Dustin Lee Hamilton v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedFebruary 6, 2024
Docket1367221
StatusPublished

This text of Dustin Lee Hamilton v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Dustin Lee Hamilton 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.

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Dustin Lee Hamilton v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Chief Judge Decker, Judges Beales and Raphael Argued at Norfolk, Virginia PUBLISHED

DUSTIN LEE HAMILTON OPINION BY v. Record No. 1367-22-1 JUDGE RANDOLPH A. BEALES FEBRUARY 6, 2024 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF CHESAPEAKE John W. Brown, Judge

Brett P. Blobaum, Senior Appellate Attorney (Virginia Indigent Defense Commission, on briefs), for appellant.

Victoria Johnson, Senior Assistant Attorney General (Jason S. Miyares, Attorney General; Andrew T. Hull, Assistant Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

At a probation revocation hearing in August 2022, Dustin Hamilton was found to be in

violation of the terms of his probation. The trial court revoked Hamilton’s previously suspended

sentence, and then resuspended a portion of that previously suspended sentence. The trial court

also placed Hamilton back on supervised probation, and it added a new twenty-year period of

good behavior. On appeal, Hamilton argues, “The trial court erred in finding that it had

jurisdiction to revoke Mr. Hamilton’s previously suspended sentences.” Hamilton also argues,

“The trial court erred in returning Mr. Hamilton to supervised probation” and “in ordering

Mr. Hamilton to be of good behavior for twenty (20) years.”

I. BACKGROUND

On appeal, “we will view the evidence received at the revocation hearing in the light

most favorable to the Commonwealth, as the prevailing party, including all reasonable and legitimate inferences that may properly be drawn from it.” Henderson v. Commonwealth, 285

Va. 318, 329 (2013).

In 2006, Hamilton was found guilty of three counts of distribution of marijuana for

offenses that took place during September 2005. On August 11, 2006, the trial court sentenced

Hamilton to fifteen years of imprisonment with fourteen years and four months suspended.

Specifically, Hamilton was sentenced to five years of imprisonment for each conviction.

Hamilton was placed on supervised probation for an indeterminate period and was also ordered

to be of good behavior for an indeterminate period.

In 2008, Hamilton pleaded guilty to violating the terms of his probation by absconding,

failing to pay restitution, and failing to maintain contact with his probation officer. The trial

court revoked Hamilton’s previously suspended sentence of fourteen years and four months, and

it resuspended thirteen years and ten months of that sentence. Hamilton was again placed on

supervised probation for an indeterminate period and was also ordered to be of good behavior for

an indeterminate period.

In 2010, Hamilton’s probation officer filed a second major violation report stating that

Hamilton had acquired new criminal charges and that he had failed to notify his probation officer

of these new charges. In addition, the violation report detailed that Hamilton was absconding

and that he had failed to report to probation. The trial court found that Hamilton violated the

terms of his probation again, and the trial court then revoked Hamilton’s previously suspended

sentence of thirteen years and ten months. The trial court then resuspended twelve years and ten

months of that sentence “on the same conditions as contained in the previous sentencing order of

this Court.”

In 2014, Hamilton was convicted of robbery, and, on November 18, 2014, he was

sentenced to fifteen years of imprisonment with ten years suspended for a period of suspension

-2- of twenty years. The trial court also found that Hamilton had violated the terms of his probation

for the third time because he had acquired this new robbery conviction. The trial court revoked

the twelve years and ten months of the suspended sentence for his underlying convictions from

2006. It then resuspended ten years and ten months of that sentence “on the same conditions as

contained in the previous sentencing order,” and it also placed Hamilton on supervised probation

“for three (3) additional years.”

In 2022, Hamilton’s probation officer filed a fourth major violation report alleging that

Hamilton had failed to report to probation and that Hamilton had tested positive for Fentanyl in

September and November 2021. At the probation revocation hearing, Hamilton pleaded guilty to

both probation violations, but he later moved to set aside the circuit court’s verdict. In his

motion to set aside the verdict, Hamilton cited the 2021 amendments to Code § 19.2-306, and he

argued, “Any sentence for a probation violation after July of 2021 for the Possession with the

Intent to Distribute Marijuana charge from 2006 could not be imposed after 2016 because the

‘period of probation’ is limited to the maximum period for which the defendant might have been

imprisoned.”1 He then argued, “Since Mr. Hamilton was sentenced more than ten years ago, this

court lacks subject matter or active jurisdiction over the defendant and any violation filed after

July 1, 2021.”

The trial court rejected Hamilton’s argument, and it determined that it still had

jurisdiction over Hamilton’s previously suspended sentence. According to the September 20,

2022 revocation order, the trial court revoked a total of twenty years and ten months of the

previously suspended sentence (combining the ten years and ten months of the suspended

sentence remaining from the 2006 convictions with the ten years of the suspended sentence from

1 The record actually shows that Hamilton was previously convicted of a Class 5 felony for each of his Distribution of Marijuana convictions. See Code § 18.2-248.1(a)(2). A Class 5 felony, both today and in 2006, carries a maximum sentence of ten years of imprisonment. See Code § 18.2-10(e). -3- the 2014 robbery conviction), and it then resuspended a total of eighteen years and six months,

giving him an active sentence of two years and four months. In addition, the trial court ordered,

“Sentence suspended on the same conditions as contained in the previous sentencing order of this

Court with the following additions or changes: 1. Good behavior. The defendant shall be of

good behavior for twenty (20) years.” The trial court also placed Hamilton on supervised

probation for an indeterminate period. Hamilton now appeals.

II. ANALYSIS

A. The trial court’s jurisdiction over Hamilton’s suspended sentence

On appeal to this Court, Hamilton argues, “The trial court erred in finding that it had

jurisdiction to revoke Mr. Hamilton’s previously suspended sentences.” Specifically, Hamilton

argues that, under the 2021 amendments to Code § 19.2-306(C), the trial court lost jurisdiction

over his previously suspended sentence on August 11, 2016 because his 2006 convictions only

resulted in a period of suspension for that suspended sentence of ten years. Hamilton contends

that the trial court here erred when it combined the maximum possible sentences of his three

2006 convictions to calculate the period of suspension for Hamilton’s previously suspended

sentence.

This appeal requires us to interpret Code § 19.2-306 to determine whether the trial court

had jurisdiction to revoke and resuspend Hamilton’s suspended sentence. A trial court’s decision

to revoke a suspended sentence “will not be reversed unless there is a clear showing of abuse of

discretion.” Jacobs v. Commonwealth, 61 Va. App. 529, 535 (2013) (quoting Davis v.

Commonwealth, 12 Va. App. 81, 86 (1991)).

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