State v. Renner

708 N.E.2d 765, 125 Ohio App. 3d 383
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 16, 1998
DocketNo. 16455.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 708 N.E.2d 765 (State v. Renner) 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. Renner, 708 N.E.2d 765, 125 Ohio App. 3d 383 (Ohio Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

Brogan, Judge.

In this case, defendant-appellant, William Renner, appeals from a jury verdict convicting him of felonious assault, with a firearm specification. Renner was *385 tried on three charges: abducting Taleisa with a gun, and feloniously assaulting Taleisa by discharging a gun from a vehicle. The latter two charges included firearm specifications. After trial, Renner was found not guilty of abduction and of one charge of felonious assault and a mandatory five years on the firearm charge, to be served prior to and consecutively to the term for the felonious assault.

Briefly, the pertinent facts are as follows. Beginning in high school, Renner and Taleisa Jones dated. While still in high school, Taleisa became pregnant with Renner’s child, and after Taleisa graduated, the pair lived together with their daughter, Exelis, in Miamisburg, from approximately May 1995 until September 1996. In the meantime, Taleisa gave birth to another child, Isaac.. In September, 1996, Taleisa moved back to her mother’s house, but she and Renner continued to see each other until around the end of October 1996. At that time, they argued over the telephone and had no contact for approximately two weeks. According to Taleisa, she was not angry or upset with Renner during the conversation; instead Renner was angry at her because she had broken up with him and would not move back in. On the other hand, Renner’s testimony was that Taleisa was angry with him because she thought he was seeing other women. This complete disparity in accounts typifies the contradictions rampant in the testimony of the only two witnesses to the crimes with which Renner was charged.

On the evening of November 14, 1996, Renner came to the Arby’s Restaurant where Taleisa was working. According to Renner, he had spoken to Taleisa three times earlier that evening and she knew he was coming to pick her up. Taleisa denied this, but independent, neutral testimony supported Renner’s account. Specifically, Taleisa’s supervisor, Mary Smith, testified that Taleisa received three phone calls that evening from a man. Smith also testified that she and Taleisa both left the restaurant at approximately 1:03 a.m. Smith offered Taleisa a ride home, but Taleisa declined, telling Smith that her ex-boyfriend had called earlier and was there to take her home.

Smith testified that Taleisa walked over to Renner’s truck and did not stop at the driver’s side. Instead, Taleisa went to the passenger’s side and got in. However, Taleisa’s story was that she walked to the driver’s side, where she saw a gun sitting on the console. Renner looked angry and told her to get in the truck. Taleisa was scared and did as Renner said, because of Renner’s tone of voice and because of Renner’s prior acts of violence against her, including one occasion when he had placed the gun in her mouth.

Allegedly, Renner had purchased the gun at a flea market some months before, when he and Taleisa were thinking about moving into his mother’s home in Miamisburg. Because Renner and Taleisa are not of the same race, threats had *386 been made against them, even by neighbors, and Renner wanted a gun for protection. His testimony was that the gun had never been taken out of the car. He also denied ever threatening Taleisa with the gun. His testimony was that Taleisa had been violent toward him in the past and had hit and scratched him on a number of occasions. Additionally, she had done property damage, especially when she moved out of their apartment.

In any event, after Taleisa got in the truck, they began to argue. Again, their accounts differ dramatically. Taleisa’s story is that Renner immediately began calling her a “whore” and a “bitch,” hit her twice with a closed fist, and hit her three times above her left eyebrow with the butt of the gun. At that point, they were traveling on Alex-Bell Road, and she jumped out of the car because she did not want to be hit anymore. According to Taleisa, Renner was driving about thirty miles an hour at the time. After she jumped out, he slammed on the brakes, and the car skidded to a halt. Taleisa testified that when she looked “back,” Renner was pointing the gun straight out the door of the truck. Renner did not get out of the truck, but fired directly at her. Her testimony also was that the she was right in the doorway of the truck when he shot at her. She' got up and ran, and heard a second shot a few seconds later. She then ran to a neighboring house, and the occupants called the police.

Renner testified that he had dinner that evening at his sister’s house and that he and his brother-in-law later went to a drive-through, where he purchased and drank a forty-ounce beer. After returning to his sister’s house, he contacted Taleisa and then asked his sister if he could borrow some money from her or sell her something because Taleisa needed money for the kids. His sister agreed to purchase wedding rings Renner had previously bought for himself and Taleisa, and gave him a check for $250.00. Renner then went to his own house, cleaned up, and drove to Arby’s. Upon arriving, he went to a pay phone next to Arby’s and called Taleisa to let her know he was there. A few minutes later, Taleisa walked out with her supervisor and got in the truck.

Renner testified that the gun was not on top of the console, but was underneath, where it was always kept. Taleisa knew where the gun was and had handled it before. His story was that after getting in the truck, Taleisa began accusing him of seeing other women. She then started hitting him and scratching him while he was trying to drive. At some point, she reached under the console and got the gun. They continued to struggle, and Renner slammed on the brakes. The passenger’s door flew open, the gun went off, and Taleisa rolled out of the truck. Renner denied having the gun in his hand or shooting it. He claimed that after the shot, he did not know if the gun was still in Taleisa’s hand or where it was. He then pulled across the street into a parking lot and reached over to close the door. At that point, he saw the gun on the floor of the *387 passenger’s seat and put it back under the console. Since Taleisa no longer had the gun, he got out of the car to see if she was all right. However, he didn’t see her, and she didn’t answer when he called. As a result, he turned and started to walk to a pay phone to call his sister.

The police arrived as Renner was walking away. They first detained him for identification and then arrested him after Taleisa identified him. Subsequently, Renner was charged with abduction and the two counts of felonious assault that were previously mentioned. As was noted above, the jury found Renner guilty only of felonious assault in connection with the discharge of a firearm from a vehicle.

On appeal, Renner raises the following three assignments of error:

“I. The trial court erred in allowing testimony concerning Mr. Renner’s prior assaults upon Ms. Jones. This evidence should have been excluded pursuant to Rule of Evidence 404(B), and it does not fit within any of the enumerated exceptions.
“II. This court should overturn Mr. Renner’s conviction because the verdict is against the manifest weight of the evidence.
“III.

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708 N.E.2d 765, 125 Ohio App. 3d 383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-renner-ohioctapp-1998.