State v. Doss

1 Ohio App. Unrep. 282
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 1, 1990
DocketCase No. 56569
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Ohio App. Unrep. 282 (State v. Doss) 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. Doss, 1 Ohio App. Unrep. 282 (Ohio Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

J.F. CORRIGAN, J.,

The defendant appeals from his bench trial conviction for felonious assault with an aggravated felony specification. The county grand jury originally indicted the defendant for murder. However, the trial court, at the close of the state's evidence, reduced the charge to involuntary manslaughter specifying felonious assault as the underlying felony. The trial court ultimately convicted the defendant of felonious assault as a lesser included offense of involuntary manslaughter.

The defendant raises three assignment of error for our review. He first asserts that the trial court erred in reducing the original murder [283]*283charge to involuntary manslaughter arguing that involuntary manslaughter does not constitute a lesser included offense of murder.

The defendant, in his second assignment of error, challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting his conviction for felonious assault. He finally argues that he was denied the effective assistance of counsel at trial. Each of these claims lack merit, so we affirm the trial court's judgment.

I.

The victim died from a ruptured brain aneurysm on November 10, 1987 after being hospitalized for treatment of injuries sustained in an attack during the early morning hours of October 3, 1987. Friends found the victim, semi-conscious from an apparent beating, in the front room of the house where the victim lived with a friend, the defendant, and the defendant's mother.

At trial, the state sought to prove that the defendant had beaten the victim with a table leg and that this beating caused the rupturing of the aneurysm. The state called as witnesses in support of its case the victim's friend who claimed that he witnessed the attack, the defendant's daughter, a neighbor, and a county coroner. The defendant at trial argued that the victim's friend had administered the beating and that, regardless of the identity of the attacker the beating had not proximately caused the rupturing of the victim's aneurysm. The defendant testified on his own behalf and also called his mother as a witness.

The victim's friend testified that although the two were brothers-in-law, the victim and the defendant did not get along. He claimed that the defendant injured the victim during a fight one time before. The witness stated that the defendant's mother hid the household knives from the two.

The victim's friend testified that two days before the attack the victim complained of having a severe headache. Thereupon the defendant and the victim's friend left in order to summon a paramedic squad, leaving the victim in the house. Upon their return the defendant noticed that his television set was missing. The emergency squad arrived but the victim refused any treatment. Later the defendant told the victim's friend that he suspected that the victim had stolen his television set.

The witness testified that shortly after midnight on October 3 he observed the victim sleeping on the floor of the front room of the house. The victim's friend testified that that night he himself was watching television with the defendant's mother in the kitchen.

The victim's friend stated that at approximately 4:00 a.m., the defendant came home apparently intoxicated and "looking all wild." The defendant asked where the victim was and, upon being told, picked up a thick, heavy table leg and proceeded to the front room. From the kitchen the victim's friend could hear the defendant striking the victim with the table leg and demanding, "Where's my damn TV." The witness, going to his friend's assistance, observed the defendant standing over the victim in the front room. He saw the defendant strike at least two powerful blows and heard bones cracking. The defendant then left the house.

The victim's friend denied having an argument with the victim or beating him on the night on the attack.

The defendant's daughter testified that she arrived at the house immediately following the attack. She testified that before the victim was taken to the hospital the victim told her that the defendant and another man had beaten him with a pipe. The witness stated that the defendant's mother later told her that the defendant and the victim had fought over the stolen television and that the defendant had struck the victim "one or two times." Several minutes later she confronted her father who had returned and asked him why he had beaten the victim. The defendant answered, "It's a long story ***, and I don't really want to talk about it right now."

The neighbor testified that when she observed the victim being taken to the hospital, she asked the defendant what had happened to him. She claimed that the defendant told her that the victim had stolen his television set and that he was going to beat the victim until he paid for it. The witness stated that the defendant repeated this threat to her several days later.

The county coroner testified that the victim sustained lacerations about the left eye, forehead, and scalp, bruising of the abdomen, and defense related fractures of the left hand. The coroner further discovered an aneurysm at the base of the victim's brain which predated the time of the beating. The witness opined that the victim's death was caused by the rupturing of the aneurysm as a result of "multiple impacts to the head." The coroner indicated homicide as the manner of death.

[284]*284The coroner admitted the possibility that the aneurysm could have burst spontaneously as a result of conditions unrelated to the attack, including an elevation of blood pressure. He testified that the aneurysm began leaking sometime between October 1 and October 3.

The defendant testified that on the night of the beating he heard the victim and his friend arguing about money. He saw the victim's friend beat the victim about the head with a beer bottle. The defendant claimed that he went to the victim's assistance and stopped the friend from further striking the victim. He said that he then went to sleep. When he awoke after a short time, his mother told him that the victim's friend had again attacked the victim and that the victim had been taken to the hospital.

The defendant testified that earlier that evening the victim complained about suffering from severe headaches. The defendant called for an ambulance but the victim refused treatment. The defendant denied having an argument with the victim concerning his missing television set and denied striking the victim with a table leg.

The defendant's mother essentially corroborated the defendant's testimony. She stated that the victim's friend beat the victim with a table leg and later bragged to her about his attack.

II.

The defendant first argues that the trial court should have entered a "not guilty" verdict on the murder charge instead of continuing the trial on a reduced charge of involuntary manslaughter. He claims that involuntary manslaughter does not constitute a lesser included offense of murder and that consequently the trial court denied him a fair trial since he had no fair notice of the charges against him. We conclude otherwise.

We first note that in conjunction with the defendant's motion for acquittal at the close of the state's evidence, defense counsel requested that the trial court in the alternative consider a lesser charge. Defendant counsel raised no objection when the trial court amended the indictment to charge involuntary manslaughter.

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1 Ohio App. Unrep. 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-doss-ohioctapp-1990.