State v. Oppenheimer

348 N.E.2d 731, 46 Ohio App. 2d 241, 75 Ohio Op. 2d 404, 1975 Ohio App. LEXIS 5851
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 12, 1975
Docket75AP-184
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 348 N.E.2d 731 (State v. Oppenheimer) 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. Oppenheimer, 348 N.E.2d 731, 46 Ohio App. 2d 241, 75 Ohio Op. 2d 404, 1975 Ohio App. LEXIS 5851 (Ohio Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

Whiteside, J.

Defendant appeals from a judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of Franklin County, division of domestic relations, juvenile branch, upon a jury verdict finding him guilty of the nonsupport of his two minor children, from June 4,1974, until September 30, 1974, in violation of R. C. 2919.21.

The evidence indicates that defendant was divorced from his wife in January, 1973, who was awarded custody of their then three minor children, and defendant was ordered to pay support for the children in the amount of $260 per month. On September 30, .1974,. defendant’s ex-wife *242 caused the commencement, of the present proceedings by filing a Complaint charging defendant with failing to support their three children from June 4, 1974, until September 30, 1974. One of the children was nineteen years of age at the time. At trial, the Complaint was amended to delete the reference to the nineteen year old.

The evidence indicated that, during the four-month period alleged, defendant had made ho support payments to his ex-wife for the children and hád not otherwise supported the children except, by an occasional small amount of money which he may have given them. Presumably more was given in the way of gifts. The trial court excluded any evidence, as to payments made by defendant for support of the children prior op subsequent to the four-month period alleged and also excluded certain evidence concerning a $1,000 bond of. defendant’s, which was in the possession of his .ex-wife, and which he allegedly offered to sign over to her for support during the period involved. The trial court also excluded some evidence concerning the earnings of defendant’s ex-wife.

The trial court also admitted into evidence, over' the objection of defendant, the divorce decree establishing and ordering the support payments and the cashier’s record card of the clerk of courts showing ho' payments made by defendant. The trial court refused to’instruct the jury that the divorce decree did not establish defendant’s obligation to provide adequate support ’ under the criminal charges. Defendant testified that he; had had physical and mental problems for which he had been under the care of doctors; including a psychiatrist; that he was hospitalized for three months in 1973; and that his problems continued at least through September of 1974. Defendant further testified that he had paid no support payments during the period in question and had been employed with a take-home pay of $215 a week during that period, but that he had had no income for a period of three and one-half months, apparently sometime prior thereto. Testimony that he had “gone in the hole $3,000 just a few months before,” as an accumulation of the three and one-half month period with no in *243 ■come, was excluded by the trial court; The. trial court refused to charge the jury upon the defense of inability to support. . . . •

Defendant proffered certain evidence, including exhibits, which were excluded by the trial court, which, inter alia, show that, from December 28, 1973, through December 30, 1974, defendant made support payments- to his ex-wife —the prosecuting complainant and witness — for child support totalling some $1,879.11. He also proffered evidence that in 1973 he voluntarily caused to be paid to his ex-wife, from a profit-sharing plan, the sum of $7,824.21, which was his property and was not under compulsion of the divorce decree. Defendant also proffered defendant’s joint return with his then wife for the year. 1972, indicating gross rental income in that year of some $17,000, and a .net income, after expenses but including allowance, for depreciation, of approximately $8,500. :

In effect, the trial court limited the consideration of the jury to evidence concerning the four-month period from June 4, 1974, until September 30, 1974. The jury returned a verdict of guilty. In support of his appeal, defendant raises six assignments of error, which he "has labeled “Propositions of Law,” as follows:

1. “The record of a judgment rendered in a civil action is not admissible in a criminal prosecution to establish facts essential to a conviction of the ■ offense charged, because the parties in a criminal prosecution-'are different from those in a civil action, and the quantum of proof--is different in a criminal case from that iequired .-in a civil case. ’ ’

. 2. “Due process of law requires that a defendant be permitted to present his version of the facts, as well as the prosecution’s version to the jury so that the jury may decide where the truth.lies.”

3. “The triál court must hold a balance between the state and the accused and afford each the benefit of a fair hearing.”

■ 4. “ The effective res judicata attached only to a valid, final judgment on the evidence between the same' parties.”

5. “The trial court added to the prejudicial effect the *244 admission of the divorce decree and cashier’s record herein by refusing to grant an instruction that the amount listed in the divorce decree for child support did not necessarily mean that this would constitute the required adequate support under the criminal law.”

6. “The court erred when it refused an instruction concerning the affirmative defense under Section 2919.21. Ohio Revised Code.”

Before specifically considering each assignment of error, it is necessary to review the general principles of law applicable to a case such as this and which permeate all of the assignments of error.

R. C. 2919.21, which defendant is accused of violating, is a relatively new statute, effective January 1, 1974, enacted as a part of the new Criminal Code and replacing, in part, former R. C. 3113.01 and 2903.08, with which there are both similarities and differences. R. C. 2919.21 provides in pertinent part:

“(A) No person shall * * * fail to provide adequate support to:

< Í * # *

“(2) His or her legitimate * * * child under eighteen # * #

Í < * * *

“(B) It is an affirmative defense to a charge under this section that the actor was unable to provide adequate support, and provided such support as was within his ability and means.”

Former R. C. 2903.08, inter alia, prohibited a parent from willfully or negligently failing to furnish his child under the age of eighteen with “necessary and proper food, clothing, or shelter.” Former R. C. 3113.01 prohibited a parent of a child under eighteen from failing to •'provide such child “with the necessary or proper home, care, food, and clothing.” The present statute, like the former ones, places an equal burden upon both parents, both father and mother, to provide for the support of their minor children. The question immediately arises as to the criminal liability of one parent for failure to provide adequate support, *245 ■where such adequate support is provided by the other parent who is fully able to do so.

In an old case, interpreting a former, statute, which read substantially similar to the present ft. C. 3113.06 in.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
348 N.E.2d 731, 46 Ohio App. 2d 241, 75 Ohio Op. 2d 404, 1975 Ohio App. LEXIS 5851, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-oppenheimer-ohioctapp-1975.