Court Opinion

ID: 2704462
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2014-08-04 20:25:47.247054+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:57:22.923135
License: Public Domain

[Cite as State v. Soueidi, 2011-Ohio-3579.]

          Court of Appeals of Ohio
                                 EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
                                    COUNTY OF CUYAHOGA

                            JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION
                                    No. 95353

                                     STATE OF OHIO
                                                       PLAINTIFF-APPELLEE

                                                 vs.

                                      MAYA SOUEIDI
                                                       DEFENDANT-APPELLANT

                                              JUDGMENT:
                                              REVERSED

                                Criminal Appeal from the
                          Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas
                                  Case No. CR-529201

        BEFORE: Keough, J., Sweeney, P.J., and E. Gallagher, J.

        RELEASED AND JOURNALIZED: July 21, 2011
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT

Brett M. Mancino
Ritzler, Coughlin & Paglia, Ltd.
1360 East Ninth Street
1000 IMG Center
Cleveland, OH 44114

ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE

William D. Mason
Cuyahoga County Prosecutor

BY: James D. May
Assistant Prosecuting Attorney
The Justice Center, 9th Floor
1200 Ontario Street
Cleveland, OH 44113

KATHLEEN ANN KEOUGH, J.:

      {¶ 1} Defendant-appellant,    Maya   Soueidi   (“Maya”),   appeals   her

conviction of securing writings by deception. For the following reasons, we

reverse, vacating her conviction.

      {¶ 2} In October 2009, Maya was charged with theft by deception

pursuant to R.C. 2913.02(A)(3) and securing writings by deception pursuant

to R.C. 2913.43(A), each containing a furthermore specification that the value

of the property was more than $25,000 but less than $1,000,000 and that the
victim was disabled. The matter proceeded before a jury where the following

evidence was presented.

      {¶ 3} Georges and Hiam Soueidi were married in 1985, had three

daughters, and resided in Utah. In 1999, Georges and Hiam were involved

in a terrible automobile accident where Georges suffered significant head

trauma that left him in a coma for six months. When he came out of the

coma, it was revealed that Georges had suffered substantial, permanent brain

damage. Following the accident, Hiam quit her job to care for Georges. She

was also appointed conservator over him, and was responsible for his

personal and financial affairs. Because of his injury, Georges’s personality

changed and he became verbally and physically abusive to Hiam and their

daughters.    In 2007, Hiam separated from Georges and filed for divorce.

When Hiam filed for divorce,    Georges moved to Cuyahoga County to be

closer to his siblings.

      {¶ 4} In December 2007, Bachara and Lina Soueidi, Georges’s brother

and sister-in-law, petitioned a Utah court to accept the resignation of Hiam

as conservator and appoint them successor co-conservators over Georges.

The court granted their petition in January 2008.

      {¶ 5} The trial testimony established that Georges lives independently

in an apartment in Strongsville.    He signed the lease to his apartment

without the help of his co-conservators, but with the assistance of his other
brother, Nemr Soueidi. Georges is able to walk freely and independently to

local stores and establishments. According to Georges, he has friends in the

apartment complex, including his friend “Fred.” Georges has obtained his

own cell phone and opened his own credit card and checking accounts,

without the assistance or knowledge of his co-conservators.

      {¶ 6} The testimony established that Georges receives $1,768 in

disability benefits from an insurance policy through his former employer,

which is enough for him to live on. When his check arrives, Georges signs

and Bachara cashes it to pay for Georges’s rent and medications.         Lina

testified that if Georges does not take his medications, he can get “mean.”

He has difficulty regulating his emotions and can easily become upset or very

emotional and even volatile under certain conditions. Georges has screamed

at Lina and even threatened her in the past. Additionally, Georges filed a

police report accusing Lina and Bachara of “taking his money and jewelry.”

      {¶ 7} Georges and Hiam’s divorce was finalized by a Utah court in

March 2009.     Hiam was awarded sole physical custody of their minor

daughter, age 14. Georges was not ordered to pay monthly child support;

Hiam was solely responsible for providing for their three children. As part of

the divorce decree, Hiam was awarded exclusive use and possession of the

Midvale town home, located in Utah, until their minor daughter graduated

from high school; the divorce decree provided that “reasonable efforts will be
made to sell the property in a timely fashion.” The divorce decree further

provided that when the town home is sold, Hiam is to receive 62 percent of

the proceeds from the sale and Georges is to receive the remaining 38 percent.

 Until the house was sold, Hiam was entitled to “additionally encumber the

[Midvale town home] up to her interest in the property.” According to both

Hiam and Georges, the Midvale town home is valued at $300,000.

      {¶ 8} By the time the divorce was finalized, Hiam needed a loan to pay

her legal fees, other bills, and the children’s medical bills and educational

costs. Sometime between the finalization of the divorce and June 2009, she

contacted a Utah title company, Inwest Title Services, Inc. (“Inwest”), and

inquired about taking an additional mortgage on the Midvale town home to

help with these debts.   According to Hiam, Inwest informed her that she

could not receive an additional mortgage on the Midvale town home unless

Georges also agreed to the loan because of his share in the house. Hiam

testified that Inwest advised her that Georges had a lien on the property.

Hiam testified that she gave Inwest Georges’s contact information, which

included his cell phone number and address, and that Inwest handled the

entire transaction.   Hiam did not give Inwest Lina or Bachara’s contact

information, or advise Inwest that Georges was under a conservatorship. To

facilitate the loan, Inwest drafted all necessary documents for Georges to

sign, including a Special Warranty Deed (“Deed”) and an “Instruction Letter
and Hold Harmless Agreement.” Hiam did not create these documents nor

did she receive a copy of them. No one from Inwest testified at trial.

        {¶ 9} Around the time Hiam was trying to obtain the loan, Lina and

Bachara had a month-long trip scheduled to Lebanon for a family wedding.

Although they purchased a plane ticket for Georges, he decided not to travel

to Lebanon, but stay home under the supervision of his brother Nemr. Lina

testified that she had no concerns leaving Georges for the month. Lina left

on June 24th and Bachara left on July 1st. According to Hiam, while Lina

and Bachara were in Lebanon, Georges called her and said he needed help

because his brother and sister-in-law had gone to Lebanon and he had no

money. Hiam testified that she told their eldest daughter, Maya, to fly to

Ohio to help her father because she was concerned about his living conditions.

        {¶ 10} In June 2009, Inwest contacted Titleco Title Agency (“Titleco”) in

Middleburg Heights, Ohio to notarize Georges’s signature on the Deed. Kim

Beth Greco (“Greco”), owner of Titleco and a notary public, testified that she

notarized Georges’s signature on two different documents on two different

days.

        {¶ 11} On June 26, 2009, Georges and another “gentleman,” (later

identified as Fred), came to her office. At this meeting, Georges signed the

Deed conveying his interest in the Midvale town home to Hiam. According to
Greco, a special warranty deed is a deed that conveys title to property; it is

“how you give something away that you own.”

      {¶ 12} The Deed provided in bold upper case letters:    “THIS SPECIAL

WARRANTY DEED IS GIVEN AS FULL SATISFACTION OF ANY EQUITY

LIEN SET FORTH IN THE TERMS OF THAT CERTAIN DECREE OF

DIVORCE FILED JUNE 3, 2009, AS CASE NO. 074905498, FILED IN THE

THIRD DISTRICT COURT, WHEREIN HIAM SOUEIDI APPEARS AS

PETITIONER AND GEORGES M. SOUEIDI APPEARS AS RESPONDENT.”

 Greco testified that she could not recall if Georges brought the deed with

him or if she received it from Inwest directly.     According to Greco, when

Georges and Fred came to the office, Georges began showing her pictures of

his family.   She testified that as they were talking about the document,

Georges “got a little — him and the other gentleman had a conversation.

Unfortunately I don’t know what it was and — it was in a different language

— Georges got upset and Georges left. They left after they signed.” Greco

testified that Georges initially spoke English but “then as he got a little

agitated it was a different language,” which she found to be a “little strange.”

She also described Georges as “elderly” based on his motions and how he

walked and talked with her.      According to Greco, the entire appointment

lasted 45 minutes. Greco then sent the Deed to Inwest.
      {¶ 13} Two weeks later, on July 10th, Georges came back to the title

office with his daughter Maya to sign a second document. This document,

dated July 9, was in reference to “Hiam Soueidi, Payoff of Decree of Divorce

Instruction Letter and Hold Harmless Agreement.” The document purported

to be a letter to Vicky Robbins of Inwest from Georges (1) instructing Inwest

to record the previously executed deed, (2) acknowledging that he would

receive a check for $10,000 if and when Hiam’s refinancing was completed,

and (3) holding Inwest harmless. The testimony established that Georges

did not draft this letter; in fact, Greco testified that she received this letter

via email from Inwest Title and there was no suggestion that Georges drafted

or could have drafted the letter.     According to Greco, Maya and Georges

spoke in a foreign language to each other and their conversation was

“elevated.” After Georges signed and Greco notarized the letter, Maya and

Georges left. The entire meeting lasted five to ten minutes. Greco then sent

the document to Inwest as instructed.

      {¶ 14} Georges, who was deemed competent to testify at trial, testified

that a man came to his apartment requesting that he sign a “paper.” Fred

read the paper and told him not to sign the “paper” because it was from his

wife. Georges asked the man for his address and told him that maybe he

would call him. Georges then testified: “[A]nd after maybe five minutes,

my wife she call me: Why you never call? Sign the paper. I tell her: Okay,
I want to sign, sign. But you must tell Fred the address. She talk with

Fred the address. And she talk with Fred. You give them address. She

give them address, I go me and Fred to the woman and I sign. I give her the

paper for me, drive license Utah.”

        {¶ 15} Georges also testified about signing a document when his

daughter Maya came to visit. “And after Maya, when she come also, they

call me from Utah, a man. And they tell me: You must go sign the paper. I

tell him, I don’t understand English and he tell me wait, maybe I bring a

woman to speak with you Arabic. I tell him, yes. She come, a woman. She

speak Egyptian. I understand, you know. I am Lebanese. I understand

Egyptian, Saudi. She come; blah, blah, blah, blah. She come, start talk,

talk, talk, and I start talk with her in English. I tell her: I am disabled, what

you want from me? You want me to sign or not – no, she tell me, no, you

must sign. Okay. I sign. I sign. Maya, she take me. And I sign.”

        {¶ 16} After Georges signed the documents, Hiam eventually received a

loan for $150,000 and Georges received a $10,000 check dated July 28, 2009

issued by Inwest, with the notation “satisfy divorce decree” in the “memo”

area of the check. According to Hiam, it took her three months to obtain the

loan.

        {¶ 17} Hiam, who is neither an attorney nor works in real estate,

testified that she believed the divorce decree was still in effect and that the
$10,000 was an advance on Georges’s 38-percent interest in the sale of the

Midvale town home.       She stated that Inwest also advised her that the

$10,000 was a part of Georges’s 38 percent interst. Hiam testified that she

intends to comply with the divorce decree when she sells the house. Hiam

also testified that she did not prepare any of the documents that Georges

signed, nor did she receive copies of those documents. She stated that she

needed a loan, she contacted a title company, and “they did their job.”

      {¶ 18} When Lina and Bachara returned from Lebanon, Georges showed

them the $10,000 check and they immediately took Georges to the

Strongsville Police Department where they made a report and criminal

charges were subsequently filed against Hiam and Maya.

      {¶ 19} The jury found Maya not guilty of theft, but guilty of securing

writings by deception, including the furthermore specification.       The trial

court sentenced her to two years of community control sanctions, but

remanded her to the Cuyahoga County jail for seven days. The sentence was

stayed pending appeal.

      {¶ 20} Maya appeals, raising eight assignments of error challenging her

conviction and the admissibility of testimony and evidence submitted at trial.

      {¶ 21} In her first assignment of error, she contends that insufficient

evidence existed to support her conviction for securing writings by deception.
         {¶ 22} When a defendant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence, she

is arguing that the State presented inadequate evidence on each element of

the offense to sustain the verdict as a matter of law. State v. Hawn (2000),

138 Ohio App.3d 449, 471, 741 N.E.2d 594. The test for sufficiency requires

a determination of whether the prosecution met its burden of production at

trial.    State v. Bowden, Cuyahoga App. No. 92266, 2009-Ohio-3598, ¶12.

The relevant inquiry is whether, after viewing the evidence in a light most

favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found the

essential elements of the crime proven beyond a reasonable doubt. State v.

Jenks (1991), 61 Ohio St.3d 259, 574 N.E.2d 942, paragraph two of the

syllabus.

         {¶ 23} R.C. 2913.43(A), regarding securing writings by deception,

provides that “no person, by deception, shall cause another to execute any

writing that disposes of or encumbers property, or by which a pecuniary

obligation is incurred.”

         {¶ 24} At trial, the prosecution’s theory of the case was that Maya

deceptively caused her father to execute a writing that disposed of his interest

in the Midvale town home property. We find that she did not.

         {¶ 25} Maya traveled from Utah to Ohio at the request of her mother,

Hiam, and possibly Georges. While in Ohio on July 10th, Maya accompanied

her father to Titleco so that he could execute a document as requested by
Inwest.      The document that Georges executed was State’s exhibit three,

which was the Instruction Letter and Hold Harmless Agreement purporting

to be from Georges and addressed to Vicky Robins of Inwest dated July 9,

2009.       The testimony at trial established Georges did not draft this

document, nor did Maya bring it with her from Utah. Greco testified that

the document was sent to her office by Inwest as an attachment to an email.

        {¶ 26} The letter was regarding “Hiam Soueidi, Payoff of Decree of

Divorce Instruction Letter and Hold Harmless Agreement.”                                The letter

indicated that Georges had already executed the Deed, which the testimony

established that Maya had no involvement in procuring.                           Specifically, the

letter stated: “I have provided Inwest Title Services, Inc. with a fully executed

Special Warranty Deed dated June 26, 2009 releasing any and all interest I

have in this property, including any equitable lien rights under the Decree of

Divorce entered June 2, 2009 (and any amendments thereto) in Civil No.

074905498, filed in the Third District Court of Utah, where Hiam Soueidi

appears as the Petitioner and I appear as the Respondent.”

        {¶ 27} Although the letter instructs Inwest to record 1 the previously

executed Deed, this recording instruction does not “dispose[ ] of or encumber

        Contrary to the State’s assertion in its appellate brief and at oral argument that the Deed was
        1

recorded in Ohio, no evidence was presented at trial that it was recorded in Ohio prior to Greco
sending it to Inwest. The transcript pages cited by the State in its appellate brief purporting to
evidence such statement do not contain such testimony.
property,” which is a required element for a conviction under R.C. 2913.43(A).

 “In Ohio, a deed does not have to be recorded to pass title. Whether or not

recorded, a deed in Ohio passes title upon its proper execution and delivery,

so far as the grantor is able to convey it.”       Wayne Bldg. & Loan Co. of

Wooster v. Yarborough (1967), 11 Ohio St.2d 195, 212, 228 N.E.2d 841, citing

Baldwin v. President, etc., of Bank of Massilon (1853) 1 Ohio St. 141. See,

also, In re Estate of Dinsio, 159 Ohio App.3d 98, 2004-Ohio-6036, 823 N.E.2d

43, 18. A deed must be delivered to be operative as a transfer of ownership

of   land,   because    delivery   gives   the   instrument   force   and   effect.

Kinasz-Reagan v. Ohio Dept. Of Job & Family Servs., 164 Ohio App.3d 458,

2005-Ohio-5848, 842 N.E.2d 1067, 21, citing Kniebbe v. Wade (1954), 161

Ohio St. 294, 297, 118 N.E.2d 833.

      {¶ 28} The law in Utah is similar to that in Ohio:      delivery and intent

are necessary for the conveyance of property. Hoggan v. Fleming, 2010 UT

App 195. “A conveyance is valid only upon delivery of a deed and present

intent to transfer.” Hoggan at *1, quoting Winegar v. Froerer Corp., 813 P.2d

104, 110 (Utah 1991).

      {¶ 29} Therefore, Georges’s interest in the property was disposed of

when he executed the Deed and Greco sent it to Inwest approximately two

weeks prior to signing the instruction letter.        There was absolutely no

testimony or evidence presented at trial that linked Maya to the execution of
the Deed, and it was Fred who took Georges to Titleco on June 26th. Even

so, Fred was not charged with any crime.

        {¶ 30} We find that the writing that disposed of Georges’s interest in the

property was the Deed, upon which Maya had no involvement in procuring

her father’s signature. Therefore, because the document that Georges signed

while in the presence of Maya had no legal effect regarding the conveyance of

the property and Georges’s interest in the property was disposed of prior to

her involvement, Maya could not be convicted for securing writings by

deception under R.C. 2913.43(A).

        {¶ 31} Accordingly, we sustain her first assignment of error.

        {¶ 32} Finding merit to her first assignment of error, we need not

address her remaining assignments of error.2

         Maya’s remaining assignments of error are:
        2

“II.   Maya Soueidi’s conviction is against the manifest weight of the evidence.

“III. The State violated Maya Soueidi’s Constitutional right to a fair trial when it introduced an
irrelevant and highly inflammatory email and photograph.

“IV. The trial court denied Maya Soueidi a fair trial and misapplied evidentiary rules on expert
testimony when it permitted Lina Soueidi to opine on the legal implications of a Utah conservatorship
in Ohio.

“V. The trial court erred and violated Maya Soueidi’s Constitutional right to a fair trial when it
admitted irrelevant evidence about Maya’s alleged involvement in a band and when it permitted the
State to impeach Hiam Soueidi on this collateral issue with extrinsic evidence.

“VI.   The trial court erred when it found Georges Soueidi competent to testify and that he could do
         Judgment reversed.             The trial court is instructed to execute a

judgment entry vacating Maya Soueidi’s conviction.

         It is ordered that appellant recover from appellee costs herein taxed.

         The court finds there were reasonable grounds for this appeal.

         It is ordered that a special mandate issue out of this court directing the

common pleas court to carry this judgment into execution.

         A certified copy of this entry shall constitute the mandate pursuant to

Rule 27 of the Rules of Appellate Procedure.

KATHLEEN ANN KEOUGH, JUDGE

JAMES J. SWEENEY, P.J., and
EILEEN A. GALLAGHER, J., CONCUR

so without an interpreter.

“VII. The trial court deprived Maya Soueidi of a fair trial and violated her right to due process when
it instructed the jury with an aiding and abetting and conspiracy charge.

“VIII.   The cumulative errors committed in this case deprived Maya Soueidi of a fair trial.”