[Cite as State v. Williams, 2020-Ohio-5045.]
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO
SEVENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
COLUMBIANA COUNTY
STATE OF OHIO,
Plaintiff- Appellee,
v.
RUBIN L. WILLIAMS,
Defendant- Appellant.
OPINION AND JUDGMENT ENTRY
Case No. 19 CO 0010.
Motion to Certify Conflict
BEFORE:
Carol Ann Robb, Cheryl L. Waite, David A. D’Apolito, Judges.
JUDGMENT:
Denied.
Atty. Robert Herron, Prosecutor, Atty. John E. Gamble, Chief Assistant Prosecutor,
Atty. Tammie Riley Jones, Assistant Prosecutor, 105 South Market Street, Lisbon, Ohio
44432 for Plaintiff-Appellee and
Rubin L. Williams, pro se, #704-728, Belmont Correctional Institute, P.O. Box 540, St.
Clairsville, Ohio 43950 for Defendant-Appellant.
Dated: October 23, 2020
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PER CURIAM.
{¶1} Defendant-Appellant Rubin L. Williams has filed a motion to certify a conflict
under App.R. 25. Appellant states our judgment affirming his involuntary manslaughter
conviction in State v. Williams, 7th Dist. Columbiana No. 19 CO 0010, 2020-Ohio-4430
conflicts with the judgment reversing an involuntary manslaughter conviction in State v.
Kosto, 5th Dist. Licking No. 17 CA 54, 2018-Ohio-1925.
{¶2} In addition to citing the judgment alleged to be in conflict with the one
rendered against the movant, the motion “shall specify the issue proposed for certification
* * *.” App.R. 25(A). Appellant makes various arguments about his case, where this court
held the state presented sufficient evidence that the fentanyl Appellant supplied to the
victim was the actual and proximate cause of her death. In stating our decision conflicts
with Kosto, he claims the Fifth District held: “A defendant cannot be found guilty of
involuntary manslaughter where the cause of death is a mixed drug overdose and the
defendant is not charged with all of the drugs in the decedent’s system.” He concludes,
“where the cause of death is determined [to be] a mixed drug overdose the coroner has
no tool to say which drug independently caused the death of the decedent.” (Mot. 4).
This appears to be the specific legal issue he proposes for certification.
{¶3} “Whenever the judges of a court of appeals find that a judgment upon which
they have agreed is in conflict with a judgment pronounced upon the same question by
any other court of appeals of the state, the judges shall certify the record of the case to
the supreme court for review and final determination.” Ohio Constitution, Article IV,
Section 3(B)(4). There must be an actual conflict “upon the same question” and “the
alleged conflict must be on a rule of law – not facts.” Whitelock v. Gilbane Bldg. Co., 66
Ohio St.3d 594, 596, 613 N.E.2d 1032 (1993).
{¶4} “Factual distinctions between cases do not serve as a basis for conflict
certification.” Id. at 599. In Whitelock, the Ohio Supreme Court dismissed the appeal on
the grounds that the conflict was improperly certified and urged appellate courts to certify
“only those cases where there is a true and actual conflict on a rule of law.” Id.
Furthermore, the issue proposed for certification must be dispositive of the case. State v.
Case No. 19 CO 0010
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Agee, 7th Dist. Mahoning No. 14 MA 0094, 2017-Ohio-7750, ¶ 4, citing State ex rel. Davet
v. Sutula, 131 Ohio St.3d 220, 2012-Ohio-759, 963 N.E.2d 811, ¶ 2.
{¶5} We reviewed the Fifth District’s Kosto case in addressing Appellant’s
appeal, and we criticized statements made by the Kosto court. The Fifth District found
the evidence was insufficient to show the heroin supplied by the defendant caused the
victim's death where the victim also ingested cocaine which the defendant did not supply.
In that case, the coroner testified it was the acute combination of these two drugs that
caused the death and he could not testify as to whether the heroin alone would have killed
the victim or whether the cocaine alone would have killed the victim. The Kosto court
seemed to believe the but-for causation test set forth by a non-binding United States
Supreme Court case required the expert to say the victim “would have died from the
heroin use alone.’” See Kosto, 5th Dist. No. 17 CA 54 at ¶ 23, quoting Burrage v. United
States, 571 U.S. 204, 134 S.Ct. 881, 892, 187 L.Ed.2d 715 (2014).
{¶6} We pointed out that that particular quoted statement in Burrage was
explaining the alternative or relaxed independent cause test and was not defining the
entire doctrine of but-for causation; Burrage framed but-for causation as asking whether
the death would not have occurred without the drug supplied by the defendant. Williams,
7th Dist. No. 19 CO 0010 at ¶ 32, 39. As we explained, the Burrage Court gave examples
of but-for causation: poison is “a but-for cause” of a victim’s death even if he had multiple
diseases that contributed to his death “so long as, without the incremental effect of the
poison, he would have lived”; even if a victim’s blood contained several drugs, an expert
can testify that the drug distributed by the defendant was a but-for cause of death if he
would have lived in the absence of the addition of that drug; and referring to “the straw
that broke the camel’s back.” Williams, 7th Dist. No. 19 CO 0010 at ¶ 29-30, citing
Burrage, 571 U.S. at 217.
{¶7} In any event, we found Appellant’s case was distinguishable from Kosto
(and Burrage). Id. at ¶ 42-43. We opined that a rational person could find the state
showed fentanyl was an independent cause of death (which would have occurred even if
she had no other drugs in her system) as the evidence showed the decedent injected a
“lethal dose” of fentanyl thinking it was the heroin which she requested from Appellant.
Id. at ¶ 42. We alternatively said the state sufficiently established that fentanyl was a but-
Case No. 19 CO 0010
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for cause of death as the coroner specified that the victim would not have died if she had
not used the fentanyl. Id. at ¶ 43, 50.
{¶8} Even though we believed Kosto misinterpreted the but-for test set forth in
Burrage, the evidence in our case is distinct. And, even if we had applied the Kosto
interpretation of Burrage, our judgment would not have changed due to the unique
evidence in our case. As the evidence indicated the decedent believed she was
receiving the heroin she ordered from Appellant (not fentanyl) and the coroner concluded
the victim would still be alive but for taking the fentanyl and also concluded the dose of
fentanyl in the decedent's system was lethal, this case is distinguishable from Kosto.
Although Appellant criticizes parts of the coroner’s testimony in his case, this does not
change the fact that we accepted the testimony or make Appellant’s facts similar to those
in Kosto. Contrary to Appellant’s suggestion, the Fifth District did not rule that a coroner
is prohibited from opining that the amount of the drug supplied by the defendant was a
lethal dose (or that the victim would not have died if she had not ingested the supplied
drug) merely because, as here, the death certificate reported the immediate cause of
death was asphyxia and reported that a condition leading to the cause was mixed drug
overdose.
{¶9} For these reasons, Appellant’s motion to certify a conflict is denied.
JUDGE CAROL ANN ROBB
JUDGE CHERYL L. WAITE
JUDGE DAVID A. D’APOLITO
NOTICE TO COUNSEL
This document constitutes a final judgment entry.
Case No. 19 CO 0010