State v. Woods

548 N.E.2d 954, 48 Ohio App. 3d 1, 1988 Ohio App. LEXIS 1625
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 27, 1988
DocketC-870120
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 548 N.E.2d 954 (State v. Woods) 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. Woods, 548 N.E.2d 954, 48 Ohio App. 3d 1, 1988 Ohio App. LEXIS 1625 (Ohio Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

Doan, J.

In August 1986, the Hamilton County Grand Jury returned *2 a joint, multi-count indictment charging Carol Jean Porter and defendant-appellant Jeffrey Woods with aggravated murder, aggravated robbery and conspiracy to commit aggravated murder and/or aggravated robbery in connection with the fatal shooting of Porter’s uncle, Jessie Gandy. The charges against defendant were tried to a jury. 1 At the close of the state’s case-in-chief, the trial court granted defendant’s Crim. R. 29 motion for acquittal on the conspiracy charge. The defense rested without presenting any evidence and the remaining charges were submitted to the jury. The jury subsequently found defendant guilty of aggravated murder and aggravated robbery, and the trial court sentenced defendant as appears of record and entered judgment accordingly. From that judgment, defendant has taken the instant appeal in which he advances four assignments of error.

I

Defendant, in this first assignment of error, contends that the trial court erred in permitting the grand jury testimony of the key prosecution witness to be read to the jury. We find this contention to be well-taken.

A brief factual statement is necessary to establish the context of the trial court’s action. The record of the proceedings below reveals that, on January 20, 1981, at approximately 12:00 p.m., Gandy’s son returned home to find the house in disarray and his father prone on the kitchen floor. The police were summoned, and their investigation disclosed that Gandy had been shot six times with a .38 caliber weapon and that the only item of value missing from the house was Gandy’s wallet. On January 22, defendant and Porter were questioned by the police as to their whereabouts on the day of the murder. They denied knowledge of or participation in the murder, asserting that they had spent the day together at the movies. Neither the murder weapon nor the wallet was recovered, and the investigation was subsequently closed.

In July 1986, the authorities resumed their investigation into Gan-dy’s murder when William Meister, who had been incarcerated in the Hamilton County Justice Center with defendant, contacted a police detective to verify defendant’s account of his part in an unsolved murder which took place in January 1981. On August 1, 1986, defendant was again questioned by the police, and in a recorded interview, with counsel present, he recounted his version of the events of January 20, 1981. Defendant stated that Porter had planned a trip to Florida and that, on the morning of January 20, she displayed to him a .38 caliber handgun that she planned to take on her trip for protection. When Porter suggested using the gun to kill Gandy for his perceived role in her mother’s death, defendant objected. Later that morning, with the belief that he had convinced Porter to abandon her plot to avenge her mother’s death, defendant accompanied Porter to Gandy’s home, where she had in the past received her Social Security checks.

When defendant and Porter arrived at Gandy’s home, Gandy admitted them. Porter proceeded to the kitchen, and Gandy subsequently followed her, leaving defendant in the living room. As defendant stood at the front door and informed Porter that he was going out for coffee, he heard three gunshots. He immediately fled from the house and ran up the street. Porter soon overtook him and handed him a black wallet. Defendant im *3 mediately returned the wallet to Porter without viewing its contents and never saw it again. Defendant and Porter proceeded together to downtown Cincinnati, where Porter purchased a new jacket. The pair then proceeded to a movie theater, tossing the gun into an abandoned building on the way. Two weeks later, defendant, at Porter’s request, returned to the abandoned building and retrieved the gun. Porter cleaned the gun, dipped it into a bucket of paint, wrapped and bagged the gun, weighted the bag, and threw it into the Ohio River.

Meister testified before the grand jury that, in late June 1986, while he and defendant were incarcerated, defendant confessed to accompanying Porter to the victim’s home and to shooting the victim with a handgun. At defendant’s trial, however, when called by the state to render the only testimony implicating defendant in the crimes, Meister refused to testify on the grounds that the state had reneged on its promise to protect him while in jail and that he was uncertain as to whether his present recollection accurately reflected the particulars of defendant’s confession or had been influenced by what the police had related to him after his grand jury testimony. The trial court, over defendant’s objection, permitted the court reporter who transcribed Meister’s grant jury testimony to read the testimony into evidence.

A

The Ohio Rules of Evidence provide several means by which the substance of prior testimony or a prior written statement may be elicited or introduced into evidence at trial. Meister’s grand jury testimony was admitted into evidence under Evid. R. 803(5), which provides:

“The following are not excluded by the hearsay rule, even though the declarant is available as a witness:

<<* * *

“(5) Recorded recollection. A memorandum or record concerning a matter about which a witness once had knowledge but now has insufficient recollection to enable him to testify fully and accurately, shown by the testimony of the witness to have been made or adopted when the matter was fresh in his memory and to reflect that knowledge correctly. If admitted, the memorandum or record may be read into evidence but may not itself be received as an exhibit unless offered by an adverse party.”

The recorded-recollection exception to the hearsay rule set forth under Evid. R. 803(5) accords with the pre-Rules, common-law standard governing the admission of “past recollection recorded” established by the Supreme Court of Ohio in State v. Scott (1972), 31 Ohio St. 2d 1, 60 O.O. 2d 1, 285 N.E. 2d 344. The court in Scott recognized a “past recollection recorded” exception to the common-law proscription against the admission of hearsay evidence when a witness has testified that his present recollection is absent or incomplete, but that his recollection was complete at the time that the memorandum sought to be introduced was made and that his recollection was accurately recorded. Id. at 6, 60 O.O. 2d at 3-4, 285 N.E. 2d at 348. Thus, a party seeking admission of prior testimony or a prior written statement of a witness under the Evid. R. 803(5) hearsay exception must establish by the testimony of the witness: (1) that the witness had firsthand knowledge of the matter; (2) that the witness made or adopted a memorandum or record concerning the matter “when the matter was fresh in his memory”; (3) that the memorandum or record reflects the witness’s “knowledge correctly”; and (4) that the witness has *4 “insufficient recollection to enable him to testify fully and correctly.” Evid. R. 803(5); see, also, Scott, op. cit; Gian-nelli, Ohio Evidence Manual (1982), Section 803.09. If the above criteria are met, the memorandum or record may be read into evidence, but it may not be received as an exhibit unless offered by an adverse party. Evid. R. 803(5).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
548 N.E.2d 954, 48 Ohio App. 3d 1, 1988 Ohio App. LEXIS 1625, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-woods-ohioctapp-1988.