State v. Smith, Unpublished Decision (6-14-2002)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 14, 2002
DocketAppeal No. C-010517, Trial No. B-0010225.
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Smith, Unpublished Decision (6-14-2002) (State v. Smith, Unpublished Decision (6-14-2002)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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State v. Smith, Unpublished Decision (6-14-2002), (Ohio Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

DECISION.
The grand jury indicted defendant-appellant Lamont Smith on three counts of burglary. He appeals from the judgment of conviction entered upon a jury verdict that found him guilty of burglary and attempted burglary. Smith was acquitted of one count of burglary.

The burglary for which Smith was convicted occurred on December 7, 2000. Shirley Evans was returning her young niece to her home, and as the niece entered the apartment and turned on the living-room light, she saw Smith in the apartment. Smith was emerging from one of the bedrooms and walking into the living room. Smith yelled at them. Everyone ran out of the apartment immediately. Smith got within approximately ten or twelve feet of the young niece. Later, she saw that the coins in the cup her mother had used to collect the laundry money were gone and that her mother's red and black duffel bag was on her mother's bed. She identified Smith in court as the person she had seen on December 7 in the apartment, and she had earlier selected his photograph from among those shown to her shortly after the burglary was reported.

Shirley Evans also saw Smith in the living room after she followed her young niece into the apartment. She was within fifteen to sixteen feet and saw Smith's face. Shirley Evans saw her sister's jewelry in the red and black duffel bag and her sister's brown jewelry box on the bed. Several days later, she was shown an array of photographs at her place of business in downtown Cincinnati and picked out Smith within a few seconds. She was also shown a second set of photographs at her house and picked out Smith. She testified that she had never seen Smith on television. At trial, Shirley Evans was absolutely certain that Smith was the man she had seen in the apartment on December 7. Shirley Evans's sister, the mother of the young niece, who arrived home after Smith had fled, saw that only one of three watches she had purchased as Christmas gifts was in the red and black duffel bag. The other two were gone. She had not left the duffel bag sitting on the bed earlier in the day. Her kitchen window latch no longer worked after December 7. A chair was by the kitchen window with a footprint on it that did not belong to anyone who lived in the apartment. She testified that she and her daughter never stood on chairs. She also recognized Smith from having seen him once before when her landlord had needed items hauled away from the apartment building.

Officer Lewis Arnold testified that he found a successful completion form for an electronic monitoring unit ("EMU form") outside the apartment building, after he had concluded his search inside the Evans apartment. He put the EMU form, which included, among other information, Smith's name, in a property envelope and sent it on to Detective Ken Brickler.

Detective Brickler, using information from Smith's EMU form, ordered a photo lineup that included Smith's picture. Detective Brickler testified that the young niece and Shirley Evans took approximately thirty seconds to pick out Smith from among the photographs.

Smith was also convicted of the attempted burglary of Linda Neal's downstairs apartment in a two-family building owned by Betty Nowell, Neal's sister, who resided upstairs. Neal, who lived with other family members, was not at home at the time Smith was first observed by Nowell from upstairs next to a window. The attempted burglary occurred on December 23, 2000. Nowell testified that, having heard noises around 6:15 p.m., she eventually looked outside and saw Smith, who looked up at her, standing near a downstairs window. They stared at each other for approximately fifteen seconds, and Nowell then called for emergency assistance. Thinking Smith had fled, Nowell went downstairs and outside the building only to see Smith again by the same window. She yelled at him and Smith fled. She guessed that he was approximately eight feet away. She could see his face. The window screen had been removed, and the window was broken. In court, Nowell identified Smith as the man she had seen on December 23. Nowell had not seen Smith on television prior to May 7, when she herself had been at the courthouse and had seen a local news station filming, at which time Smith had already been charged with the crimes.

Detective Brickler testified that he showed Nowell two sets of photographs on two different occasions. He testified that she did take longer, but not much longer, than both of the Evanses took before she picked Smith from the two sets of photographs that she was shown. A person living in Nowell's neighborhood was included in the second set of photographs shown to Nowell out of concern that the perpetrator might be a neighbor, who was somewhat similar to Smith in appearance.

In his first assignment of error, Smith claims that he was denied the effective assistance of counsel when his counsel mentioned during voir dire that Smith had prior misdemeanor convictions. To prevail on his claim of ineffective assistance, Smith must first demonstrate that counsel's performance failed to meet an objective standard of reasonable representation.1 "This requires a showing that counsel made errors so serious that counsel was not functioning as the counsel guaranteed the defendant by the Sixth Amendment."2 Smith must also show that, as a result of the deficient performance, he suffered prejudice.3 Prejudice is demonstrated by a showing of a reasonable probability that, but for trial counsel's deficient performance, the result of the proceeding would have been different.4

During voir dire of potential jurors, defense counsel asked, "What do you think about Mr. Smith telling you he has a prior record?" Defense counsel did not provide the potential jurors with details of Smith's criminal history at that time. We will not second-guess what appears to have been a tactical decision made by defense counsel to foreclose the sting of prior convictions when defense counsel anticipated that there was a possibility of their admission at trial. Even if it was unreasonable for defense counsel to anticipate the admission of the prior convictions at trial, Smith still cannot show prejudice. The state's evidence included unequivocal eyewitness testimony of three persons placing Smith at the scene of the crimes for which he was convicted, thus drastically reducing the potential that the jury based its guilty verdicts for two of the three charges Smith faced on the fact that Smith might have had a criminal past. Moreover, the fact that a tactical decision may backfire does not render counsel's assistance constitutionally ineffective.5 Accordingly, we overrule Smith's first assignment of error.

In his second assignment of error, Smith contends that his conviction should be reversed for prosecutorial misconduct that occurred during the state's cross-examination of him when it asked, "As a matter of fact, you're under felony indictment for failure to pay child support?" The test for prosecutorial misconduct is whether the remarks were improper, and, if so, whether the remarks prejudicially affected the accused's substantial rights.6 The touchstone of the analysis "is the fairness of the trial, not the culpability of the prosecutor."7 Clearly the prosecutor's question was improper, but defense counsel immediately objected and the trial court promptly sustained the objection. The trial court also instructed the jury "not [to] speculate as to why the Court sustained the objection to any question or what the answer to such question might have been.

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Smith, Unpublished Decision (6-14-2002), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-smith-unpublished-decision-6-14-2002-ohioctapp-2002.