State v. Cuttiford

639 N.E.2d 472, 93 Ohio App. 3d 546, 1994 Ohio App. LEXIS 851
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 2, 1994
DocketNo. 93CA005506.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 639 N.E.2d 472 (State v. Cuttiford) 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. Cuttiford, 639 N.E.2d 472, 93 Ohio App. 3d 546, 1994 Ohio App. LEXIS 851 (Ohio Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

Dickinson, Judge.

Defendant Eric Cuttiford has appealed from his conviction of murder. 1 He has argued (1) that the trial court incorrectly refused to permit testimony about specific instances of violent behavior by decedent from witnesses other than defendant in order to demonstrate decedent’s violent character; (2) that the trial court incorrectly instructed the jury about the affirmative defense of self-defense and about the crime of voluntary manslaughter; (3) that the trial court denied *549 him due process of law by allowing the state to improperly refer to his exercise of his constitutional right to counsel; (4) that his conviction was against the manifest weight of the evidence; and (5) that he was denied effective assistance of trial counsel. We reverse defendant’s conviction because the trial court erred in instructing the jury about the affirmative defense of self-defense.

I

Defendant shot and killed his son-in-law, Raymond Banks, on January 23,1992. Defendant’s wife, Jean Cuttiford, witnessed the shooting.

Banks married the Cuttifords’ daughter on August 7, 1982. For the first year or two of their marriage, the Bankses lived with the Cuttifords. The Bankses and the Cuttifords then lived separately for a number of years. At the time of the shooting, the two families were living in the same duplex. It is not clear from the record how long they had shared the duplex.

Defendant and Mrs. Cuttiford lived in the first floor apartment of the duplex; Banks, his wife, and their two small children lived in the second floor apartment. Doors from the kitchens of the apartments opened onto landings of a common internal stairway at the rear of the duplex. That stairway consisted of a number of flights of stairs running between landings. From the landing at the rear of the Cuttifords’ apartment, a flight of stairs led up toward the Bankses’ apartment and another flight of stairs led down to a landing from which a door opened to the outside rear of the duplex. From the landing at the outside door, a flight of stairs led down to the basement of the duplex. The confrontation that led to Banks’s death began on that internal stairway.

At the time of his death, Banks was thirty-two years old, weighed two hundred twenty pounds, and was five feet, ten and one-half inches tall. Defendant was sixty-five or sixty-six years old, weighed one hundred sixty pounds, and was five feet, six and one-half inches tall. Defendant testified that Banks lifted weights daily. He also testified that Banks had physically attacked him on three occasions prior to the night of the shooting. On the first occasion, during 1984, Banks put his hands around defendant’s throat without provocation and began to strangle him. Banks backed off when defendant stepped on his toes and threatened him with a chair. On the second occasion, during 1984 or 1985, Banks grabbed him around the neck while defendant was driving his automobile. That confrontation occurred following a disagreement regarding Banks’s speaking with a woman in a bar. On the final occasion, during 1991, Banks punched defendant in his shoulder and knocked him into a kitchen cabinet. That confrontation took place because of Banks’s perception that defendant did not wish to attend Banks’s birthday celebration. According to defendant, Banks had been drinking prior to each confrontation. Defendant also testified that Banks verbally accost *550 ed him on numerous occasions when Banks had been drinking and that Banks occasionally taunted him by saying, “Go get your guns.” Defendant said that he purchased a container of Mace during October 1991 and carried it with him thereafter to use in defending himself against Banks.

Banks was drinking on January 23, 1992. A deputy coroner testified that his blood-alcohol level was .325 at the time he was taken to the hospital after the shooting. Mrs. Cuttiford testified that, sometime after 4:10 p.m. that day, Banks angrily told her that defendant had complained to him regarding cats that his children kept as pets. A litter box for the cats was kept in the area of the basement at the bottom of the common stairway. Defendant helped care for the cats, including emptying the litter box into the garbage several times a week. According to Mrs. Cuttiford, Banks stated that defendant had told him to keep the cats out of the stairway. Mrs. Cuttiford related that conversation to defendant and he told her that he had not complained to Banks about the cats.

During his testimony, defendant described the confrontation that, according to him, took place later on the evening of January 23, 1992, and that led to his shooting of Banks. At about 7:00 p.m., defendant went to the bottom of the stairway to empty the cats’ litter box. Banks called down to him that he did not have to worry about the cats anymore because they were “up here” and he was going to take care of them. Defendant responded that the cats were “no problem.” Banks then became angry "with defendant:

“He yelled, ‘What,’ in a loud voice, and he came down the stairs and confronted me at the bottom of the basement stairs.
“He said, ‘You’re calling me a liar? You’re playing with my mind.’ And he was shouting as loud as he could. He was livid with rage over a supposed confrontation where I was supposed to have given him an ultimatum to keep his cats upstairs. That never occurred. I became worried because here was a person in a rage over a confrontation that never took place.”

As Banks was shouting at defendant, Mrs. Cuttiford entered the stairway from the door that led to the outside rear of the duplex. Banks looked up toward Mrs. Cuttiford and said: “This is between him and me. I’m going to settle this right now, once and for all.” Banks then turned back toward defendant and said: “I’m going to get you tonight.”

Defendant testified that while Banks was distracted by Mrs. Cuttiford, he took the Mace from his pocket, pointed it at Banks, and tried to discharge it but could not do so. Banks stepped back and said: “If you use that on me, you’re dead meat.” Mrs. Cuttiford then said something to Banks and he again directed his attention toward her and shouted for her to leave them alone so he could settle with defendant. At that point, defendant ran up the stairs past Banks and Mrs. *551 Cuttiford. Banks began to follow him, and Mrs. Cuttiford attempted to restrain him although, according to defendant, she “couldn’t hold him back forever.”

Defendant testified that he did not go through the door to the outside rear of the duplex because it was locked and a key was required to unlock it. Instead, he ran to the kitchen entrance of his apartment and entered it, closing the door behind him. He ran to his bedroom and retrieved two guns that he kept there, a .22 caliber revolver and a .25 caliber semiautomatic pistol. He returned to the kitchen door with the revolver held in his left hand at his side and the semiautomatic held in his right hand. By that time, Banks and Mrs. Cuttiford were on the landing outside the kitchen door. Defendant opened the door and pointed the semiautomatic in Banks’s general direction.

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Bluebook (online)
639 N.E.2d 472, 93 Ohio App. 3d 546, 1994 Ohio App. LEXIS 851, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cuttiford-ohioctapp-1994.