State v. Wacker

2019 Ohio 3997
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 30, 2019
Docket2019-A-0044 2019-A-0045
StatusPublished

This text of 2019 Ohio 3997 (State v. Wacker) 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. Wacker, 2019 Ohio 3997 (Ohio Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Wacker, 2019-Ohio-3997.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

ELEVENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

ASHTABULA COUNTY, OHIO

STATE OF OHIO, : OPINION

Plaintiff-Appellee, : CASE NOS. 2019-A-0044 - vs - : 2019-A-0045

MARCUS T. WACKER, :

Defendant-Appellant. :

Criminal Appeals from the Conneaut Municipal Court, Case Nos. 2017 TRC 01537 and 2018 CRB 00043.

Judgment: Reversed.

Kyle B. Smith, Conneaut Law Director, and Christopher M. Newcomb, Assistant Conneaut Law Director, 294 Main Street, Conneaut, OH 44030 (For Plaintiff- Appellee).

Phillip L. Heasley and Marie Lane, Ashtabula County Public Defender, Inc., 4817 State Road, Suite 202, Ashtabula, OH 44004 (For Defendant-Appellant).

CYNTHIA WESTCOTT RICE, J.

{¶1} Appellant, Marcus T. Wacker, appeals from the judgment of the Conneaut

Municipal Court, finding him guilty of community control violations in two separate

cases, and sentencing him to consecutive terms of 175 and 180 days in jail in each of

the separate matters. We reverse the trial court’s sentence.

{¶2} Appellant originally pleaded guilty to two separate first-degree

misdemeanor offenses in two separate cases; to wit: in Case No. 17 TRC 1537, operating a vehicle while under the influence (“OVI”) and in Case No. 18 CRB 43,

assault. In the OVI case, he was sentenced in February 2018 to 180 days, with 175

days suspended and placed upon supervised community control. Thereafter, in April

2018, appellant was sentenced in the assault case to 180 days, all of which were

suspended, on conditions of supervised community control.

{¶3} After failing to follow the terms of his community control, separate motions

to revoke were filed in each case. In the OVI case, the motion alleged appellant

violated community control when he “failed to attend and complete the driver

intervention program; failed to follow any recommended treatment program; failed to

attend probation appointment on June 26, 2018; failed UDS for [THC] and

benzodiazepines on March 4, 2019.” In the assault case, the motion alleged appellant

violated community control when he “failed to attend probation appointment on June 26,

2018 and failed to complete comprehensive diagnostic reassessment at Signature

Health within 30 days, by May 23, 2018.”

{¶4} On March 19, 2019, the trial court held a hearing on both motions to

revoke. At a pre-revocation hearing, the record reflects appellant waived his right to

counsel; and prior to the revocation hearing, the court confirmed appellant still wished to

proceed pro se. After receiving evidence from two probation officers, the trial court

found appellant guilty on both separate violations. Appellant was subsequently

sentenced and received 175 days in jail in the OVI case and 180 days in jail in the

assault case, to be served consecutively. Appellant now appeals and assigns three

errors. His first alleges:

2 {¶5} “The trial court erred in imposing consecutive jail sentences in appellant’s

revocation hearing.”

{¶6} Under his first assignment of error, appellant argues the trial court erred in

ordering him to serve the jail terms from his original convictions consecutively after

revoking community control. He maintains the trial court’s failure to state, in its original

judgments on conviction, that a violation of community control could result in the

imposition of consecutive sentences invalidates the underlying order. In other words,

he maintains the trial court was without authority to run the sentences consecutive after

revocation because they were not originally imposed consecutively.

{¶7} The state maintains the trial court was not required “to explain consecutive

sentencing” to appellant during the original sentencing proceedings. Rather, the state

argues, the trial court was simply imposing sentences that had already been issued in

separate cases. And, because appellant knew jail time was possible if he violated, the

court did not err in imposing a consecutive term.

{¶8} We first point out that the state misconstrues appellant’s argument.

Appellant is not asserting the trial court was required to explain the possibility of

consecutive sentences during the original, separate sentencing proceedings. Rather,

he is arguing the trial court could not make the sentences run consecutively after

revoking community control because they were not originally imposed consecutively in

the initial judgment(s) on conviction.

{¶9} With this clarification in mind, appellant cites State v. Fankle, 2d Dist.

Montgomery Nos. 26350, 26351, 26352, 2015-Ohio-1581, in support of his position. In

Fankle, the defendant received a 180-day suspended jail sentence and was placed on

3 community control. Two months later, the defendant was charged with two additional

crimes and received two 180-day jail terms, to run concurrently with each other, with

120 days suspended. He was again placed on community control. One month later, the

defendant was charged with violating a protection order. For this violation, the trial court

imposed a 180-day jail term, revoked the community control in the first two cases, and

reinstated the prior suspended sentences. The trial court ran each 180-day term

consecutively. On appeal, the defendant did not take issue with the trial court’s

authority to order his sentence from the third case to run consecutively with the

sentences arising from his first and second. Instead, he argued that the trial court

lacked authority to run the sentences of the first two cases consecutively because the

trial court had not included language regarding consecutive sentences in these

judgment entries. The Second District agreed.

{¶10} While acknowledging that the trial court could not have included

consecutive sentencing language in the first judgment entry, as it was the sole sentence

at the time, the court emphasized the second sentencing entry failed to include

consecutive-sentencing language, despite the existence of the first conviction. Because

the trial court had the ability to include such language, or at least expressly inform the

defendant, but failed to do so, the Second District concluded the first two sentences

were concurrent jail terms. And the trial court’s order to run the suspended sentences

consecutively was an impermissible modification of the defendant’s previously entered

definite sentences. Id. at ¶8. The facts of Fankle are legally analogous to the matter

before this court.

4 {¶11} Both judgments from the Conneaut Municipal Court are “form entries” in

which the trial court wrote in the details of the conviction and checked boxes for the

conditions of community control it elected to impose. Each judgment entry includes a

condition which provides the sentence could be served “[c]onsecutive to all other

[s]entences in all other cases” if a defendant violates community control. The trial court

did not check this box in either judgment entry. In the OVI case, appellant was

sentenced in February 2018 to a suspended 180-day term and placed on community

control. As it was the only matter pending at the time, it would make little sense for the

trial court to indicate that sentence would be served consecutively with other cases in

the event of a violation. Because, however, appellant was sentenced in the assault

case one month after the OVI case, the trial court had the ability to check the box and

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2019 Ohio 3997, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-wacker-ohioctapp-2019.