[Cite as State v. Buelow, 2012-Ohio-832.]




                           IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO
                              SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
                                 MONTGOMERY COUNTY

STATE OF OHIO                                      :
                                                   :      Appellate Case No. 24570
        Plaintiff-Appellant                        :
                                                   :      Trial Court Case No. 2010-CR-3418
v.                                                 :
                                                   :
DAVID C. BUELOW                             :      (Criminal Appeal from
                                                   :      (Common Pleas Court)
        Defendant-Appellee                  :
                                                   :
                                                ...........

                                                OPINION

                              Rendered on the 2nd day of March, 2012.

                                                ...........

MATHIAS H. HECK, JR., by JOHNNA M. SHIA, Atty. Reg. #0067685, Montgomery County
Prosecutor’s Office, Appellate Division, Montgomery County Courts Building, P.O. Box 972,
301 West Third Street, Dayton, Ohio 45422
       Attorney for Plaintiff-Appellant

JENNIFER S. GETTY, Atty. Reg. #0074317, 46 East Franklin Street, Dayton, Ohio 45459
     Attorney for Defendant-Appellee

                                                        .............

FAIN, J.

                {¶ 1} The State of Ohio appeals from a sentence imposed upon

defendant-appellant David C. Buelow on one count of Failure to Register with the

Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office as a sex offender when he relocated to Montgomery

County from California in October, 2010, in violation of R.C. 2950.05. The State contends
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that the trial court erred when it imposed a sentence – community control sanctions –

appropriate under the law preceding 2007 S.B. 97, effective January 1, 2008, part of the Ohio

Adam Walsh Act. The State contends that the trial court should have imposed a mandatory

three-year sentence, which is required for this offense under the law that became effective in

2008.

                 {¶ 2} Under the doctrine of stare decisis, we continue to adhere to State v.

Milby, 2d Dist. Montgomery No. 23798, 2010-Ohio-6344, and a line of subsequent cases

decided by this court, in which we have held that the enhanced penalties established by the

Adam Walsh Act may not be applied to a person, like Buelow, who committed a sexually

oriented offense, and was classified as a sex offender, before the enactment of 2007 S.B. 97.

Accordingly, the judgment of the trial court is Affirmed.



          I. Buelow Commits a Sex Offense in California and Is Subsequently

                 Classified as a Sexual Offender Under Megan’s Law in Ohio.

                 {¶ 3} Buelow was convicted of Rape in California in 1987, and was

sentenced accordingly.

                 {¶ 4} In 1997, Ohio’s version of Megan’s Law went into effect, providing for

a scheme of classification of sexual offenders, with various reporting, registration and

notification requirements that depended upon the offender’s classification. 146 Ohio Laws,

Part II, 2560.     In 1999, Buelow was classified as a sexually oriented offender by the

Montgomery County, Ohio, Court of Common Pleas. Upon Buelow’s release from prison, he

registered with the Montgomery County, Ohio, Sheriff’s Office, in accordance with the
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statutory requirement.



               II. Buelow Fails to Comply, Pleads Guilty, and Is Sentenced.

               {¶ 5} In January, 2006, Buelow failed to comply with the registration

requirements applicable to him. He was charged by indictment with the appropriate offense,

pled guilty, and was sentenced to community control sanctions for five years.



      III. The Ohio Adam Walsh Act Is Enacted; Buelow Relocates to California.

               {¶ 6} In 2007, Ohio enacted its version of the federal Adam Walsh Act, P.L.

No. 109-248, 120 Stat. 587, codified at Section 16901 et seq., Title 42, U.S.Code. The Ohio

version included two parts: (1) 2007 Am.Sub.S.B. No. 10, which adopted a three-tiered

system of sex offender classification that depended upon the identity of the sex offense of

which the offender was convicted, with different, and generally more onerous, reporting,

notification, and registration requirements; and (2) 2007 S.B. 97, which changed the penalties

attached to conviction for failure to comply with requirements, and, in many situations,

enhanced those penalties. Both parts of the Ohio Adam Walsh Act became effective on

January 1, 2008.

       {¶ 7}    Buelow relocated to California in 2010, and registered with the San Diego,

California Sheriff’s Office in August of that year. The Ohio Adam Walsh Act had called for

Buelow’s re-classification as a Tier III sex offender (with the most onerous reporting,

notification, and registration requirements), and Buelow was re-classified as a Tier III offender

by the Ohio Attorney General, in accordance with the statute. But that part of the statute was
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held unconstitutional because of a separation-of-powers violation, in State v. Bodyke, 126

Ohio St.3d 266, 2010-Ohio-2424, 933 N.E.2d 753, which ordered persons who had been

reclassified by the Ohio Attorney General reinstated to their pre-existing Megan’s Law

classifications. Subsequently, the Supreme Court of Ohio has held that application of the

Adam Walsh Act classification scheme and reporting, notification, and registration

requirements to someone who committed his or her offense before the enactment of the Adam

Walsh Act constitutes a retroactive application of a punitive statute, in violation of the

Retroactive Laws prohibition in Article II, Section 28, of the Ohio Constitution. State v.

Williams, 129 Ohio St.3d 344, 2011-Ohio-3374, 952 N.E.2d 1108.



    IV. Buelow Returns to Ohio, Again Fails to Register, Pleads No Contest, and Is

   Sentenced Under the pre-Adam-Walsh-Act Law for a Felony of the Third Degree.

               {¶ 8} Buelow returned to Ohio from California, arriving October 19, 2010.

He failed to register with the Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office as required by his

classification as a sexually oriented offender under the Megan’s Law requirements, to which

he had been restored as a result of State v. Bodyke, supra. The State charged him with the

offense as a felony of the first degree, because his California Rape conviction, the equivalent

of a first-degree felony under Ohio law, and his prior failure-to-register conviction, made his

offense a felony of the first-degree under the Ohio Adam Walsh Act, 2007 S.B. 97.

               {¶ 9} Buelow pled no contest to the charge, but as a felony of the third

degree, and the trial court accepted his plea over the State’s objection. The trial court

imposed community control sanctions for a period of time not to exceed five years. From the
                                                                                             5


sentence, the State appeals.



        V. Under the Doctrine of Stare Decisis, We Reject the State’s Argument

                that We Should Not Follow Our Line of Cases Beginning with

             State v. Milby, 2d Dist. Montgomery No. 23798, 2010-Ohio-6344.

       {¶ 10}       The State’s sole assignment of error is as follows:

       {¶ 11}       “[THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN FAILING TO HOLD THAT] THE

FELONY SENTENCING STATUTE R.C. 2950.99 IS NOT APPLIED RETROACTIVELY

WHEN THE CONDUCT FOR WHICH A DEFENDANT IS CONVICTED AND

SENTENCED OCCURRED AFTER THE EFFECTIVE DATE OF THE STATUTE[,] OR

JANUARY 1, 2008.”

       {¶ 12}       In State v. Milby, supra, we held that under State v. Bodyke, supra, not only

does it violate the Ohio Constitution to apply the new reporting, notification, and registration

requirements set forth in the Ohio Adam Walsh Act to a person classified as a sex offender

before the enactment of that act, it also violates the Ohio Constitution to apply the enhanced

penalties set forth in the new act to such a person. Milby, 2010-Ohio-6344, ¶ 31. We have

followed that holding in numerous subsequent cases.           E.g., State v. Johnson, 2d Dist.

Montgomery No. 24029, 2011-Ohio-2069, ¶ 10; State v. Alexander, 2d Dist. Montgomery No.

24119, 2011-Ohio-4015, ¶ 38; State v. Alltop, 2d Dist. Montgomery No. 24234,

2011-Ohio-5541, ¶ 14; and State v. Howard, 2d Dist. Montgomery No. 24680,

2011-Ohio-5693, ¶ 12.

       {¶ 13}       The State argues that State v. Milby, supra, is incorrectly decided, and that
                                                                                              6


we should no longer follow it. The State argues that because the penalty for Buelow’s

offense (his failure to register when he returned to Ohio) was enhanced before he committed

that offense, there is no problem with applying the enhanced penalty to him

       {¶ 14}     The issue is not free from difficulty. Two members of this panel have

previously indicated that if this were an issue of first impression, they would not be inclined to

reach the same result reached in State v. Milby. E.g., Judge Hall’s concurring and dissenting

opinion in State v. Howard, 2011-Ohio-5693, ¶ 18; this author’s concurring opinion in State v.

Cook, 2d Dist. Montgomery App. No. 24611, 2012-Ohio-198, ¶ 16.

       {¶ 15}      The principle of stare decisis commands that a court should not lightly

overrule its own precedential authority. As the Supreme Court said in State v. Simpkins, 117

Ohio St.3d 420, 2008-Ohio-1197, 884 N.E.2d 568, ¶ 19, fn. 2:

       Although this court was closely divided in [State v.] Bezak [114 Ohio St.3d 94,

2007-Ohio-3250, 868 N.E.2d 961], that holding has full force and must be followed in

accordance with stare decisis. Despite any individual disagreement with precedent, we abide

by it in order to foster predictability and continuity, prevent the arbitrary administration of

justice, and provide clarity to the citizenry. Shay v. Shay, 113 Ohio St.3d 172,

2007-Ohio-1384, 863 N.E.2d 591, ¶ 26–28, citing Westfield Ins. Co. v. Galatis, 100 Ohio

St.3d 216, 2003-Ohio-5849, 797 N.E.2d 1256, at ¶ 43. That result is always proper, but it is

perhaps particularly needed in areas of the law that are in flux. Sentencing law was familiar

terrain for decades, but the constitutional ground upon which many decisions had been based

has shifted in the past few years in a series of significant decisions. See, e.g., Blakely v.

Washington (2004), 542 U.S. 296, 124 S.Ct. 2531, 159 L.Ed.2d 403; see also State v. Foster,
                                                                                                         7


       109 Ohio St.3d 1, 2006-Ohio-856, 845 N.E.2d 470.

       {¶ 16}      In the case before us, the area of law pertaining to sex offender classifications and

reporting, notification, and registration requirements must certainly be conceded to have been in flux,

until very recently, if not up to and including the present. Furthermore, and perhaps even more

importantly, the principle of stare decisis, rooted as it is in the values of predictability and stability of

the law, also takes on enhanced significance when not just one precedential authority, but a whole line

of consistent precedential authority, is of recent vintage.

       {¶ 17}      Although, as noted, two members of this panel would have reached a different

result from State v. Milby if this were an issue of first impression, none of us is persuaded that the

State v. Milby line of cases should be overruled. The State’s remedy, if the Milby line of cases are

incorrectly decided, must be found in the Supreme Court of Ohio.

       {¶ 18}       The State’s sole assignment of error is overruled.



                                            VI. Conclusion.

       {¶ 19}       The State’s sole assignment of error having been overruled, the judgment of the

trial court is Affirmed.

                                                     .............

HALL, J., concurring:

                {¶ 20}      I agree with Judge Fain’s well-reasoned opinion.

                {¶ 21}      I write separately only to indicate that I cannot find where the Adam Walsh

       Act included the penalty enhancements that were included in 2007 S.B. 97 and that are

       codified in R.C. 2950.99. I continue to believe the legislature may change the penalty for a
                                                                                             8


criminal offense as long as it only applies to criminal conduct committed after the effective

date.

                                                   .............

DONOVAN, J., concurring:

        {¶ 22}      I do not subscribe to Judge Fain’s and Judge Hall’s criticism of our holding

in State v. Milby, 2d Dist. Montgomery No. 23798, 2010-Ohio-6344, and its application to the

present case.    Defendant Buelow was previously classified under Megan’s Law.               His

reclassification to conform to the Adam Walsh Act and its requirements was unconstitutional.

 State v. Bodyke, 126 Ohio St.3d 266, 933 N.E.2d 753, 2010-Ohio-2424. As a result, Buelow

remains classified pursuant to Megan’s Law, and the penalties for his failure to comply with

the registration requirements Megan’s Law imposes are the penalties Megan’s Law prescribed

for those classified pursuant to it.

        {¶ 23}      As Judge Grady noted in his separate concurrence in State v. Williams, 2d

Dist. Montgomery No. 24452, 2012-Ohio-107, the General Assembly may impose more

onerous penalties for crimes not yet committed.          Nevertheless, per Bodyke, Buelow’s

Megan’s Law adjudication, being a final order, governs the penalties available for Buelow’s

violation of Megan’s Law, and the penalties prescribed by the Adam Walsh Act provisions are

available only for those properly classified pursuant to that legislation, and Buelow was not.

                                          ..........

Copies mailed to:

Mathias H. Heck
Johnna Shia
Jennifer S. Getty
Hon. Dennis J. Langer
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