State v. Garner, Unpublished Decision (4-28-2000)
This text of State v. Garner, Unpublished Decision (4-28-2000) (State v. Garner, Unpublished Decision (4-28-2000)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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.
Opinion
After the affirmance of his conviction and sentence of death for aggravated murder, Garner filed a petition for postconviction relief. The common pleas court denied the petition, and we affirmed that judgment in 1997.1
On August 6, 1999, Garner filed a second petition for postconviction relief. The trial court denied the petition without an evidentiary hearing, and Garner has again appealed. In his first assignment of error, he argues that Ohio's statutory scheme for postconviction petitions is unconstitutional on its face and as applied to his conviction. However, Garner failed to raise the constitutional issues before the trial court and, therefore, has waived those arguments.2 Garner's first assignment of error is overruled.
In his second and final assignment of error, Garner argues that the trial court erred in declining to entertain his petition without an evidentiary hearing or discovery. We find no merit in the assignment.
R.C.
(1) Either of the following applies:
(a) The petitioner shows that the petitioner was unavoidably prevented from discovery of the facts upon which the petitioner must rely to present the claim for relief.
(b) Subsequent to the period prescribed in division (A)(2) of section
2953.21 of the Revised Code or to the filing of an earlier petition, the United States Supreme Court recognized a new federal or state right that applies retroactively to persons in the petitioner's situation, and the petition asserts a claim based on that right.(2) The petitioner shows by clear and convincing evidence that, but for constitutional error at trial, no reasonable factfinder would have found the petitioner guilty of the offense of which the petitioner was convicted or, if the claim challenges a sentence of death that, but for constitutional error at the sentencing hearing, no reasonable factfinder would have found the petitioner eligible for the death sentence.
As we have previously held, a trial court has no jurisdiction to hear a successive petition unless the two prongs of R.C.
In the case at bar, we find no error in the trial court's determination that the statutory conditions were not satisfied. The basis of Garner's second petition was that Hamilton County's procedures for selecting grand jurors and for selecting the forepersons of grand juries were impermissibly biased against African-Americans and other cognizable groups. Even were we to assume that the first prong of R.C.
Judgment affirmed. HILDEBRANDT, P.J., DOAN and PAINTER, JJ.
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