State v. Hamilton

Ohio Court of Appeals
State v. Hamilton, 156 N.E.2d 326 (1958)
107 Ohio App. 37; 7 Ohio Op. 2d 369; 1958 Ohio App. LEXIS 701
Guernsey, Middleton, Younger

State v. Hamilton

Opinion of the Court

*38 Guernsey, J.

This cause is before this court on motion of the state of Ohio for “leave to appeal and for permission to file a bill of exceptions” from a bearing field in tfie Municipal Court of Lima. Tfie state does not claim tfiat tfie Municipal Court erred in respect to its determination tfiat tfie defendant be field to await tfie action of tfie Allen County Grand Jury, but does claim tfiat tfie lower court erred in admitting certain testimony over tfie objection of tfie state.

This proceeding does not purport to come witfiin the provisions of Chapter 2953 of tfie Revised Code pertaining to appeals from criminal cases generally, and tfie only question to be decided at this time is whether this court may and should review tfie rulings of the Municipal Court with reference to tfie admission of certain evidence by virtue of tfie provisions of Sections 2945.67 to 2945.70, inclusive, Revised Code, which provide, in part, as follows:

Section 2945.67. “The prosecuting attorney or tfie attorney general may except to a decision of tfie eourt and present a bill of exceptions thereto. * * *” (Emphasis added.)
Section 2945.68. “Tfie prosecuting attorney or tfie attorney general may present a bill of exceptions in a criminal action to the Court of Appeals or tfie Supreme Court and apply for permission to file it with tfie clerk of tfie court for tfie decision of such, court upon tfie points presented therein. * * #” (Emphasis added.)

The Supreme Court of Ohio, in interpreting former provisions analogous to these sections, field in the case of State v. Dickerson, 73 Ohio St., 193, 76 N. E., 864:

“As a general rule an application by a prosecuting attorney for leave to file a bill of exceptions to the decisions of tfie court in a criminal case before tfie prosecution is ended will be overruled.”

In tfie case before us tfie record does not reveal tfiat tfie defendant, at tfie time the motion was filed, had either been indicted or tried, or that tfie prosecution had, in any sense, ended.

Tfie prosecution has cited several cases and we have examined many more wherein tfie Supreme Court reviewed exceptions of prosecuting attorneys prior to its holding in Eastman *39 v. State, 131 Ohio St., 1, 1 N. E. (2d), 140, that the provisions of Section 13446-2, General Code (analogous to Section 2945.68, Revised Code), were unconstitutional as then written. Although it was never specifically decided, it is apparent that the Supreme Court considered the term “decision,” appearing in sections analogous to Section 2945.67, Revised Code, applicable to rulings of the lower court as to the admissibility of evidence without regard to whether such rulings had any effect on the judgment of the court or whether such judgment was adverse to the state of Ohio.

The earlier statutes, analogous to Sections 2945.67 and 2945.68, Revised Code, provided for a review of the exceptions of a prosecuting attorney by the Supreme Court only, and the statutes in question did not include provisions for a review by the Court of Appeals until recodification in their present form in 1953. Our interpretation of such sections must therefore relate to their present form and to review by the Court of Appeals-only. Our construction, if possible, must avoid conflict with the Constitution. 1 Lewis ’ Sutherland Statutory Construction, 135, Section 83.

Section 6, Article IV of the Ohio Constitution, as amended November 7, 1944, except for original jurisdiction, limits the jurisdiction of Courts of Appeals to the review, affirmance, modification, setting aside, or reversal of judgments or final orders. It necessarily follows that the word, “decision,” in Section 2945.67, Revised Code, in order not to be in conflict with this constitutional limitation, must be construed as meaning a judgment or final order. Rulings as to the admissibility of evidence are not decisions, as so construed, and are not reviewable under the provisions of these statutes independently of the review of a judgment or final order.

There being no reviewable decision, the general rule expressed by the Supreme Court in State v. Dickerson, supra (73 Ohio St., 193), is particularly applicable and the motion of the state will be overruled.

Disposing of this cause in this manner it is unnecessary for this court to determine, and it does not hereby determine, whether the order binding the defendant over was a judgment *40 or final order, whether the sections in question permit the review at the state’s request of decisions of a Municipal Court, or whether such sections are otherwise constitutional.

Motion overruled.

Middleton, P. J., and Younger, J., concur.

Reference

Full Case Name
The State of Ohio, Appellant, v. Hamilton, Appellee
Cited By
1 case
Status
Published