Gray v. Rhoads

597 S.E.2d 93, 268 Va. 81, 2004 Va. LEXIS 100
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 10, 2004
Docket031852.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 597 S.E.2d 93 (Gray v. Rhoads) 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
Gray v. Rhoads, 597 S.E.2d 93, 268 Va. 81, 2004 Va. LEXIS 100 (Va. 2004).

Opinion

KINSER, Justice.

The provisions of Code § 8.01-404 prohibit the use of certain types of prior written statements to contradict a witness in a personal injury or wrongful death action. In this appeal, we decide whether that statutory prohibition prevents a plaintiff from introducing prior written statements into evidence as party admissions during the plaintiff's case-in-chief. Concluding that this statute does not prohibit such use of prior written statements, we will reverse the judgment of the circuit court.

MATERIAL FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

This appeal arises from the fatal shooting of Frederick Gray by an officer employed by the Albemarle County Police Department. In the early morning hours of May 15, 1997, several police officers responded to "911" calls concerning a disturbance at an apartment located at 827 Old Brook Road in Albemarle County where Gray and his female companion resided. Four officers, Amos Chiarappa, David Wallace, Sharn Perry, and Philip Giles, entered the apartment and observed Gray near or coming out of the bathroom. 1 They also saw a woman in the apartment. She appeared to have blood on her clothing. Wallace described his impression of the scene in the apartment:

[S]ome type of an assault had occurred. There [were] blood drops on the various clothing items, property items off to the left in the big living room and along the little short hallway going back towards the bathroom. And there - I think there was some blood on the - maybe even the walls. I know there was some on the bathroom floor. There were drops of blood where they were both standing, so I really couldn't tell where it was coming from, but somebody had been hurt.

One of the officers ordered Gray to "get down" on the floor. Although Gray seemed to comply with the direction, a struggle ensued when Wallace started to handcuff Gray. During that struggle, Chiarappa attempted unsuccessfully to restrain Gray by hitting him with an "asp baton" between Gray's shoulder blades and on his forehead. In Chiarappa's words, after seeing what he believed to be "Sha[r]n Perry's condition ... at that time, after seeing Phil Giles sliding down the wall ..., after [Gray] threw David Wallace out that door and after [Gray] turned to attack me," Chiarappa withdrew his weapon and fired three shots. Gray fell facedown in the doorway of the apartment. A subsequent autopsy of Gray's body revealed that the cause of death was "two gunshot wounds to the chest causing injury to both lungs and the heart." He also sustained "blunt force injuries including a bruise to the back[,] a bruise to the right leg[,] a deep bruise to the left top of the head[,] and a laceration of the left forehead."

Subsequently, Abraham Gray, Jr., administrator of the estate of the decedent, filed an amended motion for judgment against Chiarappa, Wallace, Hanover, Giles, and Perry (collectively the "Officers"); Douglas Rhoads, Captain of the Police Department of Albemarle County; and John Miller, Chief of the Police Department of Albemarle County. He asserted claims for assault and battery, false arrest and imprisonment, gross negligence resulting in the wrongful death of Gray, grossly negligent retention, and grossly negligent hiring.

The circuit court entered a pre-trial order requiring the parties to exchange 15 days before trial a list of exhibits to be introduced at trial and a list of witnesses who would be testifying. The order also directed the parties to file any objections to the exhibits and witnesses, except those based on relevance, five days before trial; otherwise, the objections would be deemed waived absent a showing of good cause. The defendants did not file any objections to the exhibits at issue in this appeal.

However, during the plaintiff's opening statement at trial, the defendants objected for the first time to the use of certain prior statements made by the Officers. 2 Those prior statements were obtained during two sets of audio-recorded interviews of the Officers after the shooting incident had occurred. The audio-recordings of the interviews were subsequently transcribed. Two detectives employed by the Albemarle County Police Department conducted the first set of interviews in May 1997. A lieutenant employed by the Albemarle County Police Department conducted the second set of interviews in June 1997.

The defendants based their objection on the provision in Code § 8.01-404 prohibiting the use of certain types of prior written statements to contradict a witness in a case for personal injury or wrongful death. The circuit court agreed and ruled that the statements could not be used either to impeach the Officers who had made the statements or as substantive evidence of what the Officers had said in the interviews. 3

A jury returned a verdict in favor of Chiarappa on the claims alleging assault and battery, and gross negligence. 4 We awarded the plaintiff this appeal on the sole issue whether the circuit court erred in barring the plaintiff from using, for any purpose, the statements made by the Officers after the shooting death of Gray when the defendants had failed to make a timely objection to their admissibility in accordance with the circuit court's pretrial order.

ANALYSIS

A trial court's exercise of discretion to admit or exclude evidence will not be overturned on appeal unless the court abused its discretion. May v. Caruso, 264 Va. 358 , 362, 568 S.E.2d 690 , 692 (2002). However, a "trial court has no discretion to admit clearly inadmissible evidence because `admissibility of evidence depends not upon the discretion of the court but upon sound legal principles.'" Norfolk & Western Ry. Co. v. Puryear, 250 Va. 559 , 563, 463 S.E.2d 442 , 444 (1995) (quoting Coe v. Commonwealth, 231 Va. 83 , 87, 340 S.E.2d 820 , 823 (1986)). The converse is likewise true because admissibility of evidence is always governed by legal principles. See Crowson v. Swan, 164 Va. 82 , 92-93, 178 S.E. 898 , 903 (1935).

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597 S.E.2d 93, 268 Va. 81, 2004 Va. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gray-v-rhoads-va-2004.