State v. Zielinski

2014 Ohio 5318
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 1, 2014
DocketCA2014-05-069
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 2014 Ohio 5318 (State v. Zielinski) 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. Zielinski, 2014 Ohio 5318 (Ohio Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Zielinski, 2014-Ohio-5318.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

TWELFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT OF OHIO

WARREN COUNTY

STATE OF OHIO, : CASE NO. CA2014-05-069 Plaintiff-Appellee, : OPINION : 12/1/2014 - vs - :

CHRISHAWNDA ZIELINSKI, :

Defendant-Appellant. :

CRIMINAL APPEAL FROM WARREN COUNTY COURT Case No. 2010CRB00365

David P. Fornshell, Warren County Prosecuting Attorney, Michael Greer, 500 Justice Drive, Lebanon, Ohio 45036, for plaintiff-appellee

Chrishawnda Zielinski, 10499 Morrow-Rossburg Road, Pleasant Plain, Ohio 45162, defendant-appellant, pro se

S. POWELL, J.

{¶ 1} Defendant-appellant, Chrishawnda Zielinski, appeals pro se from the decision

of the Warren County Court denying her motion for leave to file a delayed motion for a new 1 trial without holding an evidentiary hearing. For the reasons outlined below, we affirm.

{¶ 2} On November 9, 2010, Zielinski was sentenced to six months of community

1. Pursuant to Loc.R. 6(A), we have sua sponte removed this case from the accelerated calendar. Warren CA2014-05-069

control, fined $250 and ordered to attend anger management classes after the trial court

found her guilty of one count of domestic violence in violation of R.C. 2919.25(A), a first-

degree misdemeanor. The charge stemmed from a physical altercation between Zielinski

and A.H., her then 15-year-old daughter.

{¶ 3} This court subsequently affirmed Zielinski's conviction on direct appeal in State

v. Zielinski, 12th Dist. Warren No. CA2010-12-121, 2011-Ohio-6535. From that decision, this

court summarized the evidence presented during the one-day bench trial as follows:

[T]he altercation occurred on Mother's Day after A.H., who lives with her mother, returned home from a visit with her father. A.H. testified that she was upstairs in her room when mother asked her to work outside with the family. The two reportedly argued. Mother returned again upstairs at some point because, according to A.H., her mother thought she was "taking forever" to come downstairs.

A.H. testified that her mother was standing in front of her and "came at me and I put my hands up, not to hit her or anything, but just put my hands up and she was so close, that I actually touched her and she got mad and she started swinging at me, * * * not really hard, just kind of swatting."

A.H. said her mother was swatting at her when she pulled her mother's hair "like downwards and away from me, to get her off of me." A.H. said she tripped over things in her messy room and fell on her back and her mother fell on top of her. A.H. said she tried to crawl to the door, when mother "got on top of my back and put her arm around my neck" and was choking her. The daughter said she turned onto her back and mother was "on top of my stomach" and was holding A.H.'s arms back. "I was screaming and yelling and trying to get away."

When asked how the fight ended, A.H. said "when I was on the ground, she punched me, one time right here, like right in the temple and two times right here on my bone (indicating face)." She said her mother told her to stop crying and she would let her up. A.H. said she "pulled it together really fast," her mother got up, and A.H. ran into her bathroom. The daughter said she began throwing things in her bathroom; "I was so upset." She called her father and stepmother on her cell phone and told them about the fight.

A.H. testified that she had a bruise on her face and her wrist, her

-2- Warren CA2014-05-069

temple area was swollen, she had some blurred vision afterward, and her ribs and back hurt. She said her mother helped put ice on her face and she eventually went outside with the family.

On cross examination, A.H. denied that the injury to her eye occurred "from the desk you ran into when you were falling over." She also denied the eye injury was caused by falling into the wall. A.H. said, "I was far enough distance from the wall that when I fell, I didn't hit it." She denied starting the physical fight. She admitted that she wanted to live with her dad and was now living with him at the time of trial.

A deputy sheriff testified that he responded to the house after father and stepmother called authorities. He said he observed the daughter's left eye was swollen and black and blue. He talked with A.H. and mother. Mother told the deputy her daughter has "an attitude" whenever she is dropped off from her father's, and the two were arguing over the daughter not coming outside to help with yard work.

The deputy testified A.H. said she accidently hit mother. Mother told the deputy she punched her daughter. He said he observed several marks on mother's hand, including a bite mark that the daughter admitted to inflicting when she said mother's hand was around her neck. Photographs were taken of the visible injuries of both mother and daughter. The deputy indicated he placed mother and daughter in custody for domestic violence because he was unable to determine the primary aggressor.

Mother testified that A.H.'s attitude was getting worse. "She's just been a little more mouthy and you know, typical teenager." Mother said that previously, the discipline they imposed on A.H. would include such things as taking away her cell phone. Mother felt that father and stepmother undermined her authority with her daughter. Mother indicated she and A.H. had not had a physical confrontation before this incident.

Mother said the first physical altercation with her daughter started at the top of the steps when she pulled on her daughter's elbow "to try to you know, just tell her come downstairs and then she [A.H.] swung back like this and she had her fist up at me." Mother testified that she told A.H., "[d]on't you dare do that." Stepfather observed this encounter.

Mother said no one witnessed the next encounter when she went back to her daughter's room to see why she still hadn't come downstairs. According to mother, the daughter was throwing and slamming things in her room. Mother said, "I didn't feel like listening to all her garbage at that time." She said A.H. was

-3- Warren CA2014-05-069

screaming at her, so "I grabbed her arm, she swings back at me and I swing back at her." "I don't remember hitting her at all." Mother said A.H. grabbed mother's hair and would not let go. Mother said she picked up her daughter to try to control the situation. Mother said she wanted to get on top of her daughter to get this to stop.

Mother indicated that when she picked up her daughter, there were so many clothes, books, and things on the floor that "we end up falling and she hits the wall. She hit the wall so hard, she put a dent in my wall and at that point in time, when she hit the wall, I was concerned about her."

According to mother, the fight continued when A.H. tried to get up off the floor. Mother said she grabbed her daughter's head as she was getting up and they fell back into the desk. Mother got on top of her daughter and A.H. bit her hand. Mother said her daughter called her a "bitch" and said she hated her. A.H.'s body finally went limp after mother repeatedly told her daughter she wasn't getting up until she stopped what she was doing.

Mother denied telling the deputy she punched her daughter. She said she told the deputy she "must've punched her, because look at her eye." Mother told the prosecutor she was frustrated at her daughter "swinging things all over the place, her talking to me, like I was a piece of crap and not doing what I asked her to do. That's what frustrated me. * * * And she was frustrated with me, because she didn't want to do it."

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2014 Ohio 5318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-zielinski-ohioctapp-2014.