State v. Walk, Unpublished Decision (12-29-2000)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 29, 2000
DocketCourt of Appeals No. E-97-079; Trial Court No. 97-CR-022.
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Walk, Unpublished Decision (12-29-2000) (State v. Walk, Unpublished Decision (12-29-2000)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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State v. Walk, Unpublished Decision (12-29-2000), (Ohio Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

DECISION AND JUDGMENT ENTRY
This appeal comes to us from the Erie County Court of Common Pleas. There, appellant, following the return of a jury verdict, was convicted and sentenced for drug trafficking, drug possession and felonious assault of a peace officer. Because we conclude that appellant's trial was proper, we affirm his conviction. However, because the trial court's findings to justify imposing maximum consecutive sentences on five counts were deficient, we vacate appellant's sentence and remand for resentencing.

On December 16, 1996, officers of the Perkins Township Police Department and agents of the Ohio Attorney General's Office executed a "buy bust" in a grocery store parking lot in Perkins Township, Erie County, Ohio. In a "buy bust," an undercover officer or police confidential informant contacts a suspected drug dealer to arrange a drug purchase. Typically, police surreptitiously observe the transaction, following which the drug dealer is arrested.

On December 16, a Perkins Township police confidential informant called appellant, Donald Walk, from a pay phone in a grocery store parking lot. The informant sought to purchase a "six pack," local slang for a one-sixteenth ounce rock of crack cocaine. The confidential informant was equipped with a remote transmitting device and accompanied by an undercover agent.

When appellant drove into the parking lot, the confidential informant went to appellant's car and exchanged $100 in marked money for a single piece of crack cocaine contained in a plastic baggie. When officers posted nearby heard that the transaction was completed, they descended on appellant's car. One police vehicle blocked the rear of appellant's car. A second, containing the Perkins Township Police Chief and another officer, pulled in front of appellant's car. The Perkins Township Chief emerged from his car and positioned himself between his car and appellant's. At this point, appellant's car lunged forward toward the chief until another officer entered appellant's vehicle and put it into "park." Over appellant's resistance, officers removed him from the car and subdued him on the ground. After the officers had placed appellant in a cruiser, they found two plastic baggies on the ground near where appellant was subdued. The baggies resembled the one purchased by the confidential informant and also contained crack cocaine.

Following appellant's arrest, police impounded the car which he had been driving. The following morning, Stephanie Bradley, who described herself as appellant's girlfriend and owner of the impounded car, appeared to reclaim the car. After discussion with police, Bradley consented to a search of the home she reportedly shared with appellant. During the search, police found more crack cocaine, marijuana, and nearly $2,500 in cash.

Appellant was eventually indicted on two counts of drug possession (for the cocaine found in the parking lot and at Stephanie Bradley's home), tampering with evidence (for attempting to get rid of the crack found on the ground in the parking lot), trafficking (for the sale to the confidential informant), with a school zone specification (the grocery store parking lot was nine hundred sixty-six feet from the border of the tennis courts at Sandusky High School), and felonious assault on a peace officer (for attempting to run down the Perkins Township Police Chief).

Appellant pled not guilty and the matter proceeded to a jury trial. The jury convicted appellant on all counts. The trial court immediately sentenced appellant to the maximum prison term on each count (eighteen months for each possession; five years each for trafficking and tampering; and ten years for assault on an officer). The court also ordered that the sentences be served consecutively for a total of twenty-three years imprisonment. The court then imposed a fine of $45,000.

Several weeks later, prior to the transfer of appellant's custody to the department of corrections, notice was taken that the sentence initially imposed did not comport with the newly enacted provisions of R.C. 2929.11 et seq.. On June 3, 1997, a second sentencing hearing was held at which the trial court attempted to make appropriate findings under the sentencing statute and again sentenced appellant to a maximum consecutive term of imprisonment on each count. The court reduced the fine to $5,000.

Appellant's initial attempt at a direct appeal failed when this court dismissed the appeal after appellant's appellate counsel failed to timely file a brief. This appeal is now before the court on appellant's successful motion to reopen pursuant to App.R. 26(B).

Appellant sets forth the following four assignments of error:

"ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR 1:

"THE TRIAL JUDGE DID NOT HAVE JURISDICTION TO HEAR THE CASE BECAUSE THE MATTER WAS ASSIGNED TO JUDGE ANN MASCHARI AND THE RECORD IS DEVOID OF ANY JOURNAL ENTRY EITHER APPOINTING OR REASSIGNING JUDGE ROBERT WALKER TO THE CASE AS SET FORTH IN THE GUIDELINES FOR ASSIGNMENT OF JUDGES.

"ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR II:

"APPELLANT'S RIGHTS WERE VIOLATED WHEN THE TRIAL COURT IMPOSED AN ILLEGAL SENTENCE BY IMPOSING MAXIMUM CONSECUTIVE SENTENCES IN VIOLATION OF R.C. 2929.14(B) AND (C) AND BY THE IMPOSITION OF THE MAXIMUM FINE ($45,000.00) WITHOUT A DETERMINATION OF APPELLANT'S ABILITY TO PAY SUCH FINES AS REQUIRED BY R.C. 2929.181.

"ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR III:

"THE TRIAL COURT COMMITTED ERROR WHEN IT FAILED TO ADDRESS THE JURY QUESTIONS IN OPEN COURT AND ON THE RECORD.

"ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR IV:

"DONALD WALK WAS DENIED HIS RIGHT TO EFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL AS GUARANTEED BY ARTICLE I, SECTION 10 OF THE OHIO CONSTITUTION AS WELL AS THE SIXTH AND FOURTEENTH AMENDMENTS TO THE UNITED STATES CONSTITUTION

A. COUNSEL FAILED TO OBJECT TO AN OFFICER TESTIFYING ABOUT ALLEGATIONS OF PRIOR ACTS OF VIOLENCE COMMITTED BY APPELLANT.

B. COUNSEL FAILED TO OBJECT TO THE TRIAL COURT ANSWERING JURY QUESTIONS OFF THE RECORD.

C. COUNSEL FAILED TO OBJECT TO THE IMPOSITION OF MAXIMUM CONSECUTIVE TERMS OF IMPRISONMENT WHEN APPELLANT DID NOT MEET THE STATUTORY CRITERIA SET FORTH IN 2929.14(B)."

I.
In his first assignment of error, appellant asserts that the trial court, presided over by a visiting judge, did not have jurisdiction over his case because the record does not contain a letter of assignment from the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Ohio. The state attached to its brief a general letter of assignment of the visiting judge to the Erie County Court of Common Pleas for the period in which the trial at issue occurred. The state, however, did not move to supplement the record with this letter of assignment. Consequently, pursuant to App.R. 9, we may not consider this document. Nevertheless, this assignment of error must fail.

Appellant raises his concern about the absence of an assignment letter for the first time on appeal. He raised no objection before the trial court when the inclusion of the letter could have been easily remedied. When a defendant fails to call the court's attention to a purported error when it could have timely been avoided or corrected, this constitutes a waiver of that error. State v. Peagler (1996), 76 Ohio St.3d 496, 499;Potocnik v. Sifco Industries, Inc. (1995),

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Walk, Unpublished Decision (12-29-2000), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-walk-unpublished-decision-12-29-2000-ohioctapp-2000.