Keith Jones v. Commonwealth of Virginia ( 2000 )


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  •                       COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    Present: Chief Judge Fitzpatrick, Judges Benton and Clements
    Argued at Chesapeake, Virginia
    KEITH JONES
    MEMORANDUM OPINION * BY
    v.   Record No. 2922-99-1          CHIEF JUDGE JOHANNA L. FITZPATRICK
    DECEMBER 28, 2000
    COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF SOUTHHAMPTON COUNTY
    Rodham T. Delk, Jr., Judge
    Archer L. Jones, II (Jones & Jones, P.C.,
    on brief), for appellant.
    Robert H. Anderson, III, Senior Assistant
    Attorney General (Mark L. Earley, Attorney
    General, on brief), for appellee.
    Keith Jones (appellant) was convicted in a jury trial of
    maliciously causing bodily injury by mob action in violation of
    Code § 18.2-41.   On appeal, he contends (1) the trial court
    improperly admitted hearsay evidence and (2) the evidence was
    insufficient to prove his guilt.    We disagree and affirm his
    conviction.
    I.   Background
    Under familiar principles of appellate review, we examine
    the evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth,
    the prevailing party below, granting to that evidence all
    * Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not
    designated for publication.
    reasonable inferences fairly deducible therefrom.      See Juares v.
    Commonwealth, 
    26 Va. App. 154
    , 156, 
    493 S.E.2d 677
    , 678 (1997).
    So viewed the evidence established that on September 5, 1998,
    Neil Link (Link) and Steven Lovett (Lovett), were confined in
    the Deerfield Correctional Center.      They were approached by
    another inmate, Fitzgerald, who asked them to smuggle drugs into
    the prison.    Both Link and Lovett rejected Fitzgerald's request.
    On September 7, 1998, Link and Lovett were approached by
    another inmate, Gholson, who said they owed him money as a
    result of their deal with Fitzgerald.     Lovett and Link told
    Gholson that there was no deal with Fitzgerald.     During this
    encounter with Gholson, a group of inmates, including appellant,
    encircled Link and Lovett.   Although nothing physical happened,
    Link and Lovett were approached in a threatening manner and "it
    felt like something was going to take place."
    The next evening, the same group of people, including
    appellant, tackled Lovett and started beating him.     Link was
    also attacked by some members of the group.     During the attacks,
    some of the inmates switched back and forth between assaulting
    Link and Lovett.   There was no evidence that appellant actually
    struck Link.   However, appellant was present during the attacks,
    appeared to be stomping someone on the floor, was identified as
    directing some of the attack, and stood over Link during part of
    the attack.
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    II.    Hearsay
    Appellant first contends that the trial court improperly
    allowed two hearsay statements into evidence over his objection.
    The first statement concerned a conversation with inmate
    Fitzgerald ("Fitzgerald's statement").       Over appellant's
    objection the trial court allowed Link to testify that
    Fitzgerald "asked Mr. Lovett if he would be willing to smuggle
    some drugs into the institute in the visiting room.      Mr. Lovett
    told him no, he wouldn't.   And he asked me the same question."
    Appellant argues the trial court erred in ruling that this
    statement was not offered for the truth of the matter and
    therefore improperly admitted the statement.      Fitzgerald's
    statement prejudiced appellant because it established a "mob"
    motive.
    The second statement related to a conversation with Gholson
    ("Gholson's statement").    Gholson's statement was admitted into
    evidence over appellant's objection during Lovett's testimony.
    Lovett testified:
    Well I told him I didn't owe him some money.
    Basically the reason that he was stating
    that I owed him some money was because
    Fitzgerald on the 5th, had come to me asking
    me to bring him some drugs. Somehow he went
    to [Gholson] and told [Gholson] that the
    deal was made already. I told [Gholson], I
    said, I didn't make no deal. I don't owe no
    money and that was the end of it and I
    walked away from him.
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    A trial court has broad discretion in admitting evidence,
    and its ruling will not be disturbed on appeal, absent an abuse
    of discretion.     Brown v. Commonwealth, 
    21 Va. App. 552
    , 555, 
    466 S.E.2d 116
    , 117 (1996).     Hearsay evidence is "'testimony in
    court . . . of a statement made out of court, the statement
    being offered as an assertion to show the truth of matters
    asserted therein, and thus resting for its value upon the
    credibility of the out-of-court asserter.'"     Jenkins v.
    Commonwealth, 
    254 Va. 333
    , 338, 
    492 S.E.2d 131
    , 134 (1997)
    (quoting Stevenson v. Commonwealth, 
    218 Va. 462
    , 465, 
    237 S.E.2d 779
    , 781 (1977)).    Assuming that both statements were offered
    for the truth, we find that appellant waived any objection to
    them.
    A.   "Fitzgerald's statement"
    "[W]here an accused unsuccessfully objects to evidence
    which he considers improper and then on his own behalf
    introduces evidence of the same character, he thereby waives his
    objection, and we cannot reverse the alleged error."     Saunders
    v. Commonwealth, 
    211 Va. 399
    , 401, 
    177 S.E.2d 637
    , 638 (1970);
    accord Hubbard v. Commonwealth, 
    243 Va. 1
    , 9, 
    413 S.E.2d 875
    ,
    879 (1992).    A party cannot avail itself of an objection to
    evidence if the party has, at some other time during the trial,
    "voluntarily elicited the same evidence, or has permitted it to
    be brought out by his adversary without objection."     Burns v.
    Board of Supervisors of Stafford County, 
    227 Va. 354
    , 363, 315
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    S.E.2d 856, 862 (1984) (quoting Whitten v. McClelland, 
    137 Va. 726
    , 741, 
    120 S.E. 146
    , 150 (1923)).
    In the instant case, appellant initially objected to Link's
    testimony regarding "Fitzgerald's statement."       Appellant then
    cross-examined Link about the statement and other possible
    motives for the individuals who attacked Link.      Lovett testified
    to the same statements made by Fitzgerald without objection.
    Appellant had a duty to object in a timely manner.      Lovett's
    testimony without objection amounts to a waiver by appellant of
    his hearsay objection.      
    Id.
       Nor was appellant's failure to
    object saved by his prior objection to Link's testimony.      His
    prior objection cannot be interpreted as a continuing objection
    to this testimony.    Thus, appellant's failure to object when
    Lovett testified waived any objection to the trial court's
    admission of "Fitzgerald's statement."      Accordingly, the trial
    court did not err in allowing testimony regarding Fitzgerald's
    conversations with Link and Lovett.
    B.   "Gholson's statement"
    Appellant cross-examined Link regarding the motivation of
    some of the attackers.      Link testified that Green, one of the
    inmates who attacked Link, had made sexual advances towards
    Link.    Link turned down these advances and during the attack
    Green made mention of the failed sexual advances as the reason
    for the attack.    Appellant elicited this testimony to prove that
    a mob did not exist, as the Commonwealth alleged, because there
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    was no single group motive for the attack on Link.   "Having
    introduced evidence of the same character, appellant is
    confronted by a substantive rule of law which renders
    irreversible the action of the trial court in permitting the
    Commonwealth to introduce evidence of the victim's [or
    defendant's] state of mind."   Strohecker v. Commonwealth, 
    23 Va. App. 242
    , 255, 
    475 S.E.2d 844
    , 851 (1996).
    Having introduced evidence of an individual motive for the
    attack on Link, the Commonwealth was entitled to offer evidence
    of a group motive behind the attack to disprove appellant's
    theory that no mob existed because of individual motivations in
    attacking Link.   By establishing that Gholson approached Link
    and Lovett with a group of inmates in a threatening manner and
    alleged that Lovett owed him money, the Commonwealth was using
    the statement to establish the state of mind of Gholson and the
    group of inmates in the attack.   Therefore, Gholson's statement
    was offered by the Commonwealth to establish that a drug deal,
    involving a group of inmates, was the underlying motivation for
    their attack on Link, not a failed sexual advance by a single
    inmate.   Thus, the evidence was admissible to establish the
    state of mind of the group of inmates.
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    III. Sufficiency of Evidence
    Lastly, appellant contends that the evidence was
    insufficient to support a finding of guilt. 1    Code § 18.2-38
    defines a "mob" as "any collection of people, assembled for the
    purpose and with the intention of committing an assault or a
    battery upon any person or an act of violence."     "Intent may,
    and most often must, be proven by circumstantial evidence and
    the reasonable inferences to be drawn from proven facts are
    within the province of the trier of fact."      Fleming v.
    Commonwealth, 
    13 Va. App. 349
    , 353, 
    412 S.E.2d 180
    , 183 (1991);
    accord Campbell v. Commonwealth, 
    12 Va. App. 476
    , 483-84, 
    405 S.E.2d 1
    , 4 (1991).   The mob need not have a common motivation
    or underlying reason for the assault, they "need only to
    collectively band together with the common purpose and intention
    of committing an assault and battery upon a person."         Harrell v.
    Commonwealth, 
    11 Va. App. 1
    , 7, 
    396 S.E.2d 680
    , 683 (1990).
    Although not every act of assault by a group of people
    constitutes a mob assault, no particular words or express
    agreements are required for a mob to exist.      See id. at 7-8, 
    396 S.E.2d at 683
    .   Nor is it a defense for appellant that he did
    not actually strike the victim.   See id. at 8, 
    396 S.E.2d at
    1
    The Commonwealth argues that appellant waived this issue
    by failing to renew his motion to strike the evidence at the end
    of all the evidence. We disagree as appellant preserved the
    issue in his motion to set aside the verdict made at his
    sentencing hearing.
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    683.   If appellant was a part of the "mob" which attacked Link,
    then appellant is criminally culpable for all the acts of the
    "mob" even though he "may not have actively encouraged, aided,
    or countenanced the act."    
    Id.
        "[C]riminal accountability flows
    from being a member of the mob, regardless of whether the member
    aids and abets in the assault and battery."      
    Id.
    The evidence established that on September 7, 1998, a group
    of inmates described as a "click," including appellant,
    approached and encircled Lovett.      This encounter was "getting to
    a physical manner" and some members of the group "approached Mr.
    Lovett and [Link] in a threatening manner."     The tone of this
    encounter was "very angry" and "plotful"; it "felt like
    something was going to take place," but it didn't.
    The following evening, the same group of inmates, including
    appellant, approached Lovett and Link again.     Some of the group
    tackled Lovett and started assaulting him.     Within seconds
    another member of the group struck Link, and other members
    joined in the assault on Link.      Some of the members of this
    group switched back and forth between assaulting Link and
    assaulting Lovett.   Although no evidence proved that appellant
    actually struck Link, Link saw appellant standing over him
    during the fray.   The evidence was sufficient to prove the group
    attacking the victims was a "mob," that appellant was a part of
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    the group, and thus culpable for the actions taken by the "mob."
    Accordingly, we affirm appellant's conviction.
    Affirmed.
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