Daivon Renee Lucas v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJuly 13, 2021
Docket0647204
StatusUnpublished

This text of Daivon Renee Lucas v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Daivon Renee Lucas v. Commonwealth of Virginia) 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
Daivon Renee Lucas v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Petty, Athey and Senior Judge Frank UNPUBLISHED

Argued by videoconference

DAIVON RENEE LUCAS MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 0647-20-4 JUDGE WILLIAM G. PETTY JULY 13, 2021 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ARLINGTON COUNTY Daniel S. Fiore, II, Judge

Shalev Ben-Avraham, Senior Assistant Public Defender, for appellant.

Mason D. Williams, Assistant Attorney General (Mark R. Herring, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

Daivon Renee Lucas appeals the trial court’s decision to reimpose the balance of her

sentence and its refusal to re-suspend any of that sentence. She argues that the court erred in failing

to indicate on the record that it had considered mitigating evidence. For the reasons below, we

affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

Because the parties are fully conversant with the record in this case and this memorandum

opinion carries no precedential value, we recite below only those facts and incidents of the

proceedings as are necessary to the parties’ understanding of the disposition of this appeal. On

appeal, we review the evidence in the “light most favorable” to the Commonwealth. Holloway

v. Commonwealth, 57 Va. App. 658, 663 (2011) (en banc).

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. In 2013, Lucas was convicted in the Circuit Court of Arlington County of credit card

theft in violation of Code § 18.2-192 and identity theft in violation of Code § 18.2-186.3. The

court sentenced her to three years for the credit card theft, with all suspended for four years, and

twelve months for the identity theft, with all but time served suspended for four years. The court

placed Lucas on four years of supervised probation, on the special condition that she was not to

leave the Commonwealth without first resolving other charges and meeting with the probation

officer.

Later in 2013, Lucas’s probation was transferred to California. She then travelled to

Pennsylvania without permission and was convicted there in 2016 of access device fraud, theft

by deception, and giving false identity to law enforcement. In December 2016, based upon a

major violation report submitted by Lucas’s probation officer, the Circuit Court of Arlington

County issued bench warrants for Lucas for violating her probation on the 2013 convictions by

changing residence without permission and absconding from supervision. For reasons not

entirely clear from the record, Lucas was not arrested on the warrant until 2020 and spent the

intervening time in several other states.

In 2020, the probation officer submitted an addendum to the 2016 major violation report,

listing multiple additional charges and convictions Lucas incurred between 2013 and 2019.1 In

2013, Lucas was convicted in California of credit card fraud and theft by forgery. In 2015, a

bench warrant was issued in California for seven charges involving theft, forgery, and giving a

false identity. Later that year, she pled guilty in New Jersey to theft by deception and receiving

stolen property. In 2019, Lucas was convicted and sentenced in California for theft by use of a

credit card and possession of a driver’s license to commit forgery. Later in 2019, after

1 This addendum was not included in the appendix in this appeal. The Commonwealth attached the addendum to the end of its appellee’s brief. -2- presumably being extradited to Maryland for an outstanding bench warrant, she pled guilty to

theft. Lucas was then extradited from Maryland to Virginia on the outstanding 2016 bench

warrants.

On February 21, 2020, Lucas had a hearing in the Circuit Court of Arlington County on

the probation violation report. She admitted to the allegations in the violation report and

addendum and submitted mitigation evidence. Counsel for Lucas submitted that Lucas had a

“two to three-year period where she started to turn it around . . . [and become] a productive

member of society where she wasn’t getting involved with the law.” During that period, she

worked in community housing in San Francisco.

The court asked whether, since 2013, Lucas had lived or visited anywhere other than

Pennsylvania, New Jersey, California, or Maryland. Counsel for Lucas stated, “I don’t believe

so.” The court then noted that “every place she’s gone to[,] she [has] committed a crime.”

Lucas then spoke on her own behalf, stating that she had “stayed out of jail and out of

trouble for years” in between her sentences and that she had worked “three jobs in the case

manager and social worker field in the city of San Francisco.” She stated that she had a

miscarriage in 2018 and that the child’s father and two of her friends were later killed in a triple

homicide perpetrated by her godbrother. Following those events, Lucas was let go from her job,

and she “fell into a very deep depression.” She said she “turned to alcohol” and “drank [her]self

to jail.” She asked the court for “another opportunity.”

In response, the court stated,

I really wish there were something the [c]ourt could do here. I wish there were something the [c]ourt could do here for you but I just see nothing. I have no alternatives; the charges of credit theft, attempted felony ID. Then you’re out and every state you visit you’re committing the same types of crimes.

-3- The court said, “I have no alternative but to impose the balance of the time,” and did so in its

final order. The order also stated:

THEREUPON the Defendant was given an opportunity to show cause why the suspended sentence should not be revoked, and the Defendant admitted the violation and the [c]ourt considered the information provided, and argument was heard by the Attorney for the Commonwealth and Attorney for the Defendant on the same.

This appeal followed. II. ANALYSIS

Lucas assigns error to a narrow issue: whether the trial court failed to “indicat[e] on the

record that the trial court considered the mitigation in this case.” She also argues that the

Commonwealth should be estopped from contesting the merits of Lucas’s appeal, because the

Commonwealth’s attorney previously acquiesced in the petition for appeal, and to change

positions now would be to approbate and reprobate.2

We hold that Lucas failed to properly preserve her argument below and that the ends of

justice exception has not been satisfied. Furthermore, we hold that the Commonwealth has not

approbated and reprobated by changing positions on appeal.

A. Lucas’s Argument was Not Preserved

Rule 5A:18 provides that “[n]o ruling of the trial court . . . will be considered as a basis

for reversal unless an objection was stated with reasonable certainty at the time of the ruling,

except for good cause shown or to enable this Court to attain the ends of justice.”

The purpose of the contemporaneous objection rule embodied in Rule 5A:18 is to inform the trial judge of the action complained of in order to give the judge the opportunity to consider the issue and

2 The Commonwealth’s attorney remained silent during the probation violation hearing and did not offer up the Commonwealth’s position regarding sentencing. For reasons not entirely clear from the record, he apparently had a change of heart sometime thereafter.

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