Aaron Joshua Robinson v. Commonwealth ( 2006 )


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  •                                   COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    Present: Judges Benton, Clements and Beales
    Argued at Richmond, Virginia
    AARON JOSHUA ROBINSON
    MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY
    v.        Record No. 1251-05-2                                JUDGE JEAN HARRISON CLEMENTS
    OCTOBER 24, 2006
    COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ALBEMARLE COUNTY
    Paul F. Sheridan, Judge Designate
    Scott Goodman for appellant.
    Virginia B. Theisen, Senior Assistant Attorney General (Robert F.
    McDonnell, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.
    Aaron Joshua Robinson (appellant) was convicted in a jury trial of malicious wounding, in
    violation of Code § 18.2-51, and use of a firearm in the commission of malicious wounding, in
    violation of Code § 18.2-53.1. On appeal, he contends the trial court erred in refusing his proffered
    jury instruction on self-defense without fault. Finding no error, we affirm.
    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 are necessary to the parties’ understanding of the disposition of this
    appeal.
    I. BACKGROUND
    “When reviewing a trial court’s refusal to give a proffered jury instruction, we view the
    evidence in the light most favorable to the proponent of the instruction.” Commonwealth v.
    *
    Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication.
    Vaughn, 
    263 Va. 31
    , 33, 
    557 S.E.2d 220
    , 221 (2002). So viewed, the evidence establishes that, in
    April 2004, a long-standing feud existed between two groups of students at the University of
    Virginia. One group consisted mainly of members of the University’s football team, and the other
    group consisted of non-athlete students. Appellant was in the latter group, along with a number of
    his friends, including Paul Drake, John Drake, and Nathan Lacey.
    On the evening of April 28, 2004, a cookout to mark the last day of classes for spring
    semester was held on campus near Faulkner dormitory. Twenty to thirty football players and ten to
    twelve of appellant’s friends attended the cookout. Attempting to peacefully resolve the feud
    between the two groups, Elton Brown, one of the captains of the football team, approached Paul
    Drake and Nathan Lacey and conveyed his desire to cease hostilities between the two groups.
    Brown, Paul Drake, and Lacey agreed the feud was “nonsense” and that it “shouldn’t continue.”
    Subsequently, Lacey went to get appellant, who lived in an apartment in Faulkner
    dormitory, so that he could be a part of the resolution. Appellant came outside and spoke briefly
    with Brown. Brown asked him if he was “cool” with everything. Appellant responded
    affirmatively but, patting his waist, added, “[I]f you touch me or my [friends], there will be
    problems.” Perceiving appellant’s words and gesture as a threat, some of the football players
    reacted angrily. One of them, Almondo Curry, got on a table and yelled, “We got guns, too.”
    When some of the football players moved toward appellant, Lacey started leading him back to his
    dormitory, while Brown and some of appellant’s friends attempted to calm and hold back the angry
    football players. The crowd of angry football players followed appellant as he made his way to his
    apartment in Faulkner dormitory. Shortly thereafter, police arrived on the scene and everyone
    “scattered.”
    Later that night, appellant and his friends attended a “last-day-of-class” party at the Sigma
    Nu fraternity house. Around midnight, while appellant was conversing with someone in the front
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    hallway, Jamaine Winborne, a football player who had heard about appellant’s statement at the
    cookout, approached appellant and asked him why he had threatened to “shoot[] football players.”
    In response, appellant “rolled his eyes” and “kept on talking” with the other person. Angered by
    appellant’s response, Winborne “grabbed [appellant] by the throat and started choking him.” After
    John Drake was able to separate the two men, Brown pulled Winborne down the hallway away
    from appellant, and Lacey pushed appellant out the front door of the fraternity house. At that point,
    police arrived at the fraternity house and the party ended.
    After leaving the fraternity house, several football players, including Brown, Marquis
    Weeks, and Jason Snelling walked to their cars. As they neared the parking lot, they saw appellant
    coming from the lot toward them. Appellant held one hand behind his back as he approached the
    group. He appeared angry and was cussing. When appellant neared the football players, he
    dropped his hand to his side, revealing that he had a gun in his hand. Fearing appellant was looking
    “for another fight” with Winborne, Winborne’s roommate, Weeks, attempted to calm appellant,
    who “was hyped at the time.” Brushing by Weeks, appellant “went straight to” Snelling and asked
    him: “[W]hat’s up now? What’s up now?” Realizing Snelling was not Winborne, appellant
    demanded to know where he could find Winborne. Brown told him he did not know. Seeing
    Winborne was not in the group of football players, appellant “ran off” in the direction from which
    he had come. Most of the football players in the group then headed to Faulkner dormitory for an
    “after party.”
    Several minutes later, appellant returned to his apartment at Faulkner dormitory. Appellant,
    who was “visibly upset, nervous,” and “agitated,” told Noel Mukubwa, one of his roommates, about
    the incident at the fraternity party. Shortly thereafter, Mukubwa heard “extremely loud beating” on
    the front door. As the “pounding on the door” continued, Mukubwa heard “a lot of commotion like
    there were people” outside the door. Mukubwa, who was nervous “because [he] had just been
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    informed of what had happened at the party,” heard the door open and then “slam.” Concerned for
    appellant’s safety, Mukubwa went out the door a few seconds later. Stepping outside, Mukubwa
    observed appellant “immediately in front of [him]” on the landing in front of the apartment.
    Mukubwa further observed eight to eleven football players on the landing, two other people on the
    steps leading up to the landing, and approximately twenty other individuals in the courtyard below.
    Winborne was in front of the other football players on the landing. Seeing Winborne lunging
    toward appellant “with his hands out,” Mukubwa “stepped in front of” appellant to try to stop
    Winborne’s advance. Winborne “was obviously very agitated, very upset.” Mukubwa told
    Winborne and the others “to just go away” and “leave [them] alone.”
    Screaming, “[Y]ou can’t do anything about it,” Winborne shoved Mukubwa aside and
    continued his advance toward appellant. Others on the landing advanced toward appellant as well.
    As Winborne approached, appellant backed up a few steps and said nothing. When Winborne put
    his hands on appellant’s chest, appellant pulled out a gun. As Winborne turned quickly to run down
    the steps, appellant fired the gun twice, striking Winborne in the leg.
    At trial, appellant requested that the jury be given both a self-defense without fault
    instruction and a self-defense with fault instruction. The self-defense without fault jury instruction
    proffered by appellant read as follows:
    The defense argues that the defendant acted in self-defense,
    which requires that the defendant introduce evidence that tends to
    prove that the defendant was without fault in provoking or bringing
    on the difficulty, and that the defendant reasonably feared, under the
    circumstances as they appeared to him, that he was in danger of
    serious bodily injury or harm; under such circumstances, the
    defendant had the right to use such force as was reasonably necessary
    to protect himself from the threatened harm.
    If you believe that the evidence is sufficient on this point to
    cause you a reasonable doubt as to whether he is guilty, then you
    shall find the defendant not guilty.
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    Finding appellant was not entitled as a matter of law to a jury instruction on self-defense
    without fault because the evidence did not support such an instruction, the trial judge refused the
    proffered instruction. The trial judge did give appellant’s proffered instruction on self-defense with
    fault.
    The jury subsequently convicted appellant of malicious wounding and use of a firearm in
    the commission of malicious wounding and fixed his punishment at five years in prison for the
    malicious wounding conviction and three years in prison for the firearm conviction. After denying
    appellant’s motion to set aside the verdicts, the trial judge sentenced appellant in accordance with
    the jury’s verdict, but suspended execution of the five-year sentence for the malicious wounding
    conviction upon certain conditions.
    This appeal followed.
    II. ANALYSIS
    On appeal, appellant challenges the trial court’s refusal to give his proffered jury instruction
    on self-defense without fault. He contends the trial court should have allowed the jury to decide
    whether or not he was at fault in bringing on the difficulty that culminated in the shooting of
    Winborne. The evidence, he asserts, provided a factual basis for the jury to find that he was not at
    fault. Thus, he concludes, the trial court erred in ruling he was not entitled as a matter of law to a
    jury instruction on self-defense without fault and in refusing his proffered instruction. We disagree.
    The legal principles applicable to this appeal are well settled. “A party is entitled to have the
    jury instructed according to the law favorable to his or her theory of the case if evidence in the
    record supports it.” Foster v. Commonwealth, 
    13 Va. App. 380
    , 383, 
    412 S.E.2d 198
    , 200 (1991).
    Indeed, in a criminal proceeding,
    [b]oth the Commonwealth and the defendant are entitled to
    appropriate jury instructions on the law applicable to their version of
    the case. See Banner v. Commonwealth, 
    204 Va. 640
    , 645-46, 
    133 S.E.2d 305
    , 309 (1963). When evidence exists in the record to
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    support the defendant’s theory of defense, the trial judge may not
    refuse to grant a proper, proffered instruction. See Painter v.
    Commonwealth, 
    210 Va. 360
    , 365, 
    171 S.E.2d 166
    , 170-71 (1969);
    Delacruz v. Commonwealth, 
    11 Va. App. 335
    , 338, 
    398 S.E.2d 103
    ,
    105 (1990). . . . “Where evidence tends to sustain both the
    prosecution’s and the defense’s theory of the case, the trial judge is
    required to give requested instructions covering both theories.”
    Diffendal v. Commonwealth, 
    8 Va. App. 417
    , 422, 
    382 S.E.2d 24
    , 26
    (1989).
    O’Banion v. Commonwealth, 
    33 Va. App. 47
    , 55-56, 
    531 S.E.2d 599
    , 603 (2000) (en banc).
    “However, an instruction is proper only if supported by more than a scintilla of the evidence.”
    Commonwealth v. Sands, 
    262 Va. 724
    , 729, 
    553 S.E.2d 733
    , 736 (2001). “Thus, it is not error to
    refuse an instruction when there is no evidence to support it.” 
    Id. To assert the
    affirmative defense of self-defense without fault, the defendant must be
    completely free of fault in provoking or bringing about the confrontation that resulted in the killing
    or wounding. See Smith v. Commonwealth, 
    165 Va. 776
    , 785, 
    182 S.E. 124
    , 128 (1935) (holding
    that, to employ the without-fault self-defense, the defendant “must have been without fault in the
    ‘minutest degree’”). “Any form of conduct by the accused from which the fact finder may
    reasonably infer that the accused contributed to the affray constitutes ‘fault.’” Smith v.
    Commonwealth, 
    17 Va. App. 68
    , 71, 
    435 S.E.2d 414
    , 416 (1993).
    For instance, engaging in or continuing a feud may constitute fault. See 
    Smith, 165 Va. at 782-83
    , 182 S.E. at 127. In Smith, our Supreme Court held that the defendant, who maintained that
    his neighbor attacked him with a rock “without provocation” and that he shot the neighbor “to save
    himself,” was not without fault because, having engaged in a bitter feud with the neighbor, the
    defendant had armed himself “intending of course to avail himself of that protection in case of an
    encounter” with the neighbor. 
    Id. at 783, 182
    S.E. at 127. This “ill feeling,” the Court observed,
    “grew out of” the defendant’s participation in the feud, including conduct on his part that was “not
    justified but well calculated to bring about trouble.” 
    Id. -6- The same
    can reasonably be said of appellant’s conduct in this case. Indeed, viewed in the
    light most favorable to appellant, the evidence establishes that appellant was not completely free of
    fault in provoking or bringing about the confrontation outside appellant’s apartment that resulted in
    the shooting of Winborne. That confrontation was the latest episode in the bitter, long-running feud
    between appellant and a group of football players and constituted the culmination of a continuous
    series of altercations that day between appellant and those players.
    The day’s first altercation occurred at the cookout at Faulkner dormitory. There, apparently
    rejecting an offer of peace from the football players, appellant gestured in a manner suggesting he
    had a gun and warned the football players that there would “be problems” if they touched him or his
    friends. The football players responded to appellant’s perceived threat by stating they had guns, too,
    and pursuing him back to his apartment.
    In apparent response to appellant’s warning at the cookout, Winborne later confronted
    appellant at the Sigma Nu party. Angered by appellant’s dismissive response, Winborne grabbed
    appellant’s neck and choked him. A short time later, appellant armed himself and angrily accosted
    a group of football players leaving the party. Brandishing his gun, he asked the football players
    where Winborne was. It was clear to those present, including Winborne’s roommate, that appellant
    sought requital for the earlier attack.
    Following that incident, appellant returned to his apartment at Faulkner dormitory. Shortly
    after appellant’s arrival, there was sustained, “extremely loud” knocking on the metal front door and
    a “commotion” outside the door. In response, appellant, who was armed, opened the door. On the
    landing, Winborne and several other players confronted him. When Winborne advanced and placed
    his hands on appellant’s chest, appellant drew his gun and shot him.
    Appellant’s fault in the affray was established when, despite having the opportunity to avoid
    further involvement in the ongoing dispute by staying inside his apartment, he voluntarily continued
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    the conflict by arming himself, leaving his apartment, and confronting the football players on the
    landing outside his apartment. Cognizant of the anger that his perceived threat at the cookout had
    engendered and having just recently informed a group of Winborne’s teammates of his desire to
    settle the score with Winborne, appellant was clearly aware, in answering the persistent, “extremely
    loud beating” on the front door, that the people outside his door were not intending to make a
    friendly social call. In arming himself before leaving the apartment, he plainly intended “to avail
    himself of that protection in case of an encounter” with Winborne. 
    Id. Under such circumstances,
    appellant’s leaving the apartment constituted conduct that was “not justified but well calculated to
    bring about trouble” in furtherance of the feud. 
    Id. Accordingly, appellant was
    not free from fault
    “in the minutest degree.” 
    Id. at 785, 182
    S.E. at 128.
    Because the evidence in this case fails to support a jury instruction on self-defense without
    fault, appellant was not entitled to such an in instruction, as a matter of law. Thus, the trial judge
    properly refused appellant’s proffered jury instruction on self-defense without fault.
    III. CONCLUSION
    For these reasons, we affirm the judgment of the trial judge and appellant’s convictions.
    Affirmed.
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