Michael Lee Ellis v. Commonwealth of Virginia ( 2008 )


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  •                                COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    Present: Judges Kelsey, Petty and Senior Judge Willis
    Argued at Chesapeake, Virginia
    MICHAEL LEE ELLIS
    MEMORANDUM OPINION * BY
    v.               Record No. 1485-07-1                             JUDGE D. ARTHUR KELSEY
    SEPTEMBER 30, 2008
    COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF NORFOLK
    Lydia Calvert Taylor, Judge
    Robert H. Knight, III, Assistant Public Defender (Office
    of the Public Defender, on brief), for appellant.
    Josephine F. Whalen, Assistant Attorney General II
    (Robert F. McDonnell, Attorney General, on brief), for
    appellee.
    A jury convicted Michael Lee Ellis of aggravated malicious wounding, violating a
    protective order, and use of a firearm during the commission of a felony. On appeal, Ellis argues
    the trial court erred by admitting into evidence recorded 911 calls because they were “unduly
    prejudicial.” Ellis never made this argument in the trial court, however, and he cannot do so for
    the first time on appeal. We affirm.
    I.
    The principal evidence at trial came from the victim, Ellis’s former girlfriend. She
    testified she broke off her relationship with Ellis in March 2006. A month later it became
    necessary for her to obtain a protective order to forbid Ellis from harassing her. Around
    1:00 a.m. on April 11, 2006, the victim arrived at her duplex apartment. Before she could get
    into the apartment, Ellis appeared with a gun from behind some bushes. She begged Ellis not to
    *
    Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication.
    shoot her and screamed “Rock, don’t.” The victim’s mother and sister, both inside the
    apartment, heard the scream. Ellis then shot the victim in the face at point blank range.
    The victim feigned death until Ellis ran away. She managed to find her mother and
    exclaim that Ellis (“Rock”) had just shot her. The mother called 911 but was too distraught to
    speak clearly. The victim’s sister told the 911 operator that Ellis had just shot the victim. A
    neighbor also called 911 saying he had heard the gunshot and the victim’s cries for help.
    Police found Ellis’s vehicle at a local motel. In the vehicle, police found the victim’s
    purse but could not find Ellis. He later turned himself in and claimed he had nothing to do with
    the shooting as he had been with two women, strippers who worked for him, at a private party
    that night. The strippers appeared at trial and supported Ellis’s alibi.
    At trial, the Commonwealth sought to introduce into evidence the 911 calls. Ellis’s
    counsel objected on hearsay grounds. The trial court agreed the recordings contained hearsay
    and gave a cautionary instruction to the jury to not consider the hearsay statements in the calls
    for the truth of the matter asserted. The court emphasized the recordings included “sheer
    hearsay” and Ellis was “absolutely correct to make an objection” on this ground. The jury, the
    court admonished, could not consider the statements identifying Ellis as the shooter because the
    911 callers “were basing it solely on what the alleged victim . . . told them.”
    After completing the cautionary instruction, the court asked Ellis’s counsel: “Would you
    like me to add anything else to that?” “No, Your Honor,” counsel replied. The court once again
    summarized the cautionary instruction for the jury and asked Ellis’s counsel: “Is that sufficient?
    If not, come up and tell me, and I will add anything that you think.” Counsel answered, “That is
    sufficient, Judge.” Counsel then added a new ground for the objection: “I would object to the
    relevance, and I know the Court’s ruling.” The court responded by ruling that the 911 calls were
    relevant to explain the police response to the shooting but not relevant, as the cautionary
    -2-
    instruction noted, for the purpose of identifying Ellis as the shooter. “Then I would just ask the
    Court to note my exception,” counsel concluded.
    When the 911 recordings were played for the jury, the trial court repeated for the third
    time its cautionary instruction warning jurors not to consider the identification of Ellis by the
    callers for the truth of the matter asserted. Again the court sought to clarify the objection, asking
    Ellis’s counsel if her “only objection” was the identification of Ellis as the shooter. “Yes,
    ma’am,” counsel answered. The court, now for the fourth time, repeated the cautionary
    instruction advising the jury to consider the 911 calls “solely to show . . . the sequence of events”
    and not to identify Ellis as the shooter. “That is what your objection was to this exclusively?”
    the court asked Ellis’s counsel. “Yes, ma’am,” counsel again replied.
    Later in the trial, the neighbor who made a 911 call testified. He stated he heard the
    gunshot and saw the victim leave the scene screaming: “Help me. Somebody help me. He shot
    me. He’s trying to kill me.” Ellis’s counsel objected on hearsay grounds, but the court ruled the
    statement fit within the excited utterance exception to the hearsay rule. The victim’s mother also
    took the stand at trial and testified that, immediately prior to the gunshot, she heard her daughter
    screaming “Rock, don’t.” Ellis’s counsel objected on hearsay grounds, and the court held the
    statement admissible as an excited utterance. The victim’s sister also testified that, just before
    the gunshot, the victim screamed “Rock, don’t.” Ellis’s counsel did not object to this testimony.
    The jury rejected Ellis’s alibi and found him guilty on all counts.
    II.
    Ellis frames the issue on appeal this way: “Whether playing the tape of the three 911
    calls by the victim’s mother and sister at the beginning of the trial, which was admitted by the
    court as evidence of why the police went looking for Appellant, was unduly prejudicial due to
    the numerous hearsay statements made by the callers identifying Appellant as the shooter?”
    -3-
    Appellant’s Br. at 3 (emphasis added); Pet. for App. at 3 (emphasis added). 1 He argues the
    introduction of the recordings at the beginning of trial, the “hysterical voices” of the callers
    identifying him as the shooter, and the ineffectual cautionary instructions all combined to render
    the evidence “so unduly prejudicial” as to be inadmissible. See Appellant’s Br. at 4-5.
    Ellis, however, never objected at trial to the 911 calls as unduly prejudicial. His first
    objection was hearsay and his second relevance. The trial court addressed the hearsay objection
    by giving multiple cautionary instructions forbidding the jury from accepting the 911 calls as
    evidence that Ellis was the shooter. The court addressed the relevance objection by ruling the
    911 calls provided a contextual background for the police investigation and explained the
    sequence of events immediately after the shooting.
    Objecting to evidence as unduly prejudicial is different from attacking it as logically
    irrelevant or, even if relevant, nonetheless barred by the hearsay rule. No matter how “remote or
    insignificant,” evidence is relevant so long as it “tends to establish the probability or
    improbability” of a material fact. Thomas v. Commonwealth, 
    44 Va. App. 741
    , 753, 
    607 S.E.2d 738
    , 743, adopted upon reh’g en banc, 
    45 Va. App. 811
    , 
    613 S.E.2d 870
     (2005) (citation
    omitted). Evidence is unduly prejudicial, despite its logical relevance, when it has a tendency to
    “inflame irrational emotions” or lead a factfinder to “illegitimate inferences.” Id. at 758, 
    607 S.E.2d at 745
    . Even when logically relevant and not unduly prejudicial, evidence can still be
    independently barred by the hearsay rule. While perhaps related, these three concepts are far
    from synonymous. See generally Kent Sinclair, A Guide to Evidence in Virginia §§ 401, 403 &
    802 (2008).
    1
    Under Rule 5A:12(c), only questions “presented in the petition for appeal will be
    noticed by the Court of Appeals.” Clifford v. Commonwealth, 
    274 Va. 23
    , 25, 
    645 S.E.2d 295
    ,
    297 (2007); McLean v. Commonwealth, 
    30 Va. App. 322
    , 329, 
    526 S.E.2d 717
    , 720 (1999) (en
    banc). Unlike Rule 5A:18, Rule 5A:12(c) contains no “good cause” or “ends of justice”
    exceptions authorizing us to address issues outside the scope of the question presented. See
    Thompson v. Commonwealth, 
    27 Va. App. 620
    , 626, 
    500 S.E.2d 823
    , 826 (1998).
    -4-
    The only issue before us on appeal, undue prejudice, was never raised in the trial court.
    As we have often said:
    As a precondition to appellate review, Rule 5A:18 requires a
    contemporaneous objection in the trial court to preserve the issue
    on appeal. Not just any objection will do. It must be both specific
    and timely — so that the trial judge would know the particular
    point being made in time to do something about it.
    Thomas, 
    44 Va. App. at 750
    , 
    607 S.E.2d at 742
     (emphasis in original). “Making one specific
    argument on an issue does not preserve a separate legal point on the same issue for review.”
    Edwards v. Commonwealth, 
    41 Va. App. 752
    , 760, 
    589 S.E.2d 444
    , 448 (2003) (en banc), aff’d
    by unpublished order, No. 040019 (Va. Oct. 15, 2004) (emphasis added). When making an
    evidentiary objection counsel must identify the “specific rule of evidence” on which he relies.
    Neal v. Commonwealth, 
    15 Va. App. 416
    , 422, 
    425 S.E.2d 521
    , 525 (1992) (citation omitted). 2
    By not raising undue prejudice at trial, Ellis never gave the trial court an opportunity to
    decide whether — even with multiple cautionary instructions, even though relevant, and even if
    not barred by the hearsay rule — the 911 calls should still be excluded from evidence as unduly
    prejudicial. “The appellate court, in fairness to the trial judge, should not . . . put a different twist
    on a question that is at odds with the question presented to the trial court.” Commonwealth v.
    Shifflett, 
    257 Va. 34
    , 44, 
    510 S.E.2d 232
    , 237 (1999). Among the “salutary purposes of our
    contemporaneous objection rule” is to give the trial judge “a fair opportunity to rule intelligently
    on objections while there is still an opportunity to correct errors in the trial court” and to “protect
    the trial court from litigants asserting error on appeal that had not been raised at trial.” Vasquez
    v. Mabini, 
    269 Va. 155
    , 163, 
    606 S.E.2d 809
    , 813 (2005) (citation omitted).
    2
    See also Riner v. Commonwealth, 
    268 Va. 296
    , 323-25, 
    601 S.E.2d 555
    , 571-72 (2004)
    (holding that appellant waived challenge to double-tier hearsay by failing to specifically object to
    trial court’s incomplete ruling as to only one of the two tiers); West Alexandria Prop., Inc. v.
    First Va. Mortgage & Real Estate Inv. Trust, 
    221 Va. 134
    , 138, 
    267 S.E.2d 149
    , 151 (1980) (“On
    appeal, though taking the same general position as in the trial court, an appellant may not rely on
    reasons which could have been but were not raised for the benefit of the lower court.”).
    -5-
    III.
    Because Ellis failed to object at trial to the 911 calls as unduly prejudicial, he cannot now
    seek to overturn his conviction on this ground. 3 We thus affirm his convictions.
    Affirmed.
    3
    In his appellate brief, Ellis does not argue that the “good cause” and “ends of justice”
    exceptions to Rule 5A:18 apply to this case. We will not invoke these exceptions sua sponte.
    See Widdifield v. Commonwealth, 
    43 Va. App. 559
    , 564, 
    600 S.E.2d 159
    , 162 (2004) (en banc);
    Edwards, 
    41 Va. App. at 761
    , 
    589 S.E.2d at 448
    . At oral argument, Ellis suggested that the trial
    court’s cautionary instructions themselves demonstrate an implicit recognition of the unduly
    prejudicial nature of the 911 calls. We do not agree with this interpretation of the court’s
    instructions to the jury. But, even if we did, we would nonetheless find it an inadequate basis
    upon which to invoke the “good cause” and “ends of justice” exceptions to Rule 5A:18.
    -6-