the offender committed within

two years prior to the offense for which the sentence is being imposed. R.C.

2929.13(B)(1)(a)(i-iii).

{¶11} Each of those three factors does appear to apply to Byrnes. She pled guilty

to a nonviolent F5 charge, the trial judge noted that Byrnes had not previously been

convicted of any felonies, and nothing in the record before us suggests that she was

convicted on any misdemeanor offense-of-violence charges within the two years prior to

her sentencing in this case. {¶12} Also applicable to her, though, is one of the exceptions in R.C.

2929.13(B)(1)(b), which provides that “[t]he court has discretion to impose a prison term”

for a nonviolent F5 offense if “the offender committed the offense while under a

community control sanction.” R.C. 2929.13(B)(1)(b)(x).

{¶13} Before imposing the sentence in this case, the trial judge noted that Byrnes

had on her criminal record a conviction in Delaware County for which — in the words of

the trial judge — she “w[as] on probation” when she committed the offenses at issue in

this case. This fact gave the trial judge discretion, under R.C. 2929.13(B)(1)(b)(x), to

impose a prison term instead of a community-control sentence. The trial judge did not

commit error — and certainly not plain error — by imposing what we believe was in fact

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Related

State v. Dunlap, Unpublished Decision (12-9-2004)
2004 Ohio 6652 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2004)
State v. Highley
2019 Ohio 5177 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2019)
State v. Long
372 N.E.2d 804 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1978)
State v. Howard
2022 Ohio 3394 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2022)
State v. Haudenschild
2024 Ohio 407 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2024)
State v. Bright
2025 Ohio 725 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2025)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2025 Ohio 3177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-byrnes-ohioctapp-2025.