State v. Christman, Unpublished Decision (5-28-1999)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 28, 1999
DocketCase No. 786.
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Christman, Unpublished Decision (5-28-1999) (State v. Christman, Unpublished Decision (5-28-1999)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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State v. Christman, Unpublished Decision (5-28-1999), (Ohio Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

Defendant-appellant David Christman appeals his conviction of murder which was entered in the Monroe County Common Pleas Court. On October 31, 1996, a jury convicted appellant of murdering Rena Christman on November 25, 1984, the date that she disappeared. For the following reasons, appellant's conviction is affirmed.

I. STATEMENT OF FACTS
Appellant married Rena in February 1978 while touring India in search of a wife. After obtaining immigration clearance, Rena moved into appellant's trailer in Woodsfield, Monroe County, Ohio. Two children were born of the marriage. After receiving a master's degree in education, Rena found a job in Gallipolis, Gallia County, Ohio. Thereafter, she moved into an apartment in said town with her children, leaving appellant in Woodsfield.

In August 1983, appellant and E. Hakim, a friend of Rena's family, were walking on farm land owned by appellant's parents. Appellant allegedly stated that if a body were placed in the nearby woods, it would be difficult to find. Appellant also supposedly told E. Hakim that he was going to pour cement at a site where he was building a house and that it would be hard to find a body buried in concrete. Closer to the time of Rena's disappearance, appellant suggested to Rick and Tammy McClelland that he may go to Wheeling, West Virginia to hire someone to kill Rena as he wanted to ensure his custody of the children should Rena divorce him.

In a letter to Rena's mother in India dated April 16, 1984, appellant wrote that Rena was not behaving in the subservient manner that he expected and called Rena manipulative, arrogant, and serpent-like. David Erb testified that in 1984 appellant stated that the worst mistake he ever made was to marry an educated woman. In the fall of 1984, appellant told his brother, Dean Christman, that Rena told him to use a prostitute to satisfy his needs.

About one month before Rena's disappearance, appellant asked his father for advice on a good way to dispose of a body. Rena's sister stated that Rena called her three weeks before her disappearance and disclosed that she was leaving appellant. On November 9, 1984, Rena withdrew money from her checking account and bought a $2,000 certificate of deposit in her and her son's name. On November 17, 1984, Rena rented a safe deposit box and placed in it her jewelry, the certificate of deposit, her passport, her children's passports, and an affidavit. After Rena disappeared, appellant removed the items from the box. Consequently, the contents of the affidavit are unknown.

Rena brought the children to Woodsfield for Thanksgiving. On Friday, November 23, 1984, Rena and appellant shopped at the Ohio Valley Mall in Belmont County. The next day, they attended the wedding of appellant's sister. On November 25, 1984, Rena went to appellant's parents' house. Rena was scheduled to work the next day and was allegedly planning on making the more than two hour drive back to Gallipolis that night.

Dean Christman testified that appellant and Rena argued in the driveway of his parents' house with Rena calling appellant "white trash" and appellant demanding to finish the discussion at home. Although Rena's car was packed with food from the wedding, she left the house with appellant in his car and went to their trailer located on his parents' property. Dean then saw them leave the property and drive by on the main road. While he did not see them return to the trailer, Dean heard the distinctive sound of appellant's car door shut and the sound of the car coast to a start down the driveway of the trailer around 3:00 p.m. Two people reportedly saw appellant alone in his car at 4:00 p.m. in Woodsfield.

At 7:30 p.m., appellant reported Rena missing to mall security at the Ohio, Valley Mall which is almost one hour away from Woodsfield. He claimed that he let his wife out of the car around 3:30 p.m., parked the car, entered the mall, walked around, and then went to their planned meeting spot at 6:00 p.m. When Rena failed to arrive on time, appellant had her paged and searched the stores for her. At 8:10 p.m., when appellant was filing a police report, he stated that he arrived at the mall at 2:30 p.m. Three defense witnesses, two of them appellant's relatives, testified that they saw appellant at the mall that day. One of these witnesses said it was between 2:00 and 5:00 p.m., one said between 2:30 and 3:00 p.m., and one said between 3:00 and 4:00 p.m.

A videotape made by a reporter shows that Rena left her purse at appellant's parents' house that day. The reporter testified that appellant believed his wife got lost or that Hani Krishnas kidnapped her. Rena's sister testified that appellant called her in London and told her that Rena took the children to the mall, left them in the car, and never returned.

Appellant was a suspect in Rena's disappearance from early on. The day after the disappearance, Dean Christman and appellant's father looked in old wells for a body and checked to make sure the backhoes had not been moved. Rick and Tammy McClelland also checked their property where appellant was doing construction work. That same day, appellant's father caught appellant preparing to go to Gallipolis with a truck and remove all of Rena's belongings from her apartment. Appellant decided not to go that day after his father stated that he should not go unless he knew that Rena was not coming back. Within two weeks, appellant removed Rena's possessions from her apartment and retrieved her security deposit from the landlord.

In December 1985, appellant applied for social security survivor benefits. Near this time period, appellant allegedly told a babysitter, Hattie King, that he fed part of Rena's body to the hogs and buried the other part of her body under his hot tub in the basement. Years later, appellant saw Hattie King at a county fair and asked her whether she talked to anyone about what he told her.

Appellant once angrily told Penny Jones, who would not let him into her house, that if she did not listen to him then she would be "gone like her." From late 1986 until early 1987, he talked to Laura Thomas whose advertisement he answered in a Christian newspaper. He told her three different versions of his wife's disappearance. Regrettably, many of the aforementioned witnesses did not come forward with their stories until the mid-1990's.

In August 1987, appellant married a woman from the Philippines whom he contacted through an advertisement. In September 1987, he filed a complaint for divorce against Rena in Monroe County which was dismissed due to a lack of evidence that Rena was willfully absent. In August 1988, he filed a complaint for divorce in Gallia County which was granted. In 1990, appellant had Rena declared dead in probate court. In March 1996, while appellant was discussing the police investigation with his sister, Holly, he said, "Don't they realize by now I would have moved the body."

On May 17, 1996, appellant was indicted for Rena's murder. Search warrants were issued for his house and property two weeks after the indictment was issued; however, the searches proved unfruitful as no body was recovered. Before trial, appellant filed various motions which included a motion to dismiss for failure to timely prosecute and a motion to dismiss for failure to prove venue. These motions were overruled, but the trial court suggested that they be revisited after the close of the state's evidence. The case proceeded to a jury trial, and at the close of the state's case-in-chief, the court again denied appellant's motions. On October 30, 1996, appellant was convicted of murder and sentenced to serve fifteen years to life in prison. Appellant filed notice of appeal.

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Christman, Unpublished Decision (5-28-1999), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-christman-unpublished-decision-5-28-1999-ohioctapp-1999.