[Cite as State v. Vlosich, 2016-Ohio-2900.]
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
ELEVENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
LAKE COUNTY, OHIO
STATE OF OHIO, : OPINION
Plaintiff-Appellee, :
CASE NO. 2015-L-092
- vs - :
JEFF VLOSICH, :
Defendant-Appellant. :
Criminal Appeal from the Lake County Court of Common Pleas, Case No. 14 CR
000534.
Judgment: Affirmed.
Charles E. Coulson, Lake County Prosecutor, and Teri R. Daniel, Assistant Prosecutor,
Lake County Administration Building, 105 Main Street, P.O. Box 490, Painesville, OH
44077 (For Plaintiff-Appellee).
Charles R. Grieshammer, Lake County Public Defender, and Vanessa R. Clapp,
Assistant Public Defender, 125 East Erie Street, Painesville, OH 44077 (For
Defendant-Appellant).
CYNTHIA WESTCOTT RICE, P.J.
{¶1} Appellant, Jeff Vlosich, appeals the judgment of the Lake County Court of
Common Pleas, denying his motion in limine to exclude a prior conviction of operating a
vehicle under the influence of alcohol (“OVI”) for purposes of enhancing his current OVI
charge to a felony. He also appeals the court’s denial of his motion to dismiss the
repeat OVI offender specification as unconstitutional. Appellant’s appeal follows his no
contest plea to felony OVI and the foregoing specification. For the reasons that follow,
we affirm.
{¶2} On December 8, 2014, appellant was indicted for two counts of OVI, each
being a felony of the fourth degree (Counts I and 2), and each with a specification that
he was previously convicted of five or more OVI offenses within 20 years of the current
offense pursuant to R.C. 2941.1413; disobeying a traffic control device, a minor
misdemeanor (Count 3); and failing to drive within marked lanes of traffic, a minor
misdemeanor (Count 4). Appellant pled not guilty.
{¶3} On January 28, 2015, appellant filed a motion to suppress, a motion in
limine regarding one of his prior OVI convictions, and a motion to dismiss the repeat
OVI offender specification.
{¶4} The court held a hearing on the motions. The evidence presented during
the suppression hearing demonstrated that on July 19, 2014, at about 2:00 a.m., a
police officer saw appellant drive through a red light and cross over marked lanes. After
the officer activated his overhead lights and siren, appellant drove his car over a curb
and almost hit a tree. When appellant opened his car door, the officer smelled alcohol
on his breath. Appellant fumbled for his wallet and driver’s license. He said he was
coming from a nearby bar where he had several drinks. His eyes were watery and
bloodshot. He was slurring his speech. When the officer removed appellant from his
car, he was unsteady on his feet. He refused field sobriety tests. After he was arrested,
he refused to take an Intoxilyzer test.
{¶5} With respect to appellant’s motion in limine to exclude his 1995 OVI
conviction in Euclid Municipal Court Case No. 1994 TRC 10201, retired Judge Robert F.
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Niccum, who was Presiding Judge of the Euclid Municipal Court from 1969 until 1998,
testified concerning that prior conviction. Appellant committed that OVI offense on
December 29, 1994 and was convicted on January 3, 1995.
{¶6} Judge Niccum said that in every OVI case that came before the court,
during the defendant’s initial hearing, he would advise the defendant that he had the
right to counsel, the right to a continuance to obtain counsel, and the right to appointed
counsel if he was indigent.
{¶7} Judge Niccum said that if the defendant did not want an attorney, he
would read and explain the court’s waiver-of-counsel form to the defendant. If the
defendant still wanted to waive his right to counsel, the Judge would hand him the form
and tell him to read it again and, if he was certain he wanted to waive counsel, to sign it.
If the defendant waived counsel and signed the waiver form, the Judge then stamped
the defendant’s case file with two stamps that said, first, “RIGHTS EXPLAINED –
DEFENDANT ACKNOWLEDGED” and, second, “DEFENDANT KNOWINGLY,
INTELLIGENTLY, AND VOLUNTARILY WAIVES COUNSEL.” Judge Niccum said he
followed this procedure in every OVI case without exception. He said that he never
used the first stamp until after he personally advised the defendant regarding his right to
counsel and that he only stamped the file with the waiver-of-counsel stamp after the
defendant signed the waiver-of-counsel form. Judge Niccum said the appearance of
the waiver-of-counsel stamp on appellant’s file is evidence that appellant waived his
right to counsel.
{¶8} The parties stipulated to a copy of part of appellant’s case file, which the
prosecutor presented during the hearing regarding appellant’s 1994 OVI case. The
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partial file consisted of only the citation with the judgment entry of conviction on the
back of the citation. Judge Niccum said he stamped the judgment entry with a date
stamp of January 3, 1995. Next to the date, Judge Niccum stamped the entry with the
stamps stating: (1) “RIGHTS EXPLAINED – DEFENDANT ACKNOWLEDGED” and (2)
“DEFENDANT KNOWINGLY, INTELLIGENTLY, AND VOLUNTARILY WAIVES
COUNSEL.”
{¶9} Judge Niccum said he wrote on the judgment entry that appellant entered
his guilty plea on January 3, 1995. He also wrote that appellant said he “has drinking
problems” and that he “has insurance.” The Judge said the entry shows he suspended
the imposition of the three-day jail term, and imposed community service for the week of
January 9, 1995. The entry also states that appellant was fined $775; sentenced to 60
days in jail; given one year probation; and his license was suspended for 180 days.
{¶10} In explaining why appellant’s case file did not include his signed waiver-of-
counsel form, Judge Niccum said he would have placed that form in the defendant’s
original case file. He said the file would be maintained by the Clerk for the period
prescribed by the court’s rules regarding records retention, which is now seven years.
He said the original file would have been destroyed after that period. He said the copy
of the file provided by the prosecutor was not from the original file. Rather, it was only a
copy of the partial file that was sent to the community service department or the
probation department at the time appellant entered his guilty plea. He said copies of the
file sent to these departments contained only the citation/judgment entry, and would not
have included other contents of the original file, such as the waiver-of-counsel form.
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{¶11} Judge Niccum said that since appellant’s 1994 case was more than 20
years old, the waiver-of-counsel form would have been destroyed along with the original
file pursuant to the court’s rules.
{¶12} Judge Niccum acknowledged he did not personally remember appellant’s
1994 case, but said he advised every defendant facing an OVI charge regarding his
right to counsel. Thus, Judge Niccum said that if appellant was charged with OVI in his
court, as he was, he advised him of his right to counsel. For this reason, Judge Niccum
said he knows he advised appellant of his right to counsel.
{¶13} Appellant did not testify at the hearing; instead, he relied on his half-page
affidavit in which he said that at the time of his 1995 OVI conviction, he was not
represented by counsel; that he did not understand his right to an attorney; that the
Judge did not advise him of his right to counsel; that he did not waive his right to
counsel; and that he did not sign any document waiving counsel. He said he was
nervous and just pled guilty.
{¶14} Following the hearing on appellant’s motions, the trial court denied
appellant’s motion to suppress, his motion to exclude his 1995 conviction, and his
motion to dismiss the repeat OVI offender specification.
{¶15} After the court’s rulings, appellant entered a plea bargain pursuant to
which he pled no contest to Count I, OVI, with the repeat OVI offender specification.
{¶16} The court sentenced appellant to two years in prison for OVI and one year
for the specification, to be served consecutively to the sentence for OVI, for a total of
three years in prison.
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{¶17} Appellant does not appeal the trial court’s judgment denying his motion to
suppress; rather, his appeal is limited to the court’s denial of his motion to exclude his
1995 OVI conviction and his motion to dismiss the repeat OVI offender specification.
Appellant asserts two assignments of error. For his first, he alleges:
{¶18} “The trial court erred when it overruled the defendant-appellant’s motion to
dismiss the [repeat OVI offender specification] where the seriousness of the crime was
increased due to a previous uncounseled conviction, in violation of the defendant-
appellant’s due process rights and rights to counsel, as guaranteed by the Sixth and
Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution and Article I, Section 10 of
the Ohio Constitution.”
{¶19} We review a trial court's decision on a motion to dismiss under the de
novo standard of review. State v. Rode, 11th Dist. Portage No. 2010-P-0015, 2011-
Ohio-2455, ¶14. However, in reviewing a trial court’s findings of fact, the appellate court
must determine whether there is competent, credible evidence to support the court’s
decision. State v. Pate, 11th Dist. Portage No. 95-P-0021, 1996 Ohio App. LEXIS 3006,
*10 (Jul. 5, 1996). In resolving questions of fact, the court, as the trier of fact, weighs
the testimony and credibility of the witnesses. Id.
{¶20} The Supreme Court of Ohio, in State v. Brooke, 113 Ohio St.3d 199,
2007-Ohio-1533, ¶9, set forth the following standard in relation to uncounseled
convictions:
{¶21} Generally, a past conviction cannot be attacked in a subsequent
case. However, there is a limited right to collaterally attack a
conviction when the state proposes to use the past conviction to
enhance the penalty of a later criminal offense. A conviction
obtained against a defendant who is without counsel, or its
corollary, an uncounseled conviction obtained without a valid
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waiver of the right to counsel, has been recognized as
constitutionally infirm. State v. Brandon, 45 Ohio St.3d 85, 86
(1989); Nichols v. United States, 511 U.S. 738 (1994).
{¶22} Subsequently, the Supreme Court of Ohio, in State v. Thompson, 121
Ohio St.3d 250, 2009-Ohio-314, ¶7, explained the Brooke decision, as follows:
{¶23} [N]either 2945.75 nor Brooke requires the state to prove that the
defendant had been represented or that he had validly waived
representation. According to Brooke, the state does not have the
burden of proving that [the defendant] had been represented or that
he had validly waived representation unless [the defendant] makes
a prima facie showing that he had been “uncounseled” in his prior
convictions -- that is, that he had not been represented and that he
had not validly waived representation. * * * A bald allegation of
constitutional infirmity is insufficient to establish a prima facie
showing with respect to an “uncounseled” plea.
{¶24} This court followed Brooke, supra, in State v. Vacchelli, 11th Dist.
Ashtabula No. 2007-A-0078, 2008-Ohio-1780, in stating as follows:
{¶25} When a defendant contests the use of a prior conviction on the
ground that he or she has entered an uncounseled plea in the prior
case, the burden is on the defendant to introduce evidence to make
a prima-facie showing of constitutional infirmity. [State v. Neely,
11th Dist. Lake No. 2007-L-054, 2007-Ohio-6243,] ¶14. Thus,
‘[w]here questions arise concerning a prior conviction, a reviewing
court must presume all underlying proceedings were conducted in
accordance with the rules of law and a defendant must introduce
evidence to the contrary in order to establish a prima-facie showing
of constitutional infirmity.’ Brooke at ¶11. Once the prima-facie case
is made, then the burden shifts to the state to prove that the right to
counsel was properly waived. Id. To do so, the state must show
there was a knowing, voluntary, and intelligent waiver of the right to
counsel under the Sixth Amendment. Id. at ¶25. Vacchelli at ¶14.
{¶26} In summary, the burden is not initially on the state to demonstrate that the
defendant was represented by counsel in the prior misdemeanor conviction or that he
validly waived representation because the burden is initially on the defendant to make a
prima-facie showing that his prior conviction was uncounseled. In fact, the defendant
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has the burden of proving a “constitutional defect in any prior conviction” by a
preponderance of the evidence. R.C. 2945.75(B)(3). Only after the defendant makes a
prima-facie showing that his prior conviction was uncounseled does the burden shift to
the state to show the defendant properly waived counsel.
{¶27} Further, in addressing the state’s burden to prove a waiver of counsel in a
prior case, we must determine whether the prior offense was a “serious” offense or a
“petty” offense. The Ohio Supreme Court in Brooke, supra, stated: “[A]ny waiver of
counsel must be made on the record in open court and in cases involving serious
offenses where the penalty includes confinement of more than six months, the waiver
must also be in writing and filed with the court.” (Emphasis added.) Id. at ¶24, citing
Crim.R. 44(C). “A first or second OVI offense within six years is a first-degree
misdemeanor, a petty offense.” State v. Faulkner, 2d Dist. Champaign No. 2013-CA-43,
2015-Ohio-2059, ¶11. Appellant’s December 29, 1994 OVI was his second OVI offense
within six years (his first being in March 1989), and was thus a petty offense. As a
result, the state was only required to show that appellant’s waiver of counsel was made
on the record in open court; it was not also required to show his waiver of counsel was
in writing and filed with the court. Brooke, supra, at ¶25.
{¶28} Appellant argued below that his 1995 OVI conviction was constitutionally
infirm because he was not represented by counsel and the record of those proceedings
does not show he waived his right to counsel. The trial court found that appellant made
a prima-facie showing that he was not represented by counsel and had not waived his
right to counsel, thus shifting the burden to the state to show appellant waived his right
to counsel. However, in denying appellant’s motion in limine, the trial court stated:
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{¶29} The parties stipulated to the authenticity * * * of exhibit two (a copy
of the record of Case No. 1994 TRC 10201 from Euclid Municipal
Court) and exhibit three (stamped phrases “RIGHTS EXPLAINED –
DEFENDANT ACKNOWLEDGED” and “DEFENDANT
KNOWINGLY, INTELLIGENTLY AND VOLUNTARILY WAIVES
COUNSEL”, entries used by the then presiding judge). Also before
the court is an affidavit from the current clerk of courts for the Euclid
Municipal Court stating that there is no audio tape or transcript of
the hearing on January 3, 1995. The state does not argue that
Vlosich was represented by counsel.
{¶30} Exhibit two does not include a written waiver of counsel by Vlosich.
The top of page three of exhibit two does, however, show two
stamped entries identical to exhibit three. The state also presented
testimony by the then presiding judge (now retired Judge Robert F.
Niccum) about the procedures that he regularly followed. He
testified that while he does not remember the hearing with Vlosich,
he was very careful to invariably follow a set procedure about
advising defendants of their rights. He assumed the bench on
February 17, 1969 and since the mid-1970s started strictly advising
defendants about their right to an attorney and if indigent, their right
to a court appointed attorney and their right to a trial. He testified
that he used a specific procedure in OVI cases * * *. He initially
advised defendants of their rights en masse and then he addressed
them individually.
{¶31} When addressing a defendant individually, the judge advised that
he or she could obtain a continuance to get an attorney and if the
defendant had no funds, the defendant had the right to proceed on
their own or obtain a court appointed attorney. The judge outlined
the guilty plea, the not-guilty plea and a no contest plea and the
defendant’s right to a trial and to call witnesses. * * * [I]f desired,
the defendant could get his case continued to the next week. If the
defendant did not have an attorney and did not request one, the
judge gave the defendant a waiver of counsel form, read it to the
defendant while the defendant read it and if the defendant wanted
to waive the right to an attorney, had the defendant sign the form.
He would not accept an oral waiver of counsel. If the defendant
waived counsel and signed the waiver form, the judge would stamp
the file indicating that the defendant’s rights were explained to him
and that the defendant knowingly, intelligently and voluntarily
waived counsel. He would not stamp the file if the defendant did
not sign a written waiver of counsel. The judge was very firm in his
testimony that he never varied from this procedure.
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{¶32} While the case file currently before this court does not include a
written waiver of counsel form, Judge Niccum explained that the file
is not the court file, but a partial copy of the file that was probably
sent to the probation department or the community services
department. He testified that files originally were kept for [36]
years, but later were retained only for [10] to [15] years and now
only [7] years. Files past that retention period were sent to * * * be
burned. Since Case Number 1994 TRC 1021 is over [20] years
old, it most likely was destroyed and the judge testified that he was
surprised that any portion of the case file could be found. He was
adamant that exhibit two is not the full case file but only a copy of a
portion of it. The judge confirmed that the handwriting in exhibit two
is his [and] was adamant that he would not have stamped the file
unless Vlosich had signed a written waiver of counsel.
{¶33} Presuming the proceeding in Euclid Municipal Court Case Number
1994 TRC 10201 was conducted in accordance with the rules of
law and finding the testimony of retired Judge Robert F. Niccum to
be credible, this court finds that Vlosich had validly waived the right
to counsel before entering his guilty plea. Accordingly, his
conviction in * * * Case Number 1994 TRC 10201 can be used to
enhance the penalty of a later OVI offense.
{¶34} Appellant argues that because no signed waiver was included in the file of
his 1994 OVI case, any waiver was not of record and thus insufficient to prove he
voluntarily waived his right to counsel. However, Judge Niccum said that, during
appellant’s initial hearing/guilty-plea hearing, he stamped appellant’s judgment entry of
conviction with the stamps stating that he explained appellant’s rights to him; appellant
acknowledged those rights; and appellant knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily waived
counsel. The Judge said he never stamped a defendant’s file with these stamps unless
the defendant had already signed the waiver-of-counsel form. Further, the judgment
entry was signed by Judge Niccum and, according to the clerk of courts’ affidavit,
entered on the court’s journal. Thus, the record in appellant’s 1994 OVI case reflects
that appellant knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily waived counsel in open court.
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{¶35} Appellant relies on this court’s decision in State v. Chiominto, 11th Dist.
Lake No. 2007-L-138, 2008-Ohio-3393, in which this court held a prior OVI conviction
was uncounseled. However, his reliance on Chiominto is misplaced for two reasons.
First, the OVI offense at issue in Chiominto was the defendant’s third OVI offense and
thus, in Chiominto, unlike here, the state bore the additional burden of proving the
waiver was in writing. Faulkner, supra. Second, in this case, unlike Chiominto,
appellant’s waiver of counsel in his 1994 OVI case was made on the record in open
court. In Brooke, supra, the Ohio Supreme Court held that the trial court’s entry stating
that the defendant was advised of her rights and voluntarily waived counsel, which entry
was journalized as part of the trial court’s record, provided sufficient evidence the
defendant properly waived counsel for penalty enhancement purposes. Id. at ¶47.
Further, nothing in Brooke precludes the state from attempting to meet its burden to
prove a waiver of counsel through the testimony of the trial court judge who accepted
the waiver. In addition, Evid.R. 406 provides: “Evidence of the habit of a person * * * is
relevant to prove that the conduct of the person * * * on a particular occasion was in
conformity with the habit * * *.”
{¶36} Significantly, appellant does not reference any case law holding that a trial
court judge is not competent to testify that he regularly followed a specific procedure in
accepting a waiver of counsel to show he followed that procedure in a particular case.
{¶37} Appellant argues that “[i]t simply is not believable that the judge, who
served on the bench for [29] years before retiring in 1998, never deviated from his plea
colloquy and his advisement of rights regarding the waiver of counsel.” Appellant thus
concedes this is a credibility issue. While appellant stated in his affidavit that Judge
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Niccum did not advise him of his right to counsel and he never waived it, the trial court,
as the trier of fact, was entitled to find, as it clearly did, that appellant’s affidavit
testimony was less credible than Judge Niccum’s in-court testimony.
{¶38} As a result, while appellant met his burden to make a prima-facie case,
competent, credible evidence in the record supports the trial court’s finding that the
state met its burden to prove appellant waived his right to counsel in open court and on
the record before entering his guilty plea. As a result, the trial court did not err in
denying appellant’s motion in limine regarding his repeat OVI offender specification.
{¶39} For his second and last assignment of error, appellant alleges:
{¶40} “The trial court erred by imposing a consecutive prison term under the
repeat OVI offender specification in violation of the defendant-appellant’s rights to equal
protection and due process as guaranteed by the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendment (sic)
to the U.S. Constitution and Sections 2 and 16, Article I of the Ohio Constitution.”
{¶41} Appellant argues the trial court erred in denying his motion to dismiss the
repeat OVI offender specification. He argues it is unconstitutional to impose a
consecutive prison term under the repeat OVI offender specification because “R.C.
4511.19 and R.C. 2941.1413 permit two radically different sets of penalties for those
who have committed six OVI offense[s] within twenty years, yet does place not any (sic)
additional burden upon the prosecution to achieve additional punishment.” In support of
his argument, appellant cites State v. Klembus, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 100068, 2014-
Ohio-3227, in which the Eighth District held the repeat OVI offender specification is
unconstitutional as a violation of equal protection.
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{¶42} In Klembus, the appellant argued that the repeat OVI offender
specification allows the prosecutor to “arbitrarily obtain a greater prison sentence for the
underlying offense without proof of any additional element, fact, or circumstance.” Id.
at ¶7. Agreeing with appellant, the Eighth District in Klembus held that a repeat OVI
offender may be subjected to an increased penalty solely at the prosecutor’s discretion
when deciding whether to present the repeat OVI offender specification to the grand
jury. Id. at ¶19. “The increased penalty does not depend upon the jury finding any
additional elements, facts, or circumstances beyond a reasonable doubt.” Id.
{¶43} The Eighth District in Klembus relied on State v. Wilson, 58 Ohio St.2d 52
(1979), to support its holding. In Wilson, the Ohio Supreme Court held that
prosecutorial discretion, standing alone, does not violate equal protection. Id. at 55.
However, if two statutes “prohibit identical activity, require identical proof, and yet
impose different penalties, then sentencing a person under the statute with the higher
penalty violates the Equal Protection Clause.” Id. at 55-56. Therefore, the Eighth District
in Klembus held that, in light of the prosecutor’s discretion and the fact there is no
requirement to apply the specification uniformly to all offenders, the repeat OVI
specification is not rationally related to a legitimate state purpose. Klembus at ¶21-23.
{¶44} The Supreme Court of Ohio allowed a discretionary appeal of Klembus,
and in State v. Klembus, ___ Ohio St.3d ___, 2016-Ohio-1092, reversed the Eighth
District’s decision. The Supreme Court distinguished Wilson, supra, noting that in
Wilson, the defendant challenged the constitutionality of the burglary statute and the
aggravated burglary statute, arguing that the two statutes imposed different
punishments for identical criminal conduct and thus violated equal protection. Id. at 55-
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56. In contrast, the Supreme Court stated that specifications such as the repeat OVI
offender specification do not prohibit conduct; they merely add sentencing
enhancements to the violation of a predicate statute. Id. at ¶17. Thus, the Supreme
Court held that because that case did not involve multiple criminal offenses, equal
protection was not implicated. Id. at ¶18. The Supreme Court further held that the
possibility of longer prison sentences for OVI offenders who continue to violate the OVI
statute is rationally related to the state’s interest in punishing repeat offenders and
protecting the public and, thus, the repeat OVI offender specification does not violate
equal protection. Id. at ¶22.
{¶45} We therefore hold the trial court did not err in denying appellant’s motion
to dismiss the repeat OVI offender specification.
{¶46} For the reasons stated in this Opinion, the assignments of error are
overruled. It is the order and judgment of this court that the judgment of the Lake
County Court of Common Pleas is affirmed.
TIMOTHY P. CANNON, J.,
THOMAS R. WRIGHT, J.,
concur.
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