State v. Hunter

2013 Ohio 1469
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 12, 2013
Docket24844
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

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Bluebook
State v. Hunter, 2013 Ohio 1469 (Ohio Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Hunter, 2013-Ohio-1469.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT MONTGOMERY COUNTY

STATE OF OHIO : : Appellate Case No. 24844 Plaintiff-Appellee : : Trial Court Case No. 11-CRB-194 v. : : CYNTHIA D. HUNTER : (Criminal Appeal from Montgomery : (County Municipal Court - Western Defendant-Appellant : (Division) : : ...........

OPINION

Rendered on the 12th day of April, 2013.

...........

RAYMOND J. DUNDES, Atty. Reg. #0041515, City of Trotwood Prosecutor’s Office, 7 South Mechanic Street, Lebanon, Ohio 45036 Attorney for Plaintiff-Appellee

ANGELA WILSON MILLER, Atty. Reg. #0064902, 322 Leeward Drive, Jupiter, Florida 33477 Attorney for Defendant-Appellant

.............

FAIN, P.J.

{¶ 1} Defendant-appellant Cynthia Hunter appeals from her conviction for Violating 2

a Protection Order, for which she was sentenced to one hundred eighty days in jail, all of which

was suspended. She was also fined $100 and placed on non-reporting community control for a

period of three years. Hunter’s initial appellate counsel filed a brief pursuant to Anders v.

California, 386 U.S. 738, 87 S.Ct. 1396, 18 L.Ed.2d 493 (1967), stating that after reviewing the

record and the applicable law, she found no potentially meritorious issues for appeal. Counsel

set forth one potential assignment of error, which counsel concluded is frivolous: that the

conviction is against the manifest weight of the evidence.

{¶ 2} Upon exercising our duty of independent review, we found a potential

assignment of error having arguable merit, based upon a misstatement by the trial court of the

applicable burden of proof. The trial court was the finder of fact in Hunter’s bench trial. We

also noted that the trial court, in its sentencing entry mistakenly recited that Hunter had pled

guilty to the offense. Accordingly, we rejected the Anders brief, and caused new counsel to be

assigned.

{¶ 3} Newly assigned counsel has not set forth an assignment of error based upon the

trial court’s misstatement of the applicable burden of proof – understandably so, since the trial

court has now corrected the record to reflect that it did, in fact, employ the correct burden of

proof, and that Hunter did not plead guilty, but was, in fact, convicted after a bench trial. But

newly assigned counsel has set forth two assignments of error for our consideration.

I. The Protection Order and its Alleged Violation

{¶ 4} In February 2011, M.C. was granted an ex parte protection order against

Hunter. Of relevance hereto, the protection order states: [Cite as State v. Hunter, 2013-Ohio-1469.] RESPONDENT SHALL STAY AWAY FROM protected persons named

in this Order, and shall not be present within 500 feet of any protected persons

wherever those protected persons may be found, or any place the Respondent

knows or should know the protected persons are likely to be, even with the

protected persons’ permission. If Respondent accidentally comes in contact

with protected persons in any public or private place, Respondent must depart

immediately. This Order includes encounters on public and private roads,

highways, and thoroughfares. (Emphasis sic.).

{¶ 5} M.C. and her parents, Marquette and Michael Curington, are protected persons

under the terms of the Order. Hunter was properly served with notice of the protection order.

{¶ 6} Three days after the issuance of the ex parte protection order, after Hunter had

been served with it, Hunter was in her vehicle within 500 feet of the Curington residence. She

was arrested and charged with one count of Violating a Protection Order in violation of R.C.

2912.27.

{¶ 7} At trial, the following evidence was presented by the State. Michael Curington

was in his garage when he saw a red truck pull into his driveway. He testified that he recognized

the car as Hunter’s, so he ran into the house and grabbed his camera. He then ran back out and

took pictures as Hunter drove away. He testified that he then got in his car to follow her, and

that he then caught up with her and took more pictures. The pictures were admitted in evidence.

{¶ 8} Glyndon Wilson also testified for the State. She indicated that she lives next

door to the Curingtons, and that she was home on the evening in question. She testified that her

granddaughter was home with her. Wilson testified that she “usually” leaves her porch light on, 4

and that she turns it on “early.” She also testified that the porch light was on that evening.

Wilson testified that she knows Hunter because Hunter’s daughter has spent the night at her

house with Wilson’s granddaughter. She denied ever babysitting Hunter’s children. Wilson

testified that she had no knowledge that Hunter intended to come to her house on the evening in

question, and had not talked to her about doing so. Wilson also testified that shortly thereafter,

Hunter called her and said that she wanted Wilson to sign a note “stating that [Wilson] was her

daughter’s babysitter.” Wilson testified that she declined to do so because she did not babysit

the child.

{¶ 9} The State presented the testimony of Trotwood Police Officer Brian Douglas who

testified that he was on duty that evening, when he responded to a call from Hunter stating that

she was in her vehicle being followed by another vehicle. He testified that Hunter said there was

a protection order in place, and that “there was one being ordered on both ends.” He testified

that Hunter said that she had gone to Wilson’s residence, but that she left when she saw no lights

on at the home. He testified that Hunter said that a car began following her as she left, and that

she saw the person in the car taking photographs of her vehicle. A certified copy of the

protection order was admitted into evidence.

{¶ 10} Hunter testified on her own behalf. She testified that there was an ongoing

dispute between her daughter and the Curingtons’ daughter, M.C. She testified that she was at

school when she “received a call from my daughter and Ms. Wilson’s granddaughter saying that

the Curingtons was [sic] harassing and threatening them.” She testified that, because she was

crying and afraid, she left school and picked up her sister. She testified that when she arrived at 5

Wilson’s home, Wilson “met [her] at the car and [said that the] kids next door have been

harassing and calling these kids all day. And I will not let them go outside because I’m afraid of

them.” Hunter testified that she then asked Wilson to keep the girls inside next weekend while

Hunter was in school. She testified that the next weekend she picked up her daughter, and

Wilson told her that she had kept her house alarm on because she was “sick” of the kids next

door, who continued to harass Hunter’s daughter and Wilson’s granddaughter.

{¶ 11} Hunter testified that three days before the protection order was issued, she, her

daughter, and another woman were grocery shopping when they were accosted by M.C. and

another woman whom she did not know. She testified that the other woman threatened Hunter,

and identified M.C. as her “little sister.” Hunter testified that M.C. then used her cellular

telephone to call her mother. Hunter testified that as she was loading her groceries into her car,

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Related

State v. White
2015 Ohio 3512 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2015)
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