Jones v. Commonwealth ( 2017 )


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  • PRESENT: All the Justices
    DONTE LAMAR JONES
    OPINION BY
    v. Record No. 131385                                            JUSTICE D. ARTHUR KELSEY
    February 2, 2017
    COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF YORK COUNTY
    Richard Y. AtLee, Jr., Judge
    Acting on a petition for certiorari, the United States Supreme Court in Jones v. Virginia,
    
    136 S. Ct. 1358
    (2016), vacated and remanded Jones v. Commonwealth (Jones I), 
    288 Va. 475
    ,
    
    763 S.E.2d 823
    (2014), for our reconsideration in light of Montgomery v. Louisiana, 577 U.S.
    ___, 
    136 S. Ct. 718
    (2016). Having done so, we now reinstate our holding in Jones I, subject to
    the qualifications made herein, and affirm the trial court’s denial of the motion to vacate filed by
    Donte Lamar Jones.
    I.
    In 2000, Jones and an accomplice, both armed and wearing masks, robbed two night
    clerks at a convenience store. They ordered both clerks to lie down on the floor. After his
    accomplice took roughly $35 from the cash register and the two were fleeing the scene, Jones
    shot one of the clerks in the back as she laid on the floor. The following day, Jones stated, “I
    think I paralyzed the bitch.” J.A. at 9-10. In fact, however, Jones’s gunshot wound had killed
    her. At the time of the offense, Jones was a few months away from his 18th birthday and was on
    supervised juvenile probation for a felony offense committed when he was 15 years old.
    After his arrest, Jones entered an Alford guilty plea to capital murder and several related
    charges. He executed a plea agreement stipulating that he would receive a life sentence “without
    the possibility of parole” on the capital murder charge and a term of years to be determined by
    the court on the remaining charges. 
    Id. at 45.
    The plea agreement also stipulated that Jones
    agreed “to waive any and all rights of appeal with regard to any substantive or procedural issue
    involved in this prosecution.” 
    Id. at 44.
    The trial court held a sentencing hearing and received a presentence report from a
    probation officer. The court imposed the life sentence pursuant to the plea agreement, as well as
    a 68-year term of incarceration on the remaining 10 felony charges. The sentencing order
    concluded: “TOTAL SENTENCE IMPOSED: LIFE + 68 YEARS” followed by “TOTAL
    SENTENCE SUSPENDED: NONE.” 
    Id. at 53.
    After serving 12 years of his sentence, Jones filed a motion to vacate his life sentence in
    the trial court, claiming that it violated the principles articulated in Miller v. Alabama, 567 U.S.
    ___, 
    132 S. Ct. 2455
    (2012), which was issued by the United States Supreme Court 11 years
    after his convictions. In Miller, two juvenile defendants received mandatory life sentences
    without the possibility of parole. Under applicable law, the state sentencing courts had no power
    to suspend in whole or in part either of the two mandatory life sentences. See Ala. Code § 15-
    22-50 (“The court shall have no power to suspend the execution of sentence imposed upon any
    [convicted] person . . . whose punishment is fixed at death or imprisonment in the penitentiary
    for more than 15 years.”); 1 Ark. Code Ann. § 5-4-104(e)(1)(A)(i) (“The court shall not suspend
    imposition of sentence as to a term of imprisonment nor place the defendant on probation for . . .
    [c]apital murder.”). 2
    1
    See also Belote v. State, 
    185 So. 3d 1154
    , 1155 (Ala. Crim. App. 2015) (finding that
    “because the circuit court imposed a sentence of 16 years’ imprisonment, pursuant to § 15-22-50,
    the circuit court was without authority to suspend the execution of [appellant’s] sentence”); Little
    v. State, 
    129 So. 3d 312
    , 313 (Ala. Crim. App. 2012) (holding that, pursuant to Ala. Code § 15-
    22-50, the trial court was “without jurisdiction” to impose a completely suspended 20-year
    sentence).
    2
    See also State v. Colvin, 
    427 S.W.3d 635
    , 638 (Ark. 2013) (noting that Ark. Code Ann.
    § 5-4-104 “prohibit[s] probation and the suspended imposition of sentence for the offense[] of
    capital murder”).
    2
    Miller held that “a judge or jury must have the opportunity to consider mitigating
    circumstances before imposing the harshest possible penalty for juveniles.” Miller, 567 U.S. at
    ___, 132 S. Ct. at 2475 (emphasis added). A “mandatory sentencing” scheme that eliminates this
    opportunity, Miller concluded, could be constitutional only if at some later date the prisoner is
    afforded the “possibility of parole” — not the guarantee of it. 
    Id. (emphasis added).
    Miller was quite clear about what it meant by a mandatory sentence: “Such mandatory
    penalties, by their nature, preclude a sentencer from taking account of an offender’s age and the
    wealth of characteristics and circumstances attendant to it.” Id. at ___, 132 S. Ct. at 2467
    (emphasis added). Miller thus concluded that, “[b]y making youth (and all that accompanies it)
    irrelevant” to imprisonment for life without parole, mandatory, life-without-parole sentences for
    juveniles violate the Eighth Amendment. Id. at ___, 132 S. Ct. at 2469. Underlying this holding
    was the necessary premise that it could only apply to an actual, not a suspended, life-without-
    parole sentence imposed upon a juvenile offender because only the former, not the latter, would
    involve “condemning him or her to die in prison.” Montgomery, 577 U.S. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at
    726 (summarizing Miller).
    Relying on Miller, Jones’s motion before the trial court expressly stated that it “only
    deal[t] with the Capital Murder charge.” J.A. at 56. His motion also proposed an “alternative
    option” to his request for vacatur of the life sentence. 
    Id. at 61.
    “Pursuant to Code § 19.2-303,”
    Jones argued, the trial court “‘may suspend imposition of sentence or suspend the sentence in
    whole or part’ on the Capital Murder conviction.” 
    Id. (quoting Code
    § 19.2-303); see also 
    id. at 55-56.
    The motion to vacate concluded with this prayer for relief: “Suspend the mandatory life
    sentence without parole or declare Mr. Jones’s conviction for Capital Murder void in the absence
    of any legal punishment the Court can lawfully impose.” 
    Id. at 62.
    3
    The motion to vacate, however, made no factual proffer and left the question whether to
    hold an evidentiary hearing entirely within the discretion of the trial court. The motion requested
    that the trial court “grant Mr. Jones an evidentiary hearing on the claims presented in this
    Motion” only “if the Court determine[d] there [was] a need for further factual development.” 
    Id. The trial
    court denied the motion “after review of the case file and the defendant’s motion,”
    observing that Jones presented “nothing new in mitigation of the offense.” 
    Id. at 65.
    On appeal of the trial court’s denial of the motion to vacate, we “h[e]ld that because the
    trial court ha[d] the ability under Code § 19.2-303 to suspend part or all of the life sentence . . . ,
    the sentencing scheme applicable to Jones’s conviction was not a mandatory life without the
    possibility of parole scheme.” Jones 
    I, 288 Va. at 477
    , 763 S.E.2d at 823. Thus, we reasoned,
    Miller was inapplicable to the Virginia sentencing law at issue “even if it is to be applied
    retroactively.” 
    Id. at 481,
    763 S.E.2d at 826.
    We came to this conclusion because Virginia law does not preclude a sentencing court
    from considering mitigating circumstances, whether they be age or anything else. To be sure,
    sentencing statutes specifically authorize a trial court to do so, even to the point of suspending
    entirely a life sentence so that the offender never spends a day in prison. See Code § 19.2-303.
    Nor does Virginia law make “youth (and all that accompanies it) irrelevant” to the court’s
    sentencing discretion. Miller, 567 U.S. at ___, 132 S. Ct. at 2469. Nothing in the statutory
    suspension power suggests that the offender’s youth should be legally irrelevant to the exercise
    of the sentencing court’s discretion.
    Dissatisfied with our reasoning, Jones filed a petition for certiorari to the United States
    Supreme Court arguing that he never truly had the mitigation opportunity. Despite the
    unqualified text of Code § 19.2-303 authorizing the power of suspension and our unanimous
    4
    opinion applying it to his case, Jones argued that we were plainly wrong: “Because life without
    parole is the only sentence (other than death) authorized under Virginia’s capital murder statute,
    the Virginia Supreme Court’s characterization of that sentence as ‘not mandatory’ rings hollow.”
    Pet. Cert. at 9 n.2 (emphasis in original).
    Jones’s petition for certiorari did not call attention to conflicting prior precedent or
    suggest that we had abruptly changed course in established legal doctrine governing the
    suspension power of a sentencing court. Neither did his petition put forward any legal analysis
    suggesting that our application of Code § 19.2-303 to life sentences rested upon a flawed
    statutory interpretation. Instead, he merely argued that the power to suspend a life sentence
    (even to the point of not serving a day in prison) was an insufficient “opportunity” for the
    sentencing court to take into account “mitigating circumstances before imposing the harshest
    possible penalty for juveniles.” Miller, 567 U.S. at ___, 132 S. Ct. at 2475; see also Pet. Cert. at
    13-15.
    Before ruling on the merits of Jones’s petition, the United States Supreme Court issued
    Montgomery v. Louisiana, which decided the “question whether Miller’s prohibition on
    mandatory life without parole for juvenile offenders indeed did announce a new substantive rule
    that, under the Constitution, must be retroactive.” 577 U.S. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 732.
    Montgomery held that Miller was retroactive, and thus, juvenile defendants “must be given the
    opportunity [at the time of sentencing] to show their crime did not reflect irreparable corruption;
    and, if it did not, their hope for some years of life outside prison walls must be restored” by the
    possibility of future parole. Id. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 736-37 (emphases added). 3 Like the
    3
    Montgomery acknowledged that “Miller did not require trial courts to make a finding of
    fact regarding a child’s incorrigibility” and “did not impose a formal factfinding requirement” on
    this mitigation issue. Montgomery, 577 U.S. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 735.
    5
    sentencing statutes reviewed in Miller, the Louisiana law addressed in Montgomery forbade the
    sentencing court from suspending in whole or in part the life sentence without parole in capital
    cases. See La. Stat. Ann. § 14:30(C)(1) (“If the district attorney seeks a capital verdict, the
    offender shall be punished by death or life imprisonment at hard labor without benefit of parole,
    probation, or suspension of sentence . . . .” (emphasis added)).
    The holding in Montgomery tracked that in Miller: State law cannot impose “mandatory”
    penalties that make “youth (and all that accompanies it) irrelevant” to the decision to imprison a
    juvenile for life without parole. Montgomery, 577 U.S. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 726 (quoting Miller,
    567 U.S. at ___, 132 S. Ct. at 2469). Mandatory sentencing statutes, “by their nature, preclude a
    sentencer from taking account of an offender’s age and the wealth of characteristics and
    circumstances attendant to it.” Miller, 567 U.S. at ___, 132 S. Ct. at 2467 (emphasis added). It
    was this legal preclusion that Miller and Montgomery deemed unconstitutional. If a mandatory
    sentencing statute has that effect, it can survive constitutional scrutiny only if the “possibility of
    parole,” id. at ___, 132 S. Ct. at 2469, gives the prisoner a “hope” that he will not “die in prison,”
    Montgomery, 577 U.S. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 736-37.
    Roughly 40 petitions for certiorari implicating Miller were before the United States
    Supreme Court at the same time as Jones’s petition. The Court decided them all on the same day
    and issued a two-sentence order in each case, stating as applicable, “Petition for writ of certiorari
    granted. Judgment vacated, and case remanded . . . for further consideration in light of
    Montgomery v. Louisiana, 577 U. S. ___, 
    136 S. Ct. 718
    , 
    193 L. Ed. 2d 599
    (2016).” Jones v.
    Virginia, ___ U.S. ___, ___, 
    136 S. Ct. 1358
    , 1358 (2016) (per curiam). 4
    4
    See also Baker v. Alabama, 
    136 S. Ct. 1378
    (2016); Black v. Alabama, 
    136 S. Ct. 1367
    (2016); Burgos v. Michigan, 
    136 S. Ct. 1357
    (2016); Carp v. Michigan, 
    136 S. Ct. 1355
    (2016);
    Click v. Alabama, 
    136 S. Ct. 1363
    (2016); Contreras v. Davis, 
    136 S. Ct. 1363
    (2016); Cook v.
    6
    In each of these orders, Justices Thomas and Alito filed a concurring statement
    explaining the Court’s precise holding:
    The Court has held the petition in this and many other cases
    pending the decision in Montgomery v. Louisiana, 577 U. S. ___,
    
    136 S. Ct. 718
    , 
    193 L. Ed. 2d 599
    (2016). In holding this petition
    and now vacating and remanding the judgment below, the Court
    has not assessed whether petitioner’s asserted entitlement to
    retroactive relief “is properly presented in the case.” Id., at ___,
    136 S. Ct. at 
    732, 193 L. Ed. 2d at 617
    .
    Jones v. Virginia, ___ U.S. ___, ___, 
    136 S. Ct. 1358
    , 1358 (2016) (Thomas, J., concurring).
    The concurrence clarified, without any suggestion to the contrary in the majority’s form order,
    what the remand order did not do:
    On remand, courts should understand that the Court’s disposition
    of this petition does not reflect any view regarding petitioner’s
    entitlement to relief. The Court’s disposition does not, for
    example, address whether an adequate and independent state
    ground bars relief, whether petitioner forfeited or waived any
    entitlement to relief (by, for example, entering into a plea
    agreement waiving any entitlement to relief), or whether
    petitioner’s sentence actually qualifies as a mandatory life
    without parole sentence.
    
    Id. (emphases added).
    Michigan, 
    136 S. Ct. 1358
    (2016); Davis v. Michigan, 
    136 S. Ct. 1356
    (2016); Duke v. Alabama,
    
    136 S. Ct. 1378
    (2016); Dunlap v. Alabama, 
    136 S. Ct. 1367
    (2016); Flynn v. Alabama, 136 S.
    Ct. 1371 (2016); Forman v. Alabama, 
    136 S. Ct. 1372
    (2016); Foster v. Alabama, 
    136 S. Ct. 1371
    (2016); Gardner v. Alabama, 
    136 S. Ct. 1369
    (2016); Gibson v. Louisiana, 
    136 S. Ct. 1360
    (2016); Hogan v. Alabama, 
    136 S. Ct. 1370
    (2016); Iiams v. Alabama, 
    136 S. Ct. 1370
    (2016);
    Ingram v. Alabama, 
    136 S. Ct. 1372
    (2016); Jacobs v. Louisiana, 
    136 S. Ct. 1362
    (2016); Lewis
    v. Michigan, 
    136 S. Ct. 1357
    (2016); Livas v. Louisiana, 
    136 S. Ct. 1362
    (2016); Martin v.
    Smith, 
    136 S. Ct. 1365
    (2016); Matthews v. Alabama, 
    136 S. Ct. 1366
    (2016); McWilliams v.
    Alabama, 
    136 S. Ct. 1373
    (2016); Pratt v. Alabama, 
    136 S. Ct. 1368
    (2016); Presley v. Alabama,
    
    136 S. Ct. 1399
    (2016); Reeves v. Alabama, 
    136 S. Ct. 1369
    (2016); Riley v. Louisiana, 136 S.
    Ct. 1359 (2016); Sanchez v. Pixley, 
    136 S. Ct. 1361
    (2016); Storey v. Alabama, 
    136 S. Ct. 1373
    (2016); Stubbs v. Alabama, 
    136 S. Ct. 1368
    (2016); Tapp v. Louisiana, 
    136 S. Ct. 1355
    (2016);
    Thompson v. Roy, 
    136 S. Ct. 1375
    (2016); Tolliver v. Louisiana, 
    136 S. Ct. 1354
    (2016); Tyler v.
    Louisiana, 
    136 S. Ct. 1356
    (2016); Williams v. Alabama, 
    136 S. Ct. 1365
    (2016); Williams v.
    Louisiana, 
    136 S. Ct. 1360
    (2016); Wilson v. Alabama, 
    136 S. Ct. 1366
    (2016); Young v.
    Louisiana, 
    136 S. Ct. 1359
    (2016).
    7
    II.
    On remand, Jones seeks a vacatur of his life sentence on several interdependent grounds.
    Under his view of Miller and Montgomery, Jones contends that we must order the trial court to
    resentence him to a specific term of years (not life) and to ensure that the term of incarceration is
    not long enough to be the “functional equivalent of a life sentence.” Appellant’s Remand Reply
    Br. at 9, 14. We find none of Jones’s arguments persuasive. 5
    A.
    Jones first argues that we should hold — contrary to Jones I — that his life sentence was
    a mandatory life sentence in violation of Miller. We decline the invitation to do so.
    1.
    As Jones I observed, the General Assembly has carefully distinguished between
    “mandatory minimum sentence[s]” that cannot be suspended and non-mandatory minimum
    sentences that can be. Jones 
    I, 288 Va. at 479-80
    , 763 S.E.2d at 825. 6 “Only where the General
    5
    Jones’s motion to vacate filed in the trial court expressly stated that the motion “only
    deal[t] with the Capital Murder charge.” J.A. at 56. Consequently, Rule 5:25 precludes Jones
    from challenging on appeal any of the sentences imposed on his other convictions. See Floyd v.
    Commonwealth, 
    219 Va. 575
    , 584, 
    249 S.E.2d 171
    , 176 (1978) (holding that appellate courts
    will not consider an argument that differs from the specific argument presented to the trial court
    even if it relates to the same general issue). Jones does not assert any grounds for invoking the
    “good cause” or “ends of justice” exceptions under Rule 5:25, and we will not sua sponte raise
    them on his behalf. See Toghill v. Commonwealth, 
    289 Va. 220
    , 239-40, 
    768 S.E.2d 674
    , 684
    (2015) (McClanahan, J., concurring); see also Widdifield v. Commonwealth, 
    43 Va. App. 559
    ,
    564, 
    600 S.E.2d 159
    , 162 (2004) (en banc); Edwards v. Commonwealth, 
    41 Va. App. 752
    , 761,
    
    589 S.E.2d 444
    , 448 (2003) (en banc).
    6
    See Code § 18.2-61(B)(2) (rape by adult offender) for an example of a life sentence that
    cannot be suspended. For non-life sentences — of varying severity — that cannot be suspended
    see, for example, Code §§ 3.2-4212(D) (unlawful sale/transport of certain tobacco products),
    16.1-253.2(A) (repeat violations of certain types of protective orders), 18.2-36.1(B) and -36.2(B)
    (aggravated involuntary manslaughter), 18.2-46.3:3 (gang-related activity in gang-free
    zones), 18.2-51.1 (malicious wounding of law enforcement officers or other first
    responders), 18.2-57 (certain types of assaults and batteries), 18.2-60.4(A) (repeat violations of
    certain protective orders), 18.2-61(B)(1) (rape when offender is more than three years the
    8
    Assembly has prescribed a mandatory minimum sentence imposing an inflexible penalty has it
    ‘divested trial judges of all discretion respecting punishment.’” 
    Id. at 479,
    763 S.E.2d at 825
    (quoting In re: Commonwealth, 
    229 Va. 159
    , 163, 
    326 S.E.2d 695
    , 697 (1985)). 7 What is true
    for term-of-years sentences is just as true for life sentences. Unless a statute precludes the
    exercise of such discretion, Virginia trial courts can — and do — suspend life sentences. 8 Jones
    victim’s senior), 18.2-67.1(B)(1) and -67.2(B)(1) (forcible sex acts when offender is more than
    three years the victim’s senior), 18.2-121 (property damage motivated by a victim’s “race,
    religious conviction, color or national origin”), 18.2-154 (shooting a firearm at certain types of
    vehicles), 18.2-186.4 (use of law enforcement officer’s identity with intent to coerce), 18.2-248
    (certain first or repeat drug manufacture, sale, transportation, or distribution offenses), 18.2-
    248.01 and -248.03 (same), 18.2-255 (distribution of marijuana to minors), 18.2-255.2 (repeat
    drug distribution on school campus), 18.2-270 (repeat DWI convictions), 18.2-308.1 (possession
    of explosive device on school campus), 18.2-308.2:2 (thwarting criminal background checks for
    firearms), 18.2-374.1 (production of child pornography), 18.2-374.1:1 (repeat reproduction or
    transmission of child pornography), 18.2-374.3 (certain electronic solicitation and other child
    pornography crimes), 46.2-341.28 (driving a commercial vehicle while intoxicated), 46.2-357(B)
    (habitual operation of a motor vehicle while license revoked), 46.2-391 (revocation of license for
    multiple DWI convictions), 46.2-865.1 (street racing resulting in death of another), 53.1-203
    (escape by a felon from a correctional facility). Notwithstanding the girth of this list, when
    “[c]lassifying state guidelines systems along a continuum from most voluntary to most
    mandatory, Virginia ranks the most voluntary of [Minnesota, Michigan, and Virginia].” Va.
    Crim. Sent’g Comm’n, Annual Report 95 (2014), http://www.vcsc.virginia.gov/2014Annual
    Report.pdf.
    7
    The phrase “[m]andatory minimum” in the Virginia Code “means, for purposes of
    imposing punishment upon a person convicted of a crime, that the court shall impose the entire
    term of confinement, the full amount of the fine and the complete requirement of community
    service prescribed by law.” Code § 18.2-12.1. “The court shall not suspend in full or in part any
    punishment described as mandatory minimum punishment.” 
    Id. (emphasis added).
           8
    See, e.g., Tyson v. Commonwealth, Record No. 140917, 2015 Va. Unpub. LEXIS 6, at
    *1 (Aug. 24, 2015) (unpublished) (life sentence with “all but 13 years suspended”); Hamilton v.
    Director of the Dep’t of Corrs., Record No. 131738, 2014 Va. LEXIS 201, at *1 (June 6, 2014)
    (unpublished) (two life sentences plus 68-year term sentence “with all but twenty-two years
    suspended”); Harris v. Commonwealth, 
    279 Va. 123
    , 125 n.2, 128, 
    688 S.E.2d 279
    , 280 n.2, 282
    (2010) (suspension of life and multiple term-of-years sentences to a total of “eight years of the
    life sentence for the abduction conviction”); Moore v. Hinkle, 
    259 Va. 479
    , 485, 
    527 S.E.2d 419
    ,
    422 (2000) (suspension of “all but ten years” of a life sentence); Jefferson v. Commonwealth,
    Record No. 2172-12-2, 2013 Va. App. LEXIS 311, at *2 (Oct. 29, 2013) (unpublished)
    (suspension of all but 20 years of life sentence); White v. Commonwealth, Record No. 1998-96-2,
    1997 Va. App. LEXIS 613, at *4 (Sept. 23, 1997) (unpublished) (suspension of two life
    sentences and fifteen years of a thirty-year term to “twenty years of active time”).
    9
    has offered no persuasive reason to us, either before or after Jones I, in support of the thesis that
    life sentences are exempt from the judicial power of suspension. Consequently, we reaffirm
    Jones I’s holding that, under Virginia law, “the trial court ha[d] the ability under Code § 19.2-
    303 to suspend part or all of the life sentence,” and thus, “the sentencing scheme applicable to
    Jones’s conviction was not a mandatory life without the possibility of parole scheme.” 288 Va.
    at 
    477, 763 S.E.2d at 823
    .
    2.
    Whether a state sentencing statute authorizes or precludes judicial discretion is a matter
    solely governed by state law. In the companion case addressed in the Miller opinion, the United
    States Supreme Court reaffirmed that whether a state sentencing statute is mandatory (that is,
    precludes the possibility of mitigation of the prescribed punishment) is a decision to be made by
    “state courts.” Miller, 567 U.S. at ___ 
    n.2, 132 S. Ct. at 2462
    n.2. When a state court treats a
    sentencing statute as “mandatory,” the United States Supreme Court will “abide by that
    interpretation of state law.” 
    Id. 9 9
              See also Mullaney v. Wilbur, 
    421 U.S. 684
    , 691 (1975) (“This Court . . . repeatedly has
    held that state courts are the ultimate expositors of state law. . . . Accordingly, we accept as
    binding the Maine Supreme Judicial Court’s construction of state homicide law.”); Murdock v.
    Memphis, 87 U.S. (20 Wall.) 590, 626 (1875) (“The State courts are the appropriate tribunals, as
    this court has repeatedly held, for the decision of questions arising under their local law, whether
    statutory or otherwise.”). See generally Winters v. New York, 
    333 U.S. 507
    (1948) (noting the
    United States Supreme Court’s respect for and deference to a state court’s interpretation of that
    state’s own policy considerations underlying its laws); 18 Susan Bandes et al., Moore’s Federal
    Practice § 133.14[1], at 133-17 (Matthew Bender 3d ed. 2016) (“A federal decision based on a
    federal judicial construction of state law may not preclude reconstruction of the law by that
    state’s own courts. The highest court of each state is the principal expositor of that state’s law,
    and therefore the state court may not be bound by a federal construction of that state’s laws.”
    (footnote omitted)); 22 Drew S. Days, III, 
    id. § 406.20[3][b][ii],
    at 406-80 to -81 (“Matters of
    state law are not the [United States Supreme] Court’s concern; rather, the state courts are the
    appropriate tribunals to decide questions arising under their local law.” (footnote omitted)).
    10
    It follows that where, as here, a State’s highest court treats a sentencing statute as non-
    mandatory (that is, provides an opportunity to seek mitigation of the prescribed punishment), the
    United States Supreme Court would abide by that interpretation of state law. We thus infer no
    disapproval in either Miller or Montgomery of our interpretation of Virginia’s sentencing
    statutes. Nor do we believe it proper to read into the remand order “any view” on the question of
    “whether petitioner’s sentence actually qualified as a mandatory life without parole sentence.”
    Jones, ___ U.S. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 1358 (Thomas, J., concurring).
    B.
    Jones frames his next argument in equally absolute, but flawed, terms. “Montgomery
    confirmed,” Jones argues, “that Miller requires a hearing where youth and its attendant
    characteristics are considered as sentencing factors in order to separate those juveniles who may
    be sentenced to life without parole from those who may not. Virginia law does not provide for
    such hearing.” Appellant’s Remand Br. at 8. We disagree on several levels with this reasoning.
    1.
    As Montgomery explained, the mandatory, life-without-parole sentence under Louisiana
    law violated Miller because it gave the juvenile defendant “no opportunity to present mitigation
    evidence to justify a less severe sentence.” Montgomery, 577 U.S. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 726
    (emphasis added). 10 Like the sentencing statutes in Miller, the Louisiana statute imposing a
    10
    In a post-argument submission to us, Jones contends that the United States Supreme
    Court has recently signaled a far broader interpretation of Miller and Montgomery. That signal,
    however, came from only one Justice in a concurrence to a summary opinion granting certiorari,
    vacating the lower court’s decision, and remanding without any discussion of the merits of the
    petition. See Tatum v. Arizona, ___ U.S. ___, ___, 
    137 S. Ct. 11
    , 13 (2016) (Sotomayor, J.,
    concurring) (expanding Montgomery to require “more than mere consideration of a juvenile
    offender’s age” but to require a particular finding that the offender “is a child ‘whose crimes
    reflect transient immaturity’ or is one of ‘those rare children whose crimes reflect irreparable
    corruption’” (citation omitted)). The majority did not mention this view, and two other Justices
    11
    sentence of life imprisonment on Montgomery was not subject to suspension in whole or in part
    by the sentencing court. See La. Stat. Ann. § 14:30(C)(1). Thus, as was the case in Miller, the
    state sentencing law at issue in Montgomery precluded the juvenile defendant from either
    seeking mitigation of his sentence or offering any evidence in support of such a request.
    In Virginia, however, a criminal defendant has a statutorily provided opportunity to
    present mitigation evidence at his sentencing hearing. 11 If relevant and admissible, evidence in
    mitigation of punishment can be presented unless the punishment imposed is a mandatory, fixed
    sentence that cannot be varied in any degree. 12 This principle is no less true in Jones’s case than
    disclaimed it. See 
    id. at *5-6
    (Alito, J., dissenting). Our colleagues in dissent find it relevant that
    the Court duplicated the Tatum summary opinion in Arias v. Arizona, ___ U.S. ___, 
    137 S. Ct. 370
    (2016), another summary opinion issued the same day. We are unpersuaded that either
    Tatum or Arias has any controlling precedential impact.
    11
    See Code § 19.2-264.4(B) (stating that the sentencing court in a capital case may
    consider evidence of “history and background of the defendant, and any other facts in mitigation
    of the offense” including, inter alia, the “age of the defendant at the time of the commission of
    the capital offense” and the “capacity of the defendant to appreciate the criminality of his
    conduct or to conform his conduct to the requirements of law”); Thomas v. Commonwealth, 
    244 Va. 1
    , 7, 
    419 S.E.2d 606
    , 609 (1992) (acknowledging that Virginia’s death penalty statute
    provides for “individualized consideration” of capital defendants because age is a “statutorily
    prescribed mitigating factor the jury may consider” in sentencing); John L. Costello, Virginia
    Criminal Law and Procedure § 63.5[1], at 1118 (4th ed. 2008) (“The Commonwealth may not
    attempt to preclude the defendant’s offer of evidence in extenuation and mitigation by declining
    to put on evidence in aggravation.”); 
    id. § 63.7[3],
    at 1130-31 (“[T]he trial judge must instruct
    the jury concerning the duty to consider matters in mitigation to the extent they found them
    supported by evidence of record. . . . Under the statute, the defendant’s age and grasp of moral
    considerations are relevant . . . .” (footnotes omitted)); accord Code § 19.2-295.1 (stating that
    defendant in non-capital case may present any “relevant, admissible evidence related to
    punishment”); Code § 19.2-299(A) (allowing a defendant to offer “any additional facts” bearing
    on sentencing in response to pre-sentence report offered in bench trials or non-capital jury trials);
    Rule 3A:17.1(e)(4) (allowing defendant convicted of non-capital felony offense to produce
    “relevant, admissible evidence related to punishment”); Commonwealth v. Shifflett, 
    257 Va. 34
    ,
    43-44, 
    510 S.E.2d 232
    , 236 (1999) (stating that the trial court “may be guided” by mitigating
    factors listed in the capital sentencing statute, Code § 19.2-264.4, when sentencing non-capital
    offenders).
    12
    “[U]nder the Virginia practice, the punishment as fixed by the jury is not final or
    absolute, since its finding on the proper punishment is subject to suspension by the trial judge, in
    whole or in part, on the basis of any mitigating facts that the convicted defendant can marshal.”
    12
    in any other criminal case. Moreover, Virginia’s sentencing laws — unlike the laws found
    unconstitutional in Miller — authorized the sentencing court to suspend Jones’s life sentence in
    whole or in part. Nothing in Virginia law denied Jones the opportunity to request a suspension
    and to present evidence of his “youth and attendant characteristics,” Montgomery, 577 U.S. at
    ___, 136 S. Ct. at 734, in support of a suspended sentence. Jones was never denied this
    constitutionally required opportunity. For the certainty of a plea agreement, he simply chose not
    to exercise it.
    2.
    Jones’s argument to the contrary seems oblivious to the fact that he entered into a plea
    agreement in which he stipulated to a life sentence “without the possibility of parole” on the
    capital murder charge. See J.A. at 45. 13 He also agreed “to waive any and all rights of appeal
    with regard to any substantive or procedural issue involved in this prosecution.” 
    Id. at 44.
    Consistent with the prevailing view, see 7 Wayne R. LaFave et al., Criminal Procedure § 27.5(c),
    at 86 (4th ed. 2015) (observing that “[m]ost courts, including all twelve federal courts of appeals
    with criminal jurisdiction, uphold appeal waivers”), 14 Virginia has long held that a criminal
    Vines v. Muncy, 
    553 F.2d 342
    , 349 (4th Cir. 1977). Furthermore, “[a] defendant convicted of a
    felony has an absolute right to have a presentence investigation and report prepared upon his
    request and submitted to the court prior to the pronouncement of sentence.” Duncan v.
    Commonwealth, 
    2 Va. App. 342
    , 345-46, 
    343 S.E.2d 392
    , 394 (1986). “The presentence report
    generally provides the court with mitigating evidence.” 
    Id. at 345,
    343 S.E.2d at 394.
    13
    At no point in the trial court or during this appeal has Jones asserted that he entered
    into his plea agreement involuntarily.
    14
    As most courts have held, “because other important constitutional rights of the
    defendant may be waived by plea agreement, the right to appeal, which is not even guaranteed by
    the Constitution, but by statute, should also be subject to waiver.” Congdon v. Commonwealth,
    
    57 Va. App. 692
    , 696, 
    705 S.E.2d 526
    , 528 (2011) (quoting 7 Wayne R. LaFave, Criminal
    Procedure § 27.5(c), at 75-76 (3d ed. 2007)); see also United States v. Lo, 
    839 F.3d 777
    , 783 (9th
    Cir. 2016); United States v. Rodriguez, 659 Fed. Appx. 671, 673 (2d Cir. 2016) (unpublished);
    United States v. Haslam, 
    833 F.3d 840
    , 844 (7th Cir. 2016); United States v. Betancourt-Pérez,
    
    833 F.3d 18
    , 22 (1st Cir. 2016); United States v. Fazio, 
    795 F.3d 421
    , 425 (3d Cir. 2015); United
    13
    defendant can waive “his appeal of right” if the circumstances demonstrate “his decision to
    waive his appeal was made knowingly, voluntarily, and intelligently,” Davidson v.
    Commonwealth, 
    244 Va. 1
    29, 131, 
    419 S.E.2d 656
    , 658 (1992) (accepting waiver of right to
    appeal capital conviction but applying a specific statutory exception mandating limited appellate
    review of all death sentences). 15
    In short, Jones was never denied the opportunity to offer mitigation evidence of his
    “youth and attendant characteristics,” Montgomery, 577 U.S. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 734, in support
    of a suspended sentence. He affirmatively waived that right as part of a negotiated plea
    agreement. 24 Daniel R. Coquillette et al., Moore’s Federal Practice § 611.08[4][a], at 611-84
    (Matthew Bender 3d ed. 2016) (“There is a ‘presumption that legal rights generally, and
    evidentiary rights specifically, are subject to waiver by voluntary agreement of the parties.’ A
    plea of guilty entered on the competent advice of counsel will be held to waive all constitutional
    objections to the conviction . . . unless the jurisdiction in which the case arises specifically
    permits appeals on those issues, even after a plea of guilty.” (footnote omitted) (quoting United
    States v. Mezzanatto, 
    513 U.S. 196
    , 203 (1995))). He also expressly waived his right to
    challenge his sentence on direct appeal and, a fortiori, on collateral attack. His present argument
    States v. Shemirani, 
    802 F.3d 1
    , 2 (D.C. Cir. 2015); United States v. Archie, 
    771 F.3d 217
    , 221
    (4th Cir. 2014), cert. denied, Archie v. United States, 
    135 S. Ct. 1579
    (2015), sentence vacated,
    
    2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 81872
    , at *2 (E.D.N.C. June 23, 2016); United States v. Keele, 
    755 F.3d 752
    , 754 (5th Cir. 2014), cert. denied, 
    135 S. Ct. 1174
    (2015); United States v. Gibney, 
    519 F.3d 301
    , 305-06 (6th Cir. 2008); United States v. Smith, 
    500 F.3d 1206
    , 1210 (10th Cir. 2007);
    United States v. Bascomb, 
    451 F.3d 1292
    , 1294 (11th Cir. 2006); United States v. Blick, 
    408 F.3d 162
    , 168 (4th Cir. 2005); United States v. Lemaster, 
    403 F.3d 216
    , 219-20 (4th Cir. 2005);
    United States v. Andis, 
    333 F.3d 886
    , 889 (8th Cir. 2003) (en banc).
    15
    See also Hudson v. Commonwealth, 
    267 Va. 29
    , 33, 
    590 S.E.2d 362
    , 364
    (2004); Emmett v. Commonwealth, 
    264 Va. 364
    , 370, 
    569 S.E.2d 39
    , 43-44 (2002); Patterson v.
    Commonwealth, 
    262 Va. 301
    , 306, 
    551 S.E.2d 332
    , 335 (2001).
    14
    thus amounts to a challenge that he was never afforded an opportunity to present evidence that he
    never offered and to request relief that he never sought.
    Putting aside for the moment Jones’s void-ab-initio contention, which we address in Part
    II(C) of this opinion, we fail to see how his Miller-Montgomery claim can be immunized from
    waiver principles that govern all other constitutional challenges. See, e.g., McDonald v.
    Commonwealth, 
    274 Va. 249
    , 255, 
    645 S.E.2d 918
    , 921 (2007) (holding that appellant had
    waived his facial constitutional challenge under Rule 5:25); Powell v. Commonwealth, 
    182 Va. 327
    , 336, 
    28 S.E.2d 687
    , 691 (1944) (affirming express waiver of various constitutional rights,
    including rights to counsel, to trial by jury, to sequester the jury, and to speedy trial); Brown v.
    Epps, 
    91 Va. 726
    , 737, 
    21 S.E. 119
    , 122 (1895) (observing, in a Sixth Amendment challenge,
    that it is “beyond a doubt” that “a prisoner may waive many of his constitutional rights”).
    Nothing in Montgomery undermines settled waiver principles. Nor does the remand
    order do so. As the concurring Justices pointed out, the remand order disclaims any position
    whatsoever on “whether an adequate and independent state ground bars relief” or “whether
    petitioner forfeited or waived any entitlement to relief (by, for example, entering into a plea
    agreement waiving any entitlement to relief).” Jones, ___ U.S. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 1358
    (emphasis added). We are thus free to employ traditional waiver principles applicable to plea
    agreements. Those principles, in our opinion, are dispositive in this case.
    C.
    Jones next addresses the fact that, at his original sentencing, he never asked for a
    mitigation hearing, never proffered any mitigation evidence, expressly stipulated to his life
    sentence as a condition of his plea agreement, and affirmatively waived any appellate challenge
    to his conviction or sentence. That is of no concern, Jones claims, because his sentence was void
    15
    ab initio — a doctrinal “royal flush” that outranks any lesser hands of procedural default,
    estoppel, or even judicial stipulations.
    This assertion, however, presupposes that the trial court violated the Eighth Amendment
    by accepting Jones’s Alford guilty plea and by imposing the life sentence Jones agreed to in the
    plea agreement. As Montgomery explained, a mandatory, life-without-parole sentence violates
    Miller when it provides the juvenile defendant “no opportunity to present mitigation evidence to
    justify a less severe sentence.” Montgomery, 577 U.S. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 726 (emphasis
    added). Under Virginia law, Jones had such an opportunity. 
    See supra
    Part II.B. He simply
    failed to exercise it.
    But even if, as Jones’s logic implies, the trial court — over a decade ago — had a
    constitutional duty to force Jones to violate his plea agreement by requesting a partial or
    complete suspension of his stipulated sentence and then, whether requested or not, to order Jones
    to present mitigation evidence in support of an unrequested suspension, we would not hold that
    such a violation renders his sentence void ab initio. Nothing in Virginia or federal law compels
    us to do so, and we can think of no good reason why we should.
    1.
    In this case, as in most, whether an alleged error by a trial court renders its order void ab
    initio or merely voidable turns on the subtle, but crucial, distinction deeply embedded in Virginia
    law “between a court lacking jurisdiction to act upon a matter and the court, while properly
    having jurisdiction, nonetheless erring in its judgment.” Kelley v. Stamos, 
    285 Va. 68
    , 75, 
    737 S.E.2d 218
    , 221-22 (2013). “In this context, a matter is void either because it has been null from
    the beginning (void ab initio) or because it is declared null although seemingly valid until that
    point in time (voidable).” Nelson v. Warden, 
    262 Va. 276
    , 285, 
    552 S.E.2d 73
    , 77-78 (2001).
    16
    Significantly, “very few judgments are totally void and subject to attack at any time.” Costello,
    supra note 11, § 62.12, at 1087.
    This distinction guards against the improper elevation of a court’s failure “to comply with
    the requirements for exercising its authority to the same level of gravity as a lack of subject
    matter jurisdiction.” 
    Nelson, 262 Va. at 281
    , 552 S.E.2d at 75; see also Burrell v.
    Commonwealth, 
    283 Va. 474
    , 480, 
    722 S.E.2d 272
    , 275 (2012). In this sense, a trial court has
    “jurisdiction to err” just as an appellate court has jurisdiction to correct such errors. Parrish v.
    Jessee, 
    250 Va. 514
    , 521, 
    464 S.E.2d 141
    , 146 (1995) (citation omitted).
    As subtle as this distinction may be, it has a sharp impact on criminal cases. If a criminal
    defendant fails to preserve an issue in the trial court, he can waive claimed violations of his
    constitutional right to be free of unreasonable searches and seizures under the Fourth
    Amendment, 16 of his Miranda rights under the Fifth Amendment, 17 of his confrontation and
    16
    See, e.g., McGhee v. Commonwealth, 
    280 Va. 620
    , 625, 
    701 S.E.2d 58
    , 61 (2010)
    (refusing to consider appellant’s Fourth Amendment argument based on developments in search-
    and-seizure law because appellant had not “object[ed] to the search incident to arrest below”);
    Hudson v. Commonwealth, 
    266 Va. 371
    , 375, 
    585 S.E.2d 583
    , 585 (2003) (finding appellant’s
    Fourth Amendment argument “barred from consideration on appeal under Rule 5:25” because
    appellant “present[ed] this argument for the first time on appeal”); see also Code § 19.2-
    266.2(A)-(B) (providing that a defendant waives his right to challenge the admission of evidence
    allegedly obtained in violation of the Fourth Amendment if he does not file a “motion or
    objection in a proceeding in circuit court . . . in writing, before trial”).
    17
    See, e.g., Schmitt v. Commonwealth, 
    262 Va. 127
    , 145-46, 
    547 S.E.2d 186
    , 199 (2001)
    (holding that appellant “ha[d] waived on appeal his argument regarding the admissibility of [a
    self-incriminating] tape recording” because he had not complied with statutory objection
    requirements at trial); Jones v. Commonwealth, 
    230 Va. 14
    , 18 n.1, 
    334 S.E.2d 536
    , 539 n.1
    (1985) (holding appellant’s Fifth Amendment self-incrimination argument waived under Rule
    5:25 because “he did not raise these points in the trial court, and we will not consider them
    here”); see also Code § 19.2-266.2(A)-(B) (providing that a defendant waives his right to
    challenge the admission of evidence allegedly obtained in violation of the Fifth Amendment if he
    does not file a “motion or objection in a proceeding in circuit court . . . in writing, before trial”).
    17
    speedy trial rights under the Sixth Amendment,18 and even of his right to a jury trial under the
    Sixth Amendment. 19 None of these claims, even if conceded to be valid, renders the underlying
    judgment void ab initio. Procedural default principles, including Rules 5:25 and 5A:18, still
    apply, as do traditional finality principles protecting judgments no longer within the trial court’s
    active jurisdiction. 
    See supra
    notes 16-19 and accompanying text. 20
    18
    See, e.g., 
    Schmitt, 262 Va. at 145-46
    , 547 S.E.2d at 199 (holding that appellant had
    waived his Sixth Amendment right to confrontation by not complying with statutory objection
    requirements at trial); Butts v. Commonwealth, 
    145 Va. 800
    , 806, 
    133 S.E. 764
    , 766 (1926)
    (observing that the right to speedy trial “is not self-operative” but must “be claimed, or it may be
    waived”); see also Code § 19.2-266.2(A)-(B) (providing that a defendant waives his right to
    challenge the admission of evidence obtained in violation of the Sixth Amendment if he does not
    file a “motion or objection in a proceeding in circuit court . . . in writing, before trial”).
    19
    See, e.g., Woodard v. Commonwealth, 
    287 Va. 276
    , 278, 
    754 S.E.2d 309
    , 310 (2014)
    (noting the defendant’s waiver of a jury trial in a felony proceeding); Jackson v. Commonwealth,
    
    267 Va. 178
    , 189, 
    590 S.E.2d 520
    , 526 (2004) (acknowledging that the right to a jury trial may
    be waived in trial of a capital offense for which the death penalty may be imposed); Fails v.
    Virginia State Bar, 
    265 Va. 3
    , 8, 
    574 S.E.2d 530
    , 533 (2003) (observing that a criminal
    defendant “may waive, among other constitutional rights, the right to demand counsel or the
    right to demand trial by jury”); accord Heinrich Schepers GmbH & Co. v. Whitaker, 
    280 Va. 507
    , 516, 
    702 S.E.2d 573
    , 577 (2010) (affirming trial court’s holding that appellant had waived
    its right to a jury for the liability but not damages phase of trial).
    20
    We have recognized very few exceptions to the finality principle of Rule 1:1. As our
    cases demonstrate, “we apply it rigorously,” Commonwealth v. Morris, 
    281 Va. 70
    , 77, 
    705 S.E.2d 503
    , 506 (2011), in both criminal and civil cases. We recognize only those exceptions to
    finality clearly embedded in our common-law inheritance, when a statute does not provide an
    exception to finality. See, e.g., Code §§ 19.2-303 (permitting modification of an unserved
    portion of a criminal sentence “at any time before the sentence has been completely served”),
    8.01-428 (recognizing power to modify or vacate final orders under specified circumstances,
    including fraud on the court, “at any time on [the court’s] own initiative or upon the motion of
    any party”), 8.01-654(A)(2) (authorizing petitions for habeas corpus, as applicable, “within one
    year after the cause of action accrues” or “within two years from the date of final judgment in the
    trial court or within one year from either final disposition of the direct appeal in state court or the
    time for filing such appeal has expired”), 8.01-677 (authorizing writs of error coram vobis “after
    reasonable notice” for “any clerical error or error in fact for which a judgment may be reversed
    or corrected”). In Morris, for example, we noted that “[s]ome jurisdictions have held that audita
    querela is available as a remedy to modify a criminal 
    sentence.” 281 Va. at 83
    , 705 S.E.2d at
    509. “However, neither this Court nor any English court prior to the writ’s adoption in this
    Commonwealth has ever applied the writ of audita querela in this manner. We will not do so
    now.” 
    Id. 18 Jones
    contends that unlawful sentencing orders are different. He is right but not in the
    way he supposes. The jurisdictional power of a Virginia trial court to issue a criminal sentence
    depends upon the applicable sentencing statutes. See 
    Kelley, 285 Va. at 76
    , 737 S.E.2d at 222
    (acknowledging that “the Constitution of Virginia authorized the General Assembly to confer
    power upon the circuit courts” and that “[t]he General Assembly prescribed the applicable
    punishments for criminal offenses”). 21
    There is no inherent judicial power to fix terms of imprisonment. See Hernandez v.
    Commonwealth, 
    281 Va. 222
    , 225, 
    707 S.E.2d 273
    , 275 (2011) (explaining that a Virginia trial
    court “has no inherent authority to depart from the range of punishment legislatively
    prescribed”). Thus, when a trial court imposes a sentence outside the range set by the legislature,
    the court’s sentencing order — at least to that extent — is void ab initio because the court has no
    jurisdiction to do so. See, e.g., Rawls v. Commonwealth, 
    278 Va. 213
    , 221, 
    683 S.E.2d 544
    , 549
    (2009); Royster v. Smith, 
    195 Va. 228
    , 235, 
    77 S.E.2d 855
    , 858 (1953) (noting that a sentence is
    “void” only if “the court rendering it” did not have “the power to pronounce” it).
    We clarified these points in Rawls. “Prior to Rawls, our jurisprudence had not been
    uniform in determining whether a defendant who received an improper sentence was entitled to a
    new sentencing hearing.” Grafmuller v. Commonwealth, 
    290 Va. 525
    , 529, 
    778 S.E.2d 114
    , 116
    (2015). “Thus, in Rawls we adopted a bright-line rule that: ‘a sentence imposed in violation of a
    21
    See also Code § 19.2-295(A) (“Within the limits prescribed by law, the term of
    confinement . . . and the amount of fine, if any, of a person convicted of a criminal offense, shall
    be ascertained by the jury, or by the court in cases tried without a jury.”); Smyth v. Holland, 
    199 Va. 92
    , 98-99, 
    97 S.E.2d 745
    , 749-50 (1957) (“Provisions relating to the remission of fines and
    penalties, punishment and execution of sentences, the commencement of the confinement for
    crimes, credits and allowances to convicted persons, and probation and parole, are controlled and
    limited by our Constitution and statutes.”); Wilborn v. Saunders, 
    170 Va. 153
    , 160-61, 
    195 S.E. 723
    , 726 (1938) (describing the legislative task of adopting “[p]enal laws” and the limited
    “judicial function” of “fix[ing] the amount of punishment within the limits prescribed by the
    legislature”).
    19
    prescribed statutory range of punishment is void ab initio because the character of the judgment
    was not such as the Court had the power to render.’” 
    Id. (quoting Rawls,
    278 Va. at 
    221, 683 S.E.2d at 549
    ). In this context, a sentencing order is void ab initio only if the trial court lacked
    “the power to render” it. Id.; accord 
    Burrell, 283 Va. at 480
    , 722 S.E.2d at 275 (recognizing an
    order as void ab initio when the trial court had no “power to render” it). 22
    We respectfully disagree with the dissent’s assertion that Virginia law supports Jones’s
    use of a motion to vacate in this context. See post at 44-46. The dissent offers only one
    authority in support of that assertion: Loving v. Commonwealth, 
    206 Va. 924
    , 925, 
    147 S.E.2d 78
    , 79 (1966). That decision, however, was famously reversed by Loving v. Virginia, 
    388 U.S. 1
    (1967), and neither our opinion nor the United States Supreme Court opinion reversing it had a
    single line addressing the proper role of motions to vacate under Virginia law. Furthermore, the
    issue was not briefed, argued, or decided.
    Under Virginia law, stare decisis does not “foreclose inquiry” into an issue not previously
    “raised, discussed, or decided.” Chesapeake Hosp. Auth. v. Commonwealth, 
    262 Va. 551
    , 560,
    
    554 S.E.2d 55
    , 59 (2001); see also Selected Risks Ins. v. Dean, 
    233 Va. 260
    , 265, 
    355 S.E.2d 579
    , 581 (1987) (recognizing that precedent accorded stare decisis weight is contingent upon
    “full deliberation upon the issue by the court”); Moses v. Commonwealth, 
    45 Va. App. 357
    ,
    22
    See, e.g., Frango v. Commonwealth, 
    66 Va. App. 34
    , 48-49, 
    782 S.E.2d 175
    , 181-82
    (2016) (holding that the trial court’s sentence of two years of incarceration was void ab initio
    because, per sentencing statutes, the maximum sentence was 12 months, and thus, the trial court
    lacked “power to render” the excessive sentence (quoting 
    Rawls, 278 Va. at 221
    , 683 S.E.2d at
    549)); Gordon v. Commonwealth, 
    61 Va. App. 682
    , 685-86, 
    739 S.E.2d 276
    , 278 (2013)
    (reversing appellant’s conviction on the basis that it was void ab initio as to the portion of the
    sentence that exceeded applicable sentencing statutes and thus went beyond the trial court’s
    power); Zedan v. Westheim, 
    60 Va. App. 556
    , 577, 
    729 S.E.2d 785
    , 795 (2012) (analyzing
    whether the disputed trial court ruling was void versus voidable based on whether “the character
    of the order was such that the court had no power to render it” (quoting Singh v. Mooney, 
    261 Va. 48
    , 51-52, 
    541 S.E.2d 549
    , 551 (2001))).
    20
    364 n.4, 
    611 S.E.2d 607
    , 610 n.4 (2005) (en banc). For stare decisis to apply, “the court must
    have decided the issue for which the precedent is claimed; it cannot merely have discussed it in
    dictum, ignored it, or assumed the point without ruling on it.” Bryan A. Garner, et al., The Law
    of Judicial Precedent 6 (2016).
    We made this very point about motions to vacate in Hirschkop v. Commonwealth, 
    209 Va. 678
    , 
    166 S.E.2d 322
    (1969). Claiming Loving as supportive precedent, the criminal
    defendant in Hirschkop filed a motion to vacate his final conviction and sentencing order. 
    Id. at 681-82,
    166 S.E.2d at 324. We found several reasons why the motion to vacate was improper.
    One was that our Loving decision had no precedential value on the motion-to-vacate issue
    because “it does not appear from the opinion in Loving that the question of jurisdiction was
    raised or that any motion to dismiss was made by the Commonwealth. Certainly Loving does not
    stand for the proposition that any judgment which has become final can be vacated.” 
    Id. We continue
    to hold this view. 23
    2.
    Jones claims that Montgomery’s retroactivity holding requires, as a matter of federal law,
    that we treat a Miller violation as rendering the sentence void ab initio. After all, Jones points
    out, Montgomery uses the term “void” in various places in the opinion to describe
    unconstitutional convictions and sentences. What Jones misses, however, is that neither
    Montgomery nor any decision upon which it relies holds that such violations render a criminal
    conviction or sentence void ab initio. Jones’s argument fails to appreciate the crucial nature of
    this distinction.
    23
    We find unpersuasive the dissent’s reliance on Hodges v. Commonwealth, 
    213 Va. 316
    ,
    
    191 S.E.2d 794
    (1972). See post at 42 n.9, 47. We decided Hodges on direct appeal and said
    nothing about the availability of a collateral attack.
    21
    “When a new substantive rule of constitutional law is established,” the Supreme Court
    explained, “this Court is careful to limit the scope of any attendant procedural requirement to
    avoid intruding more than necessary upon the States’ sovereign administration of their criminal
    justice systems.” Montgomery, 577 U.S. at ___, 1336 S. Ct. at 735. By using the term “void,”
    Montgomery merely said what has been said for over a century. Certain types of constitutional
    errors render convictions “void,” i.e., voidable until declared void, and thus subject to collateral
    attack in federal habeas proceedings — a precedential anchor securely set in Ex parte Siebold,
    
    100 U.S. 371
    , 376-77 (1880).
    This voidness principle was introduced by Ex parte Siebold “[i]n support of its holding
    that a conviction obtained under an unconstitutional law warrants habeas relief.” Montgomery,
    577 U.S. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 731 (emphasis added) (quoting Ex parte 
    Siebold, 100 U.S. at 376
    -
    77). 24 This conclusion, Montgomery held, also applies to state habeas review, but only to the
    extent that the state collateral-review proceeding “is open to a claim controlled by federal law” 25
    24
    Ex parte Siebold cannot be read to say that mere voidable errors can never be
    addressed by a habeas court and that a habeas court can only address void-ab-initio errors. If that
    were true, of course, there would be no reason for the habeas remedy. The all-purpose motion to
    vacate would render habeas irrelevant. But it has not been true for many decades. “Originally,
    criminal defendants whose convictions were final were entitled to federal habeas relief only if
    the court that rendered the judgment under which they were in custody lacked jurisdiction to do
    so.” Danforth v. Minnesota, 
    552 U.S. 264
    , 271 (2008) (citing Ex Parte Siebold). However, the
    Supreme Court “openly discarded the concept of jurisdiction — by then more [of] a fiction than
    anything else — as a touchstone of the availability of federal habeas review, and acknowledged
    that such review is available for claims of disregard of the constitutional rights of the accused.”
    
    Id. at 272
    n.7 (quoting Wainwright v. Sykes, 
    433 U.S. 72
    , 79 (1977)) (citing Waley v. Johnston,
    
    316 U.S. 101
    , 104-05 (1942)). Habeas corpus is “not restricted to those cases where the
    judgment of conviction is void for want of jurisdiction of the trial court to render it.” 
    Waley, 316 U.S. at 104-05
    .
    25
    See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b)(1) (requiring generally the exhaustion of state remedies before
    initiating habeas action in federal court except when “there is an absence of available State
    corrective process”); Pennsylvania v. Finley, 
    481 U.S. 551
    , 556-57 (1987) (“Postconviction
    relief is even further removed from the criminal trial than is discretionary direct review. It is not
    part of the criminal proceeding itself, and it is in fact considered to be civil in nature. It is a
    22
    and the “claim is properly presented in the case.” Id. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 731-32. Those last
    two caveats are important.
    The law of habeas corpus in this Commonwealth “is open to a claim controlled by federal
    law.” Id. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 731; see, e.g., Griffin v. Cunningham, 
    205 Va. 349
    , 355, 
    136 S.E.2d 840
    , 845 (1964) (noting that “[i]t is well settled that the deprivation of a constitutional
    right of a prisoner may be raised by habeas corpus”); Lacey v. Palmer, 
    93 Va. 159
    , 172, 
    24 S.E. 930
    , 934 (1896) (evaluating statute under which habeas petitioner was convicted for validity
    under Commerce Clause of United States Constitution). We routinely adjudicate federal
    constitutional claims that are “properly presented,” Montgomery, 577 U.S. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at
    732, in our habeas proceedings.
    The case before us now, however, is not a habeas corpus proceeding. Jones filed a
    motion to vacate in the sentencing court 12 years after his conviction, claiming that his sentence
    was cruel and unusual under the Eighth Amendment. There is no precedent under Virginia law
    for asserting such a claim in a motion to vacate. To be sure, we have never held, nor are we
    aware of any court that has held, that a motion to vacate (rather than a petition for habeas corpus)
    is a proper vehicle under Virginia law to challenge a conviction or sentence based solely on a
    federal constitutional challenge.
    If a motion to vacate had the reach that Jones asserts, the multitude of substantive and
    procedural requirements in our habeas corpus law would be permanently sidelined. See Costello,
    collateral attack that normally occurs only after the defendant has failed to secure relief through
    direct review of his conviction. States have no obligation to provide this avenue of relief, and
    when they do, the fundamental fairness mandated by the Due Process Clause does not require
    that the State supply a lawyer as well.” (emphasis added) (citations omitted)); see also McKane
    v. Durston, 
    153 U.S. 684
    , 687 (1894) (“A review by an appellate court of the final judgment in a
    criminal case, however grave the offence of which the accused is convicted, was not at common
    law and is not now a necessary element of due process of law. It is wholly within the discretion
    of the State to allow or not to allow such a review. A citation of authorities upon the point is
    unnecessary.”).
    23
    supra note 11, § 68.2[2], at 1244 (describing Virginia habeas provisions as “impos[ing] strict
    limitations on the time within which petitions . . . may be filed” and highlighting other
    procedural requirements). Statutes of limitation, as well as rules governing successive petitions,
    jurisdiction of courts to hear such claims, procedural defaults, service of process — none of these
    requirements would be relevant if a motion to vacate could be used in place of a petition for
    habeas corpus.
    Virginia law does not permit a motion to vacate that is filed in a trial court long after the
    court lost active jurisdiction over the criminal case to serve as an all-purpose pleading for
    collateral review of criminal convictions. Just as habeas corpus cannot be used as a substitute for
    a direct appeal, 5 Ronald J. Bacigal, Virginia Practice Series: Criminal Procedure § 21:8, at 669
    (2015-2016 ed.), a motion to vacate cannot be used as a substitute for a habeas corpus petition.
    Except for the narrow band of situations in which we have recognized the efficacy of motions to
    vacate to remedy orders that are void ab initio, constitutional challenges like the one Jones
    asserts must be properly presented in a timely petition for habeas corpus.
    To put the point in the framework of Montgomery, a motion to vacate filed in a trial court
    that has long since lost active jurisdiction over the case, see Rule 1:1; Costello, supra note 11,
    § 62.12, at 1087, is not a state collateral-review proceeding “open to a claim controlled by
    federal law” and does not involve a claim that is “properly presented” by a motion to vacate,
    Montgomery, 577 U.S. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 731-32. Thus, even if the trial court (retroactively)
    violated Miller by imposing the stipulated life-without-parole sentence on Jones, the sentencing
    order would not be void ab initio and, thus, subject to annulment by a motion to vacate filed
    many years after the trial court lost active jurisdiction over the criminal case. Instead, the
    putative Miller violation, if proven, would render the sentence merely voidable — that is,
    24
    vulnerable to being judicially declared void — upon review either via direct appeal timely made
    or in a habeas corpus proceeding.
    To be sure, Montgomery itself implicitly refutes Jones’s assumption that a sentencing
    order in violation of Miller must be deemed void ab initio. Montgomery held that “[a] State may
    remedy a Miller violation by permitting juvenile homicide offenders to be considered for parole,
    rather than by resentencing them.” Montgomery, 577 U. S. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 736. How could
    that remedy be appropriate for a sentencing order deemed void ab initio, given that it is a
    “complete nullity” which, in the eyes of the law, does not exist at all? 
    Grafmuller, 290 Va. at 528
    n.1, 778 S.E.2d at 115 
    n.1 (citation omitted); see also Griffith v. Frazier, 
    12 U.S. 9
    , 28
    (1814) (noting that an appointment that is “void ab initio” is “absolutely void” and thus renders
    all subsequent acts of the appointee voidable). A nonexistent nullity cannot be resurrected by
    some future, uncertain event. In this respect, the Montgomery remedy is irreconcilable with the
    dissent’s claim that a violation of Miller ipso facto renders the sentence void ab initio.
    While the dissent correctly points out that nowhere does Montgomery specifically state
    that habeas relief is the sole remedy available to address an unconstitutional sentence, that point
    is directed to the wrong question. The proper mode of collaterally attacking a criminal
    conviction and sentence in a state court depends on state law not federal law. See Danforth v.
    Minnesota, 
    552 U.S. 264
    , 288 (2008) (“[T]he remedy a state court chooses to provide its citizens
    for violations of the Federal Constitution is primarily a question of state law.” (citation omitted));
    Pace v. DiGuglielmo, 
    544 U.S. 408
    , 414 (2005) (affirming procedural timelines for
    postconviction relief under state law and holding that “[w]hen a postconviction petition is
    untimely under state law, ‘that [is] the end of the matter’ for purposes of [federal habeas
    review]” (citation omitted)); O’Sullivan v. Boerckel, 
    526 U.S. 838
    , 847-48 (1999) (noting that
    25
    “there is nothing in the exhaustion doctrine requiring federal courts to ignore a state law or rule
    providing that a given procedure is not available”). We thus would not expect Montgomery to
    say anything about the exclusivity of state habeas relief in Virginia courts.
    What Montgomery did say was that a life-without-parole sentence invalidated by Miller
    must be corrected in any state collateral-review proceeding that “is open to a claim controlled by
    federal law,” assuming that the “claim is properly presented in the case.” Montgomery, 577 U.S.
    at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 731-32. In Virginia, a Miller violation can be addressed on direct review or
    in a habeas proceeding. Because the violation, if proven, does not render the sentence void ab
    initio but merely voidable, it cannot be addressed by a motion to vacate filed years after the
    sentence became final. See Costello, supra note 11, § 62.12, at 1087 (noting that “a voidable
    judgment may be attacked only while the trial court that rendered it still has jurisdiction”).
    The dissent appears to believe that every substantive constitutional rule held to be
    retroactive, when violated, renders the conviction or sentence void ab initio. See post at 41
    (referring to this as the “general approach”). However, only one case cited by the dissent uses
    the “void ab initio” expression, United States v. Johnson, 
    457 U.S. 537
    , 550 (1982), and that
    case, like Siebold, addressed only a federal court’s retroactive use of a new substantive rule in
    the context of federal habeas law.
    Even in that context, Johnson synthesized earlier precedent that applied the “notion” of
    “void ab initio” judgments (an after-the-fact characterization, given that none of those cases used
    that term) only to situations in which a federal habeas court applies a constitutional guarantee
    that either “immunizes a defendant’s conduct from punishment” or prevents a “trial from taking
    place at all.” 
    Id. at 550-51
    (citing cases barring punishment of a defendant invoking the Fifth
    Amendment and cases barring prosecutions violative of the Double Jeopardy Clause); see also
    
    26 Mackey v
    . United States, 
    401 U.S. 667
    , 692-93 & nn.7-8 (1971) (Harlan, J., concurring)
    (observing that habeas review historically applied only to cases in which the challenged
    conviction involved “conduct beyond the power of the criminal law-making authority to
    proscribe” in a way that “punish[ed] for conduct that is constitutionally protected”).
    Nothing in the void-ab-initio “notion” in Johnson sought to dictate how state law governs
    the scope and availability of collateral remedies or to mandate that violations of retroactive
    substantive rules be treated as defects in subject-matter jurisdiction for purposes of motions to
    vacate filed in state courts. The “general approach” referred to by the dissent, post at 41, is
    nothing more than the unremarkable fact that habeas courts applying substantive rules
    retroactively have authority to declare violative convictions or sentences to be void and to order
    appropriate relief. None of these cases hold that state courts must permit such challenges to go
    forward outside the parameters of a properly filed habeas petition.
    D.
    Finally, our colleagues in dissent raise several points about the interplay between Miller
    and Montgomery that go considerably beyond Jones’s position in this appeal. We respect these
    views and offer a brief explanation as to why we cannot agree with them.
    1.
    First, the dissent adopts an “expanded” analysis of Montgomery, post at 33, contending
    that Montgomery “require[s] a Miller hearing before a juvenile offender can be sentenced to life
    without parole, regardless of whether the sentence is mandatory or discretionary,” post at 36
    (emphasis added). This fulsome expansion, however, does not come from Montgomery’s
    expansive interpretation of Miller. It comes from the dissent’s expansive interpretation of
    Montgomery. As the dissent candidly acknowledges: “Even if Miller and Montgomery did not
    27
    expressly require the facts surrounding Jones’s sentencing be reconsidered, I would hold that
    juveniles in Virginia facing a sentence of life without parole should be afforded a Miller hearing,
    for the reasons stated in Montgomery.” Post at 47 n.11.
    We view the debate through a different prism. “We are duty bound,” of course, “to
    enforce the Eighth Amendment consistent with the holdings of the highest court in the land.”
    Vasquez v. Commonwealth, 
    291 Va. 232
    , 242, 
    781 S.E.2d 920
    , 926 (2016). However, our “duty
    to follow binding precedent is fixed upon case-specific holdings, not general expressions in an
    opinion that exceed the scope of a specific holding.” 
    Id. We believe
    “the very concept of
    binding precedent presupposes that courts are ‘bound by holdings, not language.’” 
    Id. at 242-43,
    781 S.E.2d at 926 (quoting Alexander v. Sandoval, 
    532 U.S. 275
    , 282 (2001)). This limiting
    principle exists because “words [in judicial] opinions are to be read in the light of the facts of the
    case under discussion.” Armour & Co. v. Wantock, 
    323 U.S. 126
    , 133 (1944); see also Ameur v.
    Gates, 
    759 F.3d 317
    , 324 (4th Cir. 2014).
    As we recently stated, Miller “held that ‘mandatory life-without-parole sentences for
    juveniles violate the Eighth Amendment.” 
    Vasquez, 291 Va. at 240-41
    , 781 S.E.2d at 925
    (quoting Miller, 567 U.S. at ___, 132 S. Ct. at 2464). The main “question” for decision in
    Montgomery was equally clear: “whether Miller’s prohibition on mandatory life without parole
    for juvenile offenders” should be applied retroactively. Montgomery, 577 U.S. at ___, 136 S. Ct.
    at 732. Both cases addressed mandatory life sentences without possibility of parole. The
    dissent’s proposed expansion of these holdings to non-mandatory life sentences — based entirely
    on dicta in Montgomery — requires attenuated reasoning uninfluenced by stare decisis. 26
    26
    In his Montgomery dissent, Justice Scalia asserted that the majority opinion employed
    dicta not for the purpose of “applying Miller, but rewriting it.” Montgomery, 577 U.S. at ___,
    136 S. Ct. at 743 (Scalia, J., dissenting). Our colleagues in dissent apparently endorse this view.
    28
    We acknowledge that, perhaps, some post-Montgomery opinion from the United States
    Supreme Court might expand the Eighth Amendment to “mandatory or discretionary” juvenile
    life sentences generally, as the dissent proposes, with the evident purpose of moving the bar so
    high that all life sentences for convicted juvenile murderers and rapists, or juveniles convicted of
    other similarly serious crimes, eventually will be judicially deemed cruel and unusual
    punishment as a matter of law. The question before us, however, “is what the law is now, not
    what it may be in the future. We are not in the speculative business of plotting the future course
    of federal precedents.” Clark v. Virginia Dep’t of State Police, 292 Va. ___, ___, 
    793 S.E.2d 1
    ,
    7 (2016); cf. Garcia v. Texas, 
    564 U.S. 940
    , 941 (2011) (“Our task is to rule on what the law is,
    not what it might eventually be.”).
    2.
    Second, the dissent sees our analysis as a logical conundrum. Miller cannot be
    understood, the dissent suggests, to apply only to a mandatory sentence of life without possibility
    of parole. This “interpretation of Miller and Montgomery,” the dissent states, “renders the
    requirement that a sentencing court hold a hearing and ‘consider a juvenile offender’s youth and
    attendant characteristics’ contingent upon whether the sentence to be imposed is mandatory
    rather than discretionary.” Post at 35. Continuing this syllogism, the dissent adds, “[b]y that
    same logic, the majority concludes that a sentencing court may, but is not constitutionally
    required to, consider those factors if the sentence is discretionary.” Post at 35-36.
    We do not endorse this logic or attempt to defend it. Our understanding of Miller is
    different — and far clearer — than the thesis criticized by the dissent. Under our view, the
    Post at 33 n.2 (noting that the “resultant expansion of Miller did not go unnoticed by the
    dissenters” in Montgomery). On this point, we concur with Justice Ginsburg, who aptly
    observed that “Cassandra-like predictions in dissent are not a sure guide to the breadth of the
    majority’s ruling.” Lee v. Kemna, 
    534 U.S. 362
    , 386 (2002) (citation omitted). That observation
    is particularly poignant when the predictions are based upon nonbinding dicta.
    29
    whole point of Miller was to preclude a sentencing scheme from imposing a mandatory life-
    without-parole sentence because doing so would eliminate the sentencing court’s discretion to
    impose anything less than that. Only in those nondiscretionary sentencing schemes are the
    offender’s “youth and attendant characteristics,” Montgomery, 577 U.S. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 734,
    truly irrelevant.
    The Miller remedy was to require mandatory life sentences to be accompanied by the
    possibility of release on parole at some future date. See Miller, 567 U.S. at ___, ___, 132 S. Ct.
    at 2469, 2474-75. If that possibility exists, the Miller decision held, there could be no Eighth
    Amendment violation. Montgomery added another remedy in cases in which no parole
    possibility exists: an opportunity upon resentencing to conduct an evidentiary hearing on the
    offender’s youth and attendant characteristics. See Montgomery, 577 U.S. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at
    736-37.
    Those are the only two scenarios: (i) mandatory life-without-parole sentences that can be
    remedied by the availability of parole and (ii) those for which parole is unavailable and which
    therefore require remand for discretionary resentencing. Both the Miller and Montgomery
    remedies presuppose that the original life sentence was mandatory such that no mitigating
    evidence presented at the original sentencing hearing could have precluded the entry of a
    mandatory sentencing order “condemning him or her to die in prison.” Id. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at
    726 (summarizing Miller). Without this predicate, neither remedy makes sense.
    Our dissenting colleagues think that we leave out a third scenario, one in which a purely
    discretionary sentencing scheme does not require consideration of a juvenile offender’s youth
    and attendant characteristics. Under our approach, the dissent warns, a sentencing court could
    choose to ignore these factors if the sentence is discretionary.
    30
    We respond by pointing out the unrealistic nature of that scenario. We are aware of no
    statute in the nation that authorizes a sentencing court to use its discretion to impose a life-
    without-parole punishment on a juvenile but forbids the court from considering the juvenile’s
    “youth and attendant characteristics.” Id. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 734. Nor are we aware of any
    case — and this is certainly not one — in which a sentencing statute gave the juvenile offender
    the opportunity to present mitigating evidence but the sentencing court arbitrarily refused to
    consider it. If there were such a case, we would not need the Eighth Amendment to remedy the
    obvious error. We would simply hold that the trial court cannot arbitrarily refuse to consider
    relevant evidence that a statute requires the court to consider. 
    See supra
    notes 11-12 and
    accompanying text.
    If Montgomery actually held what the dissent supposes, Montgomery would, ironically,
    not amplify Miller but reverse it. A mere future, potential opportunity to present mitigating
    evidence at a parole hearing (the remedy authorized by Miller) would never be enough to satisfy
    the Eighth Amendment under the dissent’s view of Montgomery. That is because, under the
    dissent’s “expanded” analysis of Montgomery, post at 33, only the consideration of mitigation
    evidence at the time of sentencing or resentencing would suffice — rendering the dissent’s
    reasoning in conflict with basic voidness doctrine. A judicial order that is void ab initio, in the
    eyes of the law, never existed. It might be possible to resurrect a legally dead ruling (one later
    declared void) but not one that never existed in the first place (one void ab initio). So, too, if a
    sentencing order were truly void ab initio, it could not be cured by the hope that, sometime in the
    distant future, a parole board may release the prisoner from the void-ab-initio sentence.
    31
    III.
    Having reconsidered Jones I in light of Montgomery, we reinstate our holding in Jones I,
    subject to the qualifications made herein, and affirm the trial court’s denial of Jones’s motion to
    vacate. 27
    Affirmed.
    JUSTICE POWELL, with whom JUSTICE GOODWYN and JUSTICE MIMS join, dissenting.
    When this Court first analyzed Jones’s claim, we held as the majority states: that Jones’s
    sentence was not a mandatory life sentence. Jones v. Commonwealth (Jones I), 
    288 Va. 475
    ,
    481, 
    763 S.E.2d 823
    , 826 (2014). I continue to agree with this part of the holding. However, in
    light of the Supreme Court’s recent decision in Montgomery v. Louisiana, 577 U.S. ___, 136 S.
    Ct. 718 (2016), I can no longer agree with that portion of Jones I where we held that, because
    Jones’s sentence was not a mandatory life sentence, the holding of Miller v. Alabama, 567 U.S.
    ___, 
    132 S. Ct. 2455
    (2012), does not apply.
    27
    Our rulings substantially track the successful reasoning of the original appellate brief
    filed by the Attorney General as it related to the issues addressed in Jones I. After the
    Montgomery remand, however, the Attorney General has taken a different view and now
    suggests that we should remand the case to the trial court for an additional evidentiary hearing to
    consider youth-based mitigation evidence — evidence Jones failed to present at his original
    sentencing hearing due to the stipulated sentence in his plea agreement. The Attorney General
    interprets Montgomery to require this result. Every aspect of the Attorney General’s change of
    position, however, involves purely legal issues on which we must give our de novo judgment.
    See generally Gibson v. United States, 
    329 U.S. 338
    , 344 n.9 (1946) (“A confession of error . . .
    does not relieve this Court of the performance of the judicial function” because “our judicial
    obligations compel us to examine independently the errors confessed.” (citation omitted)); Young
    v. United States, 
    315 U.S. 257
    , 259 (1942) (“[O]ur judgments are precedents, and the proper
    administration of the criminal law cannot be left merely to the stipulation of parties.”); CVAS 2,
    LLC v. City of Fredericksburg, 
    289 Va. 100
    , 117 n.5, 
    766 S.E.2d 912
    , 919 n.5 (2015) (“[A] party
    cannot concede the law.”).
    32
    In Montgomery, the Supreme Court purposefully clarified and, in my opinion, expanded
    the holding in Miller, thereby revealing why this Court’s previous interpretation of Miller in
    Jones I was misguided. The Supreme Court’s analysis in Montgomery transparently explains
    why Miller is not limited to juvenile offenders facing or serving mandatory life sentences
    without parole. Montgomery explicitly requires that a Miller hearing be held before a life
    sentence without parole may be imposed upon a juvenile offender in order to comply with the
    strictures of the Eighth Amendment. In the absence of such a hearing, the sentence is in
    violation of the juvenile’s substantive constitutional rights and a court is without jurisdiction to
    impose a life sentence without parole on a juvenile offender. Therefore, such a sentence is void
    ab initio. Accordingly, I must respectfully dissent. 1
    I. Mandatory Life Sentences
    It is important to first address the basis of my opinion that, contrary to the majority
    opinion, Miller is not limited to mandatory life sentences. As Montgomery makes explicitly
    clear, Miller “rendered life without parole an unconstitutional penalty for ‘a class of defendants
    because of their status’—that is, juvenile offenders whose crimes reflect the transient immaturity
    of youth.” 577 U.S. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 734 (quoting Miller, 567 U.S. at ___, 132 S. Ct. at
    2469) (emphasis added). See also 
    id. (“Miller .
    . . bar[red] life without parole . . . for all but the
    rarest of juvenile offenders, those whose crimes reflect permanent incorrigibility.”). 2 Thus,
    Montgomery made it clear that the focus of Miller was not that only mandatory life sentences are
    1
    With regard to the collateral review of Jones’s other sentences, I agree with the majority
    that Rule 5:25 bars our consideration of those sentences.
    2
    Although the majority in this Court fails to recognize the significance of Montgomery,
    its resultant expansion of Miller did not go unnoticed by the dissenters in the Supreme Court. As
    Justice Scalia colloquially put it, “[i]t is plain as day that the majority is not applying Miller, but
    rewriting it.” Montgomery, 577 U.S. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 743 (Scalia J. dissenting).
    33
    unconstitutional; rather, it is that the Eighth Amendment requires individualized consideration
    before a juvenile can be sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.
    To ensure such individualized consideration, the Supreme Court expressly mandated that
    a sentencing court is required to “take into account how children are different, and how those
    differences counsel against irrevocably sentencing them to a lifetime in prison” before imposing
    a life sentence upon a juvenile. Miller, 567 U.S. at ___, 132 S. Ct. at 2469. As the Supreme
    Court explained in Montgomery, such a hearing is vitally important, as the hearing “gives effect
    to Miller’s substantive holding that life without parole is an excessive sentence for children
    whose crimes reflect transient immaturity.” 577 U.S. ___, 136 S. Ct. at 735. This is because
    “[a] hearing where ‘youth and its attendant characteristics’ are considered as sentencing factors
    is necessary to separate those juveniles who may be sentenced to life without parole from those
    who may not.” 
    Id. (quoting Miller,
    567 U.S. at ___, 132 S. Ct. at 2460).
    Thus, when viewed through the lens of Montgomery, it is clear that Miller’s discussion of
    mandatory life sentences was not meant to limit application of the opinion to that instance, but
    rather to demonstrate how mandatory sentencing schemes foreclose the necessary individualized
    consideration.
    Mandatory life without parole for a juvenile precludes
    consideration of his chronological age and its hallmark features--
    among them, immaturity, impetuosity, and failure to appreciate
    risks and consequences. It prevents taking into account the family
    and home environment that surrounds him--and from which he
    cannot usually extricate himself--no matter how brutal or
    dysfunctional. It neglects the circumstances of the homicide
    offense, including the extent of his participation in the conduct and
    the way familial and peer pressures may have affected him.
    Indeed, it ignores that he might have been charged and convicted
    of a lesser offense if not for incompetencies associated with youth-
    -for example, his inability to deal with police officers or
    prosecutors (including on a plea agreement) or his incapacity to
    assist his own attorneys. And finally, this mandatory punishment
    34
    disregards the possibility of rehabilitation even when the
    circumstances most suggest it.
    Miller, 567 U.S. at ___, 132 S. Ct. at 2468 (citations omitted).
    The majority, however, contends that Montgomery’s express language barring life
    without parole for all but the rarest of juvenile offenders is not binding upon it because the
    question before the Court in Montgomery was limited to “‘whether Miller’s prohibition on
    mandatory life without parole for juvenile offenders’ should be applied retroactively.” (Quoting
    Montgomery, 577 U.S. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 732.) Thus, the majority insists that the precedential
    holding in Montgomery amounts simply to: Miller is retroactive.
    By truncating its analysis, the majority ignores the rationale underlying the Supreme
    Court’s decision. As the Supreme Court explains, the reason Miller is retroactive is because it
    announced a substantive rule of constitutional law that “rendered life without parole an
    unconstitutional penalty for ‘a class of defendants because of their status’—that is, juvenile
    offenders whose crimes reflect the transient immaturity of youth.” Montgomery, 577 U.S. at
    ___, 136 S. Ct. at 734 (quoting Miller, 567 U.S., at ___, 132 S. Ct. at 2469).
    Further, the majority’s interpretation of Miller and Montgomery renders the requirement
    that a sentencing court hold a hearing and “consider a juvenile offender’s youth and attendant
    characteristics before determining that life without parole is a proportionate sentence” contingent
    upon whether the sentence to be imposed is mandatory rather than discretionary. Under the
    majority’s interpretation, the factors that serve as the very basis of the substantive holding of
    Miller are only constitutionally required to be considered when a sentence is mandatory. By that
    same logic, the majority concludes that a sentencing court may, but is not constitutionally
    35
    required to, consider those factors if the sentence is discretionary. 3 I find it highly unlikely that
    the Supreme Court would tolerate any life sentence without parole to be imposed upon a juvenile
    without consideration of the relevant factors, especially considering that “the penological
    justifications for life without parole collapse in light of ‘the distinctive attributes of youth.’”
    Montgomery, 577 U.S. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 734 (quoting Miller, 567 U.S. at ___, 132 S. Ct. at
    2465). 4 Yet the majority concludes that this substantive constitutional right does not extend to
    juveniles facing discretionary life sentences without the possibility of parole. The more logical
    approach, and the approach I believe is required by Montgomery, would be to require a Miller
    hearing before a juvenile offender can be sentenced to life without parole, regardless of whether
    the sentence is mandatory or discretionary, thus affording the same constitutional protections to
    all juvenile offenders. 5
    3
    That is not to say that a sentencing court would be forbidden from considering these
    factors or that it could arbitrarily ignore them if presented with mitigating evidence related to
    these factors. Rather, I am simply pointing out that, under the majority’s view, a court imposing
    a discretionary life sentence without parole would not be required to hold a hearing and
    specifically consider all of the same factors to the same degree as a court imposing a mandatory
    life sentence without parole because Miller does not apply.
    4
    As further support for the proposition that the hearing requirement of Miller applies to
    all situations where a juvenile homicide offender is facing a sentence of life without parole, the
    Court need look no further than the Supreme Court’s recent summary opinion in Arias v.
    Arizona, ___ U.S. ___, 
    137 S. Ct. 370
    (2016). In Arias, the defendant sought review of his life
    sentence without parole under Miller. State v. Arias, 2015 Ariz. App. Unpub. LEXIS 658 (Ariz.
    Ct. App. 2015). The Court of Appeals of Arizona denied relief on the sole basis that Miller did
    not apply because the defendant’s life sentence was not mandatory. 
    Id. at *3.
    Given that the
    Supreme Court summarily vacated and remanded the judgment in Arias, the only logical
    interpretation for this action is that a majority of the Supreme Court interprets Montgomery as
    expanding Miller to apply to all cases where a juvenile is sentenced to life without parole, not
    just those cases where the sentence is mandatory.
    5
    For those juvenile offenders who were already sentenced to life without parole and did
    not receive the benefit of a Miller hearing, I agree with the majority’s characterization that this
    would require a resentencing either to impose a sentence where parole is available or to provide
    for a Miller hearing.
    36
    II. Miller Hearing
    Next, the majority takes the position that Miller and Montgomery require only that a
    defendant have the opportunity to offer mitigation evidence of his youth and attendant
    circumstances. Notably, the majority reaches this conclusion by relying on language taken from
    the recitation of the facts in Montgomery. 6 On the other hand, the language used throughout the
    remainder of the opinion makes it clear that the Supreme Court interpreted Miller as requiring
    more than just the opportunity to present mitigation evidence. “Miller requires that before
    sentencing a juvenile to life without parole, the sentencing judge take into account ‘how children
    are different, and how those differences counsel against irrevocably sentencing them to a lifetime
    in prison.’” Montgomery, 577 U.S. ___, 136 S. Ct. at 733 (quoting Miller, 567 U.S. ___, 132 S.
    Ct. at 2475) (emphasis added). Therefore, “[a] hearing where ‘youth and its attendant
    characteristics’ are considered as sentencing factors is necessary to separate those juveniles who
    may be sentenced to life without parole from those who may not.” 
    Id. at 735
    (quoting Miller,
    567 U.S. ___, 132 S. Ct. at 2460) (emphasis added). Disappointingly, the majority pays no heed
    to the Supreme Court’s clear statement regarding the need for such a hearing.
    If, as the majority states, a Miller violation only occurs when a juvenile offender is
    denied the opportunity to present mitigation evidence, then the entire purpose of a Miller hearing
    is undermined. The majority’s analysis ignores the Supreme Court’s admonition that “Miller
    requires a sentencer to consider a juvenile offender’s youth and attendant characteristics before
    determining that life without parole is a proportionate sentence” regardless of whether the
    6
    Specifically, the majority relies upon language describing the fact that Montgomery’s
    “sentence was automatic upon the jury’s verdict, so Montgomery had no opportunity to present
    mitigation evidence to justify a less severe sentence.” Montgomery, 577 U.S. ___, 136 S. Ct. at
    725 (emphasis added). Such language is clearly not part of the Supreme Court’s holding in
    Montgomery.
    37
    defense presents any mitigating evidence. Id. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 734 (emphasis added). The
    majority’s emphasis on the opportunity to present evidence, rather than on the need for the trial
    court’s individualized consideration of such factors, is misplaced. Even if a juvenile offender
    foregoes the opportunity to present mitigating evidence, a court does not have the option of
    sentencing that juvenile to life without the possibility of parole absent consideration of the
    juvenile’s youth and attendant circumstances.
    The majority’s approach places the burden on the juvenile offender to prove that he or
    she was not the rare exception to the rule. Notably, however, nothing in Miller requires a
    juvenile offender to present any evidence. As previously noted, because Montgomery interprets
    Miller as barring life without parole as a punishment for the vast majority of juvenile offenders,
    any burden of proof would seem to rest on the prosecution to prove that the juvenile offender
    was the rare exception to the rule.
    III. Waiver
    The majority further claims that, by entering into a plea agreement and stipulating to a
    life sentence, Jones waived the requirement that a Miller hearing be conducted. The majority
    goes on to make the broad assertion that all constitutional challenges are governed by waiver
    principles. Although I fully agree with the majority that many constitutional challenges may be
    waived, I cannot agree with the notion that a plea agreement can act as a waiver to all
    constitutional challenges. See, e.g., Hill v. Lockhart, 
    474 U.S. 52
    , 58 (1985) (holding that “the
    two-part Strickland v. Washington test applies to challenges to guilty pleas based on ineffective
    assistance of counsel.”) (emphasis added). Moreover, the majority fails to offer any controlling
    authority that supports its underlying proposition that a defendant can waive all constitutional
    38
    challenges; it does not cite to any case indicating that a defendant can waive a challenge based
    on a continuing violation of a substantive rule of constitutional law. 7
    Nor could it. The very nature of a substantive rule of constitutional law precludes such
    waiver. Such a violation occurs where “the conduct being penalized is constitutionally immune
    from punishment.” United States v. United States Coin & Currency, 
    401 U.S. 715
    , 724 (1971).
    See also Penry v. Lynaugh, 
    492 U.S. 302
    , 330 (1989) (applying the same logic to punishments
    that “the Constitution itself deprives the State of the power to impose”). Such a violation
    “affects the foundation of the whole proceedings.” Ex parte Siebold, 
    100 U.S. 371
    , 376 (1880).
    Therefore, “[a] conviction or sentence imposed in violation of a substantive rule is not just
    erroneous but contrary to law and, as a result, void.” Montgomery, 577 U.S. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at
    731.
    “An unconstitutional law is void, and is as no law.” A penalty
    imposed pursuant to an unconstitutional law is no less void
    because the prisoner’s sentence became final before the law was
    held unconstitutional. There is no grandfather clause that permits
    States to enforce punishments the Constitution forbids. To
    conclude otherwise would undercut the Constitution’s substantive
    guarantees.
    Id. (quoting 
    Siebold, 100 U.S. at 376
    ).
    Additionally, the notion that such a requirement can be waived violates our long standing
    principle that parties cannot confer power upon the court which it does not rightfully possess.
    Cf. Morrison v. Bestler, 
    239 Va. 166
    , 169-70, 
    387 S.E.2d 753
    , 755 (1990) (“Subject matter
    7
    Instead of offering any controlling precedent indicating that a defendant can waive a
    substantive rule of constitutional law, the majority relies on language taken from the concurrence
    to the summary opinion issued by the Supreme Court. See Jones v. Virginia, ___ U.S. ___, ___,
    
    136 S. Ct. 1358
    , 1358 (2016) (Thomas, J., concurring). Based on this language, the majority
    asserts that “[w]e are thus free to employ traditional principles governing waiver and forfeiture
    principle applicable to plea agreements.” Given the fact that the concurrence was written by
    Justice Thomas and joined only by Justice Alito, both of whom dissented in both Miller and
    Montgomery, I am unpersuaded that this concurrence has any controlling precedential value.
    39
    jurisdiction alone cannot be waived or conferred on the court by agreement of the parties.”). As
    the Supreme Court established in Montgomery, a trial court lacks the power to impose a sentence
    of life without parole upon a juvenile offender without first conducting a Miller hearing. 577
    U.S. ___, 136 S. Ct. at 734-35 (describing a Miller hearing as the “procedural requirement
    necessary to implement a substantive guarantee”). Therefore, the fact that Jones entered into a
    plea agreement and stipulated to a life sentence without parole is irrelevant, as neither action is
    sufficient to confer upon a trial court the power to render a sentence which it constitutionally has
    no authority to impose. I do not believe that our Commonwealth can continue to enforce a
    punishment that the Supreme Court has determined to be prohibited by the Constitution.
    IV. Void ab Initio
    The majority takes the position that not all constitutional violations render a
    conviction/sentence void ab initio, rather “[c]ertain types of constitutional errors render
    convictions ‘void,’ i.e., voidable, and thus subject to collateral attack in federal habeas
    proceedings.” While it is true that certain types of constitutional errors only render a sentence or
    conviction voidable, it is equally true that other types of constitutional errors render a conviction
    or sentence void ab initio. Under this Court’s precedent, as well as the plain language of
    Montgomery, the constitutional error at issue in the present case (i.e., a violation of a substantive
    rule of constitutional law) clearly falls into the latter category of error, not the former.
    The distinction between an action of the court that is void ab initio
    rather than merely voidable is that the former involves the
    underlying authority of a court to act on a matter whereas the latter
    involves actions taken by a court which are in error. An order is
    void ab initio if entered by a court in the absence of jurisdiction of
    the subject matter or over the parties, if the character of the order
    is such that the court had no power to render it, or if the mode of
    procedure used by the court was one that the court could “not
    lawfully adopt.”
    40
    Singh v. Mooney, 
    261 Va. 48
    , 51-52, 
    541 S.E.2d 549
    , 551 (2001) (quoting Evans v. Smyth-Wythe
    Airport Comm’n, 
    255 Va. 69
    , 73, 
    495 S.E.2d 825
    , 828 (1998)) (footnote omitted) (emphasis
    added).
    As previously explained, “[a] conviction or sentence imposed in violation of a
    substantive rule is not just erroneous but contrary to law and, as a result, void.” Montgomery,
    577 U.S. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 731. Here, it is unequivocal that “Miller announced a substantive
    rule of constitutional law.” Montgomery, 577 U.S. ___, 136 S. Ct. at 734. It is equally clear that
    the substantive rule announced in Miller must be given “retroactive effect regardless of when a
    conviction became final” because “[s]ubstantive rules . . . set forth categorical constitutional
    guarantees that place certain criminal laws and punishments altogether beyond the State’s power
    to impose.” 
    Id. at 729
    (emphasis added). Indeed, as the Supreme Court has explained, when
    applying substantive rules of constitutional law retroactively, the general approach is that “prior
    inconsistent judgments or sentences [are] void ab initio.” United States v. Johnson, 
    457 U.S. 537
    , 550 (1982) (citing Moore v. Illinois, 
    408 U.S. 786
    , 800 (1972) and Ashe v. Swenson, 
    397 U.S. 436
    , 437, n. 1 (1970)). Montgomery established that, in the absence of a Miller hearing, a
    trial court lacks the power to sentence a juvenile to life without parole. Therefore, in my
    opinion, any sentence imposed in a manner inconsistent with the substantive constitutional rule
    announced in Miller is void ab initio. 8 See 
    id. 8 In
    my opinion, the majority reads too much into the alternative remedy offered by the
    Supreme Court in Montgomery, i.e., that “[a] State may remedy a Miller violation by permitting
    juvenile homicide offenders to be considered for parole, rather than by resentencing them.” 577
    U.S. ___, 136 S. Ct. at 736. The fact that the Supreme Court suggested a remedy that some
    states “may” be able to take advantage of is not irreconcilable with my contention that a sentence
    of life without parole imposed on a juvenile offender is void ab initio in the absence of a Miller
    hearing. For example, other states may have mechanisms in place that automatically reduce a
    sentence deemed unconstitutional. Regardless, the Supreme Court’s language is merely a
    suggestion; it is not binding on the states. Indeed, as the Supreme Court explained:
    41
    Rather than address the constitutional infirmity of Jones’s sentence, the majority focuses
    on the trial court’s power to impose the sentence under Virginia law. According to the majority,
    a sentence is only void ab initio if it is imposed in violation of the range of punishment
    prescribed by Virginia law. While it is well established that “a sentence imposed in violation of
    a prescribed statutory range of punishment is void ab initio,” Grafmuller v. Commonwealth, 
    290 Va. 525
    , 529, 
    778 S.E.2d 114
    , 116 (2015) (quoting 
    Rawls, 278 Va. at 221
    , 683 S.E.2d at 549),
    nothing in our jurisprudence supports the majority’s contention that a statutory violation is the
    only basis for rendering a sentence void ab initio. 9
    V. Motion to Vacate
    According to the majority, a motion to vacate is not the proper vehicle for Jones’s claim
    because there is no precedent under Virginia law for using a motion to vacate to collaterally
    When a new substantive rule of constitutional law is established,
    this Court is careful to limit the scope of any attendant procedural
    requirement to avoid intruding more than necessary upon the
    States’ sovereign administration of their criminal justice systems.
    Fidelity to this important principle of federalism, however, should
    not be construed to demean the substantive character of the federal
    right at issue.
    Id. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 735 (citation omitted).
    Furthermore, it is worth noting that the suggestion offered by the Supreme Court was a
    means by which a state could avoid resentencing. However, assuming parole eligibility was or
    could be extended to a juvenile offender convicted of a Class 1 felony (such an eventuality is
    highly unlikely, given that parole is abolished in this state), such a sentence modification would,
    ultimately, equate to a resentencing.
    9
    It is worth noting that, on at least one occasion, this Court has, acting sua sponte, set
    aside a sentence that had been rendered unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in an unrelated
    case. In Hodges v. Commonwealth, 
    213 Va. 316
    , 317, 
    191 S.E.2d 794
    , 795 (1972), the appellant
    appealed his death sentence to this Court. After the appellant’s writs of error had been granted,
    none of which attacked the constitutionality of the sentence, the Supreme Court decided Furman.
    
    Id. at 320,
    191 S.E.2d at 797. Recognizing that the appellant’s death sentence was “nullified” by
    the Supreme Court’s decision, this Court remanded the matter “for a new trial on the issue of
    punishment.” 
    Id. at 321,
    191 S.E.2d at 798.
    42
    attack a conviction or sentence based solely on federal constitutional grounds. In the absence of
    such precedent, the majority asserts that a motion to vacate “is not a state collateral review
    proceeding ‘open to a claim controlled by federal law.’” (Quoting Montgomery, 577 U.S. ___,
    136 S. Ct. at 740.) In taking this position, however, the majority ignores a fundamental tenet of
    our jurisprudence: a void ab initio order may be attacked in any manner at any time. 
    Singh, 261 Va. at 52
    , 
    541 S.E.2d 551
    .
    The lack of jurisdiction to enter an order . . . renders the order a
    complete nullity and it may be “impeached directly or collaterally
    by all persons, anywhere, at any time, or in any manner.”
    
    Id. (quoting Barnes
    v. American Fertilizer Co., 
    144 Va. 692
    , 705, 
    130 S.E. 902
    , 906 (1925)).
    See also Thacker v. Hubard & Appleby, Inc., 
    122 Va. 379
    , 386, 
    94 S.E. 929
    , 930 (1918)
    (“Objection for want of jurisdiction of the subject matter may be taken by demurrer, or motion,
    or in any way by which the subject may be brought to the attention of the court.”).
    Indeed, contrary to the majority’s assertion, the Supreme Court’s holding in Montgomery
    is not limited to only those collateral proceedings that are “open to a claim controlled by federal
    law.” Rather, the Supreme Court explained that an unconstitutional sentence may be attacked in
    any type of postconviction proceeding where an unlawful sentence may be challenged.
    A penalty imposed pursuant to an unconstitutional law is no less
    void because the prisoner’s sentence became final before the law
    was held unconstitutional. There is no grandfather clause that
    permits States to enforce punishments the Constitution forbids. To
    conclude otherwise would undercut the Constitution’s substantive
    guarantees. Writing for the Court in United States Coin &
    Currency, Justice Harlan made this point when he declared that
    “[n]o circumstances call more for the invocation of a rule of
    complete retroactivity” than when “the conduct being penalized is
    constitutionally immune from 
    punishment.” 401 U.S. at 724
    .
    United States Coin & Currency involved a case on direct review;
    yet, for the reasons explained in this opinion, the same principle
    should govern the application of substantive rules on collateral
    review. As Justice Harlan explained, where a State lacked the
    43
    power to proscribe the habeas petitioner’s conduct, “it could not
    constitutionally insist that he remain in jail.” Desist v. United
    States, 
    394 U.S. 244
    , 261, n. 2 (1969) (Harlan, J. dissenting).
    If a State may not constitutionally insist that a prisoner remain in
    jail on federal habeas review, it may not constitutionally insist on
    the same result in its own postconviction proceedings. Under the
    Supremacy Clause of the Constitution, state collateral review
    courts have no greater power than federal habeas courts to mandate
    that a prisoner continue to suffer punishment barred by the
    Constitution. If a state collateral proceeding is open to a claim
    controlled by federal law, the state court “has a duty to grant the
    relief that federal law requires.” Yates v. Aiken, 
    484 U.S. 211
    , 218
    (1987). Where state collateral review proceedings permit
    prisoners to challenge the lawfulness of their confinement, States
    cannot refuse to give retroactive effect to a substantive
    constitutional right that determines the outcome of that challenge.
    Montgomery, 577 U.S. at ___, 136 S. Ct. at 731-32 (emphasis added).
    This Court has recognized that prisoners may challenge the lawfulness of their
    confinement using a motion to vacate. See 
    Rawls, 278 Va. at 218
    , 683 S.E.2d at 547 (holding
    that a motion to vacate is the appropriate procedural device to challenge a conviction or sentence
    that is void ab initio and that such a conviction or sentence may be corrected at any time). While
    it is true that Rawls and its progeny all involved sentences in excess of a statutory limitation, the
    underlying rationale must also apply to sentences in violation of a substantive rule of
    constitutional law because in both situations, a court is imposing a sentence it is without power
    to impose, thereby rendering the sentence void ab initio. Compare 
    Rawls, 278 Va. at 221
    , 683
    S.E.2d at 549 (explaining that the reason such sentences are void ab initio is because “the
    character of the judgment was not such as the [C]ourt had the power to render”) with
    Montgomery, 577 U.S. ___, 136 S. Ct. at 739 (holding that sentences imposed in violation of a
    substantive rule of constitutional law are “altogether beyond the State’s power to impose”).
    Indeed, “[a] nullity is a nullity, and out of nothing[,] nothing comes. Ex nihilo nihil fit is one
    maxim that admits of no exceptions.” Harrell v. Welstead, 
    175 S.E. 283
    , 285 (N.C. 1934).
    44
    Accordingly, the underlying rationale of why a sentence is void ab initio cannot and does not
    dictate the manner in which such a sentence may be attacked. If a prisoner may use a motion to
    vacate to challenge a void ab initio sentence because it was imposed in violation of a statute,
    logic dictates that the same procedural device can be used to challenge a void ab initio sentence
    imposed in violation of the Constitution.
    Furthermore, contrary to the majority’s statement, there is precedent under Virginia law
    for using a motion to vacate to collaterally attack a conviction or sentence based on federal
    constitutional grounds. In Loving v. Commonwealth, 
    206 Va. 924
    , 925, 
    147 S.E.2d 78
    , 79
    (1966), just under five years after they had pled guilty, Richard and Mildred Loving used a
    motion to vacate to challenge the constitutionality of Virginia’s miscegenation statute.
    The majority dismisses the precedential value of Loving by noting that the propriety of
    using a motion to vacate to collaterally attack a conviction or sentence based solely on federal
    constitutional grounds was not litigated. In other words, the majority intimates that the Lovings’
    claim should have been procedurally defaulted and dismissed by Virginia’s courts before the
    matter reached the Supreme Court, because, in Virginia, a motion to vacate cannot be used to
    collaterally attack a constitutionally invalid conviction.
    Our ruling in Hirschkop v. Commonwealth, 
    209 Va. 678
    , 
    166 S.E.2d 322
    (1969), clearly
    indicates otherwise. As the majority notes, in Hirschkop this Court addressed the use of a
    motion to vacate in Loving. 
    Id. at 681,
    166 S.E.2d at 324. However, the majority overlooks the
    fact that, in concluding that the use of a motion to vacate was inappropriate in Hirschkop, the
    Court expressly distinguished Loving on several bases. See 
    id. (“[Loving] is
    not apposite to
    [Hirschkop’s] case.”). The most important difference noted by this Court was that “in Loving,
    the statute under which the conviction was had was attacked as violative of the Constitutions of
    45
    Virginia and of the United States, and the sentences imposed were attacked as invalid.” 
    Id. This basis
    for differentiating Loving is very similar to the argument raised by Jones in the present
    case.
    The majority’s concerns that “the multitude of substantive and procedural requirements
    in habeas corpus law would be permanently sidelined” are unfounded. Jones is not seeking to
    subvert our habeas corpus law. Nor is he seeking to use a motion to vacate “as an all-purpose
    pleading for collateral review of criminal convictions.” Rather, Jones is simply using a motion
    to vacate to apply Virginia law in the manner this Court announced close to a century ago in
    Thacker: to bring a void ab initio order to the court’s attention. 
    122 Va. 379
    , 386, 
    94 S.E. 929
    ,
    930 (1918) (“Objection for want of jurisdiction of the subject matter may be taken by demurrer,
    or motion, or in any way by which the subject may be brought to the attention of the court.”)
    (emphasis added). See also 
    Rawls, 278 Va. at 218
    , 683 S.E.2d at 547 (recognizing that a motion
    to vacate is the proper vehicle to challenge a void ab initio sentencing order); 
    Singh, 261 Va. at 52
    , 
    541 S.E.2d 551
    (“The lack of jurisdiction to enter an order . . . renders the order a complete
    nullity [that] may be impeached directly or collaterally by all persons, anywhere, at any time, or
    in any manner.”).
    The majority’s analysis concludes that individuals such as the Lovings and Jones have no
    avenue for relief in Virginia courts, more than two years after their convictions become final,
    even if they can clearly prove that their sentences were imposed in violation of a recently
    determined substantive constitutional right. I disagree with this previously unexpressed
    restriction on the ability of Virginia state courts to address the retroactive application of new
    46
    substantive constitutional rulings, because it is clearly inconsistent with our prior cases. 10 See,
    e.g., 
    Loving, 206 Va. at 926
    , 147 S.E.2d at 80; Hirschkop, 209 Va. at 
    681, 166 S.E.2d at 324
    ;
    Hodges v. Commonwealth, 
    213 Va. 316
    , 317, 
    191 S.E.2d 794
    , 795 (1972).
    VI. Conclusion
    Although I believe that the law in this case is clear, the facts are another matter. 11 Both
    parties agree that the record in the present case is incomplete and, therefore, it is unclear whether
    Jones received a Miller hearing before he was sentenced. As such, both parties request that the
    matter be remanded to the circuit court for further development of the facts surrounding the
    imposition of Jones’s sentence of life without parole to determine whether he received the
    requisite hearing. In my opinion, this is the best course of action to ensure the constitutionality
    of the sentence imposed. If the circuit court determines that Jones did, in fact, receive a Miller
    hearing, then his motion to vacate would be properly denied. On the other hand, if it is
    determined that Jones did not receive a Miller hearing, his sentence of life in prison without
    parole would be void ab initio and he would be entitled to a new sentencing hearing that
    complies with Miller and Montgomery. Accordingly, I would vacate the circuit court’s decision
    to deny Jones’s motion to vacate and remand the matter for further proceedings to determine
    whether Jones was properly sentenced on his capital murder charge.
    10
    The majority asserts that individuals such as the Lovings and Jones may only challenge
    their convictions “either via direct appeal timely made or in a habeas corpus proceeding,” even if
    the Supreme Court retroactively determines their substantive constitutional rights were violated.
    Unstated by the majority is that a direct appeal must be noticed within 30 days of a final
    judgment and any habeas action is barred if not pursued within two years of a final judgment.
    Thus, according to the majority, any substantive constitutional rights determined to exist more
    than two years after conviction may not be successfully vindicated in a Virginia court.
    Individuals such as Jones, even if they prove that they were sentenced in violation of their
    substantive constitutional rights, can only apply for relief from a federal court.
    11
    Even if Miller and Montgomery did not expressly require the facts surrounding Jones’s
    sentencing be reconsidered, I would hold that juveniles in Virginia facing a sentence of life
    without parole should be afforded a Miller hearing, for the reasons stated in Montgomery.
    47