State v. Gilbo

645 N.E.2d 69, 96 Ohio App. 3d 332, 1994 Ohio App. LEXIS 3379, 1994 WL 720185
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 3, 1994
DocketNos. 14234, 14235, 14236, 14237 and 14238.
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 645 N.E.2d 69 (State v. Gilbo) 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. Gilbo, 645 N.E.2d 69, 96 Ohio App. 3d 332, 1994 Ohio App. LEXIS 3379, 1994 WL 720185 (Ohio Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

*334 Per Curiam.

Tor Erik Gilbo appeals from the judgments of the Kettering Municipal Court which found him guilty of underage possession of alcohol, two charges of driving without a valid operator’s license, and two charges of driving under suspension. This appeal consolidates five cases from the Kettering Municipal Court.

On April 18, 1993, Gilbo was riding as a passenger in a friend’s car. After the driver made an improper U-turn, a police officer stopped the car and identified the two teenagers in the car as Gilbo and Brady Hill. The officer observed the two making “suspicious movements” and decided to search the car for weapons.

During the search, beer was found in the trunk of the car. Gilbo claimed that the beer was his and that he was twenty-one. His driver’s license confirmed that he was twenty-one. Hill was arrested, but Gilbo was allowed to leave and to take the beer with him.

Later in the day, the officer obtained a LEADS printout of Gilbo’s driver’s license and discovered that Gilbo was only eighteen years old. The officer went to Gilbo’s house and re-examined Gilbo’s license. At first glance, the license showed that Gilbo was twenty-one. However, upon closer examination the officer detected that the lamination had been partially lifted, leaving marks which altered the appearance of Gilbo’s year of birth. Gilbo claimed that the license had been damaged in the laundry. The officer then seized the beer and Gilbo’s license.

The next day Gilbo appeared at the police station. He gave a statement and was charged with underage possession of alcohol. The officer gave him a photocopy of his driver’s license.

On April 28, 1993, Gilbo was stopped by a Montgomery County Sheriffs Deputy while driving a 1979 Jeep. He was charged, inter alia, with driving without a valid operator’s license and given a court date of May 6, 1993. On May 1, 1993, while driving the same car, Gilbo was stopped by the same officer. He was again charged with driving without a valid operator’s license and given the same court date.

On May 6, 1993, Gilbo appeared in Kettering Municipal Court and was referred to the public defender’s office. The court then warned Gilbo that the Ohio Bureau of Motor Vehicles (“BMV”) indicated that his license was under suspension. The judge concluded as follows:

“Having one charge is bad, two charges is worse, and three charges would guarantee that you’re gonna [sic] spend a lot of time in jail. So whatever your excuse to drive until this is cleared up, don’t take the chance.”

*335 After he left court on May 6, Gilbo was observed driving the 1979 Jeep, and, on May 14, Gilbo was served with a summons charging him with driving under suspension.

On May 8, 1993, Gilbo, again driving the Jeep, was stopped by a Montgomery County Sheriff’s Deputy and charged with driving under suspension.

August 24, 1993, Gilbo once again appeared before the Kettering Municipal Court. The court indicated that a plea bargain had been arranged whereby Gilbo would plead no contest to the one underage-possession-of-alcohol charge, the two driving-without-a-valid-operator’s-license charges, and the two driving-under-suspension charges, and the other charges would be dismissed. Gilbo, through counsel, entered his no contest pleas. The court permitted Gilbo to withdraw his former pleas of not guilty and accepted the pleas of no contest; The court then stated, “Court[,] based on the complaint and offense reports, as well as the records of the Bureau of Motor Vehicles, will find Defendant guilty of each of the offenses charged.” At that point, Gilbo’s counsel asked if he could make a statement “before [the court] makes [its] findings.” The trial court allowed the statement.

Gilbo’s attorney explained that the beer related to the underage-possession-of-alcohol charge actually belonged to Gilbo’s friend and that Gilbo claimed possession of it to keep his friend out of further trouble.

The attorney then addressed the driving-without-a-valid license and driving-under-suspension charges as follows. On April 28, Gilbo only had a photocopy of his license because his license had been taken by the Centerville police. Gilbo’s attorney argued that the charge was for not having his license and that Gilbo did not know that his license was suspended. A similar explanation was given for the May 1 charge. Gilbo’s attorney argued that Gilbo did not know that his license had been suspended until his arraignment on May 6, during which the court informed him of that fact.

Gilbo’s attorney explained how Gilbo’s license was suspended without Gilbo’s knowledge. On December 26, 1992, Gilbo received a speeding ticket in Pennsylvania. Gilbo apparently sent a check to pay the fine for that citation, but the check was not received by the Pennsylvania authorities. When it did not receive a response from Gilbo, Pennsylvania sent a “Request for Suspension of Driving Privileges” to the BMV in accordance with the Non-Resident Violator Compact (hereinafter “the Compact”). See R.C. 4511.95. The BMV suspended Gilbo’s driving privileges and claimed to have sent him notice of the suspension by ordinary mail. Gilbo never received the notice, and, therefore, he did not know that his license had been suspended. Finally, Gilbo’s attorney informed the court that Gilbo had since paid the Pennsylvania fine and that Pennsylvania had notified the BMV that it could terminate the suspension.

*336 After Gilbo’s attorney ended his statement, Gilbo agreed with what had been said, and the court questioned Gilbo about the charged offenses. Without making a renewed determination of guilt, the court proceeded to impose penalties on Gilbo. On the charge of underage possession of alcohol, the court imposed a $1,000 fíne and one hundred eighty days in jail, suspended $850 of the fine and all of the jail time, and placed Gilbo on three years’ unsupervised probation with a condition of “no consumption of alcohol.” On both the April 28 and May 1 driving-without-a-valid-license offenses, the court imposed $500 fines and ninety-day jail terms. The court suspended $400 and $450, respectively, of these fines and suspended all of the jail time on the condition of no similar violations for three years. On both the May 6 and May 8 charges of driving under suspension, the court imposed $1,000 fines and jail terms of one hundred eighty days. The court suspended $900 and $800, respectively, of these fines. The court also suspended one hundred seventy days of each term of incarceration and ordered that the two remaining ten-day terms be served concurrently. Finally, the court placed Gilbo on probation for three years for each of these offenses upon the condition that Gilbo be of “general good behavior,” and specifically have “no driver’s license violations.”

Gilbo appeals and asserts three assignments of error. Due to the similarity of the issues presented, the first two assignments of error will be considered together.

“I. The Kettering Municipal Court erred in finding appellant guilty of four violations of Ohio Revised Code § 4507.02(D)(1) because his driver’s license suspension was ineffective for lack of actual or constructive notice.

“II.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
645 N.E.2d 69, 96 Ohio App. 3d 332, 1994 Ohio App. LEXIS 3379, 1994 WL 720185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gilbo-ohioctapp-1994.