State v. Sims

369 N.E.2d 24, 52 Ohio Misc. 31, 6 Ohio Op. 3d 124, 1977 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 94
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedApril 25, 1977
DocketNo. CR-5732
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 369 N.E.2d 24 (State v. Sims) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Sims, 369 N.E.2d 24, 52 Ohio Misc. 31, 6 Ohio Op. 3d 124, 1977 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 94 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1977).

Opinion

Hitchcock, J.

(By assignment from Paulding County.) Ordinarily, it would seem that defendant’s R. C. 2953.-21 petition for post-conviction relief should be easily and summarily dismissed when these facts are not disputed. Defendant was tried by a jury which heard the evidence in a three-day trial. On the fourth day, June 8, 1973, when the final arguments of counsel were made and the jury instructed by the judge, the defendant, free on bail, did not appear. At 5:30 P. M. of this day, the jury returned its verdict in defendant’s absence finding him guilty as charged in respect to offenses committed shortly before midnight at the Fountain Bleu Lounge in Cleveland at E. 67th St. and Carnegie on August 24, 1972, as to three of five numbered counts specified in the indictment, to-wit: (2) G-uilty of the armed robbery of Otis M. Bivins; (4) Guilty of the armed robbery of Maurice Presley; and (5) Guilty of the armed robbery of John Bennett. Counts charging the same offense in respect to (1) Geraldine Freeman and (3) Charles Jefferson were dismissed for lack of probative evidence at the end of the state’s case because these persons could not be found to testify at the trial. Defendant was in this trial represented by Roger J. Hurley of the staff of The Legal Aid Society who in the past five years has defended over 100 persons in jury trials on felony counts and although he has kept no strict account knows that in . approximately 50 percent of them the jury returned a verdict of “not guilty.” [34]*34On appeal to the Court of Appeals defendant’s conviction on each count was affirmed and the Supreme Court of Ohio, sua sponte, dismissed his further appeal for want of a substantial constitutional question.

Further, it is known that prior to his conviction in this case on three counts of armed robbery, defendant has a Juvenile Court record and was acquitted by a jury of multiple counts of armed robbery in one trial; and again acquitted of carrying a concealed weapon in another jury trial; and that in all these jury trials he was represented by the same counsel, Mr. Roger J. Hurley, who was observed by the writer as the presiding judge of the jury trial wheré-in defendant was, by the jury, acquitted of armed robbery. Also, numerous members of the Cleveland bar have informed the court that Mr. Hurley has a reputation as being one of the city’s most competent and capable lawyers in the defense of criminal cases; and the .court knows from personal observation as presiding judge of two jury trials wherein Mr. Hurley was defense counsel that he is a trial lawyer of high competence in the defense of criminal charges.

Still, if this court is to adhere to its own conviction of what is required of those who voluntarily take Ohio’s judicial oath, defendant poses questions of uncommon difficulty in light of these additional facts.

The journal entry made after a review of the pleádings and record found that: “* * * Defendant failed to attend the concluding day of his trial and * * * that there is no substance to Defendant’s claims numbered 3, 4, 7 and 8 charging he did not have competent representation because his counsel, Roger Hurley, failed respectively to: object to the jurisdiction of the trial court, raise the due process issue in respect to his lineup identification, ask the Court for a voir dire in respect to his in-eourt identification, and request discovery from the prosecutor; and that his claims numbered 1, 2, 5, and 6 alleging that he did not have competent representation because his counsel, Roger Hurley, failed respectively to: properly investigate his case, subpoena a certain witness, object to the validity of the affidavit and warrant as constitutionally impermissible, and [35]*35to consult fully with the petitioner, cannot he determined without considering additional evidence not in the record, and that defendant petitioner is indigent.”

Alan I. Goodman was appointed counsel for defendant as per R. C. 2953.24 and defendant was returned to Cleveland, and on June 17 and 24, 1976, with defendant, defense counsel, and assistant prosecuting attorney James A. Carney present, evidence was adduced from which the court finds:

I. Identification Statement.

That defense counsel, through an investigator for the legal aid society, did on March 6, 1973, obtain from Geraldine Freeman, barmaid on duty at The Fountain Bleu lounge on August 24, 1972, the day of the robbery, a statement which reads:

“I have veiwed [sic] two photographs showed to me by Mrs. Alice Peck on March 6,1973, and I have initialed the same. None of the persons in those photographs were present or had anything to do with the robbery at the Fountain Bleu on August 24th, 1972.
“I make this statement freely and voluntarily knowing that Mrs. Peek is a [sic] investigator for the Defendant’s Office and represent [sic] Jackie Ray Sims.
“No threat, promises or other consideration were given to me for me to make this statement.
“If Jackie Ray Sims is pictured on those photographs he did not take part in that robbery.
“(s) Geraldine A. Freeman
Geraldine A. Freeman”

The statement is typed upon a sheet of bond paper bearing the letterhead of The Legal Aid Society of Cleveland and the maker’s signature is a bold one, reminiscent of some famous in history.1

[36]*36One of the photographs mentioned is undisputedly that of defendant Sims and two other men and áppears as defendant’s Exhibit B in the record.

H. Alibi

Defense counsel did not interview either defendant’s mother, Alice Richardson or his former wife, Billie Sims, who, defendant told his counsel, knew where he was for the five hours after 8:00 P. M. August 24,1972, and it was not the Fountain Bleu Lounge which defendant vehemently claims was never visited by him until he interviewed Geraldine Freeman there in January, 1973.

Defense counsel is not sure (although he thinks he probably gave it to the police) what he did with the information that defendant emphatically claims he gave him as to what he had heard from likely sources was the true identity of the robbers at the Fountain Bleu on August 24, 1972. Defendant believes it was done by some or all of the following: one Steve (a. k. a. Arthur Cox) and one Tony (a. k. a. Anthony Costes or Custers or DeCoster) definitely; and perhaps Lewis Bailey, Daniel Boone, and Claiborne Sims, brother of defendant, were participants.

Counsel admits that he recalls defendant’s claim of alibi and that he subpoenaed no witnesses in support of same. Just why he did not call the alibi witnesses he cannot recall. He believes that in several trials shortly before this one he had had bad experience with alibi testimony and probably felt that in this ease alibi testimony resting only on the memory of close relatives uncorroborated by some solidly ascertainable fact or circumstance would do defendant no good, and might possibly harm the chance he might otherwise have to obtain á not guilty verdict. He thinks he gave the police the information acquired from his client about Steve and Tony. What, if anything, police did thereafter he never learned.

III. The Affidavit and Warrant

In a direct fashion, defense counsel did not object to the affidavit and warrant as being constitutionally impér-

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2008 Ohio 592 (Clermont County Court of Common Pleas, 2008)
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United States v. Grant
473 F. Supp. 720 (D. South Carolina, 1979)
Lhost v. State
271 N.W.2d 121 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1978)

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Bluebook (online)
369 N.E.2d 24, 52 Ohio Misc. 31, 6 Ohio Op. 3d 124, 1977 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-sims-ohctcomplcuyaho-1977.