State v. Hesson

675 N.E.2d 532, 110 Ohio App. 3d 845
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 8, 1996
DocketNo. 95CA9.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 675 N.E.2d 532 (State v. Hesson) 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. Hesson, 675 N.E.2d 532, 110 Ohio App. 3d 845 (Ohio Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

Kline, Judge.

Defendant-appellant Tammy Hesson appeals from the judgment of the Washington County Court of Common Pleas finding her guilty of felonious assault in violation of R.C. 2903.11(A)(1). 1 Appellant assigns the following errors:

“1. The trial court erred in not allowing discovery of information tying prosecution witness Joe Lightfritz to three other similar crimes and by not allowing introduction of the evidence already obtained by the defense showing Lightfritz’s involvement in said other crimes.

“2. The trial court erred by not allowing the defense to introduce evidence that prosecution witnesses Joseph and Doreen Lightfritz had failed polygraph tests concerning their involvement in the Chutes beating.”.

On the evening of January 30,1993, Doreen and Joseph Lightfritz accompanied appellant to several bars. The three of them eventually arrived at the Maple Cafe, where they encountered Jonni Jill Chutes. Chutes had been drinking all evening and does not recall any of the events that occurred at the Maple Cafe or during the rest of the evening. Chutes knew appellant and the Lightfritzes socially. Apparently, in 1991, appellant, Bill (appellant’s present husband), Chutes, and Brian (Chutes’s boyfriend) traveled to Florida together where they got into an argument over money. Allegedly, Chutes and Brian abandoned appellant and Bill in Florida after the couples argued about whether Chutes and Brian stole a quarter pound of marijuana from appellant and Bill. Joe Lightfritz also knew Chutes; the two had used drugs together.

*848 The evidence indicates that appellant, Doreen and Joe Lightfritz, and Chutes left the Maple Cafe together to continue their drinking and socializing at Jackson Park in Marietta. Appellant was driving her truck, and all three of her passengers were riding with her in the front seat. There is conflicting evidence about the events that occurred upon their arrival at Jackson Park.

Doreen and Joe Lightfritz testified that appellant removed Chutes from the truck, Chutes fell or was pushed to the ground, and appellant began to punch, kick, and shake her. Appellant was yelling something at Chutes about the Florida trip, and Chutes was screaming for appellant to stop and asking why appellant was hitting her. The Lightfritzes testified that appellant stopped beating Chutes after they heard “a big crack” followed by silence. Appellant dragged Chutes to a grassy area in the park, took Chutes’s coat, and then left with the Lightfritzes. The three returned once, saw that Chutes was moving, then left again. The Lightfritzes testified 'that appellant dropped them off at their home.

Chutes was found by a passerby in the park the next morning, very cold and badly beaten. The passerby called the police, and Chutes was taken to the hospital. Chutes suffered a fractured skull and underwent two surgical procedures to remove three subdural hematomas, or blood clots. The parties stipulated that these injuries constitute serious physical harm as defined by R.C. 2901.01(E)(2).

After Chutes regained consciousness, her mother and her daughter visited her. The mother and daughter testified that Chutes nodded when her mother asked her, in front of her daughter, whether her boyfriend Brian had assaulted her. Chutes also indicated to a friend and to a police officer that she believed Brian had assaulted her. Brian had previously been convicted of domestic violence against Chutes. Brian was eventually indicted for this assault, but the prosecutor’s office dropped the charges. Chutes testified at trial that she had no memory of the evening after she, appellant, and the Lightfritzes left the Maple Cafe and that she did not know who assaulted her.

On June 8, 1994, a year and a half later, Doreen Lightfritz called the Washington County Sheriff stating that she had information about Chutes’s beating. Joe Lightfritz was in prison at that time for carrying a concealed weapon, and he was granted shock probation and $197 to leave Marietta in exchange for his cooperation with the authorities in this case. Specifically, Joe and Doreen Lightfritz met with appellant once carrying a transmitter and Joe Lightfritz telephoned appellant twice from the Sheriffs office. All of these conversations were taped and the recordings were admitted at trial against appellant.

*849 In these conversations, appellant told Joe Lightfritz that she had seen Chutes since the beating and indicated that she felt awkward approaching her. Appellant also stated that she tried to forget all about the night of the beating: “If somebody comes and says something, I’ll deny it to the * * * end.” Appellant and Joe Lightfritz reassured each other that neither had told anyone anything about that evening. Appellant stated that “Mom is about the only one and she’s going to be an alibi, if it comes down to that.” During the last phone conversation, the following was said:

“[MALE VOICE]: * * * Yeah, uh, I was talking to my sister again * * * about that Jonni Jill * * *. Well, uh, she said that the lady said, uh, that, uh, they either found blood or someone else’s blood on her or some kind of jewelry or something. And I, you know, I, I was kind of thinking, you know—

“[FEMALE VOICE]: Some kind of jewelry?

“[MALE VOICE]: Yeah, or something like that. Or blood or something. They found something up there but, you know, it ain’t nothing.

“[FEMALE VOICE]: Uh-hum.

“[MALE VOICE]: But it might just be talk, but, you know, I was wondering, you know, how [messed] up your hands were after, you know—

“[FEMALE VOICE]: Not at all. * * * I wasn’t bleeding. * * * Just that one knuckle got bruised.

“[MALE VOICE]: Just bruised.

“[FEMALE VOICE]: Yeah, remember?

“[MALE VOICE]: No. * * * I thought the skin was wore off of them from where you was hammering her.

“[FEMALE VOICE]: Huh-ah, nope.

it * * *

“[MALE VOICE]: Did you happen to break a nail or anything?

“[FEMALE VOICE]: Huh-ah. * * * My fingernails don’t get that long.

tt * * *

“[MALE VOICE]: * * * I just, you know, when she said blood, I figured, you know, ‘cause when you was hammering on her, I figured your hand was bleeding.

“[FEMALE VOICE]: Huh-ah. Her own. Ha, ha, ha.”

When appellant was arrested on June 15, 1994, she denied causing serious injury to Chutes. She stated that they were involved in a confrontation but that she only slapped Chutes a few times and that when she last saw Chutes, Chutes was up and walking towards a pay phone. After an officer played appellant a *850 portion of one of the taped conversations, appellant maintained that she only slapped Chutes and never punched her with a closed fist. She added that Joe Lightfritz knocked Chutes to the ground and fiercely kicked her in the face, head, and torso. Appellant conceded that there could have been some blood.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
675 N.E.2d 532, 110 Ohio App. 3d 845, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hesson-ohioctapp-1996.