State v. Jones

747 N.E.2d 891, 140 Ohio App. 3d 422
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 18, 2000
DocketNo. 77841.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 747 N.E.2d 891 (State v. Jones) 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. Jones, 747 N.E.2d 891, 140 Ohio App. 3d 422 (Ohio Ct. App. 2000).

Opinions

Kenneth A. Rocco, Presiding Judge.

Defendant-appellant Darlene Jones appeals from her convictions on two counts of domestic violence after a jury trial in the South Euclid Municipal Court.

Appellant asserts that the trial court improperly denied her motions for acquittal, arguing that her convictions are neither based upon sufficient evidence nor sustained by the weight of the evidence. Appellant also asserts that the trial court improperly excluded expert testimony she sought to introduce at trial.

This court has reviewed the record and determines that appellant’s convictions are supported by the evidence. Furthermore, no error can be found in the trial court’s evidentiary decision. Therefore, appellant’s convictions are affirmed.

Appellant’s convictions result from an incident that occurred on May 5,1999, at her home in South Euclid, Ohio. On that afternoon, after completing her work as a teacher’s aide in a class for children with special needs, appellant proceeded to Greenview Middle School to retrieve her eleven-year-old son. 1 As he entered the vehicle, appellant’s son “immediately handed” 2 her a “detention slip” from one of his teachers.

Appellant’s initial reaction of cautious congratulations to her son for his honesty quickly turned to confusion. Appellant noted the date of her son’s *425 transgression, upon which the detention was based, was stated as “six months ago.”

Appellant thereupon drove home with her son. Her husband and nine-year-old daughter already had arrived from work and school. While appellant’s daughter did her homework, and with appellant’s husband listening, appellant placed a telephone call to the teacher who had issued the detention to her son. Appellant sought an explanation for the delay in issuing a consequence for behavior that apparently had occurred so much earlier in the school year.

Appellant’s conversation with her son’s teacher indicated that a note the teacher had attached to the detention slip was missing. As appellant was speaking on the telephone, her husband observed that “the paper [of the detention slip] had been cut and the note was gone.” Moreover, when appellant’s husband checked his son’s “daily planner book,” he noticed “a staple * * * had been removed” and a note to them from another teacher “had been marked over with black magic marker.”

Appellant ended her telephone conversation at that point. The two parents then confronted their son about the defacing of the two school items. Their son told them his teacher “never wrote a note” and denied defacing the papers.

Both parents believed their son was lying. This belief was a source of much distress for them, since the son’s dishonesty at school had been a disciplinary issue for some time. For several months previously, appellant and her husband had attended special parent-teacher conferences, had closely monitored their son’s behavior, and had withdrawn many of their son’s privileges in an effort to “change his behavior.”

Appellant’s husband expressed his displeasure by stating to his son, “I don’t believe you.” He punctuated this statement by “hit[ting] him twice on the behind with [his] hand.” Since appellant’s husband had planned to accomplish an errand, he then announced, “Your mother’s dealing with this,” and left the home.

Appellant informed her son she would “have to spank [him].” Prior to meting out that punishment, however, she “gave [him] time to kind of think about it” by ordering him to his room and then, “three or four times,” waiting and entering it to request of him if he were “ready to tell the truth.” Each time, appellant’s son insisted that his teacher was lying.

Finally, appellant went to her bedroom and retrieved her belt. She returned to her son’s room and told him, “I’m going to have to make this hurt for a time.” Appellant “spanked” him with the belt; however, as she did so, her son “started flipping” in an effort to avoid the blows. Appellant persisted in her efforts to administer the punishment until she determined, that it was time to “calm down.” She then told her son to “take a shower.”

*426 When appellant’s son had finished that task, he approached her and “confess[ed] to everything.” Appellant’s husband returned home from his errand to find the two talking but his wife “very distraught.” Appellant informed her husband that she “needed to leave the house for a while because she just needed to get away.”

A few hours later, appellant reappeared; thus, her husband retired to bed for the night. A short time later, appellant noticed her son near the second floor shower stall; he was “using [a] bucket of water and splashing it into the shower.” When she inquired the reason he was engaged in this activity, he directed her attention to the floor of the shower stall, where a quantity of “toilet paper” lay.

Appellant previously had spoken to her daughter “on several occasions” concerning her daughter’s “doing an experiment” by placing “wads of toilet paper in the shower.” She thereupon brought her children together and demanded to know which of them had perpetrated the act. Both of the children denied doing so.

For this infraction, appellant initially required the children to “do positions,” ie., to hold “a push up position or * * * squatting position” for a certain length of time. If they were “out of form,” they “would be swatted with a belt to correct that form.”

Appellant’s daughter ultimately confessed to placing the tissue in the shower. Appellant then administered to her daughter a punishment of about three licks with her belt; however, appellant’s daughter twisted in an effort to escape the blows. Appellant then ordered both children to bed.

The following day, appellant notified her before-school care provider, Veda Rawlings, both that her son would not be in attendance that day and that her daughter was “on punishment.” Appellant requested that her daughter “sit in the corner”, for the day. Rawlings did not agree with this request, but the request focused her attention on appellant’s daughter. When Rawlings observed a “big red nasty-looking bruise” on the girl’s forehead, she inquired about it. Appellant’s daughter initially stated she “fell,” but the answer did not satisfy Rawlings. Rawlings brought the girl’s appearance to the attention of her third-grade teacher. The teacher, in turn, contacted the school’s social worker, Maureen O’Sullivan.

Appellant’s daughter eventually disclosed to O’Sullivan the punishment to which she and her brother had been subjected the previous evening. At that point, O’Sullivan contacted the counselor of the middle school appellant’s son attended, “the county,” and the police department regarding appellant’s daughter’s disclosure. O’Sullivan’s concern was based upon her observation of “marks” on the daughter’s face.

*427 Subsequently, the middle school counselor and middle school nurse observed appellant’s son’s legs and torso.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
747 N.E.2d 891, 140 Ohio App. 3d 422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-jones-ohioctapp-2000.