State v. Slone

320 N.E.2d 720, 40 Ohio App. 2d 523, 69 Ohio Op. 2d 453, 1974 WL 184250, 1974 Ohio App. LEXIS 2661
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 30, 1974
Docket74AP-118
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 320 N.E.2d 720 (State v. Slone) 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. Slone, 320 N.E.2d 720, 40 Ohio App. 2d 523, 69 Ohio Op. 2d 453, 1974 WL 184250, 1974 Ohio App. LEXIS 2661 (Ohio Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

Holmes, J.

This matter involves the appeal of a judgment by the Court of Common Pleas of Franklin County on a jury verdict of guilty of murder in the first degree. The defendant, the appellant herein, was charged and indicted by the grand jury for killing one Mohammed Murib on October 1, 1973.

The facts, as developed at the trial, showed that the defendant was at an establishment known as the Derby Bar, in Columbus, OMo, on the night of October 1, 1973. While sitting at the bar, the defendant noted that Murib had entered. and sat down at-the opposite end thereof.' The, facts *524 as developed show that the defendant had known Mnrib and they had on at least two prior occasions had some altercation with one another.

The first such altercation took place at a certain steak house in .Columbus, Ohio, managed by Murib, in which the defendant testified that upon his telling Murib that he was unable to pay for coffee which he had ordered and consumed, Murib threw him to the floor and began hitting him with a cue stick, considerably bruising and battering the defendant. It was further testified to by the defendant that, following such altercation, Murib had filed an assault and battery charge against defendant, bat failed to appear to press charges at the time the matter was called in the Municipal Court of Franklin County. The defendant testified that it was his desire at that time, immediately following such altercation, to file a like charge of assault and battery against the deceased, but didn’t do so because he was told that he would have to await the determination of the charges filed against him.

The additional altercation, which was testified to by the defendant, was one which occurred in the parking lot of the Florentine Restaurant in Columbus, Ohio. Defendant and Murib had had a discussion after seeing each other while the defendant, accompanied by a friend, one Tommy Waters, was driving on West Broad Street in the city of Columbus. Defendant, accompanied by Waters and Murib, had proceeded to the parking lot in order to discuss their differences, and defendant suggested that the two have a fair fight without the assistance of cue sticks or weapons.

, The defendant testified that Murib had at the time of this incident stated that he would like to have peace with the defendant, but could not as long as the defendant was .breathing because they would always be fighting. Defendant testified that Murib then made a move toward his back pocket as though to obtain a gun, which the defendant testified he had seen Murib put in his pocket, and the defendant apparently hastened back to his ear and hurriedly left the ¡premises along with Tommy Waters.

' At .the outset of the trial, the court, at the request of ■the.prosecutor, had .directed that there be, a separation, of *525 witnesses, and that anyone who was to testify during the course of the trial was to remove himself from the courtroom.

At the opening of the defense, the defendant’s counsel called Tommy Waters to testify as the defendant’s first witness, but the prosecutor objected, pointing out to the court that Mr. Waters was in the court room earlier that morning in violation of the separation order. The trial court sustained the prosecution’s objection to Mr. Waters’ testifying and refused to allow him to testify on defendant’s, behalf. Counsel for defendant then proffered Mr. Waters’ testimony into the record upon a voir dire examination of him.

The defense was to the effect that the accused acted in self defense, or that he was motivated by fear, when he stabbed the decedent in the Derby Bar on October 1, 1973. As previously stated, the defendant testified that at the Florentine Restaurant altercation, when he was with Tommy Waters, the decedent threatened him, and had stated that he wanted peace but could not have such as long as the defendant was alive. The defendant had called Tommy Waters as a witness to corroborate his testimony concerning the incident at the Florentine Restaurant, and the testimony proffered on voir dire would have supported the statements and testimony made by the defendant, regarding such incident.

Upon the jury verdict of guilty of murder in the first degree, the defendant appeals to this court, assigning a single error, as follows:

“I. The trial court denied defendant-appellant his constitutional rights of compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor and due process when it refused to permit an important defense witness to testify after he accidentally violated an order for the separation of witnesses of which he was un aware where neither defendant-appellant nor his counsel procured, connived, or consented to such violation.”

As a general rule, a trial court has the right to exclude witnesses from the courtroom during the trial. 52 Ohio Jurisprudence 2d 551, Trial, Section 68. It is our view that *526 whether or not witnesses are separated is discretionary with the trial court. As stated in 53 American Jurisprudence 46, Trial, Section 31:

“The court has the right, in the trial of a case, to exclude witnesses from the courtroom, but there is no doctrine requiring the witnesses to be excluded in all cases. In a few jurisdictions the exclusion of proposed witnesses from the courtroom during the examination of other witnesses is a matter of right on proper application. But the great majority of jurisdictions follow the early English rule that exclusion, separation, sequestration of witnesses, or ‘putting witnesses under the rule,’ as the procedure is variously termed, is a matter not of right, but of discretion on the part of the trial court. * * *”

Whether or not the trial court has properly exercised his discretion as to a separation of witnesses must be determined in the light of the facts and circumstances of each case.

However, it is pointed out in the aforestated American Jurisprudence article that a separation of the witnesses in a criminal case is seldom denied when requested, especially in a felony trial. On point, we find the following language in the early case of Laughlin v. State (1849), 18 Ohio 99, at page 103:

“It is certainly a good practice, where a party requests it, to have the witness examined separately. And we think (as in the case before us) 1 where the witness is called to testify as to the previous statements of a witness in order to corroborate the statement of such witness on the trial, it is especially necessary.”

However, Laughlin, as well as the instant case, goes beyond the issue of the discretionary right of the trial court to separate witnesses from the courtroom, but is additionally concerned with the right of the trial court to accept, or to exclude the testimony of any witnesses who may have remained in the courtroom, or have later come *527 into the courtroom, in violation of such separation order. The Supreme Court in Lnughlin,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
320 N.E.2d 720, 40 Ohio App. 2d 523, 69 Ohio Op. 2d 453, 1974 WL 184250, 1974 Ohio App. LEXIS 2661, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-slone-ohioctapp-1974.