Recent Posts

  • Sentencing: Clarifying the standard of review
  • Another go-around on Rance
  • Open discovery update
  • What’s Up in the 8th
  • Case Update
  • Good people
  • Open discovery is coming… maybe
  • The pitfall with Crawford
  • What’s Up in the 8th
  • Case Update


  • Categories

  • Civil
  • Criminal
  • Constitutional
  • Potpourri
  • Rants


  • Archives

  • October 2008
  • September 2008
  • August 2008
  • July 2008
  • June 2008
  • May 2008
  • April 2008
  • March 2008
  • February 2008
  • January 2008
  • December 2007
  • November 2007
  • October 2007
  • September 2007
  • August 2007
  • July 2007
  • June 2007
  • May 2007
  • April 2007
  • March 2007
  • February 2007
  • January 2007
  • December 2006
  • November 2006
  • October 2006
  • September 2006
  • August 2006
  • July 2006
  • June 2006
  • May 2006


  • The power of the pen

    March 17th, 2008

    Well, I guess I told them, huh?  Within mere hours after I’d blogged last week about the New Haven 8th-grader who’d been suspended for buying a bag of Skittles at school, the district, per this story, came to its senses, reinstated him, and cleared his record.  No word on when the candy-seller is up for parole, but believe me, I’ll be focused like a laser beam on clearing her, too, in my fight for Truth, Justice, and the American Way.

    If you’re wondering where the Case Update is, I was gone this weekend, and didn’t have time to do it.  It’ll be here tomorrow.  Meantime, I’ve got to give some snaps to the 8th District.  Every now and then you’ll see an appellate panel toss out some vague criticism of an Ohio Supreme Court decision, but it’s relatively rare to see one say, in essence, “Hey, you guys got this wrong; here’s what you meant to say.”  That’s exactly what the court did in State v. Casalicchio

    Cases are becoming sort of like movie sequels.  There’s Godfather II or Halloween 3, and here there was Casalicchio I, Casalicchio II, and Casalicchio IIICasalicchio I involved his direct appeal from his conviction for intimidation, which was affirmed, but the court sent it back down because the trial judge forgot to tell him about post-release controls.  He got resentenced two weeks before Foster v. Ohio comes down, so when he appealed that (Casalicchio II), sure enough, that sentence had to be vacated, too.

    Before that last decision came down, though, he filed a motion for postconviction relief.  What’s relevant isn’t the argument that he made, but the timing.  Which brings us to Casalicchio III.  The trial judge had thrown out the petition for post-conviction relief on the grounds that he’d filed it well past the 180-day deadline:  he’d originally been sentenced in April of 2004, and he’d filed the petition in November of 2006.

    But he had an argument:  under State v. Bezak and the other Ohio Supreme Court decisions, a failure to advise a defendant of post-release controls renders the sentence void; it’s a nullity, as if it had never happened.  Since it was a nullity, the 180 days never started running, and thus the petition was timely.

    When Bezak came down, I blogged about the problems in holding that a sentence was void, as opposed to merely voidable:  under Ohio law, there’s no conviction if there’s no sentence.  The Supreme Court’s begun to see the light there, because in State v. Payne they backed away from that.  In Foster, they’d similarly held that any sentence handed down under the unconstitutional statutory provisions was void, but in Payne they decided that they’d really meant that the sentences were merely voidable:  that is, they were valid as long as no one contested them.

    When I discussed Payne (which I did here), I’d said that the decision “goes a long way toward cleaning up the problems the Court created in not distinguishing between void and voidable sentences,” but pointed out that Bezak was still out there, and predicted that the Court would “readdress, and correct, that issue within the next year.” 

    The 8th District decided not to wait, and didn’t mince any words about it:

    the reasoning in Bezak was flawed, as it was in Foster, with respect to classifying a sentence as void. It is our view, that after Payne, the holding in Bezak, regarding the use of the word “void,” is no longer correct. Payne makes it clear that the Supreme Court erred when it labeled a sentence “void” — because the trial court had jurisdiction to impose the sentence. Therefore, the holding in Bezak, that a sentence that does not properly include postrelease control is “void,” should actually be “voidable.”

    Of course, since it’s only voidable, it’s not a nullity, the 180-day clock started to run in April of 2004, and Castalicchio’s petition for PCR is untimely.

    I’ve been critical of some of the opinions out of the 8th District lately, but I’ve got to give them a lot of credit for this one.  Most courts would have been content to parrot the language from Bezak, but the court here analyzed the situation, took into consideration the developing case law from a related area, and came to a logical, well-supported conclusion.  That’s the way things are supposed to work.

    Leave a Reply


    Search Posts




    Court Links

    Cuyahoga County
    Court of Appeals
    Common Pleas-General
    Common Pleas-Domestic
    Common Pleas-Juvenile
    Common Pleas-Probate

    Ohio Courts
    Ohio Supreme Court
    Geauga County Common Pleas
    Lake County Common Pleas
    Lorain County Common Pleas
    Summit County Common Pleas
    Links to all Ohio Courts
    Ohio Revised Code

    Federal Courts
    US Supreme Court
    6th Circuit Court of Appeals
    Ohio Northern District
    Ohio Southern District



    Law Blogs

    Sentencing Law & Policy
    Volokh Conspiracy
    Appellate Law & Practice
    CrimLaw
    Grits for Breakfast
    Confrontation Blog
    CrimProf Blog
    How Appealing
    Crime and Consequences
    Drug War Rant
    A Stitch in Haste
    Overlawyered
    Balkinization
    Inside Opinions: Legal Blogs
    ScotusBlog

    Ohio Law blogs

    Cleveland Law Library
    6th Circuit - Criminal
    6th Circuit - General
    Ohio Personal Injury Lawyer
    Ohio Family Law Blog
    OACDL
    CCDLA

    Blogfinder

    Law Blog Metrics



    lawyer blogs