Braxton v. Commonwealth

493 S.E.2d 688, 26 Va. App. 176, 1997 Va. App. LEXIS 758
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedDecember 16, 1997
Docket1344964
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 493 S.E.2d 688 (Braxton v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Braxton v. Commonwealth, 493 S.E.2d 688, 26 Va. App. 176, 1997 Va. App. LEXIS 758 (Va. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

*179 ELDER, Judge.

Kenneth Lamont Braxton (“appellant”) appeals his convictions of first degree murder and petit larceny. He contends the trial court erred when it (1) admitted as an “excited utterance” the hearsay statement of the victim’s three-year-old son (“child”) and (2) ruled that the child’s statement and evidence regarding his condition following the discovery of the victim’s body were relevant. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

I.

FACTS

In early 1995, Lorann Cox (“victim”) was working as an undercover drug informant for the Manassas City Police Department. On February 3, 1995, she executed a controlled buy of cocaine from appellant. On June 3, the Manassas police obtained a warrant for appellant’s arrest based upon the information provided by the victim. This warrant was executed on June 7 and a preliminary hearing was scheduled for July 6. A subpoena was issued ordering the victim to appear and testify at the preliminary hearing.

On June 30, appellant was riding in a car near the victim’s home with his second cousin, Yolanda Skinner. Appellant told Skinner “about some charge that [the victim] had on him” and stated that “he would kill [the victim], if he could.” Appellant pointed out the victim’s house to Skinner and said, “that’s where the bitch lives.” During this conversation, appellant asked Skinner if she knew where he could obtain a gun. Skinner replied that she did not know anybody who had a gun.

On the evening of July 2, the victim and her three year old visited her parents at their home. The victim’s father noticed that the child’s “nose [was] running” and made arrangements with the victim to care for the child the following day. The victim’s father and the victim, who worked for the same employer but at different times of the day, arranged to meet at the end of the father’s shift so that the father could take the *180 child home and care for him while the victim worked. After making these arrangements, the victim left her parents’ house around 10:30 p.m. to return home for the evening.

The next day, July 3, the victim did not meet her father at the appointed time. The victim’s father attempted to contact her by phone and by pager, but the victim did not respond. The victim’s father then drove to the victim’s house and arrived there at about 2:35 p.m. He tried the front door, discovered that it was unlocked, and walked into the victim’s house. After searching for six or seven minutes, he discovered his daughter’s body lying face down behind a love seat in the living room. He also found the child, who was unharmed, next to the victim’s body. The victim’s father picked up the child and removed him from the scene. Four minutes later, the victim’s father used a phone in a neighboring house to call “911” and then the victim’s brother.

Both an ambulance and the police arrived at the scene a short while later. The victim’s house was secured, and investigators collected evidence from the scene. A metal cooking pot with a large dent in it was found a few feet from the victim’s body. A plastic container that dispensed body lotion was found next to the victim’s sink. A bloody fingerprint matching appellant’s right index finger was found on top of the dispenser’s pumping mechanism. A DNA analysis of the blood in which the fingerprint was formed indicated a high probability that it was the victim’s.

An autopsy of the victim revealed that she was stabbed nineteen times in the neck with a sharp object. The medical examiner also found “a number of bruises about the [victim’s] body and face” and a swollen area on the back of her head that were consistent with “a blow to the head with a large object such as a pot.” The victim’s death was attributed to the stab wounds to her neck, which caused “profuse bleeding.”

Ronald Wortmann, an inmate in the Prince William County Adult Detention Center, informed authorities that appellant confessed to him that he murdered the victim. Wortmann later testified that he asked appellant “what he was in here *181 for” and appellant told him that he had been charged with the victim’s murder. Appellant then told Wortmann that “[he] did the bitch.” Appellant told Wortmann he had learned that the victim was working undercover for the Manassas City Police Department by following her when she met with officers at the police department. When Wortmann asked him why he had murdered the victim, appellant responded, “she was going to tell on all of us.” Appellant also told Wortmann that “a baby” was at the scene when he murdered the victim.

Appellant was charged with the capital murder and robbery of the victim. A jury convicted him of first degree murder and petit larceny.

The scope of this appeal is limited to the admissibility of an out-of-court statement made by the child after he was discovered at the crime scene and the evidence regarding his condition during this time. The following is a summary of the contested evidence.

At trial, the victim’s father testified that when he found the child next to the victim’s body, “it looked like [the child] had been sleeping across her body____” After he picked up the child and carried him out of the house, the victim’s father noticed that “[the child] had dried mucous down the front of his nose from the cold” and that he was wearing “the same diaper that he had on the night before.” He also noticed that the child was wearing a t-shirt that had “some blood on it” and that the child “had kind of a glazed look in his eyes” and “was in a dazed state.” Appellant objected to all of this evidence on the ground that it was not relevant, and the trial court overruled his objections.

Later in the trial, the victim’s brother testified that the victim’s father gave the child to him outside the victim’s home. The victim’s brother testified that he spoke with a police officer for about five minutes and then took the child to his home “to get him away from everything.” The victim’s brother noticed that the child “was not himself’ and that he “was in shock, kind of dazed.” The victim’s brother also observed blood on the child’s shirt and identified in court the blood *182 stained shirt that the child had been wearing. The victim’s brother testified that his wife washed the shirt before delivering it to the police. Appellant’s counsel objected to all of this evidence on the ground that it was irrelevant, and the trial court again overruled his objections.

The victim’s sister-in-law testified that, on July 3, the victim’s brother brought the child to their house from the crime scene. She testified that the child “was quiet [and] subdued” and that “there was some blood on his shirt.” She testified that she removed the blood-stained shirt from the child and eventually washed it. Appellant’s counsel objected to all of this evidence on the ground that it was not relevant. The trial court overruled his objections. The victim’s sister-in-law also testified that the child made statements about the victim “every ten to fifteen minutes.”

Kathleen Burch testified that she arrived at the residence of the victim’s sister-in-law on July 3 after the child was already there.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
493 S.E.2d 688, 26 Va. App. 176, 1997 Va. App. LEXIS 758, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/braxton-v-commonwealth-vactapp-1997.