State v. Vandergriff, Unpublished Decision (12-12-2003)

2003 Ohio 7105
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 12, 2003
DocketAppeal No. C-030068.
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2003 Ohio 7105 (State v. Vandergriff, Unpublished Decision (12-12-2003)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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State v. Vandergriff, Unpublished Decision (12-12-2003), 2003 Ohio 7105 (Ohio Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

DECISION
{¶ 1} The defendant-appellant, Patricia Vandergriff, appeals from her conviction for voluntary manslaughter following a bench trial. The trial court acquitted her of the more serious charge of murder, but rejected her claim of self-defense. She was sentenced to an eight-year prison term. In her two assignments of error, she now argues that her conviction was based upon insufficient evidence and was contrary to the weight of the evidence, and that she was improperly sentenced. For the following reasons, we affirm.

Background
{¶ 2} On June 4, 2002, Vandergriff stabbed to death Donnie Campbell, with whom she had been engaged in a relationship that appears to have been mutually abusive, emotionally and physically.1 The weapon she used was an orange-juice bottle that she had broken for the purpose of using it as a defensive weapon. On the day of his death, Campbell and Vandergriff were involved in a row, Campbell having thrown Vandergriff out of his house the night before. According to the witness closest to the incident, Mervin Martin, a fight erupted between the two when Campbell, upon seeing Vandergriff approach him at a corner, deliberately tossed a cup of his own urine in her face. (Martin testified that Campbell had been drinking.) According to Martin, Vandergriff responded by telling Campbell in a scoffing tone, "[T]hat make you think you're a man, because you do stuff like that. You should leave me alone and take care of your house, because you put me out, I can't come back." Campbell then, according to Martin, flew into a rage and struck Vandergriff hard in the face, twice, staggering her backward. Then, Martin testified, "she tried to walk off, and that's when he swung another time, and she got the bottle." The bottle had been lying on the sidewalk, and Vandergriff picked it up, broke it, and told the victim not to hit her again. Martin stated that Campbell did not heed the warning and lunged at Vandergriff. He stated that when Campbell tried to hit her, Vandergriff "held her hand up to stop him from hitting her." Apparently, it was at this point that the jagged glass of the broken bottle entered Campbell's neck, puncturing his jugular vein. Martin testified that Vandergriff immediately took off down the street, and that Campbell, unaware of the seriousness of his wound, ran after her, eventually pulling her to the ground. Asked who was the aggressor in the fight, Martin, who appears to have been more friendly with Campbell, stated that Campbell was, and that he remained the aggressor throughout the incident.

{¶ 3} Another witness, Renee Mason, was driving down Kemper Lane when both Campbell and Vandergriff entered the street in front of her vehicle. She described how Campbell, who was running after Vandergriff, pulled her to the ground. Both persons, she testified, were "covered in blood," although later she was able to see that it was Campbell who was bleeding from the neck. She testified that another woman intervened to attend to Campbell, whose wounds had robbed him of his strength and made him unable to get up from the pavement. Vandergriff, she testified, did not flee but watched as the other woman screamed for help. Mason called the 911 operator on her cellular phone.

{¶ 4} Another witness, Loyce Page, was also in a car and saw Campbell and Vandergriff scuffling on the ground in the street. Asked who was the aggressor, Page replied, "Well, when I saw — oh, when I saw him breaking loose from her, then it looked as if she was the aggressor. It looked like she cut him. I don't know." Page did state, however, that when she first saw the two scuffling, it appeared that Campbell was the aggressor, with Vandergriff pinned beneath his weight as they struggled.

{¶ 5} Eddie Neal testified that he viewed the incident from across the street. According to Neal, the fight began when Campbell refused Vandergriff's request for a cigarette lighter. Neal stated that he heard both cursing and screaming. He then described Vandergriff breaking the orange-juice bottle and Campbell trying to defend himself. He denied seeing Campbell strike or physically assault Vandergriff. As the fight was described by Neal, "He [Campbell] asked her to give him her lighter. And she said, no, I'm not giving you no damn lighter, and busted the bottle while he was trying to walk away from her, and hit him with the bottle. She tried to run from him, and he was trying to defend himself. And he grabbed her, and they both fell in the middle of the street."2

{¶ 6} Police officers arrived promptly. Vandergriff approached one of the officers and told her, "I didn't mean to do it. I cut him." She explained how Campbell had thrown a cup of his own urine in her face. After being told by the officer to sit down, she continued to talk, expressing her frustration at Campbell hitting her and insisting that she had not meant to "do it." The officer who stayed with her testified that she thought that Vandergriff was intoxicated, as indicated by her jitteriness, volubility, and inability to focus on the subject at hand Because she did not smell alcohol upon her person, the officer, based upon her experience, theorized that Vandergriff was intoxicated with crack cocaine. Vandergriff was then examined by medical personnel and taken by ambulance to a hospital where she received stitches for a cut on her hand According to the officer with her, Vandergriff continued to express her concern for Campbell's condition.

{¶ 7} The deputy coroner testified that Campbell's blood on autopsy was found to have an alcohol concentration of .142. (The autopsy was performed some 17 hours after death, thus allowing Vandergriff's defense to establish that the actual level may have been higher at the time of death and even higher at the time of the stabbing.) Cocaine metabolites were also found in his system. The deputy coroner described the wound that killed Campbell as extending through the external jugular, the left sternocleidomastoid muscle, the left internal jugular, the superior thyroid cartilage, the greater horn of the thyroid cartilage, and the back of the larynx, and ending on the right aspect of the fourth cervical vertebral body. According to the deputy coroner, such a wound was not consistent with a glancing blow but more like "holding onto a hammer and striking something, that kind of force." Upon cross-examination, however, he conceded that it was possible, but "not likely," that Campbell stumbling forward into the full force of the bottle had caused the severity of the lethal wound. The deputy coroner identified two other non-lethal wounds, one a brush wound and the other a stab wound. He stated that Campbell died from "hemorrhagic shock, from bleeding out from these wounds."

{¶ 8} The defense presented only one witness, the emergency-medicine physician who attended to Vandergriff. She described Vandergriff's injury as a "web space laceration at the base of [the] thumb of her right hand, about two centimeters in length." She characterized the wound as "fairly superficial." The physician testified that she prescribed a dosage of Ativan due to Vandergriff's agitated state. Upon cross-examination, the physician stated that Vandergriff did not at any time present complaints regarding injuries to her face or head. She stated that she could not recall seeing any such injuries, and that if Vandergriff had had any such injuries that required treatment, she would have administered the necessary medical care.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Johnson, 06ap-878 (6-7-2007)
2007 Ohio 2792 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2007)
State v. Johnson, 06ap-878 (5-29-2007)
2007 Ohio 2595 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2007)
State v. Levett, Unpublished Decision (5-5-2006)
2006 Ohio 2222 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2006)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2003 Ohio 7105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-vandergriff-unpublished-decision-12-12-2003-ohioctapp-2003.