State v. Yaden

Decision Date05 March 1997
Docket NumberNo. C-960483,C-960483
Citation692 N.E.2d 1097,118 Ohio App.3d 410
PartiesThe STATE of Ohio, Appellee, v. YADEN, Appellant. First District, Hamilton County
CourtOhio Court of Appeals

Syllabus by the Court

1. A person living in a same-sex relationship may commit domestic violence against the other, when there is evidence to show that the offender and the victim are, within the meaning of R.C. 2919.25(E)(2), "cohabiting," or that they have "cohabited * * * within one year prior to the date of the alleged commission of the act in question."

2. Cohabitation involves a case-by-case inquiry into two fact-specific considerations: financial support (e.g., shelter, food, clothing, utilities) and consortium (e.g., society, cooperation, companionship, conjugal relations).

Fay D. Dupuis, City Solicitor, Terrence R. Cosgrove and Liza A. Kotlarsic, Assistant City Solicitors, Cincinnati, for appellee.

Hal R. Arenstein and William R. Gallagher, Cincinnati, for appellant.

PAINTER, Judge.

We are asked to decide whether a person living in a same-sex relationship may be guilty of domestic violence against the other person in violation of R.C. 2919.25. This is an issue of first impression in this district. We hold that under the statutory definition provided by the legislature, a person living in a same-sex relationship may commit domestic violence upon the other, though each case will turn on its attendant facts.

I. Facts 1

In late April 1996, Dave Thompson, Joe Fields, Fields's son, Joe Jr., and defendant-appellant, Ronnie Yaden, went to a flea market. Fields and Yaden began to argue, and the group returned to Fields's apartment. Thompson and Joe, Jr. left the apartment temporarily. As the argument became louder, Fields threatened to call the police unless Yaden quieted down. Fields testified that Yaden ripped the phone from the wall and threw it, striking Fields in the forehead. Yaden then allegedly punched Fields in the stomach. When Thompson returned, he saw the broken telephone on the floor. According to Thompson, Fields picked up the phone receiver and hit himself in the head with it. Yaden denied hitting Fields either in the head or in the stomach.

Fields and Yaden had been living together as a same-sex couple for approximately four years, but had broken up shortly before this incident. While living together, Fields and Yaden had a sexual relationship, shared expenses, and attended social activities together. Fields testified that he had made a commitment to be with Yaden during this time. After the breakup, Yaden continued to keep personal belongings in Fields's apartment and would stay with Fields when he had no other place to stay.

At the time of the incident, Fields was married to a woman; however, the nature and extent of that relationship was unclear in the record. Fields admitted that he took four different psychotropic medications.

Based upon this record, the trial court found Yaden guilty of a violation of R.C. 2919.25(A), domestic violence. Yaden has appealed, arguing that (1) a same-sex relationship cannot give rise to an offense under the domestic violence statute, because one partner cannot be "living as a spouse" as defined in the statute; and (2) the judgment was against the manifest weight of the evidence.

II. "Living as a Spouse"

Yaden argues that the trial court erred when it found that a same-sex relationship falls within the statutory definition of "living as a spouse." Yaden asserts that people who are not permitted legally to marry cannot live as though a marriage has occurred.

R.C. 2919.25(A) states that "[n]o person shall knowingly cause or attempt to cause physical harm to a family or household member." R.C. 2919.25(E)(1)(a)(i) defines "family or household member," in pertinent part, as "[a] spouse, a person living as a spouse, or a former spouse of the offender." R.C. 2919.25(E)(2) further defines "living as a spouse" as "a person who is living or has lived with the offender in a common law marital relationship, who otherwise is cohabiting with the offender, or who otherwise has cohabited with the offender within one year prior to the date of the alleged commission of the act in question." Thus, Yaden asserts that he and Fields did not "cohabit" when they were living together for the four years prior to the incident, because, in his view, same-sex couples cannot "cohabit."

Yaden moves away from defining "cohabitation" and focuses instead on how the phrase "living as a spouse" "conjures up visions of a couple together without the benefit of a license but appearing in all other aspects to be husband and wife." The statute defines "living as a spouse" as a person who is otherwise cohabiting or has cohabited with the offender within one year of the alleged act.

The definition of "cohabitation" in the context of domestic violence in a same-sex relationship controls our decision on this issue. Jurists across the country have struggled to provide guidance. Because the Ohio Supreme Court has not spoken on this issue, we set out some definitions from courts across the country. One caveat to this compilation of definitions is that they are taken from a mix of various contexts that emphasize different aspects of "cohabitation." Each unique set of facts giving rise to each court's focus on certain aspects over other aspects illustrates the complexity, difficulty, and danger in creating some all-encompassing definition to describe intimate relationships.

In Alabama, cohabitation means "some permanency of relationship coupled with more than occasional sexual activity between the cohabitants." 2 In California, cohabitation means "an unrelated man and woman living together in a substantial relationship manifested principally by a [sic ] permanence, or sexual, or amorous intimacy." 3 In Delaware, the alimony statute defines cohabitation as "regularly residing with an adult of the same or opposite sex, if the parties hold themselves out as a couple, and regardless of whether the relationship confers a financial benefit." 4 The Delaware Supreme Court has defined cohabitation as an "arrangement existing when two persons live together in a sexual relationship when not legally married." 5 In New Jersey, cohabitation is "generally residing together in a common residence * * * where they generally engage in some, but not necessarily all of the following: meals taken together at the residence; departing from and returning to the residence of the other for employment and/or social purposes; maintaining clothing at the other's residence; sleeping together at the residence, or the residence of the other; receiving telephone calls at the residence or the residence of the other." 6

Other definitions include: "living together as husband and wife" (Illinois); 7 "a significant live-together relationship" (Iowa); 8 "the mutual assumption of those marital rights, duties, and obligations which are usually manifested by married people including but not necessarily dependent on sexual relations" (Kentucky); 9 "living together as husband and wife without a legal marriage having been performed" (Maryland); 10 "living together as man and wife, though not necessarily implying sexual relations" (North Carolina); 11 11 "living together in the same house" (South Carolina); 12 "dwelling or living together; community of life" (Texas); 13 "doing things ordinarily done by spouses" (Texas); 14 and "liv[ing] together permanently or for an indefinite period and assum[ing] the duties and obligations normally attendant with a marital relationship." (Virginia). 15

These definitions are not terms of art, but rather descriptions designed to assist fact-finders to discover whether the unique circumstances surrounding individual relationships can be categorized for some legal purpose, generally concerning alimony or domestic violence.

Against this backdrop of definitions, we turn to Ohio jurisprudence in this area. Cohabitation has not been defined by the Ohio Supreme Court. In State v. Williams, this court followed State v. Van Hoose and held that "cohabitation" is "a man and a woman living together in the same household and behaving as would a husband and wife." 16 But the context of our decision and the decision upon which it was based concerned opposite-sex relationships and did not involve same-sex cohabitation.

How literal should our interpretation be of "a man and a woman" or "husband and wife" as defined under the Van Hoose or Williams facts in which the cohabitors were men with women? The court in Van Hoose held that the elements that constitute living together in the same household as husband and wife pose a question of fact in each particular case--for example, in cases in the divorce/alimony context one key element for inquiry is financial support. 17 It would be fair to suggest that because same-sex couples were not contemplated under the facts of these Ohio cases, their definitions do not exclude same-sex couples. As illustrated by the many definitions above, "cohabitation" takes on different meanings in different contexts.

The Second District Court of Appeals has defined cohabitation in the alimony context as the "voluntary assumption of obligations equivalent to those arising from a ceremonial marriage." 18 The Fifth District Court of Appeals has defined cohabitation in the context of domestic violence as living together in a sexual relationship when not legally married. 19

The seminal Ohio case with facts describing domestic violence in a same-sex relationship is State v. Hadinger. 20 In Hadinger, the Tenth District Court of Appeals compiled various definitions given for cohabitation and stated that the only common thread among those definitions was simply "liv[ing] together in an intimate relationship." 21 The Hamilton County Municipal Court has agreed with Hadinger that same-sex couples are subject to the domestic violence statute. 22 Thus, the only two Ohio cases that have considered the issue...

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  • State v. Nixon
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    • January 11, 2006
    ...and homosexual persons alike. See State v. Hadinger (1991), 61 Ohio App.3d 820, 823, 573 N.E.2d 1191; State v. Yaden (1997), 118 Ohio App.3d 410, 418, 692 N.E.2d 1097. {¶ 14} The purpose of the Marriage Protection Amendment is entirely different. As stated by the Fifth District Ohio Court o......
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    • October 10, 2000
    ...guidance, we are not bound by them because "`cohabitation' takes on different meanings in different contexts." State v. Yaden, 118 Ohio App.3d 410, 692 N.E.2d 1097, 1100 (1997); see also Elizabeth Trainor, Annotation, "Cohabitation" For Purposes of Domestic Violence Statutes, 71 A.L.R.5th 2......
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