Jeffrey Jason Gardner, s/ka Jeffery Jason Gardner v. Commonwealth of Virginia ( 2004 )


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  •                                COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    Present: Judges Benton, Elder and Kelsey
    Argued at Salem, Virginia
    JEFFREY JASON GARDNER, S/K/A
    JEFFERY JASON GARDNER
    MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY
    v.     Record No. 2192-02-3                                     JUDGE LARRY G. ELDER
    APRIL 6, 2004
    COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF WASHINGTON COUNTY
    Charles B. Flannagan, II, Judge
    Robert Austin Vinyard for appellant.
    Alice T. Armstrong, Assistant Attorney General (Jerry W. Kilgore,
    Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.
    Jeffrey Jason Gardner (appellant) appeals from his jury trial convictions for five counts of
    forcible sodomy in violation of Code § 18.2-67.1 and five counts of object sexual penetration in
    violation of Code § 18.2-67.2. On appeal, he argues evidence that he penetrated the complaining
    witness’ anus with his penis did not establish animate object penetration in violation of Code
    § 18.2-67.2 and that this conduct was punishable only as sodomy under Code § 18.2-67.1. He
    also contends the evidence was insufficient to support the convictions because the
    uncorroborated testimony of the complaining witness was inherently incredible. We hold that, to
    the extent appellant preserved these assignments of error for appeal, the evidence was sufficient
    to support his convictions. Thus, we affirm.
    *
    Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication.
    I.
    A.
    PENIS AS ANIMATE OBJECT
    Appellant argues evidence that he penetrated the complaining witness’ anus with his
    penis did not establish animate object penetration in violation of Code § 18.2-67.2 and that this
    conduct was punishable only as sodomy under Code § 18.2-67.1. He candidly concedes that he
    made no contemporaneous objection to his convictions on this ground at trial as required by Rule
    5A:18 but argues that the ends of justice exception supports our consideration of it on appeal.
    We hold the ends of justice exception is inapplicable.
    Pursuant to Rule 5A:18, this Court will not consider allegations of trial court error as a
    basis for reversal where appellant failed to register a timely objection, except for good cause
    shown or to attain the ends of justice. To invoke the ends of justice exception, the record must
    “affirmatively show[] that a miscarriage of justice has occurred, not . . . merely . . . that a
    miscarriage [of justice] might have occurred.” Mounce v. Commonwealth, 
    4 Va. App. 433
    , 436,
    
    357 S.E.2d 742
    , 744 (1987). To satisfy this burden, an appellant must show “more than that the
    Commonwealth failed to prove an element of the offense. . . . [T]he appellant must demonstrate
    that he or she was convicted for conduct that was not a criminal offense[,] or the record must
    affirmatively prove that an element of the offense did not occur.” Redman v. Commonwealth,
    
    25 Va. App. 215
    , 221-22, 
    487 S.E.2d 269
    , 272-73 (1997).
    Appellant contends, in essence, that he was convicted for conduct that was not a criminal
    offense under Code § 18.2-67.2, the object penetration statute, because the Commonwealth
    alleged and argued that he penetrated the victim’s anus with his penis. Appellant contends the
    term, “any object,” as used in Code § 18.2-67.2(A)’s proscription against the “penetrat[ion of]
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    the . . . anus of a complaining witness . . . with any object,” “does not mean a penis, in that [that]
    crime is covered under the sodomy statute.” We disagree.
    Code § 18.2-67.2 criminalizes both “inanimate” and “animate object sexual penetration”
    and expressly states that penetration with “any object” violates the statute if all other elements
    have been proved. Code § 18.2-67.2(A) (emphasis added). “The statute thus addresses the
    universe of objects,” both inanimate and animate, “with which an accused may not sexually
    penetrate a complaining witness.” Bell v. Commonwealth, 
    22 Va. App. 93
    , 99, 
    468 S.E.2d 114
    ,
    117 (1996). Further, as we held in Herrell v. Commonwealth, 
    28 Va. App. 579
    , 
    507 S.E.2d 633
    (1998), in which we interpreted the phrase “any object” as used in Code § 18.2-67.2:1,
    “‘[o]bject’ is defined as ‘a discrete visible or tangible thing.’ ‘Any’ is defined as ‘one no matter
    what one: every -- used . . . to indicate one that is selected without restriction or limitation of
    choice.’” 28 Va. App. at 585, 507 S.E.2d at 636 (quoting Webster’s Third New International
    Dictionary 1555, 97 (1981)); see also Armstrong v. Commonwealth, 
    263 Va. 573
    , 583, 
    562 S.E.2d 139
    , 145 (2002) (noting principle of statutory construction that “related statutes [should
    be read] in pari materia with the statute under consideration, in order to give consistent meaning
    to the language used by the General Assembly”). Manifestly, therefore, a penis is an animate
    “object” under Code § 18.2-67.2.
    The fact that the charged behavior may also have violated the forcible sodomy statute
    does not require a different result. “‘Where the circumstances surrounding an offense permit
    prosecution under either of two statutes, the selection of the statute under which to proceed is a
    matter of prosecutorial election.’” Brown v. Commonwealth, 
    30 Va. App. 243
    , 250, 
    516 S.E.2d 678
    , 682 (1999) (quoting Smith v. Commonwealth, 
    17 Va. App. 37
    , 41, 
    434 S.E.2d 914
    , 916
    (1993)).
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    Because appellant has failed to “demonstrate that he . . . was convicted for conduct that
    was not a criminal offense” or “that an element of the offense did not occur,” Redman, 25
    Va. App. at 221-22, 487 S.E.2d at 272-73, the ends of justice exception to Rule 5A:18 does not
    excuse his failure to make a specific contemporaneous objection at trial.
    B.
    SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE
    Appellant contends next that the evidence was insufficient to support any of his
    convictions because it was based solely on the testimony of the complaining witness, D.J.S.,
    whose testimony appellant argues was inherently incredible. We disagree.
    On appellate review, we examine the evidence in the light most favorable to the
    Commonwealth, and we may not disturb the jury’s verdict unless it is plainly wrong or without
    evidence to support it. Traverso v. Commonwealth, 
    6 Va. App. 172
    , 176, 
    366 S.E.2d 719
    , 721
    (1988). The conclusions of the fact finder on issues of witness credibility may be disturbed on
    appeal only when we find that the witness’ testimony was “inherently incredible, or so contrary
    to human experience as to render it unworthy of belief.” Fisher v. Commonwealth, 
    228 Va. 296
    ,
    299-300, 
    321 S.E.2d 202
    , 204 (1984). In all other cases, we must defer to the conclusions of
    “the fact finder[,] who has the opportunity of seeing and hearing the witnesses.” Schneider v.
    Commonwealth, 
    230 Va. 379
    , 382, 
    337 S.E.2d 735
    , 736-37 (1985). These same principles apply
    in cases involving rape, sodomy and other sexual offenses, which may be sustained solely upon
    the testimony of the victim, even in the absence of corroborating evidence. Fisher, 228 Va. at
    299, 321 S.E.2d at 203.
    Here, D.J.S. testified that, on at least five different occasions, appellant subjected him to
    the same pattern of abusive sexual contact. On each occasion, that contact included appellant’s
    fellating D.J.S. with penetration or appellant’s persuading D.J.S. to fellate him with penetration,
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    or both, and appellant’s penetrating D.J.S.’s anus with his penis. It is true that D.J.S.’s testimony
    was initially somewhat confusing regarding whether appellant put D.J.S.’s penis on or in
    appellant’s mouth and vice versa. However, on direct examination, D.J.S. clarified this
    testimony as to four of the five charges, indicating expressly that appellant put D.J.S.’s penis in
    appellant’s mouth or had D.J.S. put appellant’s penis in D.J.S.’s mouth, or both. Further, on
    cross-examination, appellant elicited testimony that on each of the occasions of sexual abuse
    about which D.J.S. had testified on direct examination, “the exact same thing happened,”
    including the same oral-genital contact. That D.J.S. could not recount in what room of the house
    each incident occurred, described each incident in almost identical fashion, and exhibited no
    internal physical injuries when examined by a physician over seven months later does not render
    his testimony inherently incredible. Thus, the Commonwealth’s evidence supported the jury’s
    finding that appellant was guilty of all charged offenses against D.J.S. See, e.g., Ashby v.
    Commonwealth, 
    33 Va. App. 540
    , 548-49, 
    535 S.E.2d 182
    , 186-87 (2000) (affirming convictions
    for carnal knowledge of a minor in violation of Code § 18.2-63, holding “[t]he mere fact that the
    victim, a [fourteen-year-old] special education student, told no one about the incidents
    immediately after they happened, willingly slept in a tent with appellant again after the [first
    encounter] and remained friends with appellant after the second encounter . . . did not compel the
    conclusion that his testimony was inherently incredible”).
    II.
    For these reasons, we hold that, to the extent appellant preserved these assignments of
    error for appeal, the evidence was sufficient to support his convictions. Thus, we affirm.
    Affirmed.
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