[Cite as State v. Mutter & Mutter, 2016-Ohio-512.]
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO
FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
SCIOTO COUNTY
STATE OF OHIO, : Case Nos. 15CA3690
15CA3691
Plaintiff-Appellant, :
v. : DECISION AND
JUDGMENT ENTRY
BUDDY C. MUTTER :
and
MELVIN MUTTER, RELEASED: 2/8/2016
:
Defendants-Appellees.
APPEARANCES:
Mark E. Kuhn, Scioto County Prosecuting Attorney, and Jay S. Willis and Joseph Hale,
Scioto County Assistant Prosecuting Attorneys, Portsmouth, Ohio, for appellant.
Eddie Edwards, Portsmouth, Ohio, for appellee Buddy Mutter.
Matthew F. Loesch, Portsmouth, Ohio, for appellee Melvin Mutter.
Harsha, J.
{¶1} The State of Ohio appeals from dismissals, based on double jeopardy, of
ethnic intimidation indictments against brothers Buddy and Melvin Mutter. The brothers
originally faced felony ethnic intimidation charges in municipal court, but pled no contest
there to misdemeanor offenses. The state asserts that the court of common pleas erred
in dismissing the subsequent indictment charging the Mutters with ethnic intimidation
because jeopardy never attached to their municipal court misdemeanor convictions. We
agree.
{¶2} The common pleas court determined that the Mutters pleaded no contest
in municipal court to reduced misdemeanor offenses in return for the dismissal of the
felony ethnic intimidation charges, and that the convictions for lesser included
misdemeanor offenses barred subsequent prosecution for the underlying incident.
Scioto App. Nos. 15CA3690 and 15CA3691 2
However, the trial court’s finding that Buddy Mutter’s ethnic intimidation charge had
been reduced to the lesser included offense of aggravated menacing is not supported
by the record. Instead, the charge was amended to menacing by stalking, which is not a
lesser included offense of ethnic intimidation. Therefore, Buddy Mutter’s conviction for
menacing by stalking did not bar his subsequent indictment for ethnic intimidation.
Likewise, the trial court found that Melvin Mutter pleaded guilty to menacing by stalking
as a reduction of his ethnic intimidation charge. But again, because menacing by
stalking is not a lesser included offense of ethnic intimidation, his conviction for this
misdemeanor did not bar his subsequent indictment for ethnic intimidation.
{¶3} The trial court erred in dismissing the indictment against the Mutters
based on the record before it. We sustain the state’s second assignment of error,
reverse the judgment dismissing the indictment, and remand the cause for further
proceedings on the indictment. Our holding renders the state’s remaining assignments
of error moot.
I. FACTS
A. Melvin Mutter Municipal Court Criminal Cases
{¶4} On October 20, 2014, Portsmouth Municipal Court Case No. 1401576,
charged Melvin Mutter with ethnic intimidation. On October 23, 2014, the municipal
court dismissed that case without prejudice. On the same date that the municipal court
dismissed the ethnic intimidation charge, the state filed Case No. 1401599 charging
Melvin Mutter with menacing by stalking under R.C. 2903.211. On October 29, 2014,
the municipal court convicted him on his no contest plea, sentenced him to a suspended
sentence of 180 days in jail, and placed him on probation.
Scioto App. Nos. 15CA3690 and 15CA3691 3
{¶5} On October 20, 2014 in Case No. 1401577, the state also charged Melvin
Mutter with aggravated menacing under R.C. 2903.21 and public indecency under R.C.
2907.09(A)(1). On October 29, 2014, the municipal court convicted him on his no
contest plea to aggravated menacing, sentenced him to 180 days in jail, suspended 150
days of the jail term, placed him on probation, and fined him $50. The court dismissed
his public indecency charge.
B. Buddy Mutter Municipal Court Criminal Cases
{¶6} On October 20, 2014, Portsmouth Municipal Court Case No. 1401578,
charged Buddy Mutter with ethnic intimidation in violation of R.C. 2927.12. The
complaint alleged that on or about October 17, 2014, Buddy Mutter “did knowingly
violate Section 2903.21, 2903.22, 2909.66, 2909.07 or 2917.21 of the ORC by reason
of the race or national origin of another person to wit: intimidating victim Robert Booker
by insulting his race and ethnicity.” A notation on the complaint stated that the charge
was reduced to “M1 2903.21” on October 23, that Buddy Mutter pleaded no contest,
and that he was sentenced.
{¶7} Notwithstanding the notation on the complaint, the official docket for Case
No. 1401578 establishes that the ethnic intimidation charge was instead amended to a
charge of menacing by stalking in violation of R.C. 2903.211, a misdemeanor of the first
degree. After Buddy Mutter pleaded no contest to that charge on October 23, 2014, the
municipal court sentenced him to a suspended 180-day jail term and placed him on
probation.
{¶8} A separate municipal court criminal case, Case No. 1401579, also filed on
October 20, 2014, charged Buddy Mutter with aggravated menacing in violation of R.C.
Scioto App. Nos. 15CA3690 and 15CA3691 4
2903.21, a misdemeanor of the first degree. On October 23, 2014, the municipal court
convicted him upon his no contest plea, sentenced him to a suspended 180-day jail
term, and placed him on probation.
C. Common Pleas Court Case
{¶9} Following the municipal court criminal proceedings, on November 4, 2014,
the Scioto County Grand Jury returned an indictment charging Buddy and Melvin Mutter
with one count each of ethnic intimidation in violation of R.C. 2927.12. The indictment
alleged that “[o]n or about October 17, 2014, at Scioto County, Ohio, Buddy C. Mutter
(A), Melvin L. Mutter (B), unlawfully, did violate Section 2903.21 of the Revised Code,
Aggravated Menacing, by reason of race, color, religion, or natural origin of another
person or group of persons.” The state later filed a bill of particulars which reiterated
the allegations of the indictment.
{¶10} Melvin Mutter filed a motion to dismiss the case based on double
jeopardy. In his motion counsel argued that he had pleaded guilty1 to the charges of
aggravated menacing and menacing by stalking in the municipal court and that he had
served his sentence on those matters. He further argued the parties had agreed that
the ethnic intimidation charge would be dismissed as part of the plea agreement, so that
the subsequent indictment on that charge violated his double jeopardy rights.
{¶11} Buddy Mutter also filed a motion to dismiss based on double jeopardy.
He argued that the municipal court’s amendment of his ethnic intimidation charge to
aggravated menacing and his conviction upon his no contest plea precluded the
subsequent indictment on the ethnic intimidation charge. He attached a copy of the
1
He actually pleaded no contest to these charges.
Scioto App. Nos. 15CA3690 and 15CA3691 5
ethnic intimidation complaint in municipal court Case No. 1401578, which included the
handwritten notation suggesting that the charge was reduced to aggravated menacing
on October 23, 2014. But he did not include the sentencing entry from that case.
Instead, he included his sentencing entry from Case No. 1401579, which addresses a
separate aggravated menacing charge.
{¶12} The state submitted a written response arguing that the Mutters’ motions
were meritless because the predicate offense of aggravated menacing was not a lesser
included offense of ethnic intimidation and could not support their double jeopardy
claim.
{¶13} The trial court conducted a hearing on the motions but none of the parties
submitted evidence. Melvin Mutter’s counsel argued that the state had amended an
ethnic intimidation charge in the municipal court to menacing by stalking and that he
pleaded no contest to the amended charge and a separate aggravated menacing
charge with the understanding that it would resolve the case. He claimed that he pled
to lesser included offenses of ethnic intimidation, which under the prohibition against
double jeopardy precluded the indictment. Buddy Mutter’s counsel also argued that his
client’s ethnic intimidation charge had been reduced to a lesser included offense, which
barred his subsequent indictment by double jeopardy.
{¶14} The state countered that the Mutters had pleaded no contest to predicate
offenses, rather than lesser included offenses, to the ethnic intimidation charges in the
municipal court and that the municipal court exceeded its authority by accepting pleas
that reduced the felony offenses to misdemeanor offenses.
Scioto App. Nos. 15CA3690 and 15CA3691 6
{¶15} The trial court entered judgments granting the Mutters’ motions and
dismissing the indictment charging them with ethnic intimidation. The trial court found
that in Portsmouth Municipal Court Case No. 1401578, Buddy Mutter was charged with
ethnic intimidation and that “[t]his case alleged the same violation on October 17, 2014,
which is the same factual situation as contained in the present indictment.” The trial
court determined that this charge had been reduced to aggravated menacing and the
municipal court found him guilty upon his no-contest plea to that charge and sentenced
him. The trial court concluded that Buddy Mutter’s conviction of the aggravated
menacing charge in Case No. 1401578, which constituted a predicate offense for his
ethnic intimidation charge, precluded his subsequent indictment for ethnic intimidation.
{¶16} The trial court noted the municipal court had dismissed Melvin Mutter’s
ethnic intimidation charge and on the same day, a menacing by stalking charge was
filed against him in a separate municipal court case. The trial court concluded that “it
was the intent of the State of Ohio and defendant in the Portsmouth Municipal Court to
plead to a charge of Aggravated Menacing by Stalking as a reduction to the offense of
Ethnic Intimidation (F5)”, barring his subsequent indictment on the ethnic intimidation
charge.
{¶17} The state appeals the judgments dismissing the indictment against the
Mutters as a matter of right.2 We consolidated these appeals for purposes of decision.
II. ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
{¶18} The state assigns the following errors for our review:
2R.C. 2945.67(A) provides that “[a] prosecuting attorney, village solicitor, city director of law, or the
attorney general may appeal as a matter of right any decision of a trial court in a criminal case, * * * which
decision grants a motion to dismiss all or any part of an indictment * * *.”
Scioto App. Nos. 15CA3690 and 15CA3691 7
1. THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY NOT CONDUCTING AN
EVIDENTIARY HEARING TO DETERMINE THE FACTS AND
CIRCUMSTANCES SURROUNDING THE PROCEDURES UTILIZED
BY THE PORTSMOUTH MUNICIPAL COURT IN REDUCING, OR
AMENDING THE FELONY ETHNIC INTIMIDATION CHARGES.
2. THE TRIAL COURT’S DISMISSAL OF THE INDICTMENT FOR
ETHNIC INTIMIDATION WAS ERROR AS JEOPARDY NEVER
ATTACHED AND THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS DOES HAVE
JURISDICTION TO PROCEED.
3. THE DISMISSAL OF THE INDICTMENT IN THIS INSTANCE BY THE
COURT OF COMMON PLEAS WAS BOTH PLAIN ERROR, AND AN
ABUSE OF DISCRETION PURSUANT TO THE FACTS AND THE
RELEVANT CASELAW.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
{¶19} We apply a de novo standard of review to a lower court’s ruling on a
motion to dismiss an indictment based on double jeopardy. See State v. Trimble, 4th
Dist. Pickaway No. 13CA8, 2013-Ohio-5094, ¶ 5; State v. Hill, 2015-Ohio-2389, 37
N.E.3d 822, ¶ 17 (8th Dist.) (“We review a trial court’s judgment on a motion to dismiss
an indictment de novo”). However, insofar as the trial court was required to make
certain factual findings, we are bound to accept them if they are supported by
competent, credible evidence. State v. O’Neal, 12th Dist. Warren No. CA2014-08-104,
2015-Ohio-1096, ¶ 15.
IV. LAW AND ANALYSIS
Double Jeopardy
{¶20} Because it is dispositive we start with the state’s second assignment of
error, which asserts that the trial court erred in granting the Mutters’ motions to dismiss
the indictment based on double jeopardy.
Scioto App. Nos. 15CA3690 and 15CA3691 8
{¶21} The Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment to the United States
Constitution provides that no person shall “be subject for the same offence to be twice
put in jeopardy of life or limb.” “This protection applies to Ohio citizens through the
Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, Benton v. Maryland, 395 U.S.
784, 794, 89 S.Ct. 2056, 23 L.Ed.2d 707 (1969), and is additionally guaranteed by the
Ohio Constitution, Article I, Section 10.” State v. Ruff, 143 Ohio St,3d 114, 2015-Ohio-
995, 34 N.E.3d 892, ¶ 10. “The Double Jeopardy Clause protects against three abuses:
(1) ‘a second prosecution for the same offense after acquittal,’ (2) ‘a second prosecution
for the same offense after conviction,’ and (3) ‘multiple punishments for the same
offense’ ” in a single prosecution. Id. quoting North Carolina v. Pearce, 395 U.S. 711,
717, 89 S.Ct. 2072, 23 L.Ed.2d 656 (1969), overruled on other grounds, Alabama v.
Smith, 490 U.S. 794, 109 S.Ct. 2201, 104 L.Ed.2d 865 (1989). It is the second
protection—a second prosecution for the same offense after conviction—that is
pertinent here.
{¶22} The successive prosecution branch of the Double Jeopardy Clause
prohibits the state from trying a defendant for a greater offense after a conviction of a
lesser included offense and from twice trying a defendant for the same offense. State v.
Moore, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga Nos. 100483 and 1000484, 2014-Ohio-5682, ¶ 36, quoting
State v. Mullins, 5th Dist. Fairfield No. 12 CA 17, 2013-Ohio-1826, ¶ 12; State v.
Bentley, 4th Dist. Athens No. 01CA13, 2001 WL 1627645, *3 (Dec. 6, 2011), quoting
State v. Bickerstaff, 10 Ohio St.3d 62, 64, 461 N.E.2d 892 (1984) (“the successive
prosecution branch of the Double Jeopardy Clause ‘prohibits the state from trying a
defendant for a greater offense after a conviction of a lesser included offense’ and from
Scioto App. Nos. 15CA3690 and 15CA3691 9
twice trying a defendant for the same offense”). Consequently, “[w]hatever the
sequence may be, the Fifth Amendment forbids successive prosecution and cumulative
punishment for a greater and lesser included offense.” Brown v. Ohio, 423 U.S. 161,
169, 53 L.Ed.2d 187, 97 S.Ct. 2221 (1977).
{¶23} The common pleas court determined that in Case No. 1401578, the
municipal court reduced Buddy Mutter’s ethnic intimidation charge to aggravated
menacing and that this misdemeanor offense constituted a lesser included offense of
ethnic intimidation, thus barring the subsequent indictment for the felony offense.
Nevertheless, the record for that case, which is accessible online as a public record,
disproves this factual determination. Instead, the record for Case No. 1401578
explicitly indicates that the ethnic intimidation charge was not reduced or amended to a
charge of aggravated menacing, but was amended to a charge of menacing by stalking.
{¶24} Similarly, in Melvin Mutter’s case, the common pleas court relied on the
filing of a new charge of menacing by stalking, filed in a separate case on the same
date that the ethnic intimidation charge was dismissed, to conclude that the ethnic
intimidation charge had been reduced to the menacing by stalking charge.
{¶25} The ethnic intimidation charge that was the subject of the grand jury
indictment was premised on the predicate offense of aggravated menacing as
proscribed by R.C. 2903.21, not menacing by stalking as proscribed by R.C. 2903.211.
R.C. 2927.12(A) defines ethnic intimidation stating that “[n]o person shall violate section
2903.21, 2903.22, 2909.06, or 2909.07, or division (A)(3), (4), or (5) of section 2917.21
of the Revised Code by reason of the race, color, religion, or national origin of another
person or group of persons.”
Scioto App. Nos. 15CA3690 and 15CA3691 10
{¶26} The predicate offenses identified in R.C. 2927.12, including aggravated
menacing under R.C. 2903.21, constitute lesser included offenses of ethnic
intimidation.3 State v. Wyant, 64 Ohio St.3d 566, 580, 597 N.E.2d 450 (1992), vacated
on other grounds, Ohio v. Wyant, 508 U.S. 969, 125 L.Ed.2d 656, 113 S.Ct. 2954
(1993); State v. McCoy, 1st Dist. Hamilton No. C-090599, 2010-Ohio-5810, fn. 26, citing
Wyant for the proposition that “in the context of the ethnic-intimidation statute, a
specifically mentioned predicate offense is a lesser-included offense.” The dispositive
issue here is whether the menacing by stalking offenses, which the ethnic intimidation
charges were reduced to in the municipal court, constitute lesser included offenses of
the ethnic intimidation charges of the indictments.
{¶27} “In determining whether an offense is a lesser included offense of another,
a court shall consider whether one offense carries a greater penalty than the other,
whether some element of the greater offense is not required to prove commission of the
lesser offense, and whether the greater offense as statutorily defined cannot be
committed without the lesser offense as statutorily defined also being committed.” State
v. Evans, 122 Ohio St.3d 381, 2009-Ohio-2974, 911 N.E.2d 889, paragraph two of the
syllabus, clarifying State v. Deem, 40 Ohio St.3d 205, 533 N.E.2d 294 (1988); see also
State v. Deanda, 136 Ohio St.3d 18, 2013-Ohio-1722, 989 N.E.2d 986, ¶ 10-13.
3 The state argues that predicate offenses like aggravated menacing are not lesser included offenses of
ethnic intimidation because the United States Supreme Court held in Garrett v. United States, 471 U.S.
773, 85 L.Ed.2d 764, 105 S.Ct. 2407 (1985) that prosecution for the crime of continuing criminal
enterprise (CCE), after an earlier prosecution for a predicate offense, did not violate double jeopardy
because Congress intended that CCE be a separate offense and to permit prosecution for both predicate
offenses and CCE. The state is incorrect. Garrett is not applicable here because that holding “merely
adhered to [the Supreme Court’s] understanding that legislatures have traditionally perceived a qualitative
difference between conspiracy-like crimes and the substantive offenses upon which they are predicated.”
Rutledge v. United States, 517 U.S. 292, 300, 134 L.Ed.2d 419, 116 S.Ct. 1241, fn. 12 (1996). This case
does not involve any conspiracy or comparable charge.
Scioto App. Nos. 15CA3690 and 15CA3691 11
{¶28} Menacing by stalking is not a predicate offense of ethnic intimidation. See
R.C. 2927.12(A) and 2903.211. Nor is it a lesser included offense of ethnic intimidation
because the greater offense—ethnic intimidation—can be committed without the lesser
offense—menacing by stalking—being committed. In fact, the indictment here specified
aggravated menacing as the predicate offense for the ethnic intimidation charge against
the Mutters, not menacing by stalking.
{¶29} The common pleas court erred in relying upon the purported reduction of
the ethnic intimidation charges to menacing by stalking to make its finding of double
jeopardy. Although separate aggravated menacing charges were filed against the
Mutters in the municipal court in separate cases, the trial court could not properly rely
on these charges to support its dismissal of the indictment. There is no evidence in the
record or the municipal court’s publicly accessible dockets to determine whether these
charges arose from the same incident as in the indictment. Thus, we sustain the state’s
second assignment of error, albeit for reasons other than the primary contentions it
raises. Our holding renders the state’s remaining arguments moot. State v. Brigner,
4th Dist. Athens No. 14CA19, 2015-Ohio-2526, ¶ 16, citing App.R. 12(A)(1)(c).
V. CONCLUSION
{¶30} The trial court erred in dismissing the indictment charging the Mutters with
ethnic intimidation based on prior municipal court cases in which the court convicted
them on reduced charges of menacing by stalking. Menacing by stalking does not
constitute a lesser included offense of ethnic intimidation and thus a conviction for that
misdemeanor cannot bar a subsequent prosecution for ethnic intimidation based on
double jeopardy. We sustain the state’s second assignment of error, reverse the trial
Scioto App. Nos. 15CA3690 and 15CA3691 12
court’s judgments dismissing the indictment against Buddy and Melvin Mutter, and
remand the cause for further proceedings.
JUDGMENT REVERSED
AND CAUSE REMANDED.
Scioto App. Nos. 15CA3690 and 15CA3691 13
JUDGMENT ENTRY
It is ordered that the JUDGMENT IS REVERSED and that the CAUSE IS
REMANDED. Appellees shall pay the costs.
The Court finds there were reasonable grounds for this appeal.
It is ordered that a special mandate issue out of this Court directing the Scioto
County Court of Common Pleas to carry this judgment into execution.
IF A STAY OF EXECUTION OF SENTENCE AND RELEASE UPON BAIL HAS
BEEN PREVIOUSLY GRANTED BY THE TRIAL COURT OR THIS COURT, it is
temporarily continued for a period not to exceed sixty days upon the bail previously
posted. The purpose of a continued stay is to allow Appellant to file with the Supreme
Court of Ohio an application for a stay during the pendency of proceedings in that court.
If a stay is continued by this entry, it will terminate at the earlier of the expiration of the
sixty day period, or the failure of the Appellant to file a notice of appeal with the
Supreme Court of Ohio in the forty-five day appeal period pursuant to Rule II, Sec. 2 of
the Rules of Practice of the Supreme Court of Ohio. Additionally, if the Supreme Court
of Ohio dismisses the appeal prior to expiration of sixty days, the stay will terminate as
of the date of such dismissal.
A certified copy of this entry shall constitute the mandate pursuant to Rule 27 of
the Rules of Appellate Procedure.
McFarland, J.: Concurs in Judgment and Opinion.
Hoover, J.: Concurs in Judgment Only.
For the Court
BY: ________________________
William H. Harsha, Judge
NOTICE TO COUNSEL
Pursuant to Local Rule No. 14, this document constitutes a final judgment
entry and the time period for further appeal commences from the date of filing
with the clerk.