Flanders v. Commonwealth

CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedFebruary 13, 2020
Docket181228
StatusPublished

This text of Flanders v. Commonwealth (Flanders v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flanders v. Commonwealth, (Va. 2020).

Opinion

PRESENT: Lemons, C.J., Goodwyn, Mims, Powell, Kelsey, and McCullough, JJ., and Koontz, S.J.

SARAH ELIZABETH FLANDERS OPINION BY v. Record No. 181228 JUSTICE WILLIAM C. MIMS February 13, 2020 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

In this appeal, we consider as a matter of first impression whether felony hit and run may

serve as a predicate offense for a felony-homicide conviction.

I. BACKGROUND AND MATERIAL PROCEEDINGS BELOW

“On appeal, we review the evidence in the ‘light most favorable’ to the Commonwealth,

the prevailing party in the trial court.” Vasquez v. Commonwealth, 291 Va. 232, 236 (2016)

(quoting Bowman v. Commonwealth, 290 Va. 492, 494 (2015)). So viewed, the evidence

established that while a utility crew conducted overnight repair work, a man walked through the

job site causing them to suspend work until he cleared the area. Five or ten minutes later, a

woman later identified as Sarah Flanders “abruptly” pulled up to the job site in a red Dodge

Durango and asked the workers to call 911 because it “looked like someone had been run over

behind” the neighboring school and “the person was bleeding to death.” She then “sped away”

and “quickly left the scene.”

The utility crew’s supervisor drove behind the school to investigate. He found an injured

man, who he recognized as the same person who had passed through earlier. He was conscious

but visibly in “a lot of pain.” He had difficulty breathing and was bleeding from abrasions on his

head and knees. He told the supervisor that he had been hit. The supervisor immediately called

911. By the time first responders arrived five minutes later, the man had lost consciousness. A police officer observed that the man’s clothes and backpack had black marks “like soot” on them

and that there were visible tire tracks in the pine needles and soil of the median where he was

lying. The man eventually regained consciousness and identified himself as Rick Pentz. Pentz

was transported to a hospital where he died approximately four hours later from blunt force

trauma to his torso.

Police collected various personal items belonging to Pentz from the scene, including a

cell phone whose call log reflected a 19-second call to Flanders approximately an hour before the

incident. During an interview with investigators the next day, Flanders denied any involvement

in Pentz’ death. She did, however, admit that she drove a red Dodge Durango on the date of the

incident. She also said that she knew Pentz and had been friends with him for around six years.

The two of them had once lived together in a residence close to where the incident occurred.

When asked whether she had been with Pentz lately, she replied that she had last seen him earlier

in the week when she dropped him off at work. Investigators eventually told Flanders that Pentz

had died, then left her alone in the interview room where she was overheard saying aloud to

herself that “she thought that this was crazy and that she thought that he was going to make it.” 1

Investigators seized and forensically examined the Durango they suspected Flanders

drove during the incident. They identified Pentz’ blood on the front bumper. In addition, the

investigators found yellow paint consistent with the yellow paint on the median curb where Pentz

was found inside of the front and rear driver’s side tires. Mail addressed to Flanders was in the

passenger seat, and her DNA was on the steering wheel and gear shift knob.

1 The detective who interviewed Flanders testified that she made several statements while she was alone in the interview room. Specifically, he testified that “[m]uch of [what she said] was unintelligible, but she did say a few moments later that she thought that this was crazy and that she thought that he was going to make it.”

2 Flanders was ultimately charged with felony hit and run, in violation of Code § 46.2-894,

and felony homicide, in violation of Code § 18.2-33. At trial, the Commonwealth introduced

evidence that Flanders and Pentz were involved in another incident two days prior to Pentz’

death. An officer responded to a restaurant parking lot where he encountered a red Dodge

Durango parked partially in the road and partially in the grass with a bicycle lying next to it.

Flanders was in the driver’s seat and Pentz, who had apparently been riding the bicycle, was

standing near the driver’s door. Both were agitated. The officer asked them whether “somebody

had tried to strike somebody with a vehicle,” but both denied it. Flanders acknowledged this

incident when questioned after Pentz’ death and explained that Pentz “had jumped on the

passenger door of her Durango.”

Counsel for Flanders moved to strike the felony-homicide charge at the close of the

Commonwealth’s evidence. The crux of his argument was that a hit and run in violation of Code

§ 46.2-894 was insufficient as a matter of law to support a conviction of felony homicide, and

that even assuming that some hit and run convictions could serve as a predicate for felony

homicide, the facts of this case did not rise to the level of imputing malice to Flanders’ actions.

The Commonwealth responded that Flanders’ actions amounted to a single, continuous

transaction in which she intended to strike Pentz with her vehicle. Under these circumstances,

the Commonwealth argued, a felony-homicide conviction was proper because the homicide was

within the res gestae of the predicate hit and run. The trial court denied the motion to strike and

ultimately found Flanders guilty of both charges, noting that the issues counsel raised “create[] a

very interesting legal conundrum that minds wiser than mine will have to sort out for you and

your client.”

3 Flanders filed motions to set aside the verdict renewing the arguments made at trial and

additionally asserting that the evidence at trial was insufficient to support her convictions.

Following argument at sentencing, the trial court denied the motions and imposed an active

sentence of 22 years’ imprisonment. The Court of Appeals affirmed by unpublished opinion,

holding that the evidence established that Pentz’ death was within the res gestae of the hit and

run.

We awarded Flanders this appeal.

II. ANALYSIS

Flanders’ sole assignment of error argues that the evidence was insufficient to support her

felony-homicide conviction. Resolving this assignment of error requires a two-step inquiry. The

first issue, whether felony hit and run may serve as a predicate offense for a felony-homicide

conviction, presents a question of law we review de novo. See AGCS Marine Ins. Co. v.

Arlington Cty., 293 Va. 469, 473 (2017) (“[W]e review all conclusions of law de novo.”); see

also, e.g., Mulford v. Walnut Hill Farm Grp., LLC, 282 Va. 98, 106 (2011) (“[T]he ultimate

conclusion as to whether [a] roadway [is] a public road is reviewed de novo.”). If felony hit and

run can be a predicate offense, then the second step is to determine whether the evidence in this

case was sufficient to establish that Pentz’ death was within the res gestae of the hit and run, and

thus was an appropriate predicate offense for Flanders’ felony-murder conviction. We apply a

familiar standard of review to that inquiry:

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