State v. Deboard

187 N.E.2d 83, 116 Ohio App. 108, 21 Ohio Op. 2d 398, 1962 Ohio App. LEXIS 638
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 23, 1962
Docket154
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 187 N.E.2d 83 (State v. Deboard) 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. Deboard, 187 N.E.2d 83, 116 Ohio App. 108, 21 Ohio Op. 2d 398, 1962 Ohio App. LEXIS 638 (Ohio Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

Radclipf, P. J.

The defendant was indicted by the September 1961 Grand Jury of Highland County, Ohio, for violation of Section 2901.23 of the Revised Code. This section defines the crime of maliciously shooting with intent to kill or wound. The activity which resulted in the indictment took place on August 8, 1961, in the city of Greenfield, Highland County, Ohio. Trial was had to a jury, resulting in a finding of not guilty of maliciously shooting hut guilty of assault with a dangerous weapon contrary to the provisions of Section 2901.241 of the Revised Code, a lesser included offense. The verdict of the jury was journalized, and after the overruling of a motion for a new trial the defendant was sentenced to the Ohio Penitentiary, but the execution of sentence was stayed and the defendant was released on bond pending the outcome of this appeal.

It is necessary to recite many of the facts so that the questions passed on in this opinion will be brought into proper prospective. The defendant, his wife and son live at 1050% Mirabeau Avenue, Greenfield, Ohio. The Elliott home and the De-board home occupy the same lot, with the rear of the homes just la few feet apart. For some period of time prior to August 8, 1961, Mrs. Elliott and the defendant had been in controversy over a sewer line and a water line. Mrs. Elliott was using the same water line as the defendant, and at times when the discussion and controversy grew heated the defendant would turn off Mrs. Elliott’s water. Mrs. Elliott had requested permission to put a “T” in the defendant’s water line so that a meter could be placed on her end of the line and the water for her home would not be subject to the whim and control of the defendant. *110 Tile defendant refused unless Mrs. Elliott would pay him the cost of the entire water line, some forty odd dollars. Mrs. Elliott, disturbed no doubt by the lack of co-operation, decided that she would retaliate. It seems that the defendant had tapped into a sewer line that had been installed by Mrs. Elliott, and on the evening of August 8, a plumber, Mrs. Elliott’s son and various other members of the Elliott family were gathered in the backyard in the process of disconnecting the defendant’s drain from the the Elliott’s sewer line. As in all arguments there are two sides. We are certainly not prepared to say upon which side the greater fault lay. About 8:00 p. m. the defendant, seeing the activity in the yard and being told what was happening, called William Clay, an officer or night policeman of the city of Greenfield, to the scene and discussion was had as to the situation. Officer Clay told them it was not under the jurisdiction of the Police Department but under the jurisdiction of the City Water & Sewer Department and that the Elliotts and Deboards should maintain the status quo until contacting Mr. Hamilton at the City Hall next morning. Mr. Clay then left. A great deal of activity then transpired between the neighbors over their differences. It is not part of the criminal charge here but certainly a prelude to it. It involved threats and counter threats, the possible exhibiting of a shotgun or rifle, and reached a climax in general bedlam. Officer William Clay was again summoned, this time by the Elliotts. Mr. Clay returned to the scene of this septic squabble about 45 minutes after his first call. By this time it was beginning to get quite dark. Officer Clay engaged in a general parley with the defendant, his wife and son, and members of the Elliott family. This discussion, instead of soothing the tempers of the parties, apparently had the opposite effect. The defendant made some strong observations about the Elliotts, Mr. Clay and the situation generally. He was finally told that he was being disorderly, this by Officer Clay, and that he would have to come downtown. Here we come to the parting of the ways as to what occurred. The defendant stated that he was desirous of avoiding an argument of any kind and that shortly after Officer Clay returned to the scene he went upstairs into the living quarters of his home and stretched out on the bed to relax; that while relaxing he heard steps on the stairs leading up to the kitchen of his home and some words of remon *111 strance on the part of Ms wife; that he did not know who was coming np or the purpose of the visit; that he thought someone was going to injure his wife or invade his home without right; that he reached for a pistol in a drawer in the bedroom; that while examining it to see if it was loaded it accidentally discharged ; that he did not know who was in the living quarters of his home at the time the shot was fired; and that he could see no one and did not intend to shoot at anyone, hut was merely examining the pistol. He then went out into the kitchen and by the light coming in from the back porch discovered Officer William Clay. He then ordered Officer Clay out of his home and directed him down the stairs with his pistol pointed toward him as Officer Clay was attempting to draw on him. As they went down the stairs Deboard ordered Mr. Clay not to return unless he had a warrant. He also cast some aspersions upon Mr. Clay’s an-cestory and intelligence.

The other version of the events of the evening is, that the defendant and Officer William Clay were engaged in a heated exchange of words and when Officer Clay told defendant he was going to have to take him downtown the defendant bolted up the stairs of his home with Mr. Clay in hot pursuit, across the porch and into the kitchen. There, the officer said, he saw or heard a movement in the hall into which the defendant had gone I and he stepped back and immediately upon his stepping back there was a shot fired from the hall and that had the officer not stepped back he would have been hit. The bullet crashed into a metal china cupboard in the kitchen where the slug was found later that evening. (This was within two feet of where the officer was standing.) Then the defendant ordered Mr. Clay down the stairs and out of the house. He followed the officer with the gun pointed toward him as he descended the stairs. The officer left the scene, proceeded to his cruiser, drove around the block, returned and parked in front of the house. Clay summoned help by radio. Soon a sizeable posse of police officers of all the various governmental units surrounded the house. The defendant left the house under the cover of darkness while Officer Clay was sitting in front of the house in his cruiser. He made his way a short distance and watched the activity of the officers in and around his home. Later he made his way to a barn in the country, and slept all night there. The next morning he called *112 the Mayor of Greenfield and asked for instructions as to what he should do, and finally he came in and gave himself up.

The defendant has listed 13 assignments of error, but in reality only three questions are raised; consequently, in the interest of conserving paper, we will paraphrase the assignments of error to include only the actual issues to be determined herein.

1. Did the injection into the testimony of a prior offense of identical nature with the present charge, which occurred some 25 years previously, prevent the defendant from having a fair trial?

2.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
187 N.E.2d 83, 116 Ohio App. 108, 21 Ohio Op. 2d 398, 1962 Ohio App. LEXIS 638, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-deboard-ohioctapp-1962.