Victoria Elizabeth Dufresne v. Commonwealth of Virginia ( 2016 )


Menu:
  •                                              COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    Present: Judges Petty, Beales and Senior Judge Frank
    UNPUBLISHED
    Argued at Richmond, Virginia
    VICTORIA ELIZABETH DUFRESNE
    MEMORANDUM OPINION*
    v.     Record No. 0281-15-2                                      JUDGE ROBERT P. FRANK
    FEBRUARY 9, 2016
    COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF RICHMOND
    Gregory L. Rupe, Judge
    Dorian Dalton, Senior Assistant Public Defender, for appellant.
    Eugene Murphy, Senior Assistant Attorney General (Mark R.
    Herring, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.
    Victoria Elizabeth Dufresne (appellant), after being indicted for robbery, in violation of
    Code § 18.2-58, was convicted in a bench trial of grand larceny, in violation of Code § 18.2-95.
    On appeal, she contends the trial court erred in denying her motion to set aside the verdict and in
    finding her guilty of grand larceny, which she contends is not a lesser-included offense of
    robbery. For the reasons stated, we reverse the trial court.
    BACKGROUND
    Since our decision is based on the procedural aspects of this case and not the actual facts
    of the offense, we limit our factual recitations to the procedural history of the case.
    Appellant was indicted and tried for robbery. After the Commonwealth rested, appellant
    moved to strike the evidence, maintaining the evidence failed to prove the taking of the victim’s
    *
    Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication.
    property was accomplished by violence, intimidation, or threat. After appellant argued her
    motion, the following exchange occurred:
    The Court: What are you telling me she is guilty of?
    [Defense Counsel]: Larceny.
    The Court: Grand larceny?
    [Defense Counsel]: They prove value with the cash. So yes. I
    would say that they have met the burden for grand larceny.
    Appellant concluded her renewed motion to strike by saying, “For those reasons, I’d ask for the
    charge to be dropped down to grand larceny.” The trial court overruled appellant’s motion but
    ultimately convicted appellant of grand larceny. Appellant’s sentencing hearing was set for
    February 5, 2015.
    On January 26, 2015, appellant filed a motion to set aside the verdict, arguing that grand
    larceny is not a lesser-included offense of robbery, and contending that she should be convicted
    only of petit larceny. The Commonwealth filed a response to appellant’s motion stating that
    “[t]he Commonwealth concedes that defense counsel’s motion would have merit -- except for the
    principle that defense counsel may not approbate and reprobate by inviting error and then seek
    reversal of the conviction based upon such invited error. Rowe v. Commonwealth, 
    277 Va. 495
    ,
    502-503 (2009).”
    On February 5, 2015, after hearing argument on appellant’s motion, the trial court denied
    the motion and sentenced appellant on the grand larceny charge.
    ANALYSIS
    Appellant contends the trial court erred in reducing the robbery charge to grand larceny,
    instead of petit larceny, since grand larceny is not a lesser-included offense of robbery.1 “This
    1
    The Commonwealth, in its brief, does not address the merits of appellant’s contention
    but argues only the concepts of “invited error” and “approbate and reprobate.”
    -2-
    appeal presents a pure question of law to which we apply a de novo standard of review.” Conley
    v. Commonwealth, 
    284 Va. 691
    , 693, 
    733 S.E.2d 927
    , 928 (2012).
    Procedural Bar
    We first address whether appellant is procedurally barred from asserting her argument.
    It is uncontroverted that, at trial, appellant agreed that grand larceny was a proper offense
    for which she could be convicted. Nevertheless, while the trial court still had jurisdiction over
    the case,2 appellant filed a motion to set aside the verdict, arguing that grand larceny was not a
    proper offense for which she could be convicted because it is not a lesser-included offense of
    robbery. Appellant now challenges on appeal the trial court’s decision to deny her motion to set
    aside the verdict and to convict her of grand larceny.
    Analytically, the contemporaneous objection rule embodied in Rule 5A:18 is instructive.
    The contemporaneous objection rule, embodied in Rule
    5A:18 in the Court of Appeals and Rule 5:25 in this Court, is based
    on the principle that a litigant has the responsibility to afford a
    court the opportunity to consider and correct a perceived error
    before such error is brought to the appellate court for review. Reid
    v. Baumgardner, 
    217 Va. 769
    , 773, 
    232 S.E.2d 778
    , 781 (1977).
    The contemporaneous objection rules in each court exist “to
    protect the trial court from appeals based upon undisclosed
    grounds, to prevent the setting of traps on appeal, to enable the trial
    judge to rule intelligently, and to avoid unnecessary reversals and
    mistrials.” Reid v. Boyle, 
    259 Va. 356
    , 372, 
    527 S.E.2d 137
    , 146
    (2000) (quoting Fisher v. Commonwealth, 
    236 Va. 403
    , 414, 
    374 S.E.2d 46
    , 52 (1988)). These rules are not limited to evidentiary
    rulings and require objection while the tribunal is in a position to
    correct a claimed error. Id.; Reid v. 
    Baumgardner, 217 Va. at 774
    ,
    232 S.E.2d at 781.
    Williams v. Gloucester Sheriff's Dep’t, 
    266 Va. 409
    , 411, 
    587 S.E.2d 546
    , 548 (2003).
    2
    The Commonwealth does not contend the motion to set aside the verdict itself was
    untimely filed.
    -3-
    Clearly, the motion to set aside in this case afforded the trial court an opportunity “to
    consider and correct a perceived error”—that the court had convicted appellant of a crime that
    was neither charged nor a lesser-included offense of a charged crime—“before such error [was]
    brought to the appellate court for review.” Appellant’s assignment of error and her argument on
    appeal is the identical one contained in her motion to set aside. Although appellant erred in
    requesting the court to convict her of grand larceny, something the court could not legally do, she
    nevertheless brought the error to the court’s attention while the court still had jurisdiction over
    the case and still had the opportunity to correct its error. Therefore, we conclude appellant is not
    barred from contending grand larceny is not a lesser-included offense of robbery.
    Nevertheless, the Commonwealth argues the doctrines of “invited error” and
    “approbate/reprobate” bar appellant’s contentions on appeal. It is well-settled Virginia law that
    [a] litigant is not allowed to “approbate and reprobate.”
    Hurley v. Bennett, 
    163 Va. 241
    , 252, 
    176 S.E. 171
    , 175 (1934).
    This Court has stated that a party may not “in the course of the
    same litigation occupy inconsistent positions.” Id.; see also Rowe
    v. Commonwealth, 
    277 Va. 495
    , 502, [675] S.E.2d [161, 164]
    (2009) (this day decided) (citing Cangiano v. LSH Bldg. Co., 
    271 Va. 171
    , 181, 
    623 S.E.2d 889
    , 895 (2006) and Powell v.
    Commonwealth, 
    267 Va. 107
    , 144, 
    590 S.E.2d 537
    , 560 (2004)).
    It is improper for a litigant to invite error and take advantage of the
    situation created by her own wrong. 
    Rowe, 277 Va. at 502
    , 675
    S.E.2d at [164]; Fisher v. Commonwealth, 
    236 Va. 403
    , 417, 
    374 S.E.2d 46
    , 54 (1988).
    The prohibition against approbation and reprobation forces
    a litigant to elect a particular position, and confines a litigant to the
    position that she first adopted.
    Matthews v. Matthews, 
    277 Va. 522
    , 528, 
    675 S.E.2d 157
    , 160 (2009).
    The Commonwealth relied at trial on the Supreme Court’s decision in Rowe as the focal
    point of its argument. In 
    Rowe, 277 Va. at 500
    , 675 S.E.2d at 163, Rowe was initially convicted
    of attempted capital murder, despite his argument that felony assault and battery on a police
    -4-
    officer was a lesser-included offense of attempted capital murder. Upon conviction, Rowe filed
    a motion to reconsider, arguing inter alia that “if the trial court will consider the lesser-included
    offenses under the attempted capital murder of a police officer charge, [appellant] is not guilty of
    any lesser-included offenses . . . .” Rowe v. Commonwealth, 07 VAP UNP 3196061, Record
    No. 3196-06-1 (Aug. 14, 2007). Rowe filed a post-trial motion to reconsider, where he again
    urged the trial court to convict him of assault and battery on a police officer. The trial court
    vacated its finding of guilt on the attempted capital murder charge and convicted Rowe of assault
    and battery of a law enforcement officer, as he had requested. 
    Rowe, 277 Va. at 500
    , 675 S.E.2d
    at 163. Rowe then petitioned this Court for appeal, arguing for the first time that he could not be
    convicted of assault and battery of a law enforcement officer because it was not a lesser-included
    offense of attempted capital murder. Rowe, 07 VAP UNP 3196061. This Court denied the
    petition for that assignment of error, concluding that “[b]ecause appellant never raised this issue
    at trial, Rule 5A:18 bars our consideration of this question on appeal.” 
    Id. The Supreme
    Court
    concluded it was “not necessary to specifically address the question of Rowe’s compliance with
    Rules 5A:20(c) and 5A:18 because Rowe invited the very error of which he now complains. His
    approbation and reprobation is necessarily fatal to his lesser-included-offense argument.” 
    Rowe, 277 Va. at 501-02
    , 
    675 S.E.2d 164
    . The Court reasoned that defense counsel had invited the
    error by arguing for the lesser charge and maintaining that it was a lesser-included offense. See
    
    id. at 503-04,
    675 S.E.2d at 164-65.
    The Commonwealth’s and the dissent’s reliance on Rowe is misplaced. At no time while
    the trial court had jurisdiction did Rowe attempt to correct his initial position. Instead, he
    continued to argue his erroneous statement of the law in his motion to reconsider, i.e. that assault
    and battery of a police officer is a lesser-included offense of attempted capital murder. At no
    time did he give the trial court an opportunity to re-evaluate his earlier misstatement of the law.
    -5-
    At no time did Rowe contend to the trial court that his earlier position was incorrect. Rowe’s
    invitation of error was never withdrawn nor abandoned. Thus, Rowe never gave the trial court
    the opportunity to correct its error.
    The dissent’s analysis gives no weight to appellant’s motion to set aside the verdict,
    informing the trial court that she had abandoned her earlier position. On appeal, unlike in Rowe,
    appellant took the same position in her motion to set aside the verdict as she now takes on
    appeal. In sum, Rowe is distinguishable on its facts and does not support the dissent’s analysis.
    To adopt the dissent’s application of Rowe would mean that an attorney who acquiesces to a
    mistake of law during a trial would be forever bound by the error with no opportunity to correct
    it by bringing it to the trial court’s attention. Such an interpretation simply cannot be correct.3
    The Commonwealth further maintains the relief sought in the motion to set aside the
    verdict was untimely requested. The Commonwealth argues that the motion to set aside
    therefore should not be considered. As a result, appellant has not avoided the effect of the
    “approbate/reprobate” doctrine and is bound by her earlier concession that grand larceny was a
    charge upon which she properly could be convicted. The dissent adopts this position.
    The Commonwealth cites Creamer v. Commonwealth, 
    64 Va. App. 185
    , 
    767 S.E.2d 226
    (2015), which addresses the approbate-reprobate doctrine as well as the timeliness of a
    3
    The dissent notes that appellant acquiesced without objection when the trial court
    accepted her theory and convicted her of grand larceny. We note that the Commonwealth failed
    to object to the court’s decision to convict appellant of a crime that was neither charged nor a
    lesser-included offense. The trial court commented that appellant had “conceded” that she was
    guilty of grand larceny when she admitted the value of the property taken. However, “[a] party
    can concede the facts but cannot concede the law.” Cofield v. Nuckles, 
    239 Va. 186
    , 194, 
    387 S.E.2d 493
    , 498 (1990). Thus, appellant could not “concede” that grand larceny was a
    lesser-included offense of robbery. The “judge is presumed to know the law and to apply it
    correctly in each case.” Groves v. Commonwealth, 
    50 Va. App. 57
    , 62, 
    646 S.E.2d 28
    , 30
    (2007) (quoting Crest v. Commonwealth, 
    40 Va. App. 165
    , 172 n.3, 
    578 S.E.2d 88
    , 91 n.3
    (2003)). Where, as here, the trial court makes an error of law, the parties must have the
    opportunity to alert the court to the error at a time when the court can consider and correct it.
    -6-
    post-verdict proffer. At trial, Creamer specifically stated “he would not object to the
    Commonwealth’s request ‘to prohibit [Davis] from testifying for impeachment of the
    Commonwealth’s witnesses . . . .” 
    Id. at 203,
    767 S.E.2d at 234. However, post-trial, Creamer
    proffered that Davis would contradict certain pieces of the Commonwealth’s case. 
    Id. In this
    context, this Court held that Creamer approbated and reprobated, taking one position at trial and
    a contradictory position post-trial. 
    Id. The dissent
    maintains that appellant was prohibited “from taking a new position of law
    that was inconsistent with and mutually contradictory to her position at trial.” (Emphasis and
    quotation marks omitted). However, the motion to set aside the verdict was part of the trial
    phase. As stated above, “approbate and reprobate” bars a party from occupying inconsistent
    positions or positions mutually contradictory. The entire theory of approbate and reprobate is
    premised on a party “taking successive positions in the course of litigation that are either
    inconsistent with each other or mutually contradictory.” 
    Rowe, 277 Va. at 502
    , 675 S.E.2d at
    164 (quoting Cangiano v. LSH Bldg. Co., 
    271 Va. 171
    , 181, 
    623 S.E.2d 889
    , 895 (2006)).
    Appellant here did not maintain two mutually exclusive positions because she abandoned
    her earlier position while still in the trial phase. Appellant’s position in both the trial court and
    on appeal has been consistently that there was insufficient evidence to convict her of robbery
    because the Commonwealth failed to prove the element of violence, intimidation, or threat of
    serious bodily harm. Failure to prove this element of robbery converts the act into a larceny.
    Thus approbate and reprobate and the cases cited by the Commonwealth have no application.
    Appellant, through her motion to set aside, made it clear she objected to being convicted of grand
    larceny, despite her earlier position. Thus, prior to sentencing, the trial judge had the opportunity
    to hear additional argument and change his decision on the issue if he was so inclined. Unlike in
    -7-
    Rowe, where the defendant changed position during the course of litigation, appellant here kept
    the same position at the conclusion of the trial phase as she argues now on appeal.
    At oral argument, the Commonwealth argued that Smith v. Massachusetts, 
    543 U.S. 462
    (2005), precluded the trial court from reconsidering its verdict, thus barring appellant’s motion to
    set aside the verdict. Smith is a double jeopardy case, involving the trial court’s reconsideration
    of a not guilty finding, which essentially re-tried the defendant after he was acquitted. At the
    conclusion of the prosecution’s case the trial court granted what was the equivalent of a motion
    to strike, finding Smith not guilty of a weapons charge. 
    Id. at 465.
    During a recess before
    closing argument, the trial court was advised of additional legal precedent regarding the weapons
    charge. The trial court announced it was reversing the prior ruling, and allowed the weapons
    charge to go to the jury. 
    Id. The jury
    then convicted Smith of that weapons charge. 
    Id. at 466.
    The issue before the United States Supreme Court was whether the trial court could
    reconsider and change its earlier acquittal without violating double jeopardy. 
    Id. at 464.
    The
    Supreme Court found the acquittal was a final judgment and could not be changed. 
    Id. at 473.
    The instant case is quite different. A motion to vacate or set aside is premised on a
    judgment or verdict already rendered. To argue that such a motion must be made at the time of
    rendering the judgment or verdict was decided ignores the role of such motions. Clearly these
    motions seek post-verdict relief. In a criminal context, when the defendant asks for the trial
    court to reconsider the verdict, there are no double jeopardy issues. Smith does not eliminate
    such post-verdict motions. We thus conclude that Smith does not support the Commonwealth’s
    argument.
    The Commonwealth’s reliance on Smith seems to be premised on the assumption that the
    trial court would not have acquitted appellant of robbery had it known at the time that grand
    larceny was not a lesser-included offense of robbery. Thus, the Commonwealth seems to
    -8-
    suggest, it would somehow be unfair for appellant to suggest that she could be convicted of
    grand larceny and then take advantage of that erroneous assertion by arguing later that she could
    only be convicted of petit larceny at a time when the trial court could not revisit its decision to
    acquit her of robbery. The problem with this argument is the faulty premise upon which it is
    based. Nothing in the record suggests that the trial court’s decision to strike the evidence of
    robbery was based on anything other than the Commonwealth’s failure to prove the necessary
    element of a taking by violence. The Commonwealth’s argument that the trial court was
    engaging in some sort of judicial grace is simply unfounded.
    The dissent claims appellant invited error “and then attempt[ed] to take advantage of the
    situation created by [her] own wrong.” 
    Rowe, 277 Va. at 502
    , 675 S.E.2d at 164 (quoting
    
    Cangiano, 271 Va. at 181
    , 623 S.E.2d at 895), and thus manufactured a scenario in which the
    trial court was unable to convict her of the very offense which appellant asked the Court to
    convict her. Again, this contention fails to consider that the motion to set aside gave the trial
    court an opportunity to reconsider its earlier ruling. It is clear from the record that the trial court
    was fully briefed and that the issue was fully argued. The trial court did not rely on appellant’s
    concession during the guilt phase of the trial. There was no mischief but instead a full airing of
    appellant’s later position.
    By filing the motion to set aside the verdict, appellant timely made her position clear that
    grand larceny is not a lesser-included offense of robbery. A challenge to the sufficiency of the
    evidence may be made by a motion to set aside the verdict. See Howard v. Commonwealth, 
    21 Va. App. 473
    , 478, 
    465 S.E.2d 142
    , 144 (1995). We conclude that appellant timely made her
    objection known to the trial court by her motion to set aside the verdict and that the motion
    preserved appellant’s contention for consideration on appeal.
    -9-
    “While the doctrine of invited error remains good law, it simply has no application
    where, as here, the record shows that a party clearly objected to a specific ruling of the trial court
    to which error is assigned on appeal . . . .” King v. Commonwealth, 
    264 Va. 576
    , 582, 
    570 S.E.2d 863
    , 866 (2002). Therefore, we conclude that appellant is not procedurally barred from
    raising on appeal the trial court’s error in convicting her of grand larceny.
    Lesser-Included Offense
    The Due Process Clauses of the Constitution of the United
    States and the Constitution of Virginia mandate that an accused be
    given proper notification of the charges against him. U.S. Const.
    amend. XIV; Va. Const. art. 1, § 8. Code § 19.2-220 provides, in
    pertinent part, that an indictment shall be “a plain, concise and
    definite written statement, (1) naming the accused, (2) describing
    the offense charged, (3) identifying the county, city or town in
    which the accused committed the offense, and (4) reciting that the
    accused committed the offense on or about a certain date.” An
    indictment, to be sufficient, must give an accused notice of the
    nature and character of the charged offense so the accused can
    make his defense. Satcher v. Commonwealth, 
    244 Va. 220
    , 231,
    
    421 S.E.2d 821
    , 828 (1992), cert. denied, 
    507 U.S. 933
    (1993).
    It is firmly established, therefore, that an accused cannot be
    convicted of a crime that has not been charged, unless the crime is
    a lesser-included offense of the crime charged. . . .
    An offense is not a lesser-included offense of a charged
    offense unless all its elements are included in the offense charged.
    Stated differently, an offense is not a lesser-included offense if it
    contains an element that the charged offense does not contain.
    Commonwealth v. Dalton, 
    259 Va. 249
    , 253, 
    524 S.E.2d 860
    , 862 (2000). Thus, our inquiry is
    whether all the elements of grand larceny are included in robbery. We conclude that they are
    not.
    Robbery is a common law crime in Virginia. It is defined as “the taking, with intent to
    steal, of the personal property of another, from his person or in his presence, against his will, by
    violence or intimidation.” Durham v. Commonwealth, 
    214 Va. 166
    , 168, 
    198 S.E.2d 603
    ,
    605-06 (1973) (quoting Jones v. Commonwealth, 
    172 Va. 615
    , 618, 
    1 S.E.2d 300
    , 301 (1939)).
    - 10 -
    Larceny, a common law crime, is defined as the unlawful taking of another’s property without
    his permission and with the intent to permanently deprive the owner of that property. See
    Tarpley v. Commonwealth, 
    261 Va. 251
    , 256, 
    542 S.E.2d 761
    , 763 (2001). Simple larceny is
    raised to grand larceny if the value of the stolen property is $200 or more. See Code § 18.2-95.
    That value is an essential element of grand larceny. Britt v. Commonwealth, 
    276 Va. 569
    , 573,
    
    667 S.E.2d 763
    , 765 (2008). Unlike grand larceny, robbery has no value element.4
    This Court’s decision in Graves v. Commonwealth, 
    21 Va. App. 161
    , 
    462 S.E.2d 902
    (1995), aff’d on reh’g en banc, 
    22 Va. App. 262
    , 
    468 S.E.2d 710
    (1996), is instructive. There,
    we held larceny from the person is not a lesser-included offense of robbery. 
    Id. at 166,
    462
    S.E.2d at 904. “While the definition of robbery includes, as an element, the theft of property, it
    does not include, as elements, either the value of the property taken or that the property be taken
    from the person of the victim.” 
    Id. at 164,
    462 S.E.2d at 903.
    Similarly, a conviction of grand larceny requires proof that the stolen property had a
    value of $200 or more, but robbery does not. We see no principled reason why Graves does not
    control our analysis in the present case.
    Appellant further contends the trial court should have reduced grand larceny to petit
    larceny because the latter is a lesser-included offense of robbery.5 She cites Jones v.
    Commonwealth, 
    218 Va. 757
    , 759-60, 
    240 S.E.2d 658
    , 660 (1978), for the proposition that
    4
    In affirming a robbery conviction, the Virginia Supreme Court found that the
    defendant’s “taking of the victim’s shirt and sweater, by violence and against his will, is in itself
    sufficient to constitute a robbery. These items are presumed to have some value, and no
    particular value need be shown.” Simpson v. Commonwealth, 
    227 Va. 557
    , 567, 
    318 S.E.2d 386
    , 392 (1984).
    5
    At oral argument, the Commonwealth conceded petit larceny is a lesser-included
    offense of robbery. While we are not bound by a party’s concessions of law, see Copeland v.
    Commonwealth, 
    52 Va. App. 529
    , 532, 
    664 S.E.2d 528
    , 530 (2008), we nevertheless agree with
    the Commonwealth’s concession.
    - 11 -
    [d]efinitionally, theft is an essential component of robbery and
    charged as such in every robbery indictment. Manifestly, a
    robbery indictment includes all elements of whatever larceny
    offense it charges, whether grand or petit, and the larceny offense
    charged is, therefore, lesser-included in robbery.
    The Supreme Court of Virginia revisited Jones in Commonwealth v. Hudgins, 
    269 Va. 602
    , 
    611 S.E.2d 362
    (2005). In that case, the Court concluded that robbery and grand larceny
    from the person are not the same offense for double jeopardy purposes. 
    Id. at 608,
    611 S.E.2d at
    366. The Court focused upon elements of the offenses of robbery and grand larceny from the
    person, not upon whether, as stated in Jones, “the theft [had been] expressly charged in the
    . . . indictment.” 
    Jones, 218 Va. at 759
    , 240 S.E.2d at 660. The Court in Hudgins concluded that
    “to the extent that Jones may be at odds with the conclusion reached here, it is expressly
    overruled.” 
    Hudgins, 269 Va. at 698
    , 611 S.E.2d at 366.
    Nonetheless, Jones remains valid authority that petit larceny is an essential element of
    robbery. The core of a robbery offense is an unlawful taking, as in petit larceny. Every
    commission of robbery is also a petit larceny. See Bazemore v. Commonwealth, 
    210 Va. 351
    ,
    353, 
    170 S.E.2d 774
    , 776 (1969) (observing “larceny is an offense included in a charge of
    robbery”); Clay v. Commonwealth, 
    30 Va. App. 254
    , 260, 
    516 S.E.2d 684
    , 686 (1999) (en banc)
    (stating “[l]arceny is a lesser-included offense of robbery”). Because all of the elements of petit
    larceny are contained in robbery, petit larceny is a lesser-included offense of robbery.
    CONCLUSION
    Therefore, we reverse appellant’s conviction of grand larceny and remand to the trial
    court for further proceedings for petit larceny, if the Commonwealth be so advised. See 
    Graves, 21 Va. App. at 167
    , 462 S.E.2d at 905.
    Reversed and remanded.
    - 12 -
    Beales, J., dissenting.
    I respectfully dissent. The majority concludes that the trial court committed reversible error
    when it was unwilling to vacate appellant’s conviction for grand larceny. Because appellant’s trial
    counsel directly asked the trial court to convict appellant of grand larceny, I would apply the
    doctrine of invited error to the specific facts of this case.
    The Supreme Court’s decision in Rowe v. Commonwealth, 
    277 Va. 495
    , 
    675 S.E.2d 161
    (2009), is highly instructive here. In that case, the Supreme Court held that “[a] party may not
    approbate and reprobate by taking successive positions in the course of litigation that are either
    inconsistent with each other or mutually contradictory. Nor may a party invite error and then
    attempt to take advantage of the situation created by his own wrong.” Id. at 
    502, 675 S.E.2d at 164
    (quoting Cangiano v. LSH Bldg. Co., 
    271 Va. 171
    , 181, 
    623 S.E.2d 889
    , 895 (2006)). The plain
    language of Rowe makes clear that it is a prohibition of two types of conduct. First, a party is not
    allowed to invite a trial court to make an error of law and then seek to obtain a benefit created by
    that wrong. Second, a party is not allowed to take inconsistent or mutually contradictory positions
    of law “in the course of litigation.” 
    Id. Because appellant
    has violated both prohibitions of Rowe, I
    would affirm the trial court.
    APPELLANT INVITED THE TRIAL COURT TO MAKE AN ERROR OF LAW
    This case involves a defendant who was indicted for robbery and who then during the trial
    asked the court to convict her of grand larceny for taking money and prescription pills valued at
    well over $200 from her quadriplegic friend. The victim was confined to a wheelchair or to bed
    because of his paralysis below his neck, and, therefore, was physically unable to stop appellant in
    any way. There can be no question that appellant invited the trial judge to come to the erroneous
    conclusion that the trial court should find appellant guilty of grand larceny. At trial, when asked by
    the trial court whether appellant was guilty of “grand larceny, grand larceny from the person, or
    - 13 -
    is it robbery,” appellant’s counsel responded, “The argument would be larceny.” When then
    asked by the trial court if appellant was guilty of grand larceny, appellant’s counsel responded,
    “They prove value with the cash. So yes. I would say that they have met the burden for grand
    larceny.” These statements were in response to questions from the trial judge, and the majority
    says that trial counsel was simply “acquiescing” in or “conceding” these points of law. I do not
    quarrel with this assessment and would not base my conclusion that trial counsel invited error
    solely on these statements in response to the court.
    However, at the end of the trial in a renewed motion to strike the evidence, appellant’s
    trial counsel then directly asked the court to convict his client of grand larceny – stating, “I’d ask
    for the charge to be dropped down to grand larceny.” This statement by appellant’s counsel is a
    clear invitation to the trial court to make an error of law6 by finding appellant guilty of a crime
    that was not a lesser-included offense of the crime originally charged in the indictment –
    robbery. This direct request to the court to take this action is very different than – and
    significantly more serious from – failing to object to what the trial court ruled or in acquiescing
    in or conceding a point in response to questions from the court. In fact, the record demonstrates
    that trial counsel was so pleased that the trial court granted his request to find the defendant
    guilty of grand larceny that he told the court, “[W]e would be willing to waive presentence report
    and do sentencing today.”
    6
    During the renewed motion to strike, counsel for appellant’s final substantive statement
    to the trial court was a direct request to find appellant guilty of grand larceny. Because appellant
    knew at that time that she was not indicted for grand larceny and because appellant asked the
    court to convict her of grand larceny, instead of robbery (for which she was indicted), it was
    incumbent on appellant to ensure that the conviction she requested was proper under Virginia
    law. Thus, appellant invited the erroneous conviction below.
    - 14 -
    IN HER MOTION TO SET ASIDE THE VERDICT AND ON APPEAL, APPELLANT SEEKS
    TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE SITUATION CREATED BY HER INVITED ERROR
    While actual prejudice – either to the opposing party or to the trial court – has never been
    a requirement of the invited error doctrine,7 Rowe does prohibit a party from attempting “to take
    advantage of the situation created by his own wrong.” Id. at 
    502, 675 S.E.2d at 164
    . In her
    motion to set aside the verdict, appellant argued that the trial court must vacate its prior ruling
    and find appellant guilty of petit larceny – a misdemeanor. Specifically, appellant argued that
    she could not be convicted of robbery because the Commonwealth failed “to prove beyond a
    reasonable doubt that the taking of property was accomplished through violence, force, or
    intimidation.” In addition, appellant argued that she could not be convicted of grand larceny
    because “[g]rand larceny is not a lesser included offense to the original charge of robbery that the
    Defendant stood accused of.” The record reflects that the trial court convicted appellant of grand
    larceny after appellant asked the court to make that very finding. Appellant later argued that she
    may now only be convicted of the misdemeanor of petit larceny. This scenario is what the
    Supreme Court in Rowe seemingly wished to avoid. While it is not clear from the record
    whether appellant’s actions were done in good faith or bad faith, Supreme Court precedent from
    its decision in Rowe prohibited appellant from seeking to take advantage of the wrong decision
    7
    The majority opinion rejects an argument advanced by the Commonwealth that the trial
    judge engaged in “some sort of judicial grace” when it convicted appellant of grand larceny
    instead of robbery. The majority states that “[n]othing in the record suggests that the trial court’s
    decision to strike the evidence of robbery was based on anything other than the Commonwealth’s
    failure to prove the necessary element of a taking by violence.” However, it is entirely
    speculative to know with any certainty what would have happened below if appellant’s counsel
    had not directly asked the court to convict her of grand larceny. Thus, despite the majority’s and
    the Commonwealth’s assertions to the contrary, it is simply not possible to know what the trial
    court would have concluded if appellant had not invited the error below.
    - 15 -
    she invited. For these reasons, I cannot join the majority’s opinion – and also believe that it may
    well encourage mischief in future cases, even if no mischief was intended by trial counsel here.8
    APPELLANT HAS APPROBATED AND REPROBATED BY TAKING MUTUALLY
    CONTRADICTORY POSITIONS OF LAW “IN THE COURSE OF LITIGATION”
    In addition, appellant has approbated and reprobated by taking successive positions “in the
    course of litigation” that are mutually contradictory, which Rowe prohibits at any point in the
    course of litigation – whether still in the trial court or on appeal. Appellant’s request at trial for the
    trial court to find her guilty of grand larceny represents appellant’s first position on the issue. At
    the motion to set aside the judgment and now again on appeal, appellant has adopted a second
    position of law – that a conviction for grand larceny would be inappropriate because it was not a
    lesser-included offense of the charge under which appellant was indicted. These two positions of
    law are mutually exclusive and contradictory. Thus, the invited error doctrine bars appellant
    from challenging her conviction for grand larceny, as appellant’s approbation and reprobation
    waived any objection to such error below when she specifically invited the erroneous decision
    about which she later complains – and then at the hearing on the motion to set aside the verdict
    told the trial judge that “we never made a request to have her found guilty of grand larceny.”
    THE MAJORITY OPINION’S FOCUS ON THE TIMELINESS OF APPELLANT’S MOTION
    IN THE TRIAL COURT DOES NOT RECOGNIZE THE FACT THAT APPELLANT HAS
    NEVERTHELESS VIOLATED THE BASIC PROHIBITIONS SET FORTH IN ROWE
    The majority opinion concludes, “By filing the motion to set aside the verdict, appellant
    timely made her position clear that grand larceny is not a lesser-included offense of robbery.”
    8
    Interestingly, at the hearing on the motion to set aside the verdict, appellant’s trial
    counsel argued to the trial court, “If the Court will recall, we never made a request to have her
    found guilty of grand larceny. We just kept using the term larceny.” Counsel goes on to state
    that the defense “never specifically brought out in the argument to have this found grand
    larceny.” At trial, however, as noted throughout this dissent, trial counsel specifically stated,
    “I’d ask for the charge to be dropped down to grand larceny” during counsel’s renewed motion
    to strike the evidence, which was his last substantive statement to the trial court before the trial
    judge ruled, finding appellant guilty of grand larceny.
    - 16 -
    This conclusion ignores the fact that appellant – in her motion to set aside the verdict –
    approbated and reprobated by challenging the appropriateness of a conviction she directly
    requested. In Rowe, a case that involved similar facts to the present case, the Supreme Court
    held that defense counsel invited error when he urged the trial court to find his client guilty of
    assault and battery of a law enforcement officer because that charge is not a lesser-included
    offense of the indicted offense of attempted capital murder. In the present case, the trial court’s
    adoption of an invalid legal theory that appellant herself requested was also invited error.
    To conclude, as the majority does, that a party may seek to correct or “undo” in a
    post-trial motion an error she has actually invited ignores the conclusion of the Supreme Court in
    Rowe that “[a] party may not approbate and reprobate by taking successive positions in the
    course of litigation that are either inconsistent with each other or mutually contradictory.” Id. at
    
    502, 675 S.E.2d at 164
    (emphasis added). While the majority opinion is certainly correct that
    appellant timely filed her motion to set aside the verdict, the Supreme Court’s decision in Rowe
    still prohibited appellant from taking a new position of law that was “inconsistent” with and
    “mutually contradictory” to her previously adopted position. 
    Id. See also
    Matthews v.
    Matthews, 
    277 Va. 522
    , 528, 
    675 S.E.2d 157
    , 160 (2009) (“The prohibition against approbation
    and reprobation forces a litigant to elect a particular position, and confines a litigant to the
    position that she first adopted.”). While trial counsel may have changed his position while the
    matter was still in the bosom of the trial court, he did so nearly two months after he directly
    requested the trial court to convict his client of grand larceny. The trial court – to whom the
    Commonwealth vigorously argued invited error at the hearing on the motion to set aside the
    verdict – denied the motion and was in a better position to assess motives than we can from a
    cold record on appeal. For all those reasons, I must conclude that appellant’s adoption of a
    mutually contradictory position of law at the post-trial motion hearing, which was still “in the
    - 17 -
    course of litigation,” foreclosed her ability to challenge her grand larceny conviction on such
    grounds.
    KING AND CREAMER SUPPORT THE APPLICATION
    OF THE INVITED ERROR DOCTRINE
    The majority opinion relies on King v. Commonwealth, 
    264 Va. 576
    , 
    570 S.E.2d 863
    (2002), to conclude that the invited error doctrine does not apply in a situation where a litigant
    has given the trial court “the opportunity to hear additional argument and change his decision on
    the issue.” The majority’s reliance on King is misplaced, as King did not involve invited error,
    which the Supreme Court makes clear. The actual issue in King was whether the defendant’s
    initial objection at the motion to strike on the charge of firing into an occupied dwelling was
    sufficient to preserve his assigned error on appeal when he later failed to object to a jury
    instruction on that same point of law. 
    Id. at 580-81,
    570 S.E.2d at 865. The Court concluded,
    “The undeniable purpose of [this section] is to relieve counsel of the burden of making repeated
    further objections to each subsequent action of the trial court that applies or implements a prior
    ruling to which an objection has already been noted.” 
    Id. at 581,
    570 S.E.2d at 866. Thus,
    unlike in the present case, there was no invited error in King. In fact, the Supreme Court only
    mentions invited error one time in its opinion to respond to an argument advanced by the
    Commonwealth that defense counsel’s failure to object later to a jury instruction on that same
    issue of law was an invitation to the court to make additional error. 
    Id. at 581-82,
    570 S.E.2d at
    866. The Supreme Court rejected the argument that counsel needs to continue to make
    objections after having already clearly raised his objection with the court. Because the Supreme
    Court in King dealt with not having to make repeated objections (and not with the actual
    question of invited error that is before us here), it is incorrect to rely on that case to avoid the
    application of the invited error doctrine. The Supreme Court’s decision in Rowe, which
    followed King, makes clear that invited error in a case like this one should result in affirmance.
    - 18 -
    The majority opinion also fails to actually distinguish Creamer v. Commonwealth, 
    64 Va. App. 185
    , 
    767 S.E.2d 226
    (2015), a case in which this Court applied the invited error
    doctrine, even though appellant raised the issue to the trial court. The issue in Creamer that is
    relevant to the invited error doctrine was the defendant’s post-trial proffer that the defense
    witness Richard Davis could have given testimony contradicting the testimony of Edward
    Moore, a witness for the Commonwealth at trial. In response to Creamer’s argument on this
    issue, this Court concluded that Creamer was barred from raising that issue on appeal. This
    Court stated:
    Finally, to the extent appellant proffered post-trial that Davis could
    have given testimony “contradicting Moore’s testimony at trial”
    that he had returned to the home often during the lease period,
    appellant may not challenge that point on appeal. Appellant
    specifically stated at trial that he would not object to the
    Commonwealth’s request “to prohibit [Davis] from testifying for
    impeachment of the Commonwealth’s witnesses, whose testimony
    [Davis] heard [while he was still a defendant].”
    
    Id. at 203,
    767 S.E.2d at 234 (emphasis added). This Court concluded that Creamer could not
    “approbate and reprobate by taking successive positions in the course of litigation,” having
    already stated at trial that he would not object to the Commonwealth’s request to prohibit Davis
    from testifying for impeachment of the Commonwealth’s witnesses. 
    Id. In both
    this case and in
    Creamer, the defendant took one position at trial and a second, inconsistent position at a
    post-trial hearing and on appeal. Finding the Supreme Court’s decision in Rowe highly
    instructive and relying on this Court’s treatment of invited error in Creamer, I must conclude that
    appellant’s inconsistent positions regarding the grand larceny charge also warrant the application
    of the invited error doctrine, even though – like the appellant in Creamer – she raised the issue to
    the trial court in a post-trial motion.
    - 19 -
    CONCLUSION
    In summary, appellant invited the very error about which she later complains. In the
    post-trial motion and on appeal, appellant has continued to attempt to take advantage of the situation
    created by her own request at trial that the charge “be dropped down to grand larceny” by asking
    nearly two months later for her felony grand larceny conviction to be reduced to a misdemeanor
    conviction of petit larceny. Appellant takes two inconsistent positions of law over the course of
    the litigation that are mutually contradictory, and, therefore appellant has approbated and
    reprobated in a manner prohibited by the Supreme Court in Rowe and by this Court in Creamer.
    Therefore, I would apply the invited error doctrine, deny appellant’s request to reverse on appeal,
    and affirm the trial court. For these reasons, I respectfully dissent.
    - 20 -