State v. Dovala, 08ca009455 (3-30-2009)

2009 Ohio 1420
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 30, 2009
DocketNo. 08CA009455.
StatusUnpublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 2009 Ohio 1420 (State v. Dovala, 08ca009455 (3-30-2009)) 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. Dovala, 08ca009455 (3-30-2009), 2009 Ohio 1420 (Ohio Ct. App. 2009).

Opinions

DECISION AND JOURNAL ENTRY
INTRODUCTION
{¶ 1} A jury convicted Melissa Dovala of murdering a baby who was in her care, and this Court affirmed her convictions on appeal. While her appeal was pending, Ms. Dovala petitioned for postconviction relief. The trial court dismissed her petition because it concluded that her claims were barred by the doctrine of res judicata. This Court reverses in part because some of Ms. Dovala's claims could not have been raised on direct appeal based on the information contained in the original record.

FACTS
{¶ 2} On the morning of February 6, 2004, Eileen Smath left her 5-month-old son Riley with Ms. Dovala, who provided daycare for several children who were up to 9 years old. When she picked Riley up around 5:00 p.m., he looked lifeless and appeared blue. Although Ms. Smath drove him straight to the hospital, by the time they arrived, Riley did not have a pulse and *Page 2 the emergency room staff could not revive him. The Lorain County Coroner determined that the cause of death was blunt impact trauma to the head and that the time between the injury and death was three to five hours.

{¶ 3} The Grand Jury indicted Ms. Dovala for murder, felony murder, felonious assault, endangering children, and involuntary manslaughter. At the end of her trial, the State dismissed the murder charge. The jury found Ms. Dovala guilty of felony murder, felonious assault, endangering children, and involuntary manslaughter, and the trial court sentenced her to 15 years to life in prison.

{¶ 4} Ms. Dovala appealed, assigning six errors. She argued that the trial court incorrectly allowed the jury to watch a videotape outside her presence, that her trial lawyers were ineffective, that the prosecutor committed misconduct, that the trial court incorrectly admitted hearsay evidence, that the cumulative effect of the errors deprived her of a fair trial, and that her original appellate lawyers were ineffective. On September 24, 2007, this Court affirmed her convictions.

{¶ 5} Ms. Dovala, meanwhile, petitioned for postconviction relief, raising six claims. She argued that her trial lawyers were ineffective because they failed to fully prepare for trial, failed to fully investigate the State's case, failed to obtain an independent forensic evaluation, failed to present expert testimony to contest the State's expert witnesses, failed to fully investigate their theory of the case and develop it with expert testimony, failed to ensure an adequate record for appeal, and failed to object to the admission of the videotape. She also argued that she was denied the right to be present at a critical stage of the trial because the jury watched the videotape outside her presence. *Page 3

{¶ 6} The trial court determined that this Court had rejected Ms. Dovala's videotape and videotape-related ineffective assistance claims on direct appeal. It, therefore, concluded that those claims were barred under the doctrine of res judicata. It further determined that Ms. Dovala could have raised her other ineffective assistance claims on direct appeal and that, therefore, those claims were also barred under the doctrine of res judicata. Accordingly, it dismissed her petition. Ms. Dovala has appealed, assigning two errors.

RES JUDICATA
{¶ 7} Ms. Dovala's first assignment of error is that the trial court incorrectly applied the doctrine of res judicata to her claims. She has argued that res judicata does not bar her claims because she supported them with evidence from outside the record.

{¶ 8} "Under the doctrine of res judicata, a final judgment of conviction bars a . . . defendant who was represented by counsel from raising and litigating in any proceeding except an appeal from that judgment, any defense or any claimed lack of due process that was raised or could have been raised . . . on an appeal from that judgment."State v. Perry, 10 Ohio St. 2d 175, paragraph nine of the syllabus (1967). "Res judicata applies if the petition for post-conviction relief does not include any material dehors the record in support of the claim for relief." State v. Cureton, 9th Dist. Nos. 03CA0009-M, 03CA0010-M,2003-Ohio-6010, at ¶ 15. Accordingly, for Ms. Dovala "[t]o survive preclusion by res judicata, [she had to] produce new evidence that would render the judgment void or voidable and . . . show that [s]he could not have appealed the claim based upon information contained in the original record." State v. Nemchik, 9th Dist. No. 98CA00729, 2000 WL 254908 at *1 (Mar. 8, 2000) (emphasis in original).

{¶ 9} Ms. Dovala made six claims in her petition, five alleging ineffective assistance of her trial lawyers. Her other claim was that she "was denied the right to be present at a critical *Page 4 stage of the trial by the admission of a videotape as evidence without presenting the videotape in the courtroom." Regarding her videotape claim, the trial court correctly concluded that she made the same claim on direct appeal. This Court denied that claim, concluding that "the trial court's refusal to play the videotape [in open court] was neither a constitutional error, nor a prejudicial one." State v. Dovala, 9th Dist. No. 05CA008767, 2007-Ohio-4914, at ¶ 13.

{¶ 10} Ms. Dovala has argued that her videotape claim is not barred because she submitted evidence from outside the record that, according to her, establishes that the jury watched the tape during its deliberations. "Presenting evidence outside the record[, however,] does not automatically defeat the doctrine of res judicata." State v.Stallings, 9th Dist No. 19620, 2000 WL 422423 at *1 (Apr. 19, 2000) (citing State v. Lawson, 103 Ohio App. 3d 307, 315 (1995)). "Such evidence `must meet some threshold standard of cogency; otherwise it would be too easy to defeat the holding of Perry by simply attaching as exhibits evidence which is only marginally significant and does not advance the petitioner's claim[.]'" Id. (quoting Lawson,103 Ohio App. 3d at 315). Evidence outside the record "must demonstrate that the claims advanced in the petition could not have been fairly determined on direct appeal based on the original trial court record without resorting to evidence outside the record." Id.

{¶ 11} Ms. Dovala has not established that her evidence that the jury actually viewed the videotape changes her claim. This Court noted in its decision that the trial court had given "the tape directly to the jury during deliberations." Dovala, 2007-Ohio-4914, at ¶ 8. It determined, however, that, since the tape had been marked as an exhibit, it was a public record available for public viewing. It noted that Ms. Dovala's lawyers had reviewed the tape and discussed relevant parts of it during the trial.

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Bluebook (online)
2009 Ohio 1420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-dovala-08ca009455-3-30-2009-ohioctapp-2009.