State v. Goodson
Docket 2025 CA 00034
Court of record · Indexed in NoticeRegistry archive · AI-enriched for research
- Filed
- Jurisdiction
- Ohio
- Court
- Ohio Court of Appeals
- Type
- Opinion
- Case type
- Criminal Appeal
- Disposition
- Affirmed
- Judge
- Gormley
- Citation
- State v. Goodson, 2026-Ohio-1495
- Docket
- 2025 CA 00034
Appeal from a municipal-court conviction after denial of a tardy motion to suppress and a no-contest plea
Summary
The Ohio Fifth District Court of Appeals affirmed the municipal-court conviction of Tangie Goodson for operating a vehicle while under the influence. Goodson argued her trial lawyer was ineffective because a motion to suppress was filed late and denied without a hearing, after which she pled no-contest. The appeals court found counsel’s delay was deficient under the rules, but concluded Goodson could not show prejudice: the traffic stop and officer observations justified tests, admissible lay observations would remain even if test results were suppressed, and the breath-test evidence was not necessary to the conviction. Therefore the conviction was affirmed.
Issues Decided
- Whether trial counsel's late filing of a motion to suppress amounted to ineffective assistance of counsel
- Whether the traffic stop and subsequent administration of field-sobriety tests were supported by reasonable suspicion
- Whether suppression of field-sobriety or breath-test evidence would likely have changed the outcome of the case
Court's Reasoning
The court applied the two-part ineffective-assistance test: counsel’s late filing was deficient under the court rules, but Goodson could not show prejudice. Video and officer report supported the stop (stop-bar violation) and provided specific facts (odor, slurred speech, bloodshot eyes, admissions) giving reasonable suspicion for sobriety testing. Even if formal test results were excluded, the officer’s lay observations would still be admissible and were sufficient to support conviction, and the breath result was not necessary to the conviction that was based on impairment.
Authorities Cited
- Strickland v. Washington466 U.S. 668 (1984)
- Ohio Criminal Rule 12(D)
- State v. Schmitt2004-Ohio-37
- State v. Morgan2019-Ohio-2785 (5th Dist.)
Parties
- Appellant
- Tangie T. Goodson
- Appellee
- State of Ohio
- Judge
- David M. Gormley
- Judge
- Robert G. Montgomery
- Judge
- Kevin W. Popham
- Attorney
- Andrew D. Semelsberger
- Attorney
- James L. Dye
Key Dates
- Arraignment
- 2025-01-28
- Motion to suppress filed
- 2025-07-07
- Decision by Court of Appeals
- 2026-04-24
What You Should Do Next
- 1
Consult defense counsel about further appeal
If Goodson wants to pursue review beyond this appeal, she should promptly consult her attorney to evaluate grounds for a discretionary appeal to the Ohio Supreme Court and any filing deadlines.
- 2
Consider post-conviction remedies if appropriate
If there are new facts or evidence not in the record (for example, proof of procedural errors or misconduct), discuss with counsel the possibility of post-conviction relief under applicable statutes.
- 3
Comply with sentencing and pay costs
Unless relief is granted, Goodson should comply with the municipal court's sentence and any financial obligations to avoid further penalties.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What did the court decide?
- The appeals court affirmed Goodson’s conviction because, although her lawyer filed the suppression motion late (which was deficient), she could not show that this counsel error changed the outcome of her case.
- Who is affected by this decision?
- The decision affects Tangie Goodson and confirms her municipal-court conviction; it also clarifies that lateness in filing a suppression motion does not automatically require reversal if the defendant cannot show prejudice.
- Why didn’t suppression of the tests require reversal?
- Even if formal test results were excluded, the officer’s direct observations (odor, speech, eyes, balance problems, admission of drinking) would still be admissible and could support a conviction for driving while impaired.
- Can Goodson appeal again?
- Further appeal to a higher court may be possible in some circumstances, but the opinion affirms the conviction and addresses the ineffective-assistance claim on the record; any additional appeal would require appropriate grounds and procedural steps.
The above suggestions and answers are AI-generated for informational purposes only. They may contain errors. NoticeRegistry assumes no responsibility for their accuracy. Consult a qualified attorney before relying on them.
Full Filing Text
[Cite as State v. Goodson, 2026-Ohio-1495.]
IN THE OHIO COURT OF APPEALS
FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
FAIRFIELD COUNTY, OHIO
STATE OF OHIO, Case No. 2025 CA 00034
Plaintiff - Appellee Opinion & Judgment Entry
-vs- Appeal from the Fairfield County
Municipal Court, Case No. TRC2500307
TANGIE T. GOODSON,
Judgment: Affirmed
Defendant - Appellant
Date of Judgment: April 24, 2026
BEFORE: Robert G. Montgomery, Kevin W. Popham, and David M. Gormley, Judges
APPEARANCES: Andrew D. Semelsberger (Assistant City Prosecutor), Lancaster, Ohio,
for Plaintiff-Appellee; James L. Dye, Pickerington, Ohio, for Defendant-Appellant.
Gormley, J.
{¶1} Defendant Tangie Goodson argues that she was denied the effective
assistance of counsel in the trial court because the lawyer who represented her there filed
a tardy motion to suppress. The trial judge denied that motion without holding a hearing,
and Goodson then pled no-contest to a misdemeanor charge of operating a vehicle while
under the influence of alcohol. Because we conclude that Goodson was not harmed by
any shortcomings in her trial attorney’s performance, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.
The Key Facts
{¶2} Ohio State Highway Patrol trooper Jeremy Warren initiated a traffic stop of
a vehicle after he saw the driver — Goodson — commit multiple traffic violations. Once
the vehicle was stopped at the roadside, Trooper Warren, while standing near the driver’s-
side door of the vehicle, smelled alcohol on Goodson’s breath. The trooper noted, too,
that Goodson’s speech was slurred and her eyes were bloodshot and glassy. After
Goodson acknowledged that she had consumed some alcohol recently, the trooper asked
Goodson to step out of the vehicle for some roadside field-sobriety tests.
{¶3} A report prepared by Trooper Warren following his roadside interaction
with Goodson describes the trooper’s observations during those field-sobriety tests. The
trooper saw all six clues on a typical horizontal-gaze-nystagmus test and also saw some
involuntary jerking of the eyes when he administered a vertical-gaze-nystagmus test to
Goodson. Goodson then struggled to follow instructions and lost her balance while
attempting to complete the walk-and-turn test. And when the trooper asked how much
alcohol Goodson had drunk that evening, Goodson answered that she had downed “three
shots.” The trooper then attempted to instruct Goodson on the one-leg-stand test, but
Goodson could not stand with her feet together without stumbling.
{¶4} Next, Goodson was arrested and charged with a violation of R.C.
4511.19(A)(1)(a) for operating a vehicle while she was under the influence of alcohol.
Goodson was also charged under R.C. 4511.19(A)(1)(d) after the results of a breath test
indicated that she had operated her vehicle with a prohibited concentration of alcohol in
her system.
{¶5} Goodson retained an attorney to represent her during trial-court
proceedings, and that attorney appeared with Goodson at her arraignment. More than
five months later, Goodson’s attorney filed a motion to suppress. Several exhibits were
attached to that motion, including Trooper Warren’s report and some paperwork
documenting the results of Goodson’s breath test on the day of the traffic stop. Provided
to the trial court by Goodson’s attorney, too, was a memory stick or flash drive on which
video recordings of Goodson’s traffic stop and her field-sobriety tests were stored.
{¶6} At a hearing held by the trial judge a few days later, Goodson’s counsel
acknowledged that he should have filed the suppression motion sooner. The attorney also
conceded that more than three months had passed between the time when the State had
provided the video recordings to him and the date when the attorney first watched those
recordings. After considering the lengthy delay and the fact that the attorney had been
on the case from the beginning, the trial court denied Goodson’s suppression motion
without hearing any evidence on the merits of the issues raised in it.
{¶7} Goodson then pled no contest to the charges, and the trial court found her
guilty. The judge merged the two operating-a-vehicle-while-under-the-influence charges,
and Goodson was sentenced on the R.C. 4511.19(A)(1)(a) charge. She now appeals.
Goodson’s Ineffective-Assistance Claim Falls Short on the Second of
Strickland’s Two Prongs
{¶8} In her sole assignment of error, Goodson argues that her trial counsel was
ineffective because the suppression motion that the attorney filed for her was tardy, and
that tardiness in turn prompted the trial judge to deny the motion without holding a
hearing on it.
{¶9} The Sixth Amendment of course provides that an accused is entitled to the
assistance of counsel in a criminal case. U.S. Const., amend. VI. For us to overturn a
conviction based on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, a defendant must first
prove that his or her counsel’s performance was deficient. See Strickland v. Washington,
466 U.S. 668, 687 (1984). If the defendant is able to make that showing, then he or she
must demonstrate, too, that the attorney’s deficient performance harmed or prejudiced
the defendant in some way. Id.
{¶10} The failure of trial counsel to file a motion to suppress does not by itself
constitute ineffective assistance of counsel. State v. Morgan, 2019-Ohio-2785, ¶ 25 (5th
Dist.), citing State v. Madrigal, 87 Ohio St.3d 378, 389 (2000). To show that counsel was
ineffective by failing to file a suppression motion, “‘a defendant must show: (1) a basis for
the motion to suppress; (2) that the motion had a reasonable probability of success; and
(3) a reasonable probability that suppression of the challenged evidence would have
changed the outcome at trial.’” State v. Grove, 2020-Ohio-1123, ¶ 40 (5th Dist.), quoting
State v. Phelps, 2018-Ohio-4738, ¶ 13 (5th Dist.).
Goodson’s Counsel Performed Deficiently
{¶11} Even the State acknowledges that Goodson’s trial counsel performed
deficiently in this case. Under Criminal Rule 12(D), any motion to suppress must be filed
within 35 days after the arraignment or at least seven days before trial (whichever is
earlier). Goodson was arraigned on January 28, 2025, but the motion to suppress was
not filed until July 7, 2025. We readily find that Goodson’s trial counsel performed
deficiently by filing the suppression motion long after the deadline.
Because Goodson Was Unlikely to Succeed on Some of Her Suppression-Motion
Claims, and Because Success for Her on the Remaining Claims in Her Motion
Would Not Have Changed the Outcome in Her Case, She Cannot Show That She
Was Harmed by her Attorney’s Deficient Performance
{¶12} While Goodson has satisfied the first Strickland requirement of showing
that her trial counsel was deficient, we see no reasonable probability that the key evidence
against her would have been suppressed or that the outcome in her case would have been
different even had the suppression motion been timely filed.
{¶13} The failure to file a motion to suppress constitutes ineffective assistance of
counsel “only if, based on the record, the motion would have been granted.” State v.
Kuhn, 2006-Ohio-4416, ¶ 11 (9th Dist.). See also State v. Carter, 2017-Ohio-7501, ¶ 78
(7th Dist.) (“A claim of ineffective assistance of counsel in a direct appeal must be
established by the evidence in the record”).
{¶14} Although Goodson’s suppression motion was denied as untimely, her
attorney did at least file that motion with the court. Attached to the motion or provided
to the trial judge with it were the videos of Goodson’s traffic stop and field-sobriety tests,
the trooper’s report, and the results of Goodson’s breath test. Because those items are
part of the appellate record, we can consider Goodson’s argument that her trial attorney’s
poor performance caused harm to her. Without those items, we would be compelled to
reject out of hand Goodson’s ineffective-assistance claim. See State v. Parkinson, 1996
Ohio App. LEXIS 2948, *9 (5th Dist. May 20, 1996) (“Where the record is not clear or
lacks sufficient evidence to determine whether a suppression motion would have been
successful, a claim for ineffective assistance of counsel cannot be established”).
{¶15} The suppression motion filed by Goodson’s trial counsel identified several
reasons why, in the defense’s view, the evidence against her ought to have been excluded
at trial: (1) no reasonable suspicion existed for the stop of her moving vehicle, (2) no
reasonable suspicion existed for the administration of field-sobriety tests, (3) the field-
sobriety tests were administered in non-standardized ways, (4) no probable cause existed
for Goodson’s arrest, and (5) the results of the breath test were invalid because of errors
in the administration of the test or because of defects in the breath-testing machine.
The Traffic Stop Was Justified
{¶16} The dash-camera video footage from Trooper Warren’s cruiser shows that,
at an intersection where Goodson was required to come to a stop, the rear tires of her
vehicle were on top of a painted stop bar before the vehicle’s tires stopped moving as
Goodson approached the intersection. We have held numerous times that a stop-bar
violation is a valid basis for a traffic stop. See State v. Stevenson, 2025-Ohio-4431, ¶ 12
(5th Dist.) (“A driver’s stop-bar violation under R.C. 4511.43(A) is itself a sufficient basis
for a traffic stop, whether that driver commits additional violations or not”); State v. Goss,
2017-Ohio-161, ¶ 2 (5th Dist.) (upholding the constitutionality of a traffic stop where the
engine compartment of the vehicle was “beyond the stop line”).
{¶17} Because Goodson’s stop-bar violation alone was a sufficient basis for
Trooper Warren to initiate the traffic stop, we need not address the merits of Goodson’s
marked-lane-violation argument. She was unlikely to succeed in her challenge to the
trooper’s rationale for directing her to pull to the side of the road.
The Request That Goodson Participate in Field-Sobriety Tests Was Reasonable
{¶18} A law-enforcement officer must have reasonable suspicion that a driver is
under the influence of drugs or alcohol before any field-sobriety tests are administered to
that driver, and the officer’s suspicion must be based on specific and articulable facts.
State v. Dye, 2021-Ohio-3513, ¶ 64 (6th Dist.). Factors that may support an officer’s
reasonable suspicion include, but are not limited to, the time of day for the stop, any
moving traffic offenses or any erratic driving that might indicate a lack of coordination,
the appearance of the driver’s eyes, impairments related to the driver’s speech, any odor
of alcohol, the driver’s demeanor, and any admissions by that person about recent alcohol
or drug usage. State v. Rasheed, 2021-Ohio-4509, ¶ 34 (6th Dist.).
{¶19} The audio-recording function on Trooper Warren’s body-worn camera was
apparently turned off during the trooper’s roadside interaction with Goodson. The
trooper’s written report describing his encounter with Goodson indicates, though, that
Goodson smelled of alcohol, had bloodshot and glassy eyes, had slow and slurred speech,
exhibited what the report calls “scattered” behavior, and admitted having consumed
alcohol that evening. Only after smelling, seeing, and hearing those things did the trooper
ask Goodson to participate in field-sobriety tests.
{¶20} In light of those factors, we see no reasonable probability that the trial court
would have embraced Goodson’s view that the trooper lacked the necessary reasonable
suspicion to administer the field-sobriety tests.
Even Had the Results of the Field-Sobriety Tests Been Suppressed, a Favorable
Outcome for Goodson at Any Trial Appears Unlikely
{¶21} We of course have no testimony from Trooper Warren about his
administration of the field-sobriety tests, but we at least have the benefit of his report and
of the video recording that captured the trooper’s hand movements as he looked for
nystagmus in Goodson’s eyes and as Goodson attempted to participate in the other
roadside tests. What we do not have, though, are relevant pages from the so-called
NHTSA manual promulgated by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration,
which the trial judge presumably would have received had a suppression hearing been
held. See State v. Slimmer, 2023-Ohio-4756, ¶ 22 (9th Dist.) (“The State may
demonstrate what the NHTSA standards are through competent testimony and/or by
introducing the applicable portions of the NHTSA manual”) (brackets omitted); State v.
Bish, 2010-Ohio-6604, ¶ 31 (7th Dist.) (“in cases where the suppression motion alleges
specific facts about the noncompliance with field sobriety test standards, the State is
required to come forward with at least some evidence of what the standards were”).
{¶22} Yet even were we to assume that at a suppression hearing in this case, the
State could not meet the R.C. 4511.19(D)(4)(b) “substantial compliance” standard for the
admission of any field-sobriety-testing results, we still see no reasonable probability that
Goodson would have been acquitted on the charges she faced.
{¶23} The Supreme Court of Ohio has explained that “a law enforcement officer
may testify at trial regarding observations made during a defendant's performance of
nonscientific standardized field sobriety tests,” even when the actual test results are
tainted and must be excluded. State v. Schmitt, 2004-Ohio-37, ¶ 15. See also City of
Columbus v. Bickis, 2010-Ohio-3208, ¶ 15 (10th Dist.) (“even if the final results of a field
sobriety test must be excluded at trial because the test was not administered in accordance
with standardized testing procedures, an officer may testify at trial regarding observations
of the defendant made during his or her performance on the test”); City of Zanesville v.
Reaver, 2017-Ohio-4149, ¶ 20 (5th Dist.) (an officer’s observation that the defendant
could not hold himself steady, lost his balance, stumbled, or could not follow simple
directions “is admissible as lay evidence of intoxication even if the final results of the field
sobriety tests are inadmissible at trial due to a lack of substantial compliance with
accepted testing standards”).
{¶24} Trooper Warren noted in his report that Goodson could not maintain her
balance during the walk-and-turn instructions, and that same report indicates that
Goodson could not stand with her feet together “without stumbling off balance” at the
start of the one-leg-stand test. And, after the trooper saw Goodson’s stop-bar violation
and noted that Goodson was slurring her speech, smelled like alcohol, and had bloodshot
and glassy eyes, Goodson acknowledged that she had consumed “three shots” of alcohol
that evening.
{¶25} In light of those facts — which the State would not have been barred from
presenting at a trial even had the results of the field-sobriety tests themselves been
suppressed — we see no reasonable probability that the suppression of the field-sobriety-
test results would have changed the outcome in Goodson’s case.
The Suppression of Any Evidence Tied to Goodson’s Arrest and Her Breath Test
Would Not Have Led to Her Acquittal on the Under-the-Influence Charge
{¶26} Though Goodson was initially charged with two violations of R.C. 4511.19 —
not only under that statute’s (A)(1)(a) provision for operating her vehicle under the
influence of alcohol but also under the statute’s (A)(1)(d) provision for operating her
vehicle with a prohibited concentration of alcohol on her breath — she was convicted only
on the R.C. 4511.19(A)(1)(a) charge. The breath-test charge went away because of merger.
Given that a breath-test result was not needed by the State in order for the State to win at
trial on an (A)(1)(a) under-the-influence charge, and given that the facts described above
in paragraph 24 would have been presented at a trial on such a charge, we see no
reasonable probability that the outcome in her case would have been different had the
trial judge suppressed any evidence about her post-arrest breath-test result.
{¶27} And of course, if admission of the breath-test result was not an outcome-
determinative factor in the case, then any question about the probable cause supporting
the arrest that preceded the administration of that breath test was likewise not of any
consequence to Goodson’s conviction on the R.C. 4511.19(A)(1)(a) charge. Even had the
trial judge held a hearing on Goodson’s tardy suppression motion, and even had the trial
judge found some constitutional infirmity in the trooper’s warrantless arrest of Goodson,
that faulty arrest would not have justified dismissal of the complaint against her. See
State ex rel. Jackson v. Brigano, 88 Ohio St.3d 180, 181 (2000) (“even if an arrest is
illegal[,] it does not affect the validity of subsequent proceedings based on a valid
[charging document]”); State v. Henderson, 51 Ohio St.3d 54, 56 (1990) (“an illegal arrest
does not invalidate a subsequent conviction which is otherwise proper”); United States v.
Crews, 445 U.S. 463, 474 (1980) (“An illegal arrest, without more, has never been viewed
as a bar to subsequent prosecution, nor as a defense to a valid conviction”).
***
{¶28} In sum, then, while we agree that Goodson’s attorney performed deficiently
by waiting far too long to file any motion to suppress, Goodson has not met her burden of
demonstrating that she was prejudiced by her attorney’s misstep. In other words, nothing
in the record before us suggests that the outcome of her case would have been different
had the motion to suppress been timely filed. Her assignment of error is overruled.
{¶29} For the reasons explained above, the judgment of the Fairfield County
Municipal Court is affirmed. Costs are to be paid by Defendant Tangie Goodson.
By: Gormley, J.;
Montgomery, P.J. and
Popham, J. concur.