State v. Sutherlin

676 N.E.2d 127, 111 Ohio App. 3d 287
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 20, 1996
DocketNo. C-950770.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 676 N.E.2d 127 (State v. Sutherlin) 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. Sutherlin, 676 N.E.2d 127, 111 Ohio App. 3d 287 (Ohio Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

Shannon, Judge.

This is an appeal from an order of the Hamilton County Court of Common Pleas decreeing that certain property seized from the appellant, Reuben Sutherlin, be forfeited to the Cincinnati Police Division and the Hamilton County Prosecuting Attorney. It has been brought by Sutherlin, currently confined in an Ohio penal institution, pro se.

Most of the facts involved in the controversy are undisputed. On November 30, 1995, officers of the Cincinnati Police Division executed a warrant to search residential premises at 885 Ezzard Charles Drive, Cincinnati, Ohio. Sutherlin does not contest the validity of the warrant, nor does he deny that the premises were occupied by him and a female identified as Janice Deramus, who was characterized as Sutherlin’s common-law wife. The actual lessee of the quarters was Gregory Patterson.

During the search, the officers seized some $2,600 in United States currency, including a marked $20 bill which had been used by the police in an earlier controlled purchase of powdered cocaine from Sutherlin, approximately eighteen grams of cocaine in powder form, miscellaneous packing materials, a substance used to cut the drug, a digital scale, a cellular telephone and a police radio scanner. The officers also found and seized certain items of jewelry and electronic devices, and they also took, from Sutherlin’s person, keys to the locks *289 of a Mercedes Benz automobile which was parked in a lot adjacent to the apartment. 1

Immediately after the officers conducting the search placed Sutherlin and Deramus under arrest, they were advised of their constitutional rights before being questioned. Deramus told the officers that Sutherlin “was a drug dealer and that he had a safe hidden at the residence of Mr. Patterson in the Mount Airy apartments.” She informed the police that the safe contained money and drugs which “belonged to Mr. Patterson and her husband.”

On the strength of those statements, the officers contacted fellow officers operating in the area within which the Mount Airy Apartments were located. Those officers reached Patterson at his place of employment, a local radio station, identified themselves and sought his consent as lessee of the apartment to search that particular unit. Patterson signed a consent form and supplied the officers with keys to the apartment. The consent form authorized the police “to conduct a search” of the unit and “to take from my residence and storage area” any “property which is contraband or may be used as evidence in a criminal or civil proceeding.” When they opened the door to the apartment, they found it to be unoccupied and without electric service. Patterson had told the officers that there was no safe in the apartment but that if they found one it was not his, and that they “could have it and do with it what [they] wanted.”

The officers did recover a safe within one of the rooms in Patterson’s apartment and transported it to a .district station, where it was opened. They removed from it $18,860 in United States currency, a .38-caliber revolver and business cards in the name of Gregory Patterson, with “amounts written on the back of them.” When the police informed Sutherlin of the seizure of the safe and its contents he said “he knew nothing about it nor the combination.” 2 Because neither Patterson, Sutherlin nor any other person involved claimed any interest in the safe, the authorities treated it and the items taken from it as abandoned property.

Ultimately, Sutherlin was charged with offenses not specified in this record in a multicount indictment and pleaded guilty to counts one and four. 3

*290 On January 4, 1995, the state filed its petition pursuant to R.C. 2933.43(C) for the forfeiture of the seized property in toto as being contraband, pursuant to R.C. 2933.43(A), owned by Sutherlin.

On January 30, 1995, Sutherlin through counsel filed his answer to the petition denying, particularly, the state’s allegation that all the property was seized at the Ezzard Charles Drive location and that the property was contraband. In response to interrogatories, Sutherlin stated the currency in the safe represented his savings from wages, a retirement pension and an award for “workman’s compensation.”

At the hearing of the petition for forfeiture, Sutherlin was represented by different legal counsel, who, at the conclusion of the state’s case-in-chief, stated:

“Judge, Mr. Sutherlin is asking for the return most specifically of the cash found in the safe. The items found in the apartment where he and his wife lived, we are not contending should be returned. Mr. Sutherlin was 39 years old at the time of this seizure. He claims that the money found in the safe belonged to him and this was accumulated over his lifetime and that he had saved it.”

Sutherlin’s counsel had indicated to the court at the commencement of the hearing that she would “deal” with Sutherlin’s antecedent “Motion Alleging Unlawful Seizure,” which sought an order finding the safe and contents to have been seized unlawfully, in cross-examination of the state’s witnesses. Acting apparently on that representation, counsel neither adduced nor proffered evidence or testimony beyond that adduced in cross-examination.

The court entered its judgment in favor of the state on September 20, 1995, finding inter alia that the petition had been brought “pursuant to R.C. 2925.43,” that notice of the action was properly given “pursuant to R.C. 2925.43(E)(2),” and that the property seized “is property described in R.C. 2925.43(A),” and proceeded to divide it between the police division and the prosecutor.

In its colloquy with counsel in the course of their concluding arguments, the court commented on the state’s demand for complete forfeiture and Sutherlin’s counsel’s response that the money in the safe belonged to Sutherlin:

“THE COURT: You know, one of the problems in this case is Mr. Sutherlin came in here and this Court reluctantly did it and only at the urging of the State and we waived the fines because he signed — we waived thousands of dollars worth of fines which the Court didn’t want to do. I only did it because the State of Ohio urged me to do it and I did not want to do it because that money should have been applied to the fines. We didn’t do that. On one hand for purposes of *291 Mr. Sutherlin paying the fines you have him saying that he’s indigent and now he wants the $18,000 back which sounds somewhat inconsistent to me. I am sorry. Go ahead.”

The first of Sutherlin’s seven assignments of error is that the court denied his rights to due process of law when it “modified” the forfeiture hearing from one conducted under R.C. 2933.43(C), as pleaded, to one under R.C. 2925.43(E)(2), as set forth in the court’s entry of forfeiture.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
676 N.E.2d 127, 111 Ohio App. 3d 287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-sutherlin-ohioctapp-1996.