[Cite as State v. Snelling, 2011-Ohio-3222.]
COURT OF APPEALS
RICHLAND COUNTY, OHIO
FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
: JUDGES:
STATE OF OHIO : W. Scott Gwin, P.J.
: John W. Wise, J.
Plaintiff-Appellee : Julie A. Edwards, J.
:
-vs- : Case No. 10CA94
:
:
REGINALD SNELLING : OPINION
Defendant-Appellant
CHARACTER OF PROCEEDING: Criminal Appeal from Richland
County Court of Common Pleas Case
No. 2010-CR-43D
JUDGMENT: Affirmed
DATE OF JUDGMENT ENTRY: June 22, 2011
APPEARANCES:
For Plaintiff-Appellee For Defendant-Appellant
JAMES J. MAYER, JR. JOHN C. O’DONNELL
Prosecuting Attorney 13 Park Avenue West, Suite 605
Richland County, Ohio Mansfield, Ohio 44902
BY: KIRSTEN L. PSCHOLKA-GARTNER
Assistant Richland County Prosecutor
38 South Park Street
Mansfield, Ohio 44902
[Cite as State v. Snelling, 2011-Ohio-3222.]
Edwards, J.
{¶1} Appellant, Reginald Snelling, appeals a judgment of the Richland County
Common Pleas Court convicting him of abduction (R.C. 2905.02(A)(1)), two counts of
failure to comply with order or signal of a police officer (R.C. 2921.331(B)(4), R.C.
2921.331(B)(5)(a)(ii)), and assault on a police officer (R.C. 2903.13(A)). Appellee is the
State of Ohio.
STATEMENT OF FACTS AND CASE
{¶2} Reaunna Dodd met appellant in October or November of 2009, and
became involved in a romantic relationship with him. Shortly thereafter, Dodd and her
4-year-old son moved in with appellant.
{¶3} By the end of 2009, Dodd decided to end her relationship with appellant
because he was possessive and controlling. During the week between Christmas and
New Year’s Eve, Dodd left the home, over appellant’s protests, to visit a friend.
Realizing this was her chance to get away from appellant, Dodd chose to stay at her
friend’s home instead of returning to live with appellant.
{¶4} When appellant decided to stay with her friend, she left all of her
belongings at appellant’s house. After several attempts to call appellant to retrieve her
belongings, she finally reached him on December 31, 2009. He told her that she could
come to the house to get her things. However, when she arrived, he told her that he
would drive her to where her things were stored. Dodd was nervous about getting into
the truck with appellant, but called her mom on her cell phone so someone would know
of her whereabouts.
Richland County App. Case No. 10CA94 3
{¶5} After Dodd got into appellant’s truck, he drove around aimlessly for
several hours. He took her to Kroger’s, but pulled out of the parking lot without stopping
when she told her mother where they were located. He then drove to Walmart and
once again did not stop. He drove on to State Route 30 and headed toward Ashland.
{¶6} Dodd became afraid when appellant left Mansfield. She repeatedly asked
appellant to let her out of the truck, but he refused. Dodd continued to relay information
to her mother about her whereabouts because her mother and brother were trying to
follow them in a car. However, appellant became angry when Dodd told her mother
where they were going and told her that every time she told her mother what direction
they were heading, he would go a different way.
{¶7} Appellant eventually exited Route 30 and began driving down a deserted
country road. Dodd was afraid appellant was going to kill her. Appellant continued to
refuse to allow Dodd to get out of the truck. Appellant turned around and got back on
Route 30, but instead of taking Dodd back to Mansfield he headed south on Interstate
71. At one point he told Dodd he was taking her to Indiana. At another time he told her
he was going to run into a semi and kill them both.
{¶8} Appellant exited I-71 at State Route 13 and Hanley Road in Mansfield. He
was forced to stop at a stop sign because there was a car in front of him. As he slowed
down, Dodd attempted to jump out of the truck. Appellant attempted to stop her by
hitting the lock button on her door, but she unlocked the door from her side of the truck.
Appellant tried to grab the back of her jacket and pull her back inside the truck, but
Dodd slipped out of her jacket and ran.
Richland County App. Case No. 10CA94 4
{¶9} Dodd ran toward a house, but appellant drove down the driveway of the
home and reached the house first. She then ran back toward the road. Appellant got
out of the truck and chased her on foot. Dodd ran into the road and stopped a PT
Cruiser with two older ladies inside. Appellant followed. She screamed at the ladies to
help her, but they drove away.
{¶10} Dodd began running through a field and appellant got back into his truck
to chase her. Dodd ran back to the road and stopped another vehicle. The driver of the
vehicle got out and called the police. Appellant had stopped his truck in the middle of
the road and was standing by the driver’s side door. Dodd’s mother and brother arrived
on the scene. When her brother ran toward appellant, appellant got back in the truck
and left.
{¶11} Mansfield Police Officer Ryan Anschutz was traveling on Lexington
Avenue in Mansfield when he spotted appellant. He activated his lights and sirens and
turned to pursue appellant. Appellant drove erratically, swerving into oncoming traffic to
pass other vehicles and speeding. When appellant attempted to make an abrupt right
turn at a high rate of speed, he lost control of his truck, which came to rest in the front
yard of a residence.
{¶12} Appellant jumped out of the truck and ran through several back yards. He
was pursued by Anschutz, who saw appellant throw a box cutter to the ground.
Anschutz eventually was able to tackle appellant. Appellant struck the officer several
times during attempts to restrain him. After appellant was secured in handcuffs, police
found a police scanner radio in his jacket pocket. The box cutter was retrieved from the
path of his pursuit.
Richland County App. Case No. 10CA94 5
{¶13} Appellant was indicted by the Richland County Grand Jury with abduction,
two counts of failure to comply with the order or signal of a police officer, and assault on
a peace officer. Following jury trial he was convicted as charged on all counts. He was
sentenced to four years incarceration for abduction and 12 months for assault. The
court merged the failure to comply convictions and sentenced him to two years
incarceration on Count II. He assigns three errors on appeal:
{¶14} “I. THE DEFENDANT WAS DENIED EFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF
COUNSEL IN VIOLATION OF THE FIFTH AND SIXTH AMENDMENTS TO THE
UNITED STATES CONSTITUTION.
{¶15} “II. THE COURT COMMITTED PLAIN ERROR BY ALLOWING THE
EVIDENCE OF THE BOX CUTTER KNIFE AND OF THE ALLEGED RESTRAINT
INCIDENTS TWO DAYS BEFORE THE CRIME ALLEGED IN THE INDICTMENT.
{¶16} “III. THE COURT COMMITTED PLAIN ERROR TO
DEFENDANT/APPELLANT’S PREJUDICE BY ALLOWING A PROSECUTOR’S
WITNESS TO TESTIFY AFTER THE STATE HAD RESTED.”
I
{¶17} In his first assignment of error, appellant argues counsel was ineffective
for failing to object to testimony of Dodd’s mother concerning an incident between
appellant and Dodd two days earlier and for failing to object to admission of testimony
concerning the box cutter appellant threw from his person as he ran from police.
{¶18} A properly licensed attorney is presumed competent. State v. Hamblin
(1988), 37 Ohio St.3d 153, 524 N.E.2d 476. Therefore, in order to prevail on a claim of
ineffective assistance of counsel, appellant must show counsel's performance fell below
Richland County App. Case No. 10CA94 6
an objective standard of reasonable representation and but for counsel’s error, the
result of the proceedings would have been different. Strickland v. Washington (1984),
466 U.S. 668, 104 S.Ct. 2052, 80 L.Ed.2d 674; State v. Bradley (1989), 42 Ohio St.3d
136. In other words, appellant must show that counsel’s conduct so undermined the
proper functioning of the adversarial process that the trial cannot be relied upon as
having produced a just result. Id.
{¶19} Dodd’s mother testified:
{¶20} “Q. And as of that time, were you aware or familiar with Reaunna’s
relationship with Reginald Snelling?
{¶21} “A. I had just - - the first contact I had with Reggie was two days prior.
Him (sic) and Reaunna had a fight, and she had left her school stuff at his home, and he
wouldn’t give it back to her. And she wanted to know if I would go with her over to his
home to try and get her stuff back. And I said, yes, I would.
{¶22} “And I called a male friend of mine, and we went over to Reggie’s house to
try to get her stuff, and he wouldn’t give it back to her. He tried to keep her from getting
back in the car with me. And once she got loose I told her to run, and she ran up the
street, and he chased her, and there was an altercation up the street at that time, and
that was my first meeting with him.” Tr. 79
{¶23} Officer Anschutz testified that he saw appellant throw a silver or gray box
cutter knife on the ground as he fled from police on foot. Tr. 140.
{¶24} Appellant argues both pieces of evidence were inadmissible under Evid.
R. 404(B):
Richland County App. Case No. 10CA94 7
{¶25} “Evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts is not admissible to prove the
character of a person in order to show action in conformity therewith. It may, however,
be admissible for other purposes, such as proof of motive, opportunity, intent,
preparation, plan, knowledge, identity, or absence of mistake or accident.”
{¶26} Appellant cannot demonstrate that had counsel objected to Lois Dodd’s
testimony and the objection been sustained, the result of the proceeding would have
been different. Clearly the jury chose to believe Reaunna Dodd’s rendition of the facts
rather than appellant’s version that she went with him willingly. Appellant’s behavior
after police attempted to stop him supports Reaunna’s testimony that she did not
voluntarily travel about town with him while going to pick up her things. The testimony
of Lois Dodd concerning this prior incident was brief during the course of the trial.
Further, Reaunna had testified without objection concerning his possessive and
controlling behavior with her while they lived together and a prior incident where she
tried to go into her friend’s house and appellant chased her and physically picked her
up. Tr. 73. Appellant cannot demonstrate that he would have been acquitted in the
absence of Lois Dodd’s testimony.
{¶27} Evidence of the box cutter was not evidence of another crime, wrong, or
act, but a part of the crime for which appellant was on trial. Officer Anschutz witnessed
appellant throw the box cutter from his body during the chase. Although Reaunna never
saw appellant with the box cutter, she believed he was going to try to kill her. Evidence
that appellant threw the box cutter is evidence of his state of mind as he fled from
police, and demonstrates his intent in driving Reaunna around town was not simply to
run errands and retrieve her things from where he had stored them. Although he never
Richland County App. Case No. 10CA94 8
brandished or used the box cutter during the incident, evidence that he had it on his
person and attempted to discard it when running from police tends to show that he
planned to restrain Reaunna in the vehicle. Further, appellant has not shown that in
the absence of this evidence, the result of the proceeding would have been different.
There was substantial evidence of guilt presented through the testimony of Reaunna
and of the officers who chased him following her escape from the vehicle, as outlined in
the statement of facts above.
{¶28} The first assignment of error is overruled.
II
{¶29} In his second assignment of error, appellant argues that the court
committed plain error in admitting the evidence of a prior incident and of the box cutter.
As discussed in the first assignment of error, appellant’s counsel failed to object to the
admission of this evidence.
{¶30} Appellant has therefore waived all but plain error under Crim. R. 52(B). To
demonstrate plain error, appellant must show that but for the error, the result of the
proceeding would clearly have been otherwise. State v. Long (1978), 53 Ohio St.2d 91,
372 N.E.2d 804, ¶ 2 of the syllabus. Notice of plain error is to be taken with the utmost
caution, under exceptional circumstances and only to prevent a manifest miscarriage of
justice. Id. at paragraph 3 of the syllabus.
{¶31} As discussed in the first assignment of error above, appellant has not
demonstrated that had this evidence not been admitted, the result of the proceeding
would have clearly been otherwise. The State presented substantial evidence of guilt
through the testimony of Reaunna Dodd, coupled with the testimony of the police
Richland County App. Case No. 10CA94 9
concerning his flight when they attempted to apprehend him and his subsequent
behavior.
{¶32} The second assignment of error is overruled.
III
{¶33} In his third assignment of error, appellant argues that the court erred in
allowing the State to recall Reaunna Dodd to the stand to rebut his testimony. He cites
no authority in support of this assignment of error, but merely argues that all she did
was reiterate her earlier testimony without objection from appellant.
{¶34} When the State recalled Reaunna Dodd to the stand, appellant did not
object to any of her testimony. Therefore, we must find plain error to reverse.
{¶35} Rebuttal evidence is given to explain, refute, or disprove new facts
introduced into evidence by the adverse party. State v. McNeill (1998), 83 Ohio St.3d
438, 446, 700 N.E.2d 596, certiorari denied (1999), 526 U.S. 1137, 119 S.Ct. 1792, 143
L.Ed.2d 1019. Such evidence becomes relevant only to challenge the evidence offered
by the opponent, and its scope is limited by such evidence. Id. The determination as to
what evidence is admissible as proper rebuttal rests within the trial court's discretion. Id.
{¶36} The State called Reaunna Dodd to the stand to rebut appellant’s
testimony that she jumped into the truck and insisted on going with him. She also
rebutted his testimony concerning stopping to purchase orange juice for his uncle and
eating at Burger King. She rebutted his testimony that she took a picture of him with his
cell phone while they rode in the truck and that he allowed her to get out of the truck
without resistance after he refused to return her clothes. Contrary to appellant’s
Richland County App. Case No. 10CA94 10
argument, she did not simply take the stand and reiterate her testimony from earlier in
the trial.
{¶37} The third assignment of error is overruled.
{¶38} The judgment of the Richland County Common Pleas Court is affirmed.
By: Edwards, J.
Gwin, P.J. and
Wise, J. concur
______________________________
______________________________
______________________________
JUDGES
JAE/r0414
[Cite as State v. Snelling, 2011-Ohio-3222.]
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR RICHLAND COUNTY, OHIO
FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
STATE OF OHIO :
:
Plaintiff-Appellee :
:
:
-vs- : JUDGMENT ENTRY
:
REGINALD SNELLING :
:
Defendant-Appellant : CASE NO. 10CA94
For the reasons stated in our accompanying Memorandum-Opinion on file, the
judgment of the Richland County Court of Common Pleas is affirmed. Costs assessed
to appellant.
_________________________________
_________________________________
_________________________________
JUDGES