John Henry Lewis v. Commonwealth of Virginia ( 2004 )


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  •                                COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    Present: Judges Bumgardner, Humphreys and Senior Judge Hodges
    Argued by teleconference
    JOHN HENRY LEWIS
    MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY
    v.     Record No. 1770-03-2                                   JUDGE WILLIAM H. HODGES
    JUNE 29, 2004
    COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF RICHMOND
    Margaret P. Spencer, Judge
    William T. Linka (Richmond Criminal Law, on brief), for appellant.
    Donald E. Jeffrey, III, Assistant Attorney General (Jerry W. Kilgore,
    Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.
    John Henry Lewis, appellant, contends the trial court erred in refusing to give his proffered
    jury instruction. We disagree and affirm the trial court.
    BACKGROUND
    Appellant was charged with three felonies committed against his wife, Sheila Lewis:
    abduction, malicious wounding and grand larceny. At the time of the offenses, appellant and
    Sheila were separated. Sheila had agreed to give appellant a ride to the hospital. Appellant met
    Sheila at a nail salon. Sheila asked appellant to drive her car because her nails had just been
    manicured.
    Sheila testified at trial that during the drive, appellant began berating her for having him
    arrested and for allegedly having an affair. While they argued, appellant drove erratically on the
    interstate, causing Sheila to become uncomfortable. Fearful of appellant, Sheila tried to get out
    *
    Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication.
    of the car after appellant exited the interstate and slowed down at a traffic signal. However,
    appellant prevented her from doing so. Appellant grabbed Sheila’s hand and removed her
    wedding band. According to Sheila, appellant then “took [her] finger and stuck it in his mouth.”
    When Sheila eventually exited the car, she discovered that appellant had bitten off the tip of her
    finger at the uppermost joint. Sheila ran in the opposite direction the car was heading, and
    appellant “got out of the driver’s seat, came behind” her, grabbed her and ordered her to return to
    her car.
    A bystander, Barbara Fajardo, heard Sheila scream and saw her jump out of the car and
    run. Fajardo saw appellant chase Sheila, push her against a wall and place his hand over her
    mouth. Appellant tried to force Sheila toward the car, but he eventually let her go and fled in
    Sheila’s car.
    Appellant testified that “[t]he car was still rolling” when Sheila said she wanted to get
    out, so he “grabbed her arm” and “tried to keep her from getting out of the [moving] car.” He
    claimed it was traveling at 35 mph and testified:
    And then she pushed away trying to get out of the car, and her
    finger went in my mouth and cut my lip. Accidentally, I must have
    snapped down on it, and she snatched it out by the time I snapped
    down on it. . . . Then she ran out of the car.
    Continuing, appellant testified: “Then I went and grabbed her, asked her what’s she doing.”
    Regarding the finger, appellant stated, “She was trying to push to get away from me, and I
    clamped down on her about the same time she snatched it out of my mouth.” Appellant denied
    grabbing her hand and putting it in his mouth.
    At the conclusion of the presentation of evidence, appellant moved to strike the evidence.
    As to the abduction charge, appellant argued:
    Judge, there has to be a distinct crime of abduction and any
    other offense that is committed in the same presence, Judge. Here
    we have – the highest the Commonwealth’s evidence rises at this
    -2-
    point, Judge, is we have this detention that’s taking place in close
    proximity and time to the alleged wounding of Ms. Lewis.
    Judge, the Brown case at 
    230 Va. 310
    ,1 Judge – and I have
    a copy for the Court – Judge, discusses a situation very similar to
    this, where a person is abducted and the car is taken away. The
    Virginia Supreme Court said that you can’t have a person be found
    guilty of abduction if it’s an incidental act of the predicate offense.
    So I would suggest to the Court that the Commonwealth is
    saying that the abduction took place so that the wounding could
    take place, Judge. Then, at some point, we have no evidence
    before you that allows the Court to determine there are two
    distinctive offenses, and the abduction case must fall.
    The Commonwealth argued:
    [T]he Commonwealth proved that the abduction was a
    separate and distinct crime [from] the malicious wounding. The
    evidence was that there were two abductions in this case. The first
    is the first struggle in the car that was previous to even the
    malicious wounding. The victim testified that she was trying to get
    out, he was trying to hold her into [sic] the car for a matter of
    moments, and there was a struggle there that ensued. Then the
    malicious wounding of her occurred.
    Prior to the malicious wounding, the defendant struggled
    with her. He admitted he struggled with her for the express
    purpose of holding her in the car. And we would submit to the
    Court that was because he was angry and he wanted to continue to
    verbally assault her. At that time, the confrontation became more
    violent, which is when the malicious wounding happened.
    Second, there’s another abduction that’s occurred after the
    car, after the victim was able to escape. She’s running down the
    highway and he is in close pursuit. At that time, he attaches
    himself to her body, detains her, says, get back in the car, get back
    in the car. He’s cursing her, threatening to kill her, and he’s doing
    this so that she cannot contact the police. This is a separate – two
    separate abductions, clearly distinct from the actual malicious
    wounding.
    The trial court denied the motion to strike the abduction charge, noting that the “issue of
    credibility is for the jury.” The trial court found that the
    evidence is sufficient for the jury to find that there were two
    abductions, one that occurred in the car. Assuming the Court
    credits the defendant’s testimony that he only wanted to stop her
    from getting out of a car that was rolling, when she did get out, he
    1
    Brown v. Commonwealth, 
    230 Va. 310
    , 
    337 S.E.2d 711
     (1985).
    -3-
    chased her and tried to detain her . . . . So there is clearly evidence
    of two abductions here.
    There is no issue as to restraint. The Court has read Brown
    v. Commonwealth, and the detention for either abduction – the
    abduction in the car and the abduction outside the car – are
    separate and apart from the restraint that would be employed for
    any of the other offenses. The Court also notes that in Brown, one
    of the offenses was rape, which actually requires force or
    intimidation as an element of the offense.
    So the motion is denied as to the abduction, because there
    are two acts of the defendant, either of which would be sufficient
    for the jury to find the defendant guilty of abduction. Again, the
    defendant has testified and offered no explanation as to why he
    didn’t let her get out of the car.
    The trial court granted Instruction 13, which defined the elements of abduction. It
    tracked the language of Virginia Model Jury Instruction No. G4.100. Specifically, the
    instruction required the Commonwealth to prove that appellant “by force did seize or detain
    Sheila Lewis,” that he “did so with the intent to deprive [her] of her personal liberty,” and that
    “[t]he defendant acted without legal justification or excuse.”
    Appellant proffered the following jury instruction:
    If you find that the detention of Sheila Lewis is incidental to an
    assault upon her, you may not find John Lewis guilty of abduction.
    The Commonwealth objected, arguing “it gives a presumption that there’s an assault, and
    the charges are malicious wounding. So with the saying, incidental to assault, I think that
    language clearly prejudices the Commonwealth. And secondly, Your Honor, it’s not a model
    jury instruction from out of the model instruction book.”
    The trial court refused to give the instruction, finding it did not “accurately state the law,”
    and if it did, “the Court would not have denied the motion to strike.” It also rejected the
    instruction “for the reasons as stated by the Commonwealth.”
    The jury found appellant guilty of abduction, assault and battery and unauthorized use of
    an automobile.
    -4-
    DISCUSSION
    Upon review of jury instructions given or refused at trial, our responsibility is “to see that
    the law has been clearly stated and that the instructions cover all issues which the evidence fairly
    raises.” Swisher v. Swisher, 
    223 Va. 499
    , 503, 
    290 S.E.2d 856
    , 858 (1982). When reviewing a
    trial judge’s decision refusing a proffered jury instruction, “‘the appropriate standard of review
    requires that we view the evidence with respect to the refused instruction in the light most
    favorable to [the proponent of the instruction].’” Hartigan v. Commonwealth, 
    31 Va. App. 243
    ,
    257, 
    522 S.E.2d 406
    , 412 (1999) (quoting Boone v. Commonwealth, 
    14 Va. App. 130
    , 131, 
    415 S.E.2d 250
    , 251 (1992)). Moreover, the proffered instruction “must be supported by more than a
    mere scintilla of evidence.” Gibson v. Commonwealth, 
    216 Va. 412
    , 417, 
    219 S.E.2d 845
    , 849
    (1975). An instruction that is not supported by the evidence, however, is properly refused. Frye
    v. Commonwealth, 
    231 Va. 370
    , 388, 
    345 S.E.2d 267
    , 280 (1986). Moreover, “an otherwise
    correct instruction, relating to a question to be decided by the jury, ‘shall not be withheld from
    the jury solely for its non-conformance with model jury instructions.’” Davis v. Commonwealth,
    
    17 Va. App. 666
    , 673, 
    440 S.E.2d 426
    , 431 (1994) (quoting Code § 19.2-263.2).
    In Brown, the defendant appealed his conviction of abduction with intent to defile
    following his convictions for rape and forcible sodomy, arguing that any detention of the victim
    arose out of the restraint necessary to commit the other crimes. He argued that he could not be
    punished for both rape and abduction with intent to defile because “such conduct constitutes the
    same offense . . . .” Brown, 230 Va. at 313, 337 S.E.2d at 713. The Supreme Court of Virginia
    affirmed his conviction for abduction, holding:
    one accused of abduction . . . and another crime involving restraint
    of the victim, both growing out of a continuing course of conduct,
    is subject upon conviction to separate penalties for separate
    offenses only when the detention committed in the act of abduction
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    is separate and apart from, and not merely incidental to, the
    restraint employed in the commission of the other crime.
    Id. at 314, 337 S.E.2d at 713-14 (emphasis added).
    We find no error in the trial court’s refusal of the instruction under the facts and
    circumstances of this case. Assuming without deciding that an instruction was warranted as to
    the abduction inside the vehicle, the evidence was nonetheless insufficient to support the
    instruction as to the second abduction.
    Viewed in the light most favorable to appellant, see Hartigan, 31 Va. App. at 257, 522
    S.E.2d at 412, the evidence proved that appellant followed Sheila after she fled from the car and
    “grabbed her.” Clearly, the restraint appellant employed against Sheila after she exited the car to
    flee from him was not incidental to the restraint used to bite off her finger. Because the
    instruction was not “supported by more than a mere scintilla of evidence,” Gibson, 216 Va. at
    417, 219 S.E.2d at 849, the trial court did not err in refusing it. See Frye, 231 Va. at 388, 345
    S.E.2d at 280.
    Accordingly, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
    Affirmed.
    -6-