State v. Carter, 21820 (10-12-2007)

2007 Ohio 5570
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 12, 2007
DocketNo. 21820.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2007 Ohio 5570 (State v. Carter, 21820 (10-12-2007)) 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. Carter, 21820 (10-12-2007), 2007 Ohio 5570 (Ohio Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION
{¶ 1} This matter is before the Court on the Notice of Appeal of Thomas E. Carter, filed September 26, 2006. On August 23, 2006, a Montgomery County, Ohio, jury found Carter guilty of aggravated vehicular homicide (driving under suspension), a felony of the first degree, and vehicular homicide (driving under suspension), a felony of the fourth degree. The trial court merged count one *Page 2 and count two for sentencing and imposed a term of seven years imprisonment.

{¶ 2} The events giving rise to this matter began on May 13, 2003, when Carter and Ellen Hughes were traveling east in Hughes' car on Springfield Street, near Smithville Road, in Dayton, Ohio. Carter, who was driving, lost control of the vehicle at a high rate of speed and spun into a utility pole, killing Hughes. Carter had met Hughes just two months earlier at a bar on Third Street called the Band Box. Hughes, who had been thrown out of her home by her husband, did not have a place to stay, and Carter invited her to stay with him in his apartment in Riverside, Ohio. According to Carter, they soon fell in love.

{¶ 3} On May 13th, according to Carter's testimony, he and Hughes were at the Band Box for over an hour, and Carter consumed two beers. The couple then left for the nearby home of friends to hide Hughes' car, which was about to be repossessed. The friends were not home, and Carter and Hughes waited at the house for 15 — 30 minutes.

{¶ 4} Carter and Hughes then went to a nearby diner and had something to eat. The couple then returned to the home of their friends, who still were not at home. Carter and Hughes then proceeded to the muffler shop where their friend was employed, and not finding him there, they returned to his home, picking up a six pack of beer along the way. Again finding no one at the house, Carter and Hughes drank a couple of beers and waited for about 45 minutes. Carter then suggested that they take the car to the home of his brother in Riverside, and Hughes agreed.

{¶ 5} According to Carter, Hughes was driving, but when they reached a nearby intersection, she abandoned the car and began to walk away, leaving the keys in the ignition and her purse in the car. Carter said Hughes stated that she "was just tired of it all, didn't want the car, was tired of the court hearings, the divorce, the drama." Carter testified that he put Hughes back in the *Page 3 car in the passenger's seat, and that he began to drive, although his license was suspended. Carter stated that Hughes then "got frantic." According to Carter, Hughes was "flaying her arms and legs, grabbing at her chest." Carter stated that he thought Hughes was having a heart attack, and he sped up, heading down Springfield Street to Mechanical Systems of Dayton because the business had a pay phone in their parking lot.

{¶ 6} As Carter drove down Springfield Street, a four lane road with two lanes in each direction, he observed a car in the left lane ahead of him that changed lanes to get out of his way. Then he "saw the light in the intersection was green and then I — I saw the club. The Ledo Club's there on the corner. I was going to pull over there. Ellen's reaching for the door. Her arm was out the window and I didn't [know] what she was going to do. I reach over. She kind of reached back at me. She hit my hand on the wheel and the car went out of control," spinning into the pole.

{¶ 7} At trial, Patty Kegley and Allison Orrender, the occupants of the car Carter passed, testified. Kegley stated that she was driving east on Springfield Street with her sister, Orrender, and Kegley and Orrender's daughters. Upon seeing Carter approaching in her rear view mirror, Kegley "turned over to the right-hand lane to get away from him because he was coming up on me too fast and I was afraid that he was going to hit me." Kegley estimated that Carter was traveling at about 90 — 100 miles per hour. Kegley did not get a look at Carter but knew there was a female passenger in the car because "the arm was hanging out the window and she had some rings on her finger." Kegley also observed a car on Smithville Road, at the intersection with Springfield Street, that was stopped and waiting to turn left onto Springfield Street. Kegley said she thought Carter braked briefly, perhaps for the car on Smithville, but then Carter lost control, skidding into the pole. After the accident, Kegley pulled over and waited for the police to arrive. *Page 4

{¶ 8} Kegley observed that Carter "had got out of his car, he stumbled to the ground and he tried to get back up, but there was other people there that was trying to sit him down till the police got there." Kegley recognized one of the people near Carter as Robert Orrender, Allison's father-in-law. Kegley testified that she did not actually approach Hughes' vehicle. Upon observing Carter stumbling, Kegley concluded that he was drunk.

{¶ 9} Allison Orrender testified as follows: "We were driving down Springfield Street and the car was going about 80, 90 miles an hour and it flew past us. The driver was tipping a beer — a brown beer bottle and he flew by us, lost control right around the railroad tracks, hit a pole right around Springfield and Smithville at the light and wrapped his car around the pole.

{¶ 10} "He got out and he was staggering, walked around the car, looked at the lady in the car, which had lost her arm in the car. She was still alive at that point, looked at her and said, how does it feel to die, Bitch. And walked back around his side of the car and laid on the ground." Allison testified that Hughes had her head down as her car flew past Kegley's vehicle. After the car hit the pole, upon Kegley pulling over to wait for the police, Allison got out of the car and crossed the street. Allison testified that she was close enough to Carter to hear what he said to Hughes. Allison's testimony was contradicted somewhat by her statement to the police, in which she stated that she did not get close to Carter. Allison also did not include Carter's remark to Hughes in her statement to the police. When asked about the inconsistencies in her statement and testimony, Allison stated that her diabetes caused low blood sugar and memory loss at the time that she gave the police her statement. Allison stated that Carter appeared drunk and was stumbling when he got out of Hughes' car. Allison testified that Carter smelled of alcohol, and that she observed a bottle of beer on the floorboard of the car. *Page 5

{¶ 11} Robert Orrender, Allison's father-in-law, who was turning left onto Springfield Street from Smithville Road when the accident occurred, also testified. According to Robert, as he was making his turn, he heard "tires screaming." Carter "lost control and was headed toward me and he was going sideways. Otherwise, cross both lanes, you know, but he eventually moved over into my lane. He came so close to me that I had to get out of the car to see if I — I'd been hit and didn't know it." Robert estimated that Hughes' car was traveling about 80 miles an hour when it skidded sideways past him into the pole.

{¶ 12} Robert parked his car and ran to Hughes' vehicle and opened the driver's side door.

{¶ 13} Robert found Carter attempting to unbuckle his seat belt.

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Bluebook (online)
2007 Ohio 5570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-carter-21820-10-12-2007-ohioctapp-2007.