[Cite as State v. Knighten, 2025-Ohio-4495.]
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT LUCAS COUNTY
State of Ohio/ City of Toledo Court of Appeals No. {48}L-24-1241
Appellee Trial Court No. CRB-24-02369
v.
Rodneshia N. Knighten DECISION AND JUDGMENT
Appellant Decided: September 26, 2025
*****
Autumn D. Adams, Esq., attorney for appellant.
Rebecca Facey, Esq., City of Toledo Prosecutor, and Jimmie L. Jones, Esq., Assistant Prosecutor for appellee.
ZMUDA, J.
{¶ 1} Appellant, Rodneshia N. Knighten, appeals from the July 29, 2024 judgment
of the Toledo Municipal Court convicting her of two counts of child endangerment of the
first degree. Appellant’s sole assignment of error challenges the conviction as against the manifest weight of the evidence. For the reasons that follow, we reverse and remand for a
new trial.
I. Facts and Procedural History
{¶ 2} Following reports of an incident at her home, the city filed a complaint
against appellant on March 19, 2024. On that date, police responded to a witness’ report
that appellant’s two children, around two and four years old, were running around the
sidewalks unsupervised. The witness, a neighbor’s friend named Leyna Patterson,
described the children as wearing no shoes and jackets, and the younger child was in a
soiled diaper that was seeping through the pants. Patterson reported that the children had
gotten as far as several houses away from their house before returning home.
{¶ 3} Police charged appellant with two counts of child endangerment in violation
of R.C. 2919.22(A). Appellant entered pleas of not guilty to the charges on March 20,
2024. The matter proceeded to a bench trial on July 29, 2024. At trial, the state presented
testimony of the responding officer, Officer Habbouche, and testimony of Leyna
Patterson.
{¶ 4} Officer Habbouche testified first. He was asked to recall his visit to
appellant’s house. He testified that he did not see the children outside, or witness any of
the events described in the phone call. Upon arriving at the house, he noticed the
backyard was not fenced in and there were children’s toys in the yard. He went into the
house to speak with the appellant about the call he had received. There were two children
in the house who he concluded were the children reported as running around because they
2. matched the description provided to police in the witness’s report. He estimated the
children to be two and four years old, and the younger child had no clothes on and needed
a diaper change. Habbouche testified about his contact with appellant inside the house as
follows:
I started making contact with the children, and then the mother walked up. When the mother walked up, we identified ourselves and what we were doing there. And she made a statement to me saying that she – that her kids didn’t leave the house and she tried – she basically began to, you know, telling me that is not true what we’re telling her. After I explained to her that, well, if your kids were out playing in the backyard, the backyard is open. And then she started getting upset with me. She said; what, am I supposed to watch them 24/7. She started getting extremely upset with me. And I continued to confront her and question her judgement.
{¶ 5} Patterson testified that she called the police that day because the young
children were running on the sidewalk by themselves, they did not have the proper shoes
or coats on for the cold weather, and the younger child had a very soiled diaper seeping
through their pants. Patterson did not indicate, in her testimony, any specific conditions
that presented an imminent threat of danger to the children, and Patterson also did not see
appellant exit the home to bring the children inside. Patterson testified that, at the time
she made the phone call to the police, the children were no longer running around but she
could see them playing in their backyard from the road. Patterson did not know appellant
and had never seen her before trial, but she had encountered the children before because
they were regularly outside. When asked, she estimated that the children were running
around outside for thirty to forty minutes and travelled as far as 10 or 11 houses away.
3. {¶ 6} After hearing the testimony of Officer Habbouche and Patterson, appellant’s
counsel made a Rule 29 motion, arguing that the city had not met their burden of
presenting evidence of a substantial risk. Responding to the motion for acquittal, the city
stated that their burden was met and supported by the testimony of Officer Habbouche
and Patterson. The city referred to the testimony about the children’s age, the soiled
diaper, and testimony of the witness seeing the children walking on the sidewalk as their
supporting evidence. The city argued:
Though it’s not direct evidence, it’s certainly a strong link to say that these were, in fact, defendant’s children who were left unattended. Young children who were left unattended to be out on a street, and you know, were left to their own devices and left in danger. They lacked supervision. City believes that [its] at least met its prima facie elements.
{¶ 7} The trial court denied the motion for acquittal. Defense proceeded with their
case, calling on appellant to testify on her own behalf and presenting no additional
witnesses.
{¶ 8} Appellant described herself as a single mother of four children, a full-time
employee, and a full-time college student. Appellant admitted that the children described
in the police report were her children. On the day of the police report, her children were
outside playing with toys in their backyard while she was inside the house, watching and
listening for them through a kitchen window as she cleaned. She explained the backyard
was open on just one side because the driveway goes to the backyard. She stated that
although she had dressed them, at some point the children had taken off their shoes and
jackets on their own. Appellant recalled that the weather was fifty degrees that day.
4. Additionally, she admitted in her testimony that the youngest child needed a diaper
change, which she attributed to her child’s lactose intolerance.
{¶ 9} Appellant estimated that the longest period of time that she went without
physically seeing the children while she was cleaning was “probably two or three
minutes. I would just keep, like I said, just looking and seeing what they were doing.”
Appellant testified about when she realized the children were not in the backyard.
Q: Okay. So at what point in time do you think to yourself where are the kids. A: I just looked and I, like, you know, I didn’t see them outside, so I ran straight to the front, and I just seen them, like, trying to go, you know, down the driveway where my car is at. Q: Okay. So explain what direction were they going. A: They were just going, like, towards, like, Berkshire. Q: Okay. So they were coming from the backyard. A: Uh-huh. Q: All right. And what were they doing? A: Just walking.
{¶ 10} Appellant’s response to finding the children in the front driveway was to
bring them inside with her. Not long after bringing the children inside, the police were
knocking on appellant’s door. Appellant called no additional witnesses, and the state
called no witnesses on rebuttal.
{¶ 11} In closing argument, the city summarized their supporting evidence: the
age of the children, the description of the soiled diaper, the testimony of them running
along the sidewalk for 30 to 40 minutes without an adult present, and the testimony that
the children traveled 10 or 11 houses away. The city argued, “the lack of supervision here
is what the city believes is the substantial risk to the health and safety of the children.”
5. The city argued that the element of violating a duty was met. “The fact that these children
were allowed to wander from their home close to the road at such a young age does
violate a duty of care and protection.”
{¶ 12} The defense counsel at closing argument reminded the court, “endangering
children as a charge is a subjective one, largely factually based.” The defense counsel
agreed “that the real crux of the case is the unattendance; however, Your Honor, I would
certainly put forth that she did not knowing[ly] or recklessly put those children in
substantial risk of any sort of harm.” Defense counsel argued that there was a lack of
evidence. “Your Honor, we do not believe as if the prosecution has put forth enough
evidence to find Ms. Knighten guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.” Defense rested,
without renewing her motion for acquittal.
{¶ 13} Following the parties’ closing arguments, the trial court found the appellant
guilty, stating:
Having heard the testimony of the witnesses and the arguments of counsel, I have reached a decision, if the defendant could stand. I do believe the prosecution has submitted sufficient evidence beyond a reasonable doubt all the elements of the charge, therefore, I will find the defendant guilty.
{¶ 14} At the sentencing hearing on September 19, 2024, the trial court imposed a
sentence of 180 days in Northwest Ohio Corrections Center, suspended the 180-day
sentence, and placed appellant on active probation for one year. As a part of appellant’s
probation, she was ordered to receive mental health assessments and treatments,
6. parenting classes, and to have no more additional offenses. Appellant’s attorney filed a
timely notice of appeal of the judgment.
II. Assignment of Error
{¶ 15} In appealing the judgment, appellant asserts a single assignment of error:
Whether the conviction of appellant for being reckless and causing a substantial risk of serious physical harm to her children was against the manifest weight of the evidence?
III. Law and Analysis
{¶ 16} The appellant’s sole assignment of error concerns the weight of the
evidence. Appellant does not argue insufficient evidence as an assignment of error;
rather, appellant argues the trial court’s finding that appellant acted recklessly and created
a substantial risk of physical harm was against the manifest weight of the evidence
because the evidence in the record did not weigh in favor of finding appellant’s conduct
reckless nor did it reflect a failure to act on a duty of care. Appellant, furthermore, argues
the evidence in the record did not weigh in favor of finding a substantial risk, without the
court engaging in impermissible speculation.
{¶ 17} It is well established that the role of the appellate court, in reviewing a
manifest weight challenge, is to “sit as a 'thirteenth juror' and scrutinize 'the factfinder's
resolution of the conflicting testimony.'” State v. Ford, 2021-Ohio-3058, ¶ 50 (6th Dist.).
This role applies equally to a trial to the bench. State v. Boles, 2010-Ohio-1885, ¶ 36 (6th
Dist.). In a manifest weight of the evidence review, we do not view the evidence in a light
most favorable to the state. Ford at ¶ 50, quoting State v. Thompkins, 78 Ohio St.3d 380,
7. 387 (1997) (additional citation omitted.). Rather, we “will not reverse a judgment in a
bench trial as being against the manifest weight of the evidence where the trial court
could reasonably conclude from substantial evidence that the state has proved the offense
beyond a reasonable doubt. Toledo v. Coley, 2012-Ohio-4987, ¶ 11 (6th Dist.), citing
State v. Billman, 2010-Ohio-4852, ¶ 14 (7th Dist.) (additional citation omitted.).
{¶ 18} “When reviewing a manifest weight argument, an appellate court's function
is to determine whether the greater amount of credible evidence supports the verdict.”
State v. Daniel, 2023-Ohio-2800, ¶ 53 (6th Dist.), citing Thompkins at 387 (additional
citation omitted.). It is through this lens we must review the record to determine if the
city met its burden.
{¶ 19} Appellant was charged with child endangerment under R.C.2919.22(A) for
creating a substantial risk to their children’s health and safety. The elements for this
offense are: (1) appellant was a parent (or other adult liable under the statute), (2) the
child was under eighteen years old, (3) the conduct of appellant created a substantial risk
to the child’s health or safety, and (4) the conduct was created by a violation of a legal
duty of care, protection, or support. The statute states, in pertinent part:
No person, who is the parent, guardian, custodian, person having custody or control, or person in loco parentis of a child under eighteen years of age or a child with a mental or physical disability under twenty-one years of age, shall create a substantial risk to the health or safety of the child, by violating a duty of care, protection, or support. …
R.C. 2919.22(A).
8. {¶ 20} A person takes a substantial risk, as defined by R.C.2901.01(A)(8), when
there is a “a strong possibility, as contrasted with a remote or significant possibility, that
a certain result may occur or that certain circumstances may exist.” “In determining
whether a substantial risk to the health or safety of the child exists, the trial court is not
permitted to 'make an inference upon an inference in order to transform a speculative risk
into a substantial risk.’” State v. Hughes, 2009-Ohio-4115, ¶ 21 (3rd Dist.), quoting
Middleton v. McWhorter, 2006-Ohio-7030, ¶ 11 (12th Dist.), citing State v. Caton, 137
Ohio App. 3d 742, 751 (1st Dist. 2000). Thus, the analysis requires us to determine
whether the state presented evidence to support the verdict, without making inference
upon inference, that appellant created a substantial risk of harm to her children.
{¶ 21} Risk is a fact-based determination dependent on the specific circumstances
of the case. State v. Jones, 2023-Ohio-3862, ¶ 18 (1st Dist.). For example, age is a
specific fact that courts may consider when addressing risk. See State v. Spivey, 2021-
Ohio-2598, ¶ 13-14 (1st Dist.). Courts generally do not find risk based on one
circumstance alone, and “it is the substantial risk of injury that controls, not the
outcome.” (Emphasis sic.) Jones at ¶ 20, citing State v. Olah, 2023-Ohio-2113, ¶ 37 (11th
Dist.) (distinguishing between a potentially dangerous condition that did result in the
death of a child as not reckless, compared to a condition “that inherently posed a
substantial risk to the child”).
{¶ 22} A factor may support a conviction in one case while the same factor with
different circumstances may be insufficient in another case. Age combined with length of
9. time of the conduct, for example, may support a substantial risk of physical harm to the
children. Spivey at ¶ 13-14. The longer children are out of supervision, the more likely
courts find a substantial risk of danger, especially when the children are younger. See
State v. Greenlee, 2012-Ohio-1432, ¶ 15 (2d Dist.); Spivey at ¶ 14.
{¶ 23} Injury is a factual circumstance that may be considered as evidence of a
substantial risk. “While the state does not need to prove actual harm, it must demonstrate
that the circumstances created a strong possibility of harm.” State v. Lee, 2024-Ohio-
3080, ¶ 10 (1st Dist.). An actual injury to a child is not a necessary element for conviction
nor does it necessarily mean that an appellant is guilty of causing a substantial risk,
because a substantial risk is defined by the prospects of injury posed by the
circumstances, not the outcome of the conditions. See e.g. State v. Olah, 2023-Ohio-
2113, ¶ 37 (11th Dist.) (although the conditions of the apartment were cluttered and the
child died from falling down the stairs, the court did not find the defendant caused a
substantial risk).
{¶ 24} To be clear, it is not the result of the circumstances that makes appellant
guilty of child endangerment but the circumstance itself. Olah at ¶ 38-40. Courts have
been reluctant to uphold an appellant’s conviction where there were no injuries or actual
threats of harm, finding the conviction based on inappropriate speculation. See e.g. Jones,
2023-Ohio-3862, at ¶ 22 (1st Dist.) (even though the mother locked the children in her
bedroom and left the apartment, the court overturned the conviction because the children
were in good health and spirits); Hughes, 2009-Ohio-4115, at ¶ 35 (3rd Dist.) (trial
10. court’s finding of substantial risk was based on speculative scenarios not supported by
sufficient evidence).
{¶ 25} The Supreme Court of Ohio has held that to be found guilty of creating a
substantial risk under this statute, the appellant must have acted recklessly in creating a
substantial risk. State v. McGee, 79 Ohio St.3d 193, 196 (1997). Recklessness, according
to R.C. 2901.22(C), is when a person acts “with heedless indifference to the
consequences”, and “the person disregards a substantial and unjustifiable risk that the
person’s conduct is likely to cause a certain result or is likely to be of a certain nature.”
Negligent conduct is not criminal under the statute.
A person acts negligently when, because of a substantial lapse from due care, the person fails to perceive or avoid a risk that the person’s conduct may cause a certain result or may be of a certain nature. A person is negligent with respect to circumstances when, because of a substantial lapse from due care, the person fails to perceive or avoid a risk that such circumstances may exist.
R.C. 2901.22 (D). “Reckless conduct is defined as ‘conscious disregard of or indifference
to a known or obvious risk of harm to another that is unreasonable under the
circumstances and is substantially greater than negligent conduct.’” David v. Matter,
2017-Ohio-7351, ¶ 12 (6th Dist.), citing Anderson v. Massillon, 2012-Ohio-5711, ¶ 34
(additional citations omitted.).
{¶ 26} The Ohio Supreme Court describes where the legal duties under this statute
derive from and provides clarity on the scope of an actor’s liability under the last
element, “[t]he norm in our society is for a parent to strive to see that his children are
11. reasonably well nourished, housed, and clothed and reasonably protected from harm, and
provided with necessary health care.” State v. Sammons, 58 Ohio St.2d 460, 463 (1979).
Consequently, a parent neglecting to meet the needs of children may have criminal
liability.
Manifestly, such neglect is characterized by acts of omission rather than acts of commission . . . Accordingly, an inexcusable failure to act in discharge of one's duty to protect a child where such failure to act results in a substantial risk to the child's health or safety is an offense under R.C. 2919.22(A).
State v. Kamel, 12 Ohio St.3d 306, 309 (1984) (internal citation omitted.). A majority of
child endangerment cases pertain to affirmative conduct, while endangering by omission
cases are less commonly prosecuted.
{¶ 27} While the law imposes criminal liability for a reckless disregard of a
child’s health and safety, courts do not impose criminal liability for poor parenting. “We,
as a society, cannot punish parents for every error in judgment, even if a child is injured,
under a theory of strict liability.” (Citation omitted.) State v. Martin, 134 Ohio App.3d
41, 43 (1st Dist.1999).
It is not the function of the criminal justice system to invade the sacred right of parents to raise their children as they deem suitable and proper, and police officers and prosecutors should exercise the appropriate discretion in deciding whether a parent's conduct crosses that thin line between bad parenting and criminal culpability.
Hughes, 2009-Ohio-4115, at ¶ 35 (3d Dist.).
{¶ 28} Appellant contests the city’s argument that she violated her parental duty
by allowing her children to be outside for a period without supervision. To support their
12. burden the city stated, “the fact that these children were allowed to wander from their
home close to the road at such a young age does violate a duty of care and protection.”
However, the city introduced no evidence to show the children were close to the road.
{¶ 29} Although Patterson testified that the children were near a street corner,
Patterson did not identify the proximity of the corner to the road or otherwise describe
any inherently dangerous conditions that posed a substantial risk to the children. Thus,
the record did not identify a specific harm in or near the road from which appellant failed
to reasonably protect her children, as the record was devoid of evidence regarding
specifics about the location, such as proximity of cars to the sidewalk or whether the
street was a busy road.
{¶ 30} The record does not support that appellant failed to make sure her children
were “reasonably well nourished, housed, and clothed and reasonably protected from
harm, and provided with necessary health care.” See Sammons, 58 Ohio St.2d at 463.
Although the record showed that the children were not wearing shoes or jackets while
outside, appellant testified that she had clothed the children, and they had taken the shoes
and jackets off by themselves. Additionally, the city did not provide testimony that the
weather conditions were too dangerous to go without shoes or jackets and appellant was
required to make the children wear them to protect their health and safety. No evidence
showed that the children were malnourished or unhoused.
{¶ 31} It was undisputed that appellant’s younger child needed a diaper change,
however dirty diapers are not necessarily evidence of failure to provide adequate care.
13. The Twelfth District Court of Appeals overturned a trial court’s finding that a father did
not provide adequate care for his children even though “on occasion, the children
returned to the welfare department with ‘dirty faces’ or ‘dirty diapers.’ In re Vickers
Children, 14 Ohio App.3d 201, 206 (12th Dist.1983). Appellant’s failure to change the
dirty diaper may be an error of judgement, however, imposing criminal liability for such
error crosses the line to punishing bad parenting. See Hughes, 2009-Ohio-4115, ¶ 35 (3d.
Dist.). Given that the dirty diaper was the only evidence on the record that suggested the
children were not “provided with necessary health care,” the weight of the evidence did
not support that appellant disregarded a parental duty based on a dirty diaper.
{¶ 32} The city argued that appellant’s lack of supervision rose from mere
negligence to the level of criminal liability that is recklessness, and included details not
introduced as evidence. The city argued, “It is dangerous for them to have been so close
to the road. And to make decisions that would put them in harm’s way, the lack of
oversight, the – lack of oversight, City believes does rise to the level of child
endangering.” The record supported the fact that the children played outside while
appellant remained inside. The city’s witness, however, never placed the children in any
proximity to the road and failed to describe the surrounding circumstances that created an
inherent, substantial risk. While playing outside, unsupervised may have presented a
potential risk, the weight of the evidence failed to meet the higher standard of
recklessness as opposed to negligence based on the lack of any proof there was an
imminent threat to the children or proximity to danger while they were outside. Evidence
14. of an imminent threat or danger would have supported the claim that appellant had a
“conscious disregard of or indifference to a known or obvious risk of harm.” See David,
2017-Ohio-7351, at ¶ 12 (6th Dist.). Given the lack of evidence, the weight of the
evidence at most supports a finding that appellant “failed to perceive or avoid a risk,”
indicative of only negligent conduct. See R.C. 2901.22 (D).
{¶ 33} Moreover, appellant’s uncontroverted testimony demonstrated appellant
was actively supervising her children from inside the house. Appellant testified that she
took proactive steps in supervising her children, and she retrieved the children when she
saw that they were no longer in the backyard and brought them inside without incident.
Patterson’s testimony did not contradict appellant’s claim that she was listening and
looking through her window every few minutes, checking on the children. Additionally,
Patterson testified that she first saw appellant at her trial and did not notice when the
children went inside, admitting that she did not continuously observe the children outside.
Otherwise, Patterson would have seen appellant when appellant found the children in the
front yard and brought them back into the home, or at the least, observed the children go
into the house.
{¶ 34} At trial the city relied on a lack of supervision as supporting evidence to
demonstrate that appellant created a substantial risk, stressing, “the lack of supervision
here is what the City believes is the substantial risk to the health and safety of the
children.” However, the record lacked evidence of a threat, force, danger or any
testimony about the surrounding environment to demonstrate a substantial risk as
15. opposed to a potentially dangerous condition. Neither Patterson nor Officer Habbouche
provided any facts to support the children had been approached by a person or had
entered or were prone to entering the street, or any similar, inherently dangerous
conditions. The children’s ages, moreover, do not create a heightened standard for child
endangering based on “inherent risks” to such young children. See,e.g. State v. Fretas,
2008-Ohio-4686, ¶ 25 (10th Dist.) (while “inherent risks” based on young age may be
valid consideration in considering specific evidence of dangerous conditions, “‘inherent
risks’ is not the legal standard for child endangering in Ohio”).
{¶ 35} Beyond the identification of the street where the children played, there was
no other evidence in the record demonstrating specific risks that were present while the
children were outside, such as the type of road, the presence of strangers, or inherently
dangerous conditions in the neighborhood. Without testimony stating why it was a
substantial risk for the children to be near Berkshire, the conclusion that it was a
substantial risk to be near the street was speculative. Although an injury is not necessary,
evidence presenting proof of what was nearby that could have hurt the children turns a
potential or speculative risk into a substantial risk. Without more evidence about the
circumstances, the trial court engaged in turning a speculative risk into a substantial risk,
which is impermissible. See Hughes, 2009-Ohio-4115, at ¶ 21 (3rd Dist.).
{¶ 36} We recognize “[c]hild endangering cases ‘are intensely fact-specific and,
therefore, do not easily lend themselves to comparison to other child endangering cases.’”
(Citation omitted.) State v. Wilson, 2024-Ohio-2951, ¶ 27 (4th Dist.). However, in a case
16. applicable to this case, the Second District Court of Appeals reversed the conviction for
child endangerment finding the state was unable to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that
the appellant endangered the child. State v. McCleod, 2006-Ohio-579, ¶ 17 (2d Dist.). In
McCleod, the appellant was charged because he allowed the five-year-old child he was
babysitting to be 125-150 yards away, playing on a playground while the appellant was
inside his apartment watching them through his kitchen window. Id. at ¶ 12. Although the
responding officer testified that the playground was in a “problem area”, the child had not
been hurt or approached by any other adult besides the officer, and when the officer
approached the child, the appellant responded promptly. Id. at ¶ 13.
{¶ 37} The facts in McLeod closely resemble the facts of appellant’s case,
considering the lack of evidence regarding dangerous conditions or an imminent threat in
the neighborhood in which the children played. Although the issue in McLeod was
sufficiency of the evidence, the court’s analysis of similar factual circumstances in
McCleod lends support for our analysis of the factual circumstances here.
{¶ 38} The court found McCleod’s conduct did not rise beyond negligence to the
level of criminal behavior.
The failure to realize an ideal level of supervisory attention of a child does not equate to acting "with heedless indifference to the consequences, [thereby] perversely disregarding a known" "strong possibility, as contrasted with a remote or significant possibility," of harm to the health or safety of the child. . . While his supervision may not have been ideal, it did not meet the test for criminal liability under the endangering children statute.
17. Id. at ¶ 16. Additionally, the evidence presented of the surrounding circumstances did not
meet the burden of proving there was a substantial risk present.
The State highlighted Deputy Harvey's testimony that the playground is a "problem area" that had a history of some juvenile assault activity. While this fact should give any child's care-giver pause, this alone does not constitute a substantial risk, defined by the statute as "a strong possibility, as contrasted with a remote or significant possibility." The area was not so dangerous as to cause abnormal insecurity for Mackenzie's safety. It was only 4:00 p.m., it was a clear day, and McLeod was between 125 and 150 yards from Mackenzie.
Id. at ¶ 13.
{¶ 39} Here, appellant was similarly situated in distance from her children, as the
testimony of the witness and appellant reflected a distance between a driveway’s length
to 10 houses away from her children, with nothing to quantify the measurable distance of
10 houses. The record reflected appellant was watching her children through the window
of her kitchen, as did McCleod. Appellant reacted to the situation by searching for her
children and bringing them inside, similarly to how McCleod came outside when the
officer approached the child. Applying similar reasoning as in McLeod, appellant’s
conduct was not ideal, in that it was a “failure to realize an ideal level of supervisory
attention.” However, we do not criminally punish bad parenting. Hughes, 2009-Ohio-
4115, at ¶ 35 (3d. Dist.). Given the similarity between the cases, the Second District’s
finding in McCleod that the facts were insufficient supports our conclusion that the trial
court’s finding in the present case was against the manifest weight of the evidence.
18. {¶ 40} Thus, it was a manifest injustice for the trial court to conclude that the
weight of the evidence supported finding that the appellant had a conscious knowledge of
risk and disregarded that risk. Instead, the weight of the evidence merely supported a
finding that appellant was negligent for failing to recognize the possibilities of danger,
and not reckless for failing to safeguard against demonstrated substantial risk.
{¶ 41} Considering this record and the weight of credible evidence, while mindful
of the trial court’s role in resolving conflicts in the testimony, we find this case meets the
high standard for overturning a conviction under the manifest weight of the evidence
standard. See Thompkins, 78 Ohio St.3d 380 at 87. Therefore, we find that the trial court
erred in finding appellant guilty of child endangerment.
{¶ 42} Appellant’s sole assignment of error is well-taken. We therefore vacate the
conviction and remand for a new trial. See State v. Fips, 2020-Ohio-1449, ¶ 10 (“a new
trial is the appropriate remedy when a reviewing court determines that a criminal
conviction is against the manifest weight of the evidence”").
IV. Conclusion
{¶ 43} For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the judgment of the Toledo
Municipal Court. We vacate the conviction and remand for a new trial. Appellee is
ordered to pay the costs of this appeal pursuant to App.R. 24.
JUDGMENT REVERSED AND REMANDED.
19. State of Ohio/ City of Toledo v. Knighten Appeals Case No.: L-24-1241 Trial Court Case No.: CRB-24-02369
A certified copy of this entry shall constitute the mandate pursuant to App.R. 27. See also 6th Dist.Loc.App.R. 4.
Thomas J. Osowik, J. [[Applied Signature]] JUDGE
Christine E. Mayle, J. [[Applied Signature 2]] JUDGE
Gene A. Zmuda, J. [[Applied Signature 3]] CONCUR. JUDGE
This decision is subject to further editing by the Supreme Court of Ohio’s Reporter of Decisions. Parties interested in viewing the final reported version are advised to visit the Ohio Supreme Court’s web site at: http://www.supremecourt.ohio.gov/ROD/docs/.
20.