State v. Ward, Unpublished Decision (6-12-2003)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 12, 2003
DocketNo. 81282.
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Ward, Unpublished Decision (6-12-2003) (State v. Ward, Unpublished Decision (6-12-2003)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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State v. Ward, Unpublished Decision (6-12-2003), (Ohio Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION
{¶ 1} Defendant appeals his convictions by a jury for possession of drugs in violation of R.C. 2925.11, preparation of drugs for sale in violation of R.C. 2925.07, and violation of R.C. 2923.24, possession of criminal tools. For the reasons that follow, we affirm in part and reverse in part the judgment of the trial court.

{¶ 2} After pleading not guilty to a three-count indictment, defendant, through counsel, moved to suppress drugs found on him by police on December 12, 2000. At a suppression hearing the following evidence was presented.

{¶ 3} On the night of December 12th, defendant was stopped by Detective Luther Roddy of the Cleveland Police Department. Roddy testified he initially stopped defendant because he had driven through an inoperable traffic light at the intersection of East 141st and Harvard in Cleveland, Ohio. After stopping defendant, Roddy approached the driver's side of the vehicle. When defendant rolled down his window, Roddy immediately smelled and observed marijuana smoke emanating from inside the vehicle. Roddy concluded and defendant admitted he was smoking marijuana while driving. Defendant was asked to exit the vehicle, at which point Roddy patted him down and felt bulges in his pockets. Police found crack cocaine, a cell phone, and a pager in his pockets. Lab results revealed that the contents of defendant's pockets contained a little more than 25 grams of cocaine and .92 grams of marijuana.

{¶ 4} At the end of the suppression hearing held on February 14, 2002, defendant argued the initial stop was invalid because police erroneously cited defendant for failing to stop at a stop sign not a traffic light. After denying defendant's motion to suppress, the trial court and defense counsel engaged in a heated exchange in which the following comments were made:

THE COURT: The motion to suppress will be denied. Any other motions?

MR. MANCINO: The other motion outstanding is a motion for an independent analysis of the controlled substance. And we need that for two reasons: one, to weigh it; and two, to see exactly what it is.

THE COURT: I told Cynthia that was granted.

MR. MANCINO: Well, she never told me and I didn't see any order on it.

THE COURT: Well, I didn't cut an order, but when she filed it, I told her it was granted.

MR. MANCINO: She was unaware of it. He was unaware of it. We need a court order to do it.

THE COURT: All right. It's granted.

MR. MANCINO: So we need some time to do it then.

THE COURT: Why? You've had time. The case has been pending forever.

MR. MANCINO: We cannot get anybody to do it without a court order.

THE COURT: You were supposed to bring the motion to the Court's attention 14 days before trial. You have been around here forever. You have been coming around and everything. You have never said to me that this motion was outstanding, that you needed me to rule on it so you could get it analyzed while we were waiting for you to come in for trial.

MR. MANCINO: On December 18, 2001, when we were here, we brought up both motions.

THE COURT: Not to me you didn't.

MR. MANCINO: Yes, we did. We were in the courtroom here.

THE COURT: You never said to me that you needed me to rule on this motion.

MR. MANCINO: Yes, we did.

THE COURT: No, you didn't.

MR. MANCINO: Get the record. We'll show it to you.

THE COURT: I'm not getting anything. If you want it, you get it.

MR. MANCINO: We did. We were here, and the case was continued.

THE COURT: No, you didn't, because I have no problems with granting this motion. So now it's granted. And if you need me to cut something, I will, but the trial is going to go on.

MR. MANCINO: We can't. We need that information.

THE COURT: Well, you've had sufficient time to have that done. The posture of this Court has been that those will always be granted.

If you brought it up to me before, then what was my ruling before?

MR. MANCINO: You didn't pay any attention to me last time when we were in court.

THE COURT: So you made a motion and I ignored you?

MR. MANCINO: Yes. We brought it to your attention that that was outstanding, along with a motion to suppress, and needed an amended motion to suppress.

THE COURT: You know what? There has never, ever been a motion filed for an analysis, for help, for assistance, for an appointment of a specialist or anything else that I denied. I automatically grant them. Always. So there's no possibility I would have ignored you.

MR. MANCINO: I looked through the documents.

THE COURT: You find the transcript where you brought it up to me and I said I wasn't going to grant it, Mr. Mancino. Since you've taken this Court on and said that this Court ignored you, you get the transcript and you provide it for me.

MR. MANCINO: Well, I'm sorry the court feels that way.

THE COURT: You're sitting here calling me a liar.

MR. MANCINO: I am not calling you a liar.

THE COURT: I'm telling you that I always grant these motions.

MR. MANCINO: Well, we were here.

THE COURT: If you had asked me for some professional — for an expert, anything, I would have granted it.

MR. MANCINO: We were here on December 19th.

THE COURT: I don't care when you were here. You never said that to me or I would have granted it.

MR. MANCINO: Well, if you feel I'm calling you a liar, either you should step down or I should step down from the case.

THE COURT: Or you're just making it up. But I'm saying that to you and I'm not saying it to you behind your back. I'm saying it to your face.

MR. MANCINO: I always speak in person. Either I should get off the case or you should get off the case.

THE COURT: Well, it's my case, so you make up your mind.

MR. MANCINO: Well, what are we going to do with this motion?

THE COURT: It's granted.

MR. MANCINO: Well, we need some time to have somebody come over and do it.

THE COURT: That's your business, how you go about it. It's your motion.

Any other motions?

We'll get you a judgment entry saying it's granted. We'll get you a panel up.

(Recess taken)

THE BAILIFF: Judge, we're back on the record with Christopher Ward.

THE COURT: Mr. Prosecutor, where are we?

MR. KOLASINSKI: Your Honor, within the last half-hour, we had a suppression hearing and you denied the motion to suppress.

A discussion was had between you and defense counsel, Mr. Mancino, with respect to a motion for independent analysis which the Court said you [sic] granted even when Cynthia Smith was the attorney and then a discussion was had by you and Mr. Mancino.

THE COURT: Mr. Mancino.

MR. MANCINO: Two items. Number one, we did contact a person to do an analysis. They need five days to complete an analysis; and number two, I believe it's best that I withdraw from the case.

THE COURT: That will be granted. You can withdraw.

* * *.

Tr. 28-34.

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Ward, Unpublished Decision (6-12-2003), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-ward-unpublished-decision-6-12-2003-ohioctapp-2003.