State v. Robinson, Unpublished Decision (4-2-1999)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 2, 1999
DocketAppeal No.: C-980881 Trial No.: B-971412
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Robinson, Unpublished Decision (4-2-1999) (State v. Robinson, Unpublished Decision (4-2-1999)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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State v. Robinson, Unpublished Decision (4-2-1999), (Ohio Ct. App. 1999).

Opinions

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.] CATEGORY:

HOMICIDE — INSTRUCTIONS

SUMMARY:

The trial court did not err in refusing to instruct the jury on the doctrine of "transferred self-defense," as articulated inState v. Clifton (1972), 32 Ohio App.2d 284,290 N.E. 921: the Clifton instruction, which allows for an acquittal when the defendant mistakenly or accidentally kills a person while acting in self-defense, was inappropriate because the record indicated that the defendant was at fault in creating the situation that led to the affray and that he did not reasonably believe that he was in imminent danger of death or great bodily harm. [But, see, DISSENT: The trial court should have provided an instruction on transferred self-defense, where the evidence warranted the underlying instruction on self-defense; the defendant's involvement in criminal activity did not in and of itself create the "situation giving rise to an affray," even though the defendant may have anticipated the need to defend himself as a result of the criminal activity, and the defendant's belief in imminent harm was reasonable, although mistaken. By holding that self-defense was unwarranted under the circumstances because of the criminal activity, the majority has created a far-reaching rule unsupported by precedent.]

JUDGMENT: AFFIRMED OPINION.

Judgment Appealed From Is: Affirmed A jury found defendant-appellant Angelo Robinson guilty of murder and possession of cocaine, as well as three firearm specifications accompanying those charges. Robinson appeals his conviction for murder, raising three assignments of error. He does not challenge his drug conviction or the specification pertaining to that charge. In his first assignment, he challenges the trial court's failure to provide a jury instruction on transferred-intent self-defense. In his second and third assignments, he contends, respectively, that the evidence was insufficient to sustain his conviction and that the judgment was against the weight of the evidence.

The following evidence was adduced at trial. Lisha House and Melvin Howell moved into an apartment on Linn Street in Cincinnati, Ohio. A few days after they moved in, a woman House knew as Linda approached her and asked if she could sell crack cocaine from the apartment. (It is unclear whether Linda's surname was Davis or Smith.) House gave her permission, and Linda, accompanied by Robinson, sold cocaine from the apartment that same day. The next day, Linda, carrying cocaine, and Robinson returned. After spending some time alone with Robinson behind the closed door of the apartment's one bedroom, Linda provided House with some cocaine for her personal use and then left the premises, claiming she was not feeling well. Linda told House, who was to help sell the cocaine, that Robinson was going to take care of everything. Before leaving, Linda ensured that Veronica Jackson also would arrive to help sell the cocaine.

House's job in the drug sales was to allow purchasers into the building. Jackson's job was to allow purchasers into the apartment. Robinson was behind the locked bedroom door with the cocaine. Also present in the apartment were Howell and James Gibson.

House was in her position near the outside door, talking to a drug runner, when she noticed five people outside. She told the runner to let them into the building. When the runner returned, he told her that he thought the five men intended to rob them. She ran up the steps and Jackson opened the door. Upon entering the apartment, House yelled at Jackson to close the door because the men had guns. Before Jackson could completely close the door, one of the men stuck his foot between the door and the doorjamb. Before the women were able to close the door, the man pushed the barrel of a gun through the door opening and fired several shots into the apartment. During this time, Robinson never left the locked bedroom.

House described the scene:

It was total chaos. And this happened in a split second. You have to put yourself, you have to really put yourself in everybody's position. Gunshots are going off. You're telling your friend to get down. She is running around with her head cut off, like a chicken with her head cut off. You trying to tell her to get down. I'm on my stomach in the kitchen. She goes to run anyplace to try and get cover 'cause I know her ears are still ringing too.

She hits the bedroom door. More shots are fired. And then, I think she might have hit both of those doors at the same time, then more gunshots are fired. And the person that was behind the locked door was hearing the gunshots coming off like that.

House explained that when Jackson tried to get into the bedroom, three shots came from behind the closed bedroom door. After the three shots, Robinson opened the door and asked his companions to call the police.

Jackson died from a bullet wound to her chest, caused by a bullet fired through the bedroom door from the inside. The bullet was fired from the gun found at the scene, a .25-caliber Raven handgun. When the police arrived, they found a bag of crack cocaine and the handgun in the bedroom. In and around the apartment, they also found five spent .22-caliber cartridge casings-obviously from the gun or guns fired by the would-be robbers.

Robinson approached two of the investigating police officers. He told them that, while he was standing outside, he saw five men enter the building, heard shots, and observed the men run away. He provided a description of two of the men. In other words, Robinson at first denied firing the fatal shot. However, he did not take the stand at trial.

I. Self-Defense
In Robinson's first assignment of error, he argues the trial court erred in refusing to instruct the jury on transferred self-defense under State v. Clifton.1 Although Robinson has not provided a copy of his proposed jury instruction to this court, the record demonstrates that he submitted the instruction and provided the trial court with a citation to State v.Clifton. The proposed instruction would have permitted the jury to acquit Robinson if it believed that he mistakenly or accidentally killed Jackson while acting in self-defense against the intruders. The court declined to give the instruction because the facts of this case did not involve a "crossfire situation" and because the "robbers" did not gain entrance into the apartment.

The issue, as set forth by Robinson, is whether a defendant in a criminal trial is entitled, upon proper request by counsel, to an instruction on transferred-intent self-defense where the jury has been provided both with a transferred-intent instruction and with an instruction on self-defense. Robinson claims that the instruction on transferred intent without an accompanying instruction on transferred-intent self-defense rendered the jury instructions internally inconsistent and warrants reversal on appeal.

However, before we reach the issue of the necessity of the transferred-intent self-defense instruction, we must determine in the first instance whether a self-defense instruction was proper under the facts of this case. If the issue of self-defense was not properly submitted to the jury, the propriety of the transferred-intent self-defense instruction becomes irrelevant. Because we hold that the evidence did not support an instruction on self-defense, we find no prejudicial error in the court's refusal to instruct on the Clifton doctrine of transferred-intent self-defense.

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Robinson, Unpublished Decision (4-2-1999), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-robinson-unpublished-decision-4-2-1999-ohioctapp-1999.