State v. Morton, Unpublished Decision (4-30-1999)
State v. Morton, Unpublished Decision (4-30-1999)
Opinion of the Court
DECISION. Defendant-appellant Kim Morton appeals his conviction for failure to comply with the order or signal of a police officer, a fourth-degree felony.
No person shall operate a vehicle on any street or highway without due regard for the safety of persons or property.
The trial court accepted Morton's plea and found him guilty.
(B) No person shall operate a motor vehicle so as willfully to elude or flee a police officer after receiving a visible or audible signal from a police officer to bring his motor vehicle to a stop.
(C) * * * A violation of division (B) of this section is a misdemeanor of the first degree, except that a violation of division (f) of this section is a felony of the fourth degree if the jury or judge as trier of fact finds any one of the following by proof beyond a reasonable doubt:
* * *
(2) The operation of the motor vehicle by the offender was a proximate cause of serious physical harm to persons or property.
Morton moved to dismiss the common pleas indictment based on an alleged double-jeopardy violation. The motion was denied and the case proceeded to trial before a jury. Morton was found guilty and sentenced to serve eighteen months of incarceration. He timely appeals the trial court's judgment and brings one assignment of error. In this assignment, Morton actually makes four distinct arguments, one of which being that his double-jeopardy rights were violated by the state's successive prosecutions of him.
The Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment provides that no person shall "be subject for the same offense to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb." This constitutional protection bars successive prosecutions for the same offense.1 Accordingly, the state's subsequent prosecution of Morton for the felony failure to comply violated double jeopardy only if that offense constitutes the same offense as reckless operation.
In order to determine whether reckless operation and felony failure-to-comply constitute that same offense for purposes of double jeopardy, we must apply the Blockburger test, which provides:
[W]here the same act or transaction constitutes a violation of two distinct statutory provisions, the test to be applied to determine whether there are two offenses or only one is whether each provision requires proof of an additional fact which the other does not.2
In State v. Knaff,3 a case of nearly identical facts, this court recognized that reckless operation and felony failure to comply under subsection (C)(3) of R.C.
2921.331 constitute the same offense for purposes of double jeopardy, stating:When we apply the Blockburger test to the case before us, it is clear that the felony failure-to-comply offense required proof of several additional facts separate from the reckless-operation offense. However, the reckless-operation offense did not require proof of any fact beyond those required for felony failure to comply. Under the elements, it is impossible to commit the felony version of the failure-to-comply offense — operation of a motor vehicle causing substantial risk of serious physical harm to persons or property — without also violating the city ordinance — operation of a vehicle without due regard for the safety of persons or property.
This court's opinion in Knaff did not take into account the analysis identified in two prior decisions in which the United States Supreme Court noted that, historically, double jeopardy protections were inapplicable to sentencing matters because those determinations do not place offenders in jeopardy for an "offense." Over the strong and ultimately persuasive dissent by Justices Scalia and Stevens, in Monge v. California,4 the Court upheld California's "three-strikes" law. Likewise, in Almendarez-Torres v. United States,5 the Court upheld a congressional determination that recidivism findings are not elements of offenses even if they increase the accused's maximum punishment. But, last month, in Jones v. United States,6 with Justices Scalia and Stevens carrying a now-majority position, the Supreme Court limited the application of Almendarez-Torres and Monge to the context of recidivism when it determined that sentence-enhancing provisions in the federal carjacking statute, which were triggered by proof of either serious bodily harm or death, were better read as elements making up separate offenses than as sentencing factors. In doing so, the Court distinguished the factors at issue (serious bodily injury and death) from recidivism. The Court noted that, unlike recidivism, these factors had not been traditionally regarded as sentencing factors as opposed to elements. The Court also found relevant that the statutory provisions in the carjacking statute conditioned imposition of the greater penalties on proof of further facts (injury or death) that seemed as important as the elements in the principal paragraph of the section.
Because the Supreme Court's analysis in Jones is squarely applicable to this case, we are confident that Knaff's silent treatment of subsection (C)(3) of R.C.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded with instructions. Doan, P.J., Gorman and Sundermann, JJ.
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