[Cite as State v. Breitenstein, 2011-Ohio-4450.]
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO
SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
MONTGOMERY COUNTY
STATE OF OHIO :
: Appellate Case No. 24325
Plaintiff-Appellant :
: Trial Court Case No. 2010-CRB-3313
v. :
:
SCOTT A. BREITENSTEIN : (Criminal Appeal from
: (Dayton Municipal Court)
Defendant-Appellee :
:
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OPINION
Rendered on the 2nd day of September, 2011.
.........
JOHN DANISH, Atty. Reg. #0046639, and STEPHANIE L. COOK, Atty. Reg.
#0067101, by AMY B. MUSTO, Atty. Reg. #0071514, City of Dayton Prosecutor’s
Office, 335 West Third Street, Room 372, Dayton, Ohio 45402
Attorneys for Plaintiff-Appellant
MELISSA A. PFAHLER, Atty. Reg. #0086031, Law Office of the Public Defender,
117 South Main Street, Suite 400, Dayton, Ohio 45422
Attorney for Defendant-Appellee
.........
HALL, J.
{¶ 1} Scott Breitenstein and Christopher Quedeweit live in the same duplex,
Breitenstein in the upper unit, Quedeweit in the lower, and they share the back yard.
They both own dogs. On April 15, 2010, while Breitenstein was sleeping, Eric Smith,
a neighbor, entered Breitenstein’s unit, put a leash on Breitenstein’s dog, and took it
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into the back yard. Smith often did this. Quedeweit and his dog were in the back yard
at the time. When Smith and Breitenstein’s dog came outside, Quedeweit picked up
his own dog and started to walk toward the door to his unit. Breitenstein’s dog got
away from Smith. The dog ran up to Quedeweit and bit him three times. Closing
Quedeweit’s wounds required 45 stitches.
{¶ 2} Both Breitenstein and Smith were charged under Dayton’s dog-control
ordinance, R.C.G.O. 91.50(A)(5). While Smith pleaded guilty, Breitenstein
maintained his innocence, and a bench trial was held in Dayton Municipal Court.
Breitenstein did not dispute that he owned the dog, nor did he dispute that it was his
dog that bit Quedeweit. Breitenstein argued that because he was sleeping at the time
he is not culpable. The municipal court agreed, finding Breitenstein not guilty after
concluding that the city failed to prove the ordinance’s culpability element.
{¶ 3} The city appealed.
{¶ 4} In a single assignment of error, the city argues that the municipal court
erred by requiring it to prove a culpability element. The city contends that R.C.G.O.
91.50 imposes strict liability for violations. We agree.
{¶ 5} To prove a violation of R.C.G.O. 91.50(A)(5), the city must prove these
elements:
{¶ 6} “(A) No person owning, keeping, possessing, harboring, maintaining, or
having the care, custody, or control of a dog shall suffer or permit such dog to:
{¶ 7} “* * *
{¶ 8} “(5) Bite or otherwise cause physical harm to any other person * * *.”
{¶ 9} This Court directly addressed the strict-liability nature of this ordinance in
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State v. Thaler, Montgomery App. No. 22579, 2008-Ohio-5525. In Thaler, we
concluded that “R.C.G.O. § 91.50 is a strict liability offense.” Id. at ¶30. Breitenstein
concedes Thaler’s holding. But he urges us to reconsider it.
{¶ 10} Breitenstein first argues that the present case must be distinguished
from Thaler on its facts, like the municipal court concluded. While noting Thaler, the
court concluded that it did not control here because of substantial fact differences.
Construing the ordinance, the court said that the culpability requirement is “suffer or
permit the dog to bite.” The court found that because Breitenstein’s dog was under
Smith’s control at the time and because Breitenstein was unaware that Smith had
taken the dog outside, the city failed to prove that Breitenstein suffered or permitted
his dog to bite Quedeweit. But factual differences are irrelevant to the issue. “The
interpretation of a statute involves a purely legal question.” Washington Cty. Home v.
Ohio Dept. of Health, 178 Ohio App.3d 78, 2008-Ohio-4342, at ¶27.
{¶ 11} Breitenstein also points out that the ordinance does not criminalize
mere ownership or possession of a dog but rather criminalizes an owner’s suffering
or permitting his dog to bite. If we were to find that the ordinance imposes strict
liability, Breitenstein asserts, the ordinance’s “suffer or permit” language would be
rendered superfluous. Breitenstein is correct that the ordinance criminalizes an
owner’s suffering or permitting his dog to bite. This is the act (not the level of
culpability) that the city must prove. But because the ordinance imposes strict
liability, the city need not prove (as it would for a non-strict liability offense) that the
act was done with a culpable mental state–purposely, knowingly, recklessly, or
negligently. The “suffer or permit” language is not rendered superfluous.
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{¶ 12} None of the law on which we based our holding in Thaler has changed.
We note that other courts have held that similar ordinances impose strict liability.
See Highland Heights v. John Manos, Cuyahoga App. No. 84238, 2004-Ohio-6016
(holding that an ordinance providing that “No person owning, harboring or having the
care or control of a vicious dog shall suffer or permit such animal to go unconfined
on the premises of such person” imposes strict liability); Gates Mills v. Welsh (2001),
146 Ohio App.3d 368, 374 (holding that a similar dog confinement statute provided
for strict liability such that “defendant’s considerable efforts to comply with the statute
were irrelevant as a defense”). But, see, Akron v. Meissner (1993), 92 Ohio App.3d 1
(holding that a city ordinance that prohibited owners suffering or permitting their dogs
to bite required proof that the defendant “recklessly” permitted her dog to bite).
Breitenstein fails to persuade us to reconsider Thaler’s holding. That holding–that
R.C.G.O. 91.50 imposes strict liability for violations–controls the present case.
{¶ 13} The municipal court found that Breitenstein did not dispute that he
owned the dog and did not dispute that it was his dog that bit Quedeweit while the
latter was in their shared back yard. These facts satisfy the essential elements of
R.C.G.O. 91.50(A)(5). See Thaler, at ¶31. The municipal court should have
concluded that Breitenstein was strictly liable for the offense. The appellant’s
assignment of error is well taken. Nevertheless, our decision does not affect the
final judgment of the trial court as to this defendant because this is a prosecution
appeal under R.C. 2945.67. Therefore, that judgment is affirmed.
...........
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CELEBREZZE, J., concurs.
FROELICH, J., concurring:
{¶ 14} I cannot find any justification for overruling our precedent in Thaler or
State v. Squires (Montgomery 1996), 108 Ohio App. 3d 716, that anyone permitting
his or her dog to bite any other person is guilty regardless of his or her mental state
at the time he or she commits the act.
{¶ 15} However, I write separately to emphasize that the prosecution still must
prove a voluntary act on the part of the defendant. In this case, the city produced
evidence that the defendant did engage in the voluntary act of “suffering or
permitting” when it proved that he owned, kept, possessed, harbored, maintained,
etc. . .the dog at the time it bit another person.
{¶ 16} The ordinance provides for an affirmative defense if the person was
trespassing. R.C.G.O. 91.5(D)(2)1 Further, the defendant could have argued that
his suffering or permitting (i.e., his failure to not permit) the bite was an involuntary
act or not even his own act, and thus that the city did not prove the necessary actus
reus. R.C. 2901.21(A)(1). In such a scenario, the dog’s owner did not “suffer or
permit” anything and would be not guilty despite the strict liability nature of the
offense.
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(Hon. Frank D. Celebrezze, Jr. Eighth District Court of Appeals, sitting by
assignment of the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Ohio.)
1
There is nothing inconsistent with a strict liability offense’s having an affirmative defense. See,
e.g., State v. Williams, Montgomery App. No. 23546, 2010-Ohio-3334, ¶7, finding that “impossibility” is a
permissible affirmative defense to the strict liability offense of failure to register.
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Copies mailed to:
John Danish / Stephanie L. Cook
Amy B. Musto
Melissa A. Pfahler
Hon. John S. Pickrel