Court Opinion

ID: 9944645
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-02-26 18:09:23.305323+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:20:07.540581
License: Public Domain

[Cite as State v. Ghast, 2024-Ohio-697.]

                       IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO
                           THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
                                HENRY COUNTY

STATE OF OHIO,
                                                              CASE NO. 7-23-13
         PLAINTIFF-APPELLEE,

    v.

SARAH GHAST,                                                  OPINION

         DEFENDANT-APPELLANT.

                         Appeal from Napoleon Municipal Court
                             Trial Court No. CRB2300043

                                           Appeal Dismissed

                           Date of Decision: February 26, 2024

APPEARANCES:

         Tyler Naud Jechura for Appellant

         Billy D. Harmon for Appellee
Case No. 7-23-13

MILLER, J.

       {¶1} Defendant-Appellant, Sarah Ghast (“Ghast”), appeals the July 10, 2023

judgment issued by the Napoleon Municipal Court. The trial court had sentenced

her to serve 10 days in jail for violating a no-contact order. In her appeal, Ghast

argues the trial court abused its discretion in finding she violated that order. For the

reasons that follow, we dismiss Ghast’s appeal as moot.

I.     FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

       {¶2} On May 8, 2023, Ghast pleaded guilty to an amended charge of

Persistent Disorderly Conduct, a misdemeanor of the fourth degree, pursuant to R.C.

2917.11(A)(1) and (E)(3)(a).      After accepting her guilty plea, the trial court

proceeded to sentence Ghast to (a) pay a fine and court costs, with a portion stayed

upon the condition she not commit a similar violation for two years, and (b) serve

30 days in jail at the Corrections Center of Northwest Ohio, with all 30 days

suspended on the conditions that she not commit a similar violation for two years

and she have no contact with four individuals listed on a no-contact order (the “No

Contact Order”). Ghast did not appeal from this underlying May 8, 2023 judgment

or from its finding of guilt for violating R.C. 2917.11(A)(1).

       {¶3} The No Contact Order is effective from May 8, 2023 through May 8,

2025 and identifies four protected people. The No Contact Order warned Ghast,

among other things:

                                          -2-
Case No. 7-23-13

          • If Defendant violates any of the terms of this Order, even with
            a protected person’s permission, Defendant can be arrested and
            jailed pursuant to R.C. 2951.08(A).

          • A violation of this Order may result in a probation violation,
            including arrest, probation revocation, and jail or incarceration.

(May 8, 2023 No Contact Order). An attachment to the No Contact Order also

warned Ghast: “Violating the attached Protection Order is a crime, punishable by

incarceration, fine, or both and may cause the revocation of your bond or result in a

contempt of court citation against you.” (Id.).

       {¶4} Just four days later, on May 12, 2023, the State of Ohio filed a Motion

to Impose. The State alleged Ghast, on May 10, 2023, had violated the terms of her

suspended sentence by having prohibited contact with one of the individuals named

in the No Contact Order. The motion asked the trial court to impose the previously-

suspended jail time of thirty days.

       {¶5} On July 10, 2023, the trial court held a hearing on the State’s motion.

The State called one witness, the person who allegedly had been contacted by Ghast

in violation of the No Contact Order. Ghast called one witness, her employer. At

the end of the hearing, the trial court found Ghast had violated the No Contact Order.

The court ordered Ghast to serve 10 days of the suspended sentence in jail, the

remaining 20 days would continue to be suspended on the conditions previously

ordered. The court immediately remanded Ghast into the bailiff’s custody to be

transported to the jail. (July 10, 2023 Commit; July 10, 2023 Criminal Judgment

Entry).
                                         -3-
Case No. 7-23-13

       {¶6} Given the sentence, Ghast’s release date from jail was July 20, 2023.

Critically, the record supports that Ghast completed the 10-day sentence imposed

for violating the No Contact Order.

       {¶7} On August 1, 2023, Ghast filed a Notice of Appeal. Ghast stated she

was appealing the July 10, 2023 judgment of the Napoleon Municipal Court and

attached a copy of the July 10, 2023 Criminal Judgment Entry. A review of the

record in the trial court and this court shows Ghast did not request a stay of execution

of her sentence—in either the trial court or in this court—for violating the No

Contact Order.     Importantly, Ghast did not appeal her original conviction or

sentence. She only appeals the trial court’s subsequent finding that she violated the

No Contact Order.

II.    ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR

       {¶8} Ghast raises a single assignment of error for our review:

                                Assignment of Error

       The trial court abused its discretion when it decided Ms. Ghast violated
       the no contact order as that decision was against the manifest weight and
       sufficiency of the evidence.

III.   DISCUSSION

       {¶9} Before addressing Ghast’s assignment of error, we must determine

whether this appeal is moot as a result of Ghast’s having served the 10-day jail term

imposed by the judgment from which she appeals. State v. Berndt, 29 Ohio St.3d

3, 504 N.E.2d 712 (1987), syllabus (“[w]here the appellate court hears and decides

                                          -4-
Case No. 7-23-13

an appeal that is moot, the judgment of the appellate court will be reversed and the

trial court’s judgment reinstated, as if the appeal had been dismissed”).

       A.     Applicable Law

       {¶10} “At common law, courts considered appeals in criminal cases to be

moot if the appellant had completed the sentence prior to a ruling on the appeal on

the basis that if a sentence had been served, a favorable judgment could not ‘operate

to undo what has been done or restore to petitioner the penalty of the term of

imprisonment which he has served.’” City of Cleveland Hts. v. Lewis, 129 Ohio

St.3d 389, 2011-Ohio-2673, ¶ 17, quoting St. Pierre v. United States, 319 U.S. 41,

42-43, 63 S.Ct. 910, 87 L.Ed. 1199 (1943). In accordance with this principle, the

Ohio Supreme Court in Wilson held that an appeal is moot when a defendant

convicted of a criminal offense (1) has voluntarily paid the fine or completed the

sentence for that offense and (2) “no evidence is offered from which an inference

can be drawn that the defendant will suffer some collateral disability or loss of civil

rights from such judgment or conviction.” State v. Wilson, 41 Ohio St.2d 236, 325

N.E.2d 236 (1975), syllabus.

       {¶11} The Ohio Supreme Court subsequently narrowed the application of

this mootness test from Wilson and fleshed out its two conditions. City of Cleveland

Hts. at ¶ 18-23. The mootness test no longer applies to appeals from felony

convictions. State v. Golston, 71 Ohio St.3d 224, 643 N.E.2d 109 (1994), syllabus

(“an appeal challenging a felony conviction is not moot even if the entire sentence

                                          -5-
Case No. 7-23-13

has been satisfied before the matter is heard on appeal,” given the various severe

and obvious statutory and societal consequences attaching to a felony conviction);

see also Cleveland Hts. at ¶ 19 (explaining that Golston “limited the holdings in

Wilson and Berndt to appeals from misdemeanor convictions in which the appellant

has voluntarily completed the sentence and in which no collateral consequences

resulted from the conviction”). Also, a defendant-appellant “has the burden of

establishing that his appeal is not moot.” In re S.J.K., 114 Ohio St.3d 23, 2007-

Ohio-2621, ¶ 9.

       {¶12} In City of Cleveland Hts., the court addressed the first condition by

explaining what it means to “voluntarily” complete a sentence for purposes of the

mootness test. It held that “[t]he completion of a sentence is not voluntary and will

not make an appeal moot if the circumstances surrounding it demonstrate that the

appellant neither acquiesced in the judgment nor abandoned the right to appellate

review, that the appellant has a substantial stake in the judgment of conviction, and

that there is subject matter for the appellate court to decide.” City of Cleveland Hts.

at paragraph one of the syllabus. More specifically, the court explained a defendant

does not voluntarily complete his or her sentence if the person “[1] contests charges

at trial and, [2] after being convicted, seeks a stay of execution of sentence from the

trial court for the purpose of preventing an intended appeal from being declared

moot and [3] thereafter appeals the conviction.” Id. at ¶ 23. Such circumstances

“objectively demonstrate[] that the sentence is not being served voluntarily”

                                          -6-
Case No. 7-23-13

“because no intent is shown to acquiesce in the judgment or to intentionally abandon

the right to appeal.” Id. They also “demonstrate that the appellant has ‘a substantial

stake in the judgment of conviction’ * * * so that there is ‘subject matter for the

court to decide.’” Id., quoting Wilson at 237 and In re S.J.K. at ¶ 9.

       {¶13} Turning to the second condition for mootness, even when a defendant

has voluntarily completed the sentence, if he or she suffers some collateral disability

apart from the sentence, then “the defendant holds a sufficient stake in the judgment

to raise a challenge” to that judgment and has “a right of appeal.” Wilson, 41 Ohio

St.2d at 238. The defendant-appellant must offer evidence from which one can draw

an inference that he or she will suffer some collateral legal disability or loss of civil

rights apart from the judgment or sentence itself. Berndt, 29 Ohio St.3d at 4; Wilson,

41 Ohio St.2d at 238 (“evidence must be offered from which an inference can be

drawn that [defendant] suffers some collateral disability apart from the sentence”).

       {¶14} “A collateral disability is an adverse legal consequence of a conviction

or judgment that survives despite the court’s sentence having been satisfied or

served.” In re S.J.K., 2007-Ohio-2621, at ¶ 10. A collateral disability “must be a

consequence that is imposed on the basis of the challenged judgment.” Id. at ¶ 14.

For example, the Ohio Supreme Court has held “the imposition of points [assessed

against one’s driver’s license] is a penalty that constitutes a collateral disability

flowing from a conviction for a traffic offense.” Id. at ¶ 13. A collateral legal

disability implies an adverse consequence separate from the original criminal

                                          -7-
Case No. 7-23-13

prosecution or expected punishment for the current offense. See State v. Smith, 2d

Dist. Montgomery No. 27981, 2019-Ohio-3592, ¶ 12.

       B.     Analysis

       {¶15} As shown below, Ghast’s appeal is moot. She voluntarily completed

the 10-day jail term without seeking a stay from the trial court. This term was

imposed for the non-felony offense of violating the No Contact Order. There also

is no evidence offered from which an inference can be drawn that she will suffer

some collateral disability or loss of civil rights resulting from the trial court’s

judgment finding that she violated the No Contact Order previously imposed.

              1.     Ghast voluntarily completed the sentence

       {¶16} The judgment from which Ghast appeals is not for a felony conviction.

On the contrary, she pled guilty to a fourth-degree misdemeanor and was given a

suspended sentence. She did not appeal this conviction. She was subsequently

found to have violated the no-contact provision of her original sentence and was

ordered to serve 10 days in jail. Ghast was immediately taken to jail, and there is

no indication she did not serve the entirety of that 10-day jail sentence. Although

she contested the allegation that she violated the No Contact Order in the trial court,

she failed—in either the trial court or this court—to request a stay of execution.

       {¶17} Therefore, in accordance with Cleveland Hts., we find Ghast

voluntarily completed her sentence. Ghast has not shown otherwise. See In re E.A.,

3d Dist. Crawford No. 3-21-21, 2022-Ohio-2625, ¶ 30 (where there was “no

                                         -8-
Case No. 7-23-13

indication in the record that [appellant] ever sought to stay execution of the

unsuspended portion of his contempt sanction,” appellant “voluntarily served this

portion of his sanction”).

              2.      No collateral consequences resulted

       {¶18} The 10-day jail sentence has been completed, and a favorable

judgment on appeal could not undo what has been done in serving out the imposed

jail term. Again, Ghast’s challenge is to the trial court’s judgment finding that she

violated the No Contact Order and its sentence, not the underlying misdemeanor

conviction for Persistent Disorderly Conduct under R.C. 2917.11(A)(1) or its

sentence.

       {¶19} Neither the record nor briefing show Ghast ever offered evidence from

which one can draw an inference she will suffer some collateral disability or loss of

civil rights because of the challenged judgment, apart from the already-served

sentence itself. Therefore, there is no alleged resulting collateral consequence. See

Wilson, 41 Ohio St.2d at 237 (defendant’s appeal was moot where “[t]he record in

this case nowhere suggests that the defendant contended at the time of trial, or at

any stage of the appellate proceedings, that the payment of the fine and costs would

result in any collateral disability which would in any manner affect his civil rights”);

In re E.A. at ¶ 30 (appellant did not identify “evidence in the record supporting an

inference that he will suffer some collateral disability or loss of civil rights

                                          -9-
Case No. 7-23-13

attributable to the (assumedly) criminal component of his contempt sanction,” so

that portion of the appeal was moot).

       {¶20} In summary, Ghast served the sentence imposed in the appealed

judgment, Ghast failed to seek a stay of execution of the sentence in that judgment,

and there is no evidence inferring she will suffer any collateral consequence from

that judgment. Therefore, Ghast’s appeal is moot. State v. Carter, 6th Dist. Lucas

No. L-16-1099, 2017-Ohio-2898, ¶ 3, 5, 8-9 (where, following a hearing on a

probation violation, defendant appealed the court’s guilty finding for that violation

and its corresponding sentence of 30 days in jail, his appeal was moot because he

served the 30 days in jail, failed to request a stay of that sentence, and failed to argue

the existence of a collateral disability).

IV.    CONCLUSION

       {¶21} For the foregoing reasons, Ghast’s appeal is dismissed as moot.

                                                                     Appeal Dismissed.

WALDICK and ZIMMERMAN, J.J., concur.

/hls

                                             -10-