Rashard S. Cutler, s/k/a Rashard Sanders Cutler v. Commonwealth of Virginia ( 2019 )


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  •                                               COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    Present: Judges O’Brien, Malveaux and Senior Judge Clements
    UNPUBLISHED
    Argued at Richmond, Virginia
    RASHARD S. CUTLER, S/K/A
    RASHARD SANDERS CUTLER
    MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY
    v.     Record No. 1261-18-2                               JUDGE MARY BENNETT MALVEAUX
    DECEMBER 17, 2019
    COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF RICHMOND
    Margaret P. Spencer, Judge Designate
    Lauren Whitley, Deputy Public Defender, for appellant.
    Victoria Johnson, Assistant Attorney General (Mark R. Herring,
    Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.
    Rashard Sanders Cutler (“appellant”) was convicted of malicious wounding, in violation of
    Code § 18.2-51, use of a firearm during the commission of malicious wounding, in violation of
    Code § 18.2-53.1, second-degree murder, in violation of Code § 18.2-32, and use of a firearm in the
    commission of a murder, in violation of Code § 18.2-53.1. On appeal, he argues that the trial court:
    (1) abused its discretion by refusing to admit relevant evidence that a third party committed the
    shootings of Antonio Sherman and Christina Johnson; (2) violated his Sixth and Fourteenth
    Amendment rights under the United States Constitution, and his Virginia constitutional right to call
    for evidence in his favor, when it refused the introduction of evidence relevant to his theory of
    defense; and (3) erred in allowing the Commonwealth to impeach its own witness. For the
    following reasons, we affirm.
    *
    Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication.
    I. BACKGROUND
    The Commonwealth’s Evidence
    On the evening of October 18, 2014, Christina Johnson hosted a “stripper party” at her
    apartment. The party included a bar, music, and several female dancers. Johnson charged a fee
    for entry into the party. Approximately twenty-five people were in attendance. Johnson’s
    bedroom, located in the back of the apartment, served as the dressing room for the dancers.
    Because the dancers were changing in her bedroom, Johnson did not allow guests into the area.
    The party was held in the living room, with the bar in the dining room.
    During the party, Johnson’s brother, Thomas Hardy, stood at the apartment’s front door
    and patted down guests to ensure that they did not enter with any weapons. Some of Johnson’s
    friends, including Calvin Williams and Rashon Aboite (also known as “Rude Boy”), served as
    security guards to keep patrons out of the bedroom area. Dajon Johnson1 came to the party that
    night with Elijah Gee. Dajon Johnson was wearing a “walking boot” cast on his foot. Sometime
    prior to the party, he and Gee had traded weapons—Dajon Johnson gave Gee his nine-millimeter
    firearm in exchange for a .40 caliber firearm from Gee. Dajon Johnson and Gee brought these
    guns to the party. When Hardy attempted to search them at the door, they left the apartment and
    went to their car. Dajon Johnson testified that Gee left his nine-millimeter firearm in the car but
    admitted that he was able to hide the .40 caliber handgun in his walking boot and take it into the
    party.
    Eric Early went to Johnson’s party to help with security and had a .45 caliber firearm
    with him at the time. When he got to the party, he put the gun in a bag by a window. At some
    point during the evening, Early gave Aboite the bag containing the .45 gun, and Aboite took the
    1
    There is no indication in the record that Dajon Johnson and Christina Johnson are
    related.
    -2-
    bag to the back of the apartment. Matthew Green and his cousin, Antonio Sherman, also
    attended the party. When they arrived at the apartment, Hardy patted them down for weapons.
    Green and Sherman then sat down on the couch in the living room to watch the dancers.
    Later that evening, Christina Johnson saw several men, including Elijah Gee, Dajon
    Johnson, and appellant, in the back hallway of the apartment. Because she saw “a lot of
    commotion” and heard “cussing,” she went to the back hallway and told the men to leave the
    area because they were not supposed to be there. The group would not leave, so one of her
    “security” told them that they had to get out of the hallway and that they could “either respect it
    or check it.” Appellant said, “I could check it for you. I have a check that’s ready.” Christina
    Johnson then stepped between appellant and her security guard and told appellant to leave.
    Appellant swung past her and attempted to hit her security guard but missed.
    At that point, Thomas Hardy grabbed appellant and forcibly escorted him from the back
    hallway to the front door. As Hardy opened the door, Dajon Johnson pulled appellant back into
    the apartment and said, “He’s good,” but Hardy told them that they could not stay because of the
    fighting. Dajon Johnson then saw a man inside the apartment “come around the corner with [a]
    gun,” so he fired two shots in the air with his .40 caliber firearm. Appellant was right next to
    him when he fired the shots. Dajon Johnson testified that Elijah Gee was not with them at that
    time.
    When Dajon Johnson fired into the air, appellant pulled out a gun, stated that he would
    “light this bitch up,” and started to shoot. Christina Johnson, who knew appellant because they
    had attended high school together, testified that appellant was the shooter and that he fired
    towards her and her security guard. To her, it looked “like [appellant] was tripping out the door
    as he was shooting.” Thomas Hardy was unable to identify the shooter because it was “too dark”
    -3-
    and “very crowded” in the apartment. However, he testified that Elijah Gee was not the
    individual he escorted to the front door who started shooting.
    After the gunshots, Christina Johnson went into her bedroom, where she discovered that
    she had been shot in the left side of her abdomen.
    Matthew Green and Antonio Sherman had been sitting on a couch in the living room
    during the altercation. After the gunfire, Sherman went to Johnson’s bedroom, where she saw
    him collapse on one of her beds. Green came into the room and saw Sherman sitting up and
    holding his chest. He moved Sherman to the front of the apartment and waited until paramedics
    arrived.
    After Eric Early heard the shots, he walked around the apartment to check on other
    people. Early also heard shooting outside of the apartment building. Aboite came back inside
    the apartment and gave Early’s .45 caliber firearm back to him. Early put it back in his bag and
    tried to leave but could not because police had arrived.
    Police arrived and found Elijah Gee lying face down on the outside front steps of the
    apartment building. Gee was dead when the officers found him.
    Police also found shell casings on the interior staircase leading to Christina Johnson’s
    second-floor apartment. When the officers entered the apartment, they found Sherman dead in
    Green’s arms in the living room. Elijah Gee’s cause of death was later determined to be a
    gunshot wound to the right side of his chest. The medical examiner recovered the bullet from
    Gee’s body, which subsequent forensic testing determined was fired from Eric Early’s .45
    caliber handgun. Antonio Sherman’s cause of death was a gunshot wound to the left side of his
    back. The medical examiner recovered a nine-millimeter bullet from Sherman’s body.
    Just inside the apartment’s doorway, a forensic technician found two .40 caliber cartridge
    casings. Investigators also recovered six nine-millimeter cartridge casings from the interior
    -4-
    stairs of the apartment building that led to Johnson’s apartment and the area around and just
    inside the apartment’s front door. They also found five nine-millimeter bullets in various
    locations inside the apartment. Forensic testing determined that each of the nine-millimeter
    cartridge casings came from bullets fired by the same gun. An intact .45 caliber cartridge was
    found in the apartment’s back bedroom.
    Elijah Gee and Eric Early were tested for gunshot residue, which was found on samples
    from the right hand and the left hand of both individuals.
    On October 27, 2014, Detective Arcellious Demery, Jr. of the Richmond Police
    Department interviewed appellant. Appellant initially told the detective that he was not at the
    party; he later said that when he arrived, he saw the police and left. However, after Detective
    Demery read appellant the offenses with which he was being charged, appellant stated that he
    was at the party and that an altercation had occurred. He told the detective that he was thrown
    out of the party and that at that point he saw a man come from the back hallway firing a gun.
    Appellant stated that his friend Elijah Gee “fired some shots back.” Appellant said that he then
    took off running and that “as he was running . . . the guy beside [Gee] fired some more shots.”
    He stated that he had not been involved with the altercation in the back hallway. Throughout the
    interview, appellant denied ever shooting anyone at the party.
    During the interview, appellant also told Detective Demery that he currently owned a .45
    caliber firearm and that he had bought a nine-millimeter firearm in June 2014 but that it had been
    stolen from his car. He said that the theft had occurred a few months prior to the party and that
    he had not reported it because he did not have the gun’s serial number. When Detective Demery
    showed appellant a picture of appellant holding a nine-millimeter firearm “exactly like the one
    that he had originally purchased,” appellant stated that the photograph had been taken about a
    month prior to the party. He also said that the firearm in the photograph was not his, but that
    -5-
    “somebody else in the group had that gun, and it reminded him so much of his [firearm that had
    been stolen] that he wanted to take a picture with it.” Appellant also told the detective that he
    did not know Dajon Johnson, who was pictured beside him in the photograph. He later told
    Detective Demery that he did know Dajon Johnson, that Johnson was the person who shot first at
    the party, and that the individual coming from the back hallway fired back in self-defense.
    Motion in Limine
    During appellant’s first jury trial, his theory of the case was that Elijah Gee had possessed
    the nine-millimeter firearm at the party and was the individual who had shot into the apartment.
    During opening statement, counsel for appellant supported this theory by asserting that Rashon
    Aboite had not been prosecuted for Elijah Gee’s death because he had killed Gee in self-defense;
    this proved, counsel argued, that Gee had possessed a weapon. Thus, Gee—not appellant—was
    the person who had shot into the crowd in response to seeing Aboite with a firearm. Counsel for
    appellant told the jury,
    Rashon Aboite . . . wasn’t even arrested for this. Isn’t in jail. They
    said it was self-defense. If a 9mm or if a gun was being fired at
    him, if that was the self-defense, then who had the 9mm?
    Obviously, it had to be Elijah Gee. Obviously. Otherwise,
    [Aboite] would be in jail today. And you are going to find this out
    when I cross-examine him.
    Appellant testified in his own defense. Rashon Aboite did not testify at trial.
    After the jury advised that it was unable to make a decision, the court declared a mistrial.
    Prior to retrial, the Commonwealth filed a motion in limine asking the court “to exclude
    evidence, questions, testimony and argument concerning deals or suspected deals” that Aboite
    “may have made with the Commonwealth in exchange for his testimony unless or until he
    testifies at trial.” The Commonwealth proffered in its motion that Aboite “was involved in an
    incident immediately after the killing and malicious wounding that [appellant] is charged in that
    -6-
    resulted in what was deemed a justified killing of one of [appellant’s] associates.” The
    Commonwealth represented that no “deal” was ever made with Aboite, that he did not testify at
    the first trial, and that he was not expected to testify at retrial. The Commonwealth conceded
    that, were Aboite to testify, questions regarding any consideration he received for his testimony
    would be proper, but that, in the absence of testimony from Aboite, “any mention of potential
    consideration offered to [him] is not relevant, nor would it be admissible under the Virginia
    Rules of Evidence” and would “serve[] only to confuse and mislead the jurors.”
    At the hearing on the motion, both parties asked the trial court to review the transcript of
    the first trial.2 The court agreed and continued the motion.
    The trial court subsequently granted the Commonwealth’s motion in limine, ruling that
    appellant could not introduce evidence about “a deal or an agreement with the Commonwealth.”
    The Second Trial
    Appellant’s theory of the case remained the same at his second trial: that Elijah Gee had
    possessed a nine-millimeter firearm at the party and had shot into the crowd after seeing Rashon
    Aboite emerge from the back hallway with a gun in his hand. Appellant further alleged that
    Aboite had followed Gee out of the apartment, saw Gee with a gun in his hand, and shot and
    killed Gee.
    Detective Demery testified regarding appellant’s testimony at the first trial. The
    detective stated that appellant had admitted taking a .45 caliber handgun to the party but said that
    he had not brought a nine-millimeter handgun. The detective also testified that appellant had
    admitted that he was involved with an altercation with Aboite in the back hallway. Demery said
    2
    Judge Gregory L. Rupe presided over appellant’s first trial, while Judge Designate
    Margaret P. Spencer presided over the retrial.
    -7-
    that appellant stated that he saw Aboite come around a corner with a gun and that he pulled his
    gun out at that time but did not fire it.
    On cross-examination, Detective Demery acknowledged that Elijah Gee and Dajon
    Johnson had bought nine-millimeter ammunition the day of the party. The detective also stated
    that Dajon Johnson had previously told him in an interview that Gee had initially taken the
    nine-millimeter firearm back to the car but later went back to retrieve it.
    Dajon Johnson testified at the second trial. On cross-examination, he admitted that he
    and Elijah Gee had traded guns at some point prior to the party: Dajon Johnson gave Gee his
    nine-millimeter, and Gee gave Dajon Johnson the .40 caliber handgun he carried into the party.
    Dajon Johnson also testified on cross-examination that he and Gee had purchased
    nine-millimeter ammunition the day of the party, but he denied that Gee had left the party and
    retrieved the nine-millimeter gun from the car.
    Douglas DeGaetano, the forensic scientist who analyzed the primer, or gunshot, residue
    in the case, testified that he “found particles that are characteristic of primer residue” in the
    samples taken from each of Elijah Gee’s and Eric Early’s hands. He also testified that finding
    primer residue on someone’s hands was “simply consistent with either the person having fired,
    been in proximity, handled the weapon, or c[o]me into contact with someone who had primer
    residue on them.”
    Calvin Williams testified at trial that he attended the party to assist Christina Johnson
    with security. At some point during the evening, he saw a crowd in the hallway, and also saw a
    person who had been standing near the front door escort someone to that front door. Williams
    then heard gunshots coming from around the front door, and he went into the kitchen. He stated
    that he saw Christina Johnson walking around but did not see her injury. The Commonwealth’s
    attorney asked Williams if he had seen someone on the floor of the apartment, and Williams
    -8-
    responded, “No.” At that point, the Commonwealth’s attorney asked Williams, “[D]o you
    remember talking to me and Detective Sergeant Edwards?” Counsel for appellant objected,
    arguing that the Commonwealth was attempting to impeach its own witness. The trial court
    stated, “That’s permissible.” The following exchange then occurred:
    COMMONWEALTH’S ATTORNEY: Do you remember talking
    to us about this specific incident?
    WILLIAMS: Yes.
    COMMONWEALTH’S ATTORNEY: And do you remember
    telling us that you did see somebody getting taken out of the party
    by the big guy working at the front door?
    WILLIAMS: Yes.
    COMMONWEALTH’S ATTORNEY: Do you remember telling
    us that you saw that person turn around and start shooting into the
    crowd?
    WILLIAMS: No, I did not say that it was that exact person.
    COMMONWEALTH’S ATTORNEY: Do you remember saying
    that you saw that person, kind of, look as though they were
    tripping and then start firing?
    WILLIAMS: Yes. I said I saw somebody fall to the ground and
    was shooting.
    COMMONWEALTH’S ATTORNEY: So that’s different than
    what you just said that you didn’t see anyone firing, right?
    WILLIAMS: No. I said I saw someone shooting.
    COMMONWEALTH’S ATTORNEY: Okay. And it was the
    person towards the front door that was kind of falling or losing
    their balance?
    WILLIAMS: Yes.
    COMMONWEALTH’S ATTORNEY: Do you remember telling
    us that you did see Christina with a gunshot wound?
    WILLIAMS: Yes. Later on, that was after I checked everyone.
    -9-
    COMMONWEALTH’S ATTORNEY: Right. And that later on
    after you checked off people, that you did see someone laying on
    the floor of the apartment also shot?
    WILLIAMS: Yes. I saw him actually moving around, I actually
    asked him was he okay.
    COMMONWEALTH’S ATTORNEY: All right. And what
    ultimately happened with that?
    WILLIAMS: He didn’t respond.
    COMMONWEALTH’S ATTORNEY: Ultimately, did you see
    him die on the floor?
    WILLIAMS: I did not see him die on the floor. He walked back
    to the living room.
    That’s where he died at.
    Neither Rashon Aboite nor appellant testified at the second trial.
    The jury found appellant guilty of malicious wounding, use of a firearm during the
    commission of malicious wounding, second-degree murder, and use of a firearm in the
    commission of a murder.
    Appellant filed a motion for new trial, arguing that the trial court’s ruling on the motion
    in limine violated his right to due process under the Fourteenth Amendment. During the
    sentencing hearing, the trial court denied the motion.
    This appeal followed.
    II. ANALYSIS
    A. Evidence of Third-Party Guilt
    Appellant argues that the trial court abused its discretion in refusing to admit relevant
    evidence that a third party, Elijah Gee, shot Antonio Sherman and Christina Johnson.3
    3
    Appellant also argues, in his second assignment of error, that the trial court’s refusal to
    admit evidence relevant to this theory of defense implicated his Fourteenth Amendment right to
    due process, his Sixth Amendment right to present a defense, as well as his Virginia
    - 10 -
    “We review the [trial] court’s ruling concerning admissibility of evidence for an abuse of
    discretion.” Lambert v. Commonwealth, 
    70 Va. App. 54
    , 60 (2019).
    “In Virginia, evidence that a crime was actually committed by someone other than the
    accused is admissible for the purpose of generating a reasonable doubt of the guilt of the
    accused.” Juniper v. Commonwealth, 
    271 Va. 362
    , 411 (2006) (quoting Weller v.
    Commonwealth, 
    16 Va. App. 886
    , 890 (1993), aff’d on reh’g en banc, 
    443 S.E.2d 171
     (1994)).
    “Such proffered evidence need only raise a question for the jury whether reasonable doubt of
    [the accused’s] guilt existed, not whether the proffered evidence was sufficient to prove a third
    person committed the offenses.” Ramsey v. Commonwealth, 
    63 Va. App. 341
    , 355 (2014).
    However, “[p]roffered evidence ‘that merely suggests a third party may have committed
    the crime charged is inadmissible; only when the proffered evidence tends clearly to point to
    some other person as the guilty party will such proof be admitted.’” Johnson v. Commonwealth,
    
    259 Va. 654
    , 681 (2000) (quoting Soering v. Deeds, 
    255 Va. 457
    , 464 (1998)). Therefore,
    “under decided Virginia case law, the right to present evidence in one’s defense does not permit
    constitutional right to call for evidence in his favor. Finding that appellant failed to properly
    preserve these arguments, we decline to address them on appeal.
    Appellant never argued before the trial court that the exclusion of the evidence that
    Rashon Aboite had not been prosecuted for Elijah Gee’s killing violated his Sixth Amendment
    right to present a defense, or his Virginia constitutional right to call for evidence in his favor;
    therefore, he has waived these arguments on appeal. See Rule 5A:18.
    Appellant did argue in his motion for a new trial that the exclusion of this evidence
    violated his due process rights under the Fourteenth Amendment. However, “Rule 5A:18
    requires both the objection and the ‘grounds therefor’ to be made ‘at the time of the ruling.’”
    Roadcap v. Commonwealth, 
    50 Va. App. 732
    , 740 n.1 (2007). “A litigant . . . cannot wait until
    after trial to present foundation evidence pertinent to a trial court’s decision during trial to allow
    or exclude testimony.” 
    Id.
     Here, appellant did not make the trial court aware of his objection to
    the exclusion of the evidence on due process grounds at the time of the motion in limine or at any
    point during trial. We consider this post-trial argument regarding an evidentiary issue untimely
    made. Thus, appellant has also waived this argument on appeal. See Boblett v. Commonwealth,
    
    10 Va. App. 640
    , 650-51 (1990) (finding that defendant had not preserved his argument that the
    trial court erred in limiting the testimony of his expert witness when the argument was raised for
    the first time in a post-trial motion to set aside the verdict because “[i]n order for an objection to
    be timely, it must be made when the evidence is offered or the ruling given”).
    - 11 -
    a defendant to introduce evidence that merely suggests or insinuates that the third party may
    have committed the crime.” Ramsey, 63 Va. App. at 354. “Such evidence is irrelevant; it tends
    to confuse and mislead a jury unless ‘evidence [has been] introduced . . . [that] point[s] directly
    to guilt of a third party.’” Oliva v. Commonwealth, 
    19 Va. App. 523
    , 527 (1995) (alterations in
    original) (quoting Weller, 16 Va. App. at 890). Thus, an accused may introduce evidence of
    third-party guilt “only ‘where there is a trend of facts and circumstances tending clearly to point
    out some other person as the guilty party.’” Id. (alteration in original) (quoting Karnes v.
    Commonwealth, 
    125 Va. 758
    , 766 (1919)). Further, “[a]lthough circumstantial evidence tending
    to prove the guilt of a third party is to be liberally received, the evidence must be legally
    admissible. That is, the evidence must be relevant and material, and may not be hearsay.”
    Weller, 16 Va. App. at 890 (citation omitted). Finally, “a large discretion must and should
    remain vested in the trial court as to the admission of this class of testimony.” Johnson, 259 Va.
    at 681 (quoting Karnes, 125 Va. at 766).
    Appellant contends that the trial court erred in ruling that he could not introduce evidence
    that Rashon Aboite was not prosecuted for the killing of Elijah Gee because the Commonwealth
    deemed this killing justified.4 He argues that this fact tended to prove that Gee possessed a
    firearm at the party—because Gee had a firearm, Aboite was not prosecuted for his killing, as it
    was deemed justified. Therefore, appellant asserts that this evidence was relevant to his theory
    of defense: that Gee shot Antonio Sherman and Christina Johnson with a firearm that he
    possessed on the night in question. Thus, any evidence that tended to prove this fact, including
    4
    The trial court’s specific ruling was that appellant could not introduce evidence about
    Rashon Aboite having “a deal or an agreement with the Commonwealth.” For the purpose of
    this appeal, we construe this ruling to include prohibiting appellant from introducing any
    evidence that Aboite was not prosecuted for the killing of Gee.
    - 12 -
    the Commonwealth’s decision not to charge Aboite with the shooting of Gee because Aboite was
    acting in self-defense, was relevant.
    We find no merit in appellant’s argument that the trial court abused its discretion in
    refusing to admit this evidence. In the instant case, the proffered evidence—the fact that Aboite
    was not charged with the murder of Elijah Gee because it was deemed a justified killing—did not
    “tend[ ] clearly to point” to Gee as the guilty party. Johnson, 259 Va. at 681. Here, the evidence
    was not relevant to the incident for which appellant was on trial—the shooting into the apartment
    from the doorway, resulting in the murder of Antonio Sherman and the malicious wounding of
    Christina Johnson. Instead, the proffered evidence was only probative of a separate incident that
    was not a part of the offenses at trial—the killing of Elijah Gee that occurred outside Christina
    Johnson’s apartment after the shooting that occurred inside her apartment. While this killing
    was not a part of the offenses for which appellant was on trial, evidence in the record established
    that the killing of Gee occurred after the shooting into Johnson’s apartment. At trial, Eric Early
    testified that he heard shooting outside of the apartment building after the initial shooting in the
    living room. Rashon Aboite came back inside the apartment after this second round of shooting
    and returned Early’s .45 caliber firearm to him. Gee was found dead by police on the outside
    front steps of the apartment building, and forensic testing of the bullet recovered from Gee’s
    body determined that it was fired from Early’s .45 caliber handgun. Thus, the evidence indicated
    that Elijah Gee’s death, caused by Aboite, occurred outside the apartment building following the
    shooting that occurred inside the apartment. Although it is a reasonable inference that the
    Commonwealth deemed Gee’s death a justified killing because Gee had a gun at the time Aboite
    shot him, this inference does not directly point to Gee as the person who shot into the apartment,
    killing Sherman and injuring Johnson. The fact that Gee might have had a firearm during the
    - 13 -
    night in question provided no more than speculation that this firearm was also the
    nine-millimeter firearm that was used to fire into the apartment.5
    The evidence that Aboite was not prosecuted for Gee’s killing only tends to prove that
    Gee may have had a firearm outside of the apartment building when he was killed by Aboite.
    This evidence, at most, merely suggested or insinuated that Gee may have committed the
    offenses in the instant case. Because such evidence is inadmissible to prove third-party guilt, we
    hold that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in excluding the proffered evidence.
    B. Impeachment of the Commonwealth’s Own Witness
    Appellant also contends that the trial court erred in allowing the Commonwealth to
    impeach its own witness.
    “As a general rule at common law, a party was not allowed to impeach its own witness.”
    Maxey v. Commonwealth, 
    26 Va. App. 514
    , 518 (1998). However, “Virginia has enacted two
    statutes that impact the common law rule.” 
    Id.
     One of these statutes, Code § 8.01-403, “allows a
    party to impeach his or her own witness by prior inconsistent statements only when the witness
    whom the party expected to testify favorably has suddenly given unexpected, adverse testimony
    5
    We further note that the trial court’s narrow ruling regarding the evidence that Rashon
    Aboite was not prosecuted for Elijah Gee’s death did not prevent appellant from eliciting other
    evidence to indicate that Gee may have had a nine-millimeter firearm during the night in
    question. On cross-examination, Detective Demery admitted that Gee and Dajon Johnson had
    bought nine-millimeter ammunition the day of the party. The detective also testified that Dajon
    Johnson had previously told him in an interview that Gee had taken the nine-millimeter firearm
    to the car but later went back to retrieve it. On cross-examination, Dajon Johnson admitted that
    he and Gee had traded guns at some point prior to the party, and therefore Gee possessed a
    nine-millimeter firearm at the time of the party. Douglas DeGaetano testified that he found
    primer residue in the samples taken from Gee’s hands. Here, appellant was able to present his
    theory of the case—that Gee had a nine-millimeter firearm at the party and was the shooter,
    rather than appellant—without the evidence that Aboite was not prosecuted for Gee’s death.
    Thus, it is clear that the court did not abuse its discretion in prohibiting evidence regarding a
    separate incident—the fact that Aboite was not prosecuted for Gee’s killing—when appellant
    was allowed to present evidence as to his theory of defense.
    - 14 -
    on the stand.”6 Id. at 520. Further, “‘[i]n order to impeach one’s own witness . . . it is not
    sufficient merely that the witness gave a contradictory statement on a prior occasion.’ Rather,
    the ‘testimony offered must be injurious or damaging to the case of the party who called the
    witness.’” Ragland v. Commonwealth, 
    16 Va. App. 913
    , 920-21 (1993) (citation omitted)
    (quoting Brown v. Commonwealth, 
    6 Va. App. 82
    , 85 (1988)). When the “testimony is of a
    negative character and has no probative value, there is no need to discredit the witness.”
    Smallwood v. Commonwealth, 
    36 Va. App. 483
    , 489 (2001) (quoting Virginia Elec. & Power
    Co. v. Hall, 
    184 Va. 102
    , 106 (1945)).
    In the case before us, the Commonwealth’s attorney asked Calvin Williams if he had seen
    someone on the floor of the apartment after hearing gunshots, and Williams responded, “No.” At
    that point, the Commonwealth’s attorney asked Williams, “[D]o you remember talking to me and
    Detective Sergeant Edwards?” Counsel for appellant objected, arguing that the Commonwealth
    was attempting to impeach its own witness. The trial court stated, “That’s permissible.” The
    Commonwealth then elicited testimony from Williams regarding prior statements that he
    remembered making to the detective: that he remembered stating that he saw someone being
    taken out of the party by “the big guy” working at the front door, that he remembered stating that
    he saw somebody falling to the ground and shooting, and that he remembered stating that after
    he checked on everyone he saw Christina Johnson with a gunshot wound. Williams also testified
    that he did see someone lying on the floor of the apartment and that he saw this individual die in
    the living room.
    6
    In contrast, Code § 8.01-401 permits a party to call a witness “having an adverse
    interest” and examine such witness “according to the rules applicable to cross-examination.”
    Code § 8.01-401(A). The statute contemplates individuals with a “financial or other personal
    interest in the outcome of the case.” Maxey, 26 Va. App. at 520. In this case, Calvin Williams
    was not called as an adverse witness under Code § 8.01-401.
    - 15 -
    Here, the initial question was whether Williams had seen someone on the floor of the
    apartment, to which Williams replied “No.” This answer was in direct contradiction to an earlier
    statement he had made to the detective. In determining whether the Commonwealth’s use of
    Williams’ prior inconsistent statement constituted proper impeachment, we find Brown v.
    Commonwealth, 
    6 Va. App. 82
     (1988), instructive. In Brown, a witness testified that he “had not
    seen the stabbing” for which defendant was on trial, in direct contradiction to his earlier
    statement to investigators that he had witnessed the stabbing. 
    Id. at 83
    . We held that this
    testimony lacked probative value and was not “damaging or injurious to the Commonwealth’s
    case.” 
    Id. at 86
    . Because it “could not have assisted the trier of fact in determining [defendant’s]
    guilt or innocence,” it was not subject to impeachment. 
    Id.
    Similarly, Williams’ testimony that he did not see anyone on the floor was neither
    damaging nor injurious to the Commonwealth’s case, nor could it have helped the jury determine
    appellant’s guilt or innocence. Thus, as in Brown, Williams’ testimony was not subject to
    impeachment by the Commonwealth. Therefore, the trial court erred when it allowed the
    Commonwealth to impeach Williams with his prior inconsistent statement.
    However, “[w]e will not reverse a trial court for evidentiary errors that were harmless to
    the ultimate result.” Shifflett v. Commonwealth, 
    289 Va. 10
    , 12 (2015). “Under the harmless
    error doctrine, if there was ‘a fair trial on the merits and substantial justice has been reached, no
    judgment shall be arrested or reversed . . . for any . . . defect, imperfection, or omission in the
    record, or for any error committed on the trial.’” 
    Id.
     (alterations in original) (quoting Code
    § 8.01-678). Here, “we apply the standard for non-constitutional harmless error, which is that
    such error is harmless if we can be sure that it did not ‘influence the jury’ or had only a ‘slight
    effect.’” Id. (quoting Clay v. Commonwealth, 
    262 Va. 253
    , 260 (2001)). “An error is harmless
    ‘if “other evidence of guilt is ‘so overwhelming and the error so insignificant by comparison that
    - 16 -
    the error could not have affected the verdict,’” or “even if the evidence of the defendant’s guilt is
    not overwhelming, . . . if the evidence admitted in error was merely cumulative of other,
    undisputed evidence.”’” Salahuddin v. Commonwealth, 
    67 Va. App. 190
    , 212 (2017) (alteration
    in original) (quoting McLean v. Commonwealth, 
    32 Va. App. 200
    , 211 (2000)); see also Massey
    v. Commonwealth, 
    230 Va. 436
    , 442 (1985) (“Cumulative testimony is repetitive testimony that
    restates what has been said already and adds nothing to it. It is testimony of the same kind and
    character as that already given.”).
    We conclude that the error in allowing the Commonwealth to impeach Williams with his
    prior inconsistent statement was harmless, as this evidence was cumulative of other undisputed
    evidence. After asking Williams if he remembered previously discussing the case, the
    Commonwealth was able to elicit testimony from him that he saw someone being taken out of
    the party by “the big guy” working at the front door; saw somebody falling to the ground and
    shooting; remembered stating that after he checked on everyone he saw Christina Johnson with a
    gunshot wound; and saw someone lying on the floor of the apartment. The evidence obtained
    from Williams through the Commonwealth’s use of his prior statements was merely testimony
    relating generally to the events that occurred at the party. This testimony was cumulative of
    other testimony of the evening’s events already given by Christina Johnson, Thomas Hardy,
    Matthew Green, and law enforcement officials. Williams’ testimony simply restated prior facts
    testified to by other witnesses. Accordingly, after consideration of the record, we conclude that
    the admission of this evidence did not “‘influence the jury’ or had only a ‘slight effect.’”
    Shifflett, 289 Va. at 12 (quoting Clay, 
    262 Va. at 260
    ). Therefore, the error was harmless.
    III. CONCLUSION
    We hold that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in refusing to admit evidence of
    third-party guilt. In addition, while the trial court erred in allowing the Commonwealth to
    - 17 -
    impeach its own witness, such error was harmless. Consequently, we affirm the judgment of the
    trial court.
    Affirmed.
    - 18 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 1261182

Filed Date: 12/17/2019

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 12/17/2019