Daniel Lee Sine v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedApril 7, 2026
Docket0696253
StatusPublished

This text of Daniel Lee Sine v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Daniel Lee Sine 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
Daniel Lee Sine v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Record No. 0696-25-3

DANIEL LEE SINE v. COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges O’Brien, Lorish and Senior Judge Humphreys Argued at Lexington, Virginia Opinion Issued April 7, 2026

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF BOTETOURT COUNTY Joel R. Branscom, Judge

John S. Koehler (The Law Office of John S. Steele, PLLC, on briefs), for appellant.

Sandra M. Workman, Senior Assistant Attorney General (Jason S. Miyares,1 Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

PUBLISHED OPINION BY JUDGE ROBERT J. HUMPHREYS

Daniel Lee Sine pleaded guilty under a plea agreement to malicious wounding. The

Circuit Court of Botetourt County convicted Sine and sentenced him to a term of 20 years’

incarceration, with 16 years suspended. In this appeal, Sine asserts that the sentence the trial

court imposed departed from the term specified in the plea agreement, so the court erred by not

granting his post-judgment motion to set the sentence aside and resentence him according to the

plea agreement, or alternatively, to withdraw his guilty plea. For the following reasons, we

affirm the circuit court’s judgment.

1 Jay C. Jones succeeded Jason S. Miyares as Attorney General on January 17, 2026. BACKGROUND

Sine was indicted for aggravated malicious wounding. He entered an agreement with the

Commonwealth to plead guilty to an amended charge of malicious wounding. The plea agreement

provided that the court would sentence Sine after a presentence report, but he would be released on

bond pending sentencing. His presentence release would be supervised by a probation officer and

include weekly drug screenings. “If no problems [arose] during his release,” the plea agreement

continued, the court would sentence Sine to 10 years’ incarceration, with all but time served

suspended. The circuit court accepted the plea agreement, convicted Sine of malicious

wounding, ordered a presentence report, and released him on bond pending sentencing. The trial

court expressly advised Sine, “It’s important for you to follow the terms of this . . . in order to get

the benefit of it.” The court’s conditions for release included “abstinence from alcohol.”

While on release, Sine battered and threatened another individual, resulting in a charge of

assault and battery. He also admittedly consumed alcohol and tested positive for it at a drug

screening. The Commonwealth moved to revoke his bond. After a hearing, the circuit court

stated, “You have . . . an agreement and you violated the agreement,” granted the

Commonwealth’s motion, revoked Sine’s bond, and ordered him detained until sentencing.

A probation officer completed the presentence report and calculated a sentencing

guidelines recommendation. The discretionary sentencing range was an active sentence of three

years and five months to seven years and seven months, with a midpoint of six years and four

months. At the sentencing hearing, the Commonwealth asked for a 20-year sentence, with all but

6 years and 4 months—i.e., the sentencing range midpoint—suspended. Sine, through counsel,

asked to be sentenced “at the low end of the guidelines”; he did not ask to be sentenced in

accordance with the plea agreement or to withdraw his plea.

-2- The court sentenced Sine to a term of 20 years’ incarceration, with all but 4 years

suspended. The court asked Sine if he had any questions. Sine personally asked, “So how long

did I get?” The court reiterated that it would impose a four-year active sentence, with credit for

time served, which was about a year. Sine personally replied, “Awesome.” He did not mention

the plea agreement, ask why the sentence departed from the agreed term, ask the court to impose

the agreed sentence, or ask to withdraw his guilty plea.

The circuit court entered a final order memorializing its ruling on March 24, 2025. The

next day, Sine wrote a letter to the court requesting resentencing in accordance with the plea

agreement or, alternatively, to withdraw the plea agreement and his guilty plea. The court’s

judicial administrative assistant forwarded the letter to Sine’s trial counsel and the

Commonwealth on April 10, 2025. Sine’s counsel filed no further motion, and the court entered

no order addressing Sine’s requests. On April 15, 2025, Sine filed a timely pro se notice of

appeal and requested the appointment of appellate counsel. The court appointed Sine’s present

counsel to represent him in this appeal. Sine appeals from the court’s failure to grant either of

the requests in his pro se letter.

ANALYSIS

When a trial “court accepts [a] plea agreement, the court must inform the defendant that it

will embody in its judgment and sentence the disposition provided for in the agreement.” Rule

3A:8(c)(3). But “Rule 3A:8 is silent as to a defendant’s right to withdraw a guilty plea, entered

pursuant to a dispositional plea agreement, after the defendant breaches the plea agreement.” Smith

v. Commonwealth, 17 Va. App. 162, 165 (1993).

Sine asserts that he had a due process right to withdraw his guilty plea when he was

sentenced in violation of the plea agreement. He claims that the language in the plea agreement,

that the circuit court would impose the agreed sentence “[i]f no problems [arose] during his

-3- [presentence] release,” is ambiguous and did not clearly inform him that the conduct for which his

presentence release was revoked violated the plea agreement. Further, he continues, neither the

Commonwealth nor the court notified him before sentencing that he would not receive the agreed

sentence, and he was not advised of a right to withdraw his guilty plea. Regardless of whether the

court imposed the four-year active sentence because it rejected the plea agreement or because it

construed Sine to have violated it, he argues that he was entitled to withdraw his plea under Smith.

The Commonwealth counters that Sine’s arguments about resentencing are barred by the

prohibition on approbating and reprobating. The Commonwealth notes that at the sentencing

hearing, Sine, through counsel, did not ask for the agreed sentence but for a sentence at the low end

of the sentencing guidelines range, which was three years and five months; Sine received a sentence

of four years minus time served. Thus, the Commonwealth contends, he asked for the sentence the

court imposed but now rejects it. Sine replies that his counsel’s request for a sentence at the low

end of the guidelines range did not approbate and his post-judgment request to either receive the

agreed sentence or withdraw his guilty plea did not reprobate. We agree with the Commonwealth.

“A litigant cannot ‘approbate and reprobate by taking successive positions in the course of

litigation that are either inconsistent with each other or mutually contradictory,’ or else such

arguments are waived.” AV Auto., L.L.C. v. Bavely, 85 Va. App. 559, 577 (2025) (quoting Amazon

Logistics, Inc. v. Va. Emp. Comm’n, 304 Va. 107, 114-15 (2025) (per curiam)). “This estoppel

doctrine has been a ‘longstanding component of our jurisprudence’ and applies whenever a litigant

‘has affirmatively staked out a position or asked the court to act.’” Page v. Portsmouth Redev. &

Hous. Auth., 303 Va. 259, 267 (2024) (quoting Commonwealth v. Holman, 303 Va. 62, 71-72

(2024)). “‘The approbate-reprobate doctrine is broader and more demanding than’ the rules of

procedural default.” Holman, 303 Va. at 72 (quoting Alford v.

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Daniel Lee Sine v. Commonwealth of Virginia, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daniel-lee-sine-v-commonwealth-of-virginia-vactapp-2026.