Daryl O. Tyler v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedAugust 10, 2021
Docket0838201
StatusPublished

This text of Daryl O. Tyler v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Daryl O. Tyler 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
Daryl O. Tyler v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

VIRGINIA: In the Court of Appeals of Virginia on Tuesday the 10th day of August, 2021. PUBLISHED

Daryl O. Tyler, Petitioner,

against Record No. 0838-20-1

Commonwealth of Virginia, Respondent.

Upon a Petition for a Writ of Actual Innocence

Before Judges Humphreys, Huff, and Russell

Daryl O. Tyler seeks a Writ of Actual Innocence pursuant to Chapter 19.3 of Title 19.2 of the Code of

Virginia. In March 2017, following a bench trial, the Circuit Court of Gloucester County convicted Tyler of

misdemeanor assault and battery and felony strangulation. By final order of May 26, 2017, the trial court

sentenced Tyler to five years in prison for the strangulation and twelve months in jail for the misdemeanor

assault and battery.

In his July 22, 2020 petition, Tyler asserts that he is actually innocent of strangulation.1 He

specifically contends that he is entitled to relief based on the affidavit of a non-testifying witness who was

present during the “physical altercation” from which Tyler’s conviction arose and now avers that he did not

see Tyler “strangle or choke” the victim. Tyler’s petition also includes a newspaper report that, in May 2020,

the victim was indicted on a charge of malicious wounding for an unrelated incident that occurred in

December 2019. The Attorney General filed a response to the petition and Tyler, represented by counsel, has

filed a reply. After considering the parties’ arguments and the entire record, we conclude that Tyler is not

entitled to a writ of actual innocence.

1 Tyler does not challenge his conviction for misdemeanor assault and battery; this Court lacks jurisdiction to consider a claim of actual innocence for a misdemeanor conviction. See Code § 19.2-327.10. BACKGROUND

On the night of September 29, 2016, Craig Berry (“Craig”), Rogdrick Berry (“Rogdrick”),2 and Tyler

picked up Carmella Rosell from her residence. Craig was driving, Tyler was in the front passenger seat, and

Rogdrick and Rosell were in the back seat. The group planned to go to a strip club but first stopped at Wawa

on the way to use the ATM.

At Wawa, Craig and Rogdrick went into the store while Tyler and Rosell stayed in Craig’s truck.

According to Rosell, Tyler propositioned her.3 When she rebuffed his advances, Tyler offered Rosell money

to have sex with him. Craig and Rogdrick then returned to the truck, and the four proceeded to a 7-Eleven.

At 7-Eleven, Tyler got out of the truck to speak with friends in the parking lot. While Tyler was out of the

truck, Rosell told Craig and Rogdrick of Tyler’s advances and stated that she was uncomfortable in his

presence. Craig, Rogdrick, and Rosell then decided to tell Tyler (falsely) that they intended to go home and

would drop him off. Rosell stated that Craig and Rogdrick tasked her with telling Tyler that they were going

home. Upon hearing this, Tyler “freaked out” and began yelling, accusing the group of lying to him.

Tyler asked to be taken to a friend’s house and once there, Craig parked in the driveway. Tyler got

out and disappeared briefly, but soon returned to the truck and got back in. Tyler was upset and asked to be

driven to another location. Tyler and Craig began arguing, and Tyler grabbed the keys from the ignition.

When the altercation between Craig and Tyler “escalat[ed],” Rosell “got in the middle and tried to . . . push

both of them apart.” Tyler responded by hitting her with his fists, “tr[ying] to choke” her, and biting her.

Rogdrick tried to “crawl across” Rosell to stop Tyler from hitting her. Rogdrick then pulled her out of the

truck to try to stop the attack, but Tyler got out and resumed punching Rosell in the face.

Rosell got back into the truck and attempted to use Rogdrick’s cell phone to call the police. Tyler

climbed on top of her and attempted to grab the phone, and she let him take it to prevent it from breaking.

2 Craig is Rogdrick’s uncle. 3 Rosell had met Tyler only once before. -2- When Tyler grabbed the phone, he had his other hand on Rosell’s neck and “was pulling [her] neck back.”

Because Rosell was lying on her stomach, she could feel her “bone straining in the back of [her] neck” and

could not “breathe at all.” While Tyler was choking her, she felt dizzy and believed that she “was going to

die that night.” Rosell eventually was able to get Tyler’s hand off her neck.

After the altercation, Craig dropped Tyler off at his sister-in-law’s house and then drove Rosell and

Rogdrick to the Gloucester County Sheriff’s Office.4 Rosell reported the assault to Deputy Dylan Moore,

who took verbal and written statements from Rosell, Craig, and Rogdrick. Moore also photographed Rosell’s

injuries; the photographs, which were admitted into evidence at Tyler’s trial, depicted bruises on Rosell’s

face, marks on her throat and neck, a bite mark on her arm, and a broken shirt strap. Rosell went to the

hospital a week later because she thought her jaw might be dislocated and she “had been having problems

with the back of [her] neck.”5 Rosell continued to suffer from frequent headaches and had difficulty talking

and eating for approximately two weeks after the attack.

Craig and Tyler, testifying for the defense,6 gave a materially different account of the altercation.

Craig denied that he and Tyler had had an “argument”; rather, Tyler took the truck keys because “he didn’t

want to go home” but Craig wanted to leave because he had to work the next morning. Rosell then told Tyler

to return Craig’s keys. Tyler and Rosell then got “into a little argument” and the next thing Craig knew,

Rosell, Tyler, and Rogdrick had exited the truck and Tyler and Rosell got into “a fist fight.” Tyler hit Rosell

“once or twice,” and she also hit him. After the fight was over, “[t]hey got back in the truck and [they] left.”

Craig testified that he never saw Rogdrick lay on top of Rosell to shield her from Tyler. Craig also

stated that Tyler never choked or strangled Rosell during the fight. According to Craig, Rosell threatened to

4 On the way to Tyler’s sister-in-law’s house, Rosell called her grandmother, and Tyler demanded to see the phone to ensure that Rosell was not calling the police. 5 Rosell stated that she did not go to the hospital right away because she was unable to get a ride. 6 Tyler also sought to call Sheila Branch to testify about Rosell’s purported reputation for untruthfulness in the community; the trial court concluded that Branch’s proffered testimony was inadmissible because it was not proper impeachment evidence. -3- press charges against Craig if he did not take her to the sheriff’s office. Craig stated that his motivation in

taking Rosell to the sheriff’s office and making a statement was to get home and go to bed because he had to

work the next morning.

On cross-examination, Craig confirmed that he had provided the sheriff’s office with a written

statement relaying that Tyler “started beating the young girl for no reason at all,” and that Craig did not tell

Deputy Moore that Rosell threatened to press charges against him if he did not take her to the sheriff’s office.

Craig also confirmed that Tyler was his cousin.

According to Tyler, when the group arrived at his friend’s residence, they all still planned to go to the

strip club; he and Craig also intended to go to a “get-together” after the strip club. Tyler and Craig then got

into a “little argument,” and, after Craig got upset, Tyler took the keys out of the ignition and told Craig he

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