State v. Pulley

2020 Ohio 6898
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 28, 2020
DocketCA2019-12-200
StatusPublished

This text of 2020 Ohio 6898 (State v. Pulley) 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. Pulley, 2020 Ohio 6898 (Ohio Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Pulley, 2020-Ohio-6898.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

TWELFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT OF OHIO

BUTLER COUNTY

STATE OF OHIO, :

Appellee, : CASE NO. CA2019-12-200

: OPINION - vs - 12/28/2020 :

JACOB D. PULLEY, :

Appellant. :

CRIMINAL APPEAL FROM HAMILTON MUNICIPAL COURT Case No. 19CRB02720-A

Neal D. Schuett, City of Hamilton Prosecuting Attorney, 345 High Street, Hamilton, Ohio 45011, for appellee

Christopher P. Frederick, 300 High Street, Suite 550, Hamilton, Ohio 45011, for appellant

HENDRICKSON, P.J.

{¶1} Appellant, Jacob D. Pulley, appeals from the decision of the Hamilton

Municipal Court ordering him to pay $1,389.80 in restitution following his conviction for

criminal damaging. For the reasons discussed below, we affirm the court's restitution order.

{¶2} On March 22, 2019, appellant was charged by complaint with criminal

damaging in violation of R.C. 2909.06, a misdemeanor of the second degree. On Butler CA2019-12-200

September 3, 2019, appellant pled no contest to the charge, thereby admitting to the

following facts:

[O]n or about February 17, 2019, Jacob Pulley caused damage to the bathroom door of Andrew Grenier and Kasey O'Donnel's home, also damage to the kitchen cabinets. Said acts occurred in Ross Township – Ross Township, Butler County, Ohio. * * * Mr. Pulley threw an open bottle of red hand sanitizer all over the freshly painted white kitchen cabinets, ruining them. Then went upstairs, punched two holes in the bathroom door.

{¶3} The trial court accepted appellant's no contest plea and found him guilty of

criminal damaging. The court then turned to sentencing and the issue of restitution.

Appellant stipulated to $269.80 as restitution for damage to the bathroom door. However,

the amount of restitution for damage to the kitchen cabinets was disputed. Grenier and

O'Donnel sought $1,120 in damages for repairs to their cabinets. According to Grenier, the

cabinets had recently been painted white and the red-dye hand sanitizer appellant threw

"soaked in immediately" and was unable to be removed. The cabinets, therefore, had to

be scraped clean and repainted. Grenier stated that eight different cabinets had been

damaged by the red-dyed hand sanitizer appellant threw. O'Donnel believed there were "at

least eight to ten" doors that had been damaged.

{¶4} Appellant disputed that eight or more cabinets had been damaged by his

actions. He argued that photographs taken at the scene showed damage only to "two

double cabinets." He further disputed that he should be responsible for paying for a

polyurethane topcoat that had been put over top of the repaired and repainted cabinets,

contending that the polyurethane topcoat had not been on the white cabinets at the time he

threw the hand sanitizer. During the hearing, appellant asked an investigating officer,

Detective Johnson, how many cabinets were damaged. Johnson indicated she had not

responded to the scene, but someone else "was there" who might be able to answer. This

-2- Butler CA2019-12-200

person, who was unidentified in the record, recalled four cabinets being damaged.1

{¶5} Due to the dispute over cabinet damages, the trial court continued sentencing

and set the matter for a restitution hearing. The restitution hearing commenced on

September 26, 2019. At this time, defense counsel referenced a restitution memorandum

that he had filed with the court the day before the hearing. In the memorandum, appellant

took issue with a $1,120 estimate Grenier and O'Donnel received from N-Hance

Revolutionary Wood Renewal ("N-Hance") for the repair of 16 kitchen cabinets and

challenged whether he should have to pay for the application of the polyurethane topcoat.

As neither the state nor the court had seen the memorandum before the restitution hearing,

the court continued the matter to give everyone time to review the filing.

{¶6} The hearing reconvened on October 17, 2019. At that time, Grenier and

O'Donnel informed the court that 16 of their 24 kitchen cabinets had been damaged by

appellant and had to be repainted. Grenier and O'Donnel presented a receipt from N-Hance

showing that 16 cabinets were cleaned, sanded, and repainted at an amount of $70 per

cabinet, for a total of $1,120. Grenier and O'Donnel also presented a receipt from the

original project – when they paid to have all 24 cabinets painted and finished prior to

appellant splashing red hand sanitizer all over them. That invoice indicated Grenier and

1. When discussing damages at the September 3, 2019 hearing, the following discussion took place:

[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Well, I think I would ask Detective Johnson whether that is the case or not, because she investigated the crime.

THE COURT: Well, you can ask her, but I don't think they're lying about how many of their cabinets got splashed, but you can go ahead and ask her if you like.

[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: How many cabinets were damaged.

DETECTIVE JOHNSON: I did not respond to the scene. (TAPE INAUDIBLE). He was there.

THE COURT: Do you know how many?

UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: I remember four, Your Honor.

-3- Butler CA2019-12-200

O'Donnel paid $130 per cabinet, with a 7.00 percent discount, for a total of $2,901.60 for

work on all 24 cabinets.

{¶7} Appellant did not present any witnesses to rebut Grenier's and O'Donnel's

assertions that 16 cabinets were damaged and had to be repainted. He again referred to

photographs taken at the scene, which he argued showed damage to only two double

cabinets. He also argued O'Donnel and Grenier's claim about the amount of cabinets

damaged consistently changed and that law enforcement had indicated only two cabinets

had been damaged.

{¶8} The trial court ultimately rejected appellant's assertion that O'Donnel's and

Grenier's claims had changed, stating, "You know what, I don’t think they've changed their

story at all. They've been here, I don't think they've said anything other than exactly what

happened." The court concluded that O'Donnel and Grenier had established damages to

16 kitchen cabinets in the amount of $1,120. The trial court therefore ordered appellant to

pay a total of $1,389.80 in restitution for damages to the bathroom door and kitchen

cabinets. The court then sentenced appellant to 90 days in jail, with all 90 days stayed, and

to two years of community control.

{¶9} Appellant timely appealed, raising the following as his sole assignment of

error:

{¶10} THE TRIAL COURT ERRED WHEN IT ORDERED [APPELLANT] TO PAY A

TOTAL OF ONE THOUSAND THREE HUNDRED EIGHTY-NINE AND 80/100 ($1,389.80)

DOLLARS IN RESTITUTION.

{¶11} Appellant concedes the order of $269.80 in restitution for damages caused to

the bathroom door was proper but argues that the court erred when it ordered him to pay

$1,120 in restitution for damages to the kitchen cabinets. Appellant contends the economic

loss to the kitchen cabinets was not determined to a reasonable degree of certainty as there

-4- Butler CA2019-12-200

were conflicting statements about how many cabinets were damaged and the invoice from

N-Hance failed to set forth an itemized cost for each of the services it performed, such as

cleaning, sanding, painting, and applying a polyurethane topcoat. Appellant maintains that

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2020 Ohio 6898, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-pulley-ohioctapp-2020.