Venessa M. Monger v. Commonwealth of Virginia ( 2001 )


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  •                     COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    Present: Chief Judge Fitzpatrick, Judges Elder and Clements
    Argued at Richmond, Virginia
    VENESSA M. MONGER
    MEMORANDUM OPINION * BY
    v.   Record No. 1926-00-2               JUDGE JEAN HARRISON CLEMENTS
    NOVEMBER 20, 2001
    COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF HALIFAX COUNTY
    William L. Wellons, Judge
    Randall J. Trost (Randall J. Trost, P.C., on
    brief), for appellant.
    Jeffrey A. Spencer, Assistant Attorney
    General (Mark L. Earley, Attorney General, on
    brief), for appellee.
    Venessa M. Monger appeals from an order of the trial court
    affirming the decision of the Department of Motor Vehicles
    declaring her an habitual offender pursuant to Code § 46.2-351. 1
    On appeal, Monger contends the trial court erred (1) in ruling
    that the second and third convictions upon which the habitual
    offender determination was based resulted from offenses that arose
    "out of separate acts," within the meaning of Code § 46.2-351; (2)
    in ruling that Code § 46.2-351 did not violate the Equal
    Protection Clause; and (3) by not allowing the rebuttal testimony
    * Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not
    designated for publication.
    1
    Code § 46.2-351 was repealed in 1999.
    of Officer Redd.   Finding no error, we affirm the decision of the
    trial court.
    As the parties are fully conversant with the record in this
    case and because this memorandum opinion carries no precedential
    value, this opinion recites only those facts and incidents of
    the proceedings as necessary to the parties' understanding of
    the disposition of this appeal.
    Under well-settled principles of appellate review, we
    examine the evidence and all reasonable inferences fairly
    deducible therefrom in the light most favorable to the
    Commonwealth, the prevailing party below.    Burlile v.
    Commonwealth, 
    32 Va. App. 796
    , 798, 
    531 S.E.2d 26
    , 27 (2000).
    In determining whether the trial court made an error of law, "we
    review the trial court's statutory interpretations and legal
    conclusions de novo."    Timbers v. Commonwealth, 
    28 Va. App. 187
    ,
    193, 
    503 S.E.2d 233
    , 236 (1998).
    The facts relative to the matters before us are not in
    dispute.   On November 25, 1992, Monger was convicted in the
    General District Court of Halifax County of driving under a
    suspended license on September 3, 1992, in violation of Code
    § 46.2-301.    On March 17, 1997, Monger was convicted in the
    General District Court of Halifax County of driving while
    intoxicated on October 25, 1996, in violation of Code
    § 18.2-266, and of driving under a suspended license on October
    25, 1996, in violation of a Halifax local ordinance.      The latter
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    two offenses occurred simultaneously.      On April 3, 1997, the
    Department of Motor Vehicles declared Monger an habitual
    offender.   Monger appealed to the trial court, which affirmed
    the determination.    This appeal followed.
    I.   HABITUAL OFFENDER DETERMINATION
    As pertinent to this case, an habitual offender is defined
    under Code § 46.2-351 as one who has accumulated within ten
    years:
    1. Three or more convictions, . . .
    singularly or in combination, of the
    following separate offenses arising out of
    separate acts:
    *     *       *       *        *      *      *
    b. Driving or operating a motor
    vehicle while under the influence of
    intoxicants or drugs in violation of
    § 18.2-266 or subsection A of § 46.2-341.24;
    c. Driving a motor vehicle while his
    license, permit, or privilege to drive a
    motor vehicle has been suspended or revoked
    in violation of §§ 18.2-272, 46.2-301,
    46.2-302, or former § 46.1-350 or
    § 46.1-351; . . . .
    Monger contends that, because her 1997 convictions for
    driving while intoxicated and driving under a suspended license
    resulted from offenses that occurred simultaneously during the
    same act of driving, they did not arise "out of separate acts,"
    as required by Code § 46.2-351.       Thus, she argues, for purposes
    of the Habitual Offender Act, her second and third convictions
    should count as only a single conviction.      Accordingly, she
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    concludes, the trial court erred in affirming the Department of
    Motor Vehicles' determination that she is an habitual offender.
    The Virginia Supreme Court addressed the same argument in
    Estes v. Commonwealth, 
    212 Va. 23
    , 
    181 S.E.2d 622
    (1971).
    There, the Court, in adopting the analysis used for a similar
    provision in the predecessor to Code § 19.2-294, said that "one
    occasion of driving an automobile may give rise to several acts
    and offenses and that the test of whether there are separate
    acts sustaining several offenses 'is whether the same evidence
    is required to sustain them.'"     
    Id. at 24, 181
    S.E.2d at 623-24
    (quoting Hundley v. Commonwealth, 
    193 Va. 449
    , 451, 
    69 S.E.2d 336
    , 337 (1952)).   Applying that test, the Court went on to hold
    that, for purposes of the Habitual Offender Act, defendant's
    convictions for driving under the influence and driving under a
    suspended license, although resulting from offenses that were
    committed at the same time, "arose 'out of separate acts'—one
    out of the act of driving under the influence and the other out
    of the act of driving on a suspended license."     
    Id. at 24-25, 181
    S.E.2d at 624. "Therefore," the Supreme Court concluded,
    "the convictions must be counted individually as second and
    third convictions, thereby constituting the defendant an
    habitual offender."   
    Id. at 25, 181
    S.E.2d at 624.
    Monger acknowledges on appeal that the instant case is
    squarely on point with Estes.    She contends, however, that the
    Supreme Court implicitly overruled Estes in ruling in Padgett v.
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    Commonwealth, 
    220 Va. 758
    , 761, 
    263 S.E.2d 388
    , 389 (1980) (per
    curiam), that the language "the same act or acts" in Code
    § 19.2-294.1 means the "same act or acts of driving."
    We do not share Monger's view.     For one thing, the Supreme
    Court was asked in Padgett solely to interpret Code § 19.2-294.1 2
    relative to a defendant who, as a result of a high speed chase
    across jurisdictional lines, was convicted of reckless driving
    in one venue and of driving while intoxicated in another.       In
    order to give effect to the statute, the Supreme Court construed
    the statute's language, "'the same act or acts,' to mean 'the
    same act or acts' of driving and to contemplate a continuous,
    uninterrupted course of operation of a motor vehicle, without
    regard to the crossing of the boundary line between two
    localities."    
    Id. at 761, 263
    S.E.2d at 389-90.   Without such a
    construction, the statute would be rendered essentially
    meaningless by the usual interpretation of "same act" that is
    utilized in Code § 19.2-294 and double jeopardy analyses.
    Furthermore, Code § 19.2-294.1 "deals only with the
    offenses of driving while intoxicated and reckless driving; it
    applies to no other criminal offenses."     Lash v. County of
    2
    Code § 19.2-294.1 provides, in pertinent part:
    Whenever any person is charged with
    [driving while intoxicated] and reckless
    driving growing out of the same act or acts
    and is convicted of one of these charges,
    the court shall dismiss the remaining
    charge.
    - 5 -
    Henrico, 
    14 Va. App. 926
    , 930, 
    421 S.E.2d 851
    , 853 (1992) (en
    banc).   It reflects the fundamental similarity of the two
    offenses, see Harris v. City of Virginia Beach, 
    19 Va. App. 214
    ,
    216-17, 
    450 S.E.2d 401
    , 402 (1994) (noting that "the commonality
    of the underlying offending conduct . . . invokes the preclusive
    effect of the statute"), and creates, as to those two offenses,
    a "special case of the general policy against conviction for two
    statutory offenses growing from the same act which is announced
    by Va. Code § 19.2-294," John L. Costello, Virginia Criminal Law
    and Procedure § 27.1-1 (2nd ed. 1995).
    Consequently, we do not believe that the legislature or
    Supreme Court intended that the Supreme Court's interpretation
    in Padgett of Code § 19.2-294.1, limited in application as it
    was to the two offenses specified in that statute, should be
    extended to the offenses and statute now before us.
    Accordingly, we conclude that Padgett has not overruled Estes,
    implicitly or otherwise.   This view is buttressed by the fact
    that this Court has, subsequent to Padgett, employed the Estes
    test in cases involving driving offenses under Code § 19.2-294,
    see Slater v. Commonwealth, 
    15 Va. App. 593
    , 596, 
    425 S.E.2d 816
    , 817-18 (1993); Treu v. Commonwealth, 
    12 Va. App. 996
    , 997,
    
    406 S.E.2d 676
    , 677 (1991), and rejected the idea of extending
    the Supreme Court's interpretation of Code § 19.2-294.1 in
    Padgett to Code § 19.2-294, cf. 
    Slater, 15 Va. App. at 597
    , 425
    S.E.2d at 818 (Benton, J., dissenting).
    - 6 -
    Thus, following Estes, we conclude that Code § 46.2-351
    requires that the three convictions necessary for an habitual
    offender determination arise from three separate acts, rather
    than from three separate acts of driving, as Monger contends.
    Here, the record establishes that Monger was convicted of three
    separate offenses arising from three separate acts.     We hold,
    therefore, that the trial court did not err in affirming the
    Department of Motor Vehicles' habitual offender determination.
    II.   EQUAL PROTECTION CLAUSE
    As pertinent here, Code § 46.2-351 provides:
    Where more than one offense included in
    subdivision 1, 2, or 3 is committed within a
    six-hour period, multiple offenses shall, on
    the first such occasion, be treated for the
    purposes of this article as one offense
    provided the person charged has no record of
    prior offenses chargeable under this
    article.
    Monger contends that this provision violates the Equal
    Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United
    States Constitution because it discriminates against those who
    have prior offenses under the Habitual Offender Act.    We
    disagree.
    As we stated in Salama v. Commonwealth, 
    8 Va. App. 320
    ,
    322-23, 
    380 S.E.2d 433
    , 434 (1989) (citations and internal
    quotation marks omitted):
    The fourteenth amendment does not
    prohibit classifications in legislative
    enactments. Legislative classifications
    are, however, subject to judicial review.
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    . . . [C]lassifications not involving
    fundamental rights or inherently suspect
    classifications will survive an equal
    protection challenge if they bear a
    reasonable relation to a legitimate
    governmental objective. This standard of
    review is highly deferential and such
    legislative classifications are presumed
    valid. Classifications will not be deemed
    unconstitutional just because they result in
    some statutory discrimination or inequality.
    Monger acknowledges that the privilege of driving, while
    important, is not a fundamental right.     See Lockett v.
    Commonwealth, 
    17 Va. App. 488
    , 491, 
    438 S.E.2d 497
    , 499 (1993).
    Accordingly, the appropriate legal standard for determining
    whether the statutory classification challenged by Monger
    violates the Equal Protection Clause is the "rational basis"
    test.     See Etheridge v. Med. Ctr. Hosps., 
    237 Va. 87
    , 103, 
    376 S.E.2d 525
    , 534 (1989).    "The rational basis test is satisfied
    'if the legislature could have reasonably concluded that the
    challenged classification would promote a legitimate state
    purpose.'"     
    Id. at 104, 376
    S.E.2d at 534 (quoting Exxon Corp.
    v. Eagerton, 
    462 U.S. 176
    , 196 (1983)).
    It is within the public safety function of the legislature
    to pass laws determining who may or may not drive based upon a
    person's driving history and to treat those who repeatedly
    violate the law differently from those who do not.    The purpose
    of the Habitual Offender Act is to protect the public by
    preventing those who repeatedly commit the offenses described in
    the Act from driving.     See Nesselrodt v. Commonwealth, 19 Va.
    - 8 -
    App. 448, 450, 
    452 S.E.2d 676
    , 677 (1994) (en banc).     Here, in
    enacting the subject provision of Code § 46.2-351, the
    legislature simply carved out an exception precluding the
    unintended result of having a driver with no prior qualifying
    convictions under the Habitual Offender Act adjudged an habitual
    offender solely on the basis of a single act of driving, rather
    than on his or her driving history.
    We find that the challenged provision is rationally related
    to a legitimate government interest.     We hold, therefore, that
    Monger's claim under the Equal Protection Clause of the United
    States Constitution is without merit.
    III.   ADMISSIBILITY OF OFFICER REDD'S TESTIMONY
    At trial, the Commonwealth presented evidence of Monger's
    March 17, 1997 conviction of driving under a suspended license
    in violation of a Halifax local ordinance.    Monger called
    Officer R.E. Redd, a narcotics investigator for the Town of
    South Boston, as a rebuttal witness.     The following exchange
    took place between Monger's counsel and Redd:
    Q. Officer, you work in the South
    Boston, Halifax area, correct?
    A.   That's correct.
    Q. And in that connection, have you
    had occasion to be familiar with South
    Boston's ordinances?
    A.   Yes, sir, I have.
    Q. And in that connection, you're
    aware of the fact that there are no
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    ordinances concerning traffic infractions of
    Halifax County?
    At that point, the Commonwealth objected.    The trial court
    sustained the Commonwealth's objection, ruling that the
    testimony of the witness was not the appropriate method of
    proving the existence or nonexistence of the ordinance.
    Monger contends the trial court erred in not permitting
    Redd to testify regarding the local ordinance that served as the
    basis for Monger's second qualifying offense under Code
    § 46.2-351.   Such testimony, Monger argues, should have been
    allowed because it would have rebutted the Commonwealth's prima
    facie case that she had been convicted of three qualifying
    offenses.
    Code § 8.01-386 provides the mechanism for the court to
    take judicial notice of a local ordinance.   Monger, however, did
    not pursue this statutory method.    Instead, she sought to prove
    the nonexistence of the ordinance by attempting to introduce the
    hearsay testimony of Officer Redd.
    "The admissibility of evidence is within the broad
    discretion of the trial court, and a ruling will not be
    disturbed on appeal in the absence of an abuse of discretion."
    Blain v. Commonwealth, 
    7 Va. App. 10
    , 16, 
    371 S.E.2d 838
    , 842
    - 10 -
    (1988).   We hold the trial court did not abuse its discretion by
    not allowing the hearsay testimony of Officer Redd. 3
    Accordingly, we affirm the decision of the trial court.
    Affirmed.
    3
    Because it was never presented to the trial court, we do
    not address Monger's further argument that Redd should have been
    allowed to testify about the local ordinance because he was an
    expert witness. See Rule 5A:18.
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