Heath Nicholas Moison v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedAugust 2, 2022
Docket1038211
StatusUnpublished

This text of Heath Nicholas Moison v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Heath Nicholas Moison 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
Heath Nicholas Moison v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Chief Judge Decker, Judges Athey and Chaney UNPUBLISHED

Argued at Norfolk, Virginia

HEATH NICHOLAS MOISON MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 1038-21-1 JUDGE CLIFFORD L. ATHEY, JR. AUGUST 2, 2022 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF NORFOLK Mary Jane Hall, Judge

J. Barry McCracken, Assistant Public Defender, for appellant.

Craig W. Stallard, Senior Assistant Attorney General (Jason S. Miyares, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

Following a jury trial in the Circuit Court for the City of Norfolk (“trial court”), Heath

Nicholas Moison (“Moison”) appeals three convictions for aggravated sexual battery as a parent,

in violation of Code § 18.2-67.3, and four convictions for taking indecent liberties with a child as

a custodian, in violation of Code § 18.2-370.1(A). On appeal, Moison contends the following:

(1) the trial court erred in excluding testimony on the ground that it was an alibi not properly

disclosed before trial pursuant to Rule 3A:11(d)(2); (2) the trial court erred in finding that there

was sufficient evidence to support his convictions; and (3) the trial court erred by instructing the

jury that they were entitled to infer that every person intends the natural and probable

consequences of his acts. For the following reasons, we affirm.

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. I. BACKGROUND

Moison and Nikita Colvard (“Colvard”) had two children together. B.M. was born in

2003, and K.M was born in 2005. Moison and Colvard ended their relationship while Colvard

was expecting K.M. Moison initially continued his parental relationship with the girls by caring

for them while Colvard was at work. However, when K.M. was about a year old, one of the girls

nearly drank bleach while in his care. As a result, Colvard temporarily ceased letting the girls

visit with Moison. Around 2008, Colvard began permitting him to visit with the girls again.

Moison has continuously lived in Norfolk with his mother and stepfather, and Colvard permitted

the visitation to progress over time from having the girls at his mother’s home every Sunday to

having visitation with them every other weekend for the entire weekend.

In 2015, B.M. stopped wanting to go to her paternal grandmother’s home for visitation

with Moison. At trial, Colvard testified that around 2009, B.M. and K.M. did not want to wear

dresses anymore and wore pants almost exclusively. According to Colvard, the girls wore

sweaters even in the worst summer heat. B.M., who was about six years old at the time, “wanted

nothing to do with bathing suits . . . [or] shorts.” Colvard further testified that at “Halloween she

would cry because she’d have to wear a costume that looked girlish with a dress of some sort.

She wanted nothing to do with any of that.” This was a “sudden change.” According to

Colvard, around 2010, K.M, who had “always loved dressing up,” changed also and “eventually

became this tomboy who no longer wanted to dress up” and constantly wore “long shorts [and]

oversized shirts.”

Both girls testified at the trial that Moison began sexually abusing them during their

overnight visits at their grandmother’s home where they slept together in a bedroom. B.M.

testified that Moison would rub her back underneath her shirt and would also “mess with [her]

breasts” and “put his mouth on them.” She further testified that Moison would “touch [her] over

-2- [her] clothes or over [her] pants in [her] vagina or buttocks area.” B.M. explained that her father

would start to abuse her while she was still asleep, but when she awoke, she would turn away

from him so that he would leave her alone. She also confirmed that the episodes occurred almost

every time she spent the night at her paternal grandmother’s house and that he touched her

vaginal area “a few times.” She stated that she knew it was her father because of the size of his

hands—Moison is six feet and six inches tall—and because she would see him in the room.

Consistent with the testimony of her sister, K.M testified that when she was eight or nine

years old, Moison began touching her breasts, vagina, and stomach under her clothes during

overnight visitation at her grandmother’s home. She explained that if she wore a nightgown, he

would lift it; if she wore pants, he would try to pull them off. She also stated that Moison would

lift the covers on her side of the bed so he could gain access. Like her sister, when the touching

woke her, she would close her eyes and turn away to try to get him to stop. K.M. saw his face

during at least some of these incidents. Again, like her sister, she confirmed that the episodes

would occur “every time we would go over there” and that Moison would not speak to her

during the incidents, which were short. The abuse would stop when K.M. would “physically get

up and leave or go to the bathroom.”

Both girls testified that the sexual abuse continued until they reported the abuse to their

mother after an incident in November of 2018. That incident occurred when they were visiting

with Moison for the weekend and all three went to a birthday party at the home of one of

Moison’s friends, a woman named Laurie Lee (“Laurie”). While at the birthday party, the girls

fished, played with a dog, and ate smores. When Moison became too drunk to drive them home,

they stayed the night. Around 1:00 a.m., the girls went to sleep on couches in the living room.

B.M. testified that she woke up around 5:00 a.m. and her father was “laying down on the ground

next to me and rubbing my back.” He tried to put his hands inside her pants on her private parts

-3- and when she turned away, he forcefully tried to get her to turn back around. She then saw him

move over to K.M. and put his hands beneath her blanket. K.M. testified that she woke up

around 3:00 or 4:00 a.m. to her father’s hand fondling her breast and side. She tried to move

around so that he would stop, but he continued. She eventually got up to go to the bathroom.

When she came back, she saw B.M. awake and assumed he had fondled her sister after she left

the room. B.M. texted several friends concerning the abuse and was told by friends that she

ought to report him.

Moison and the girls left Laurie’s home around 9:00 a.m. the next morning and when

they arrived at their grandmother’s house, the girls contacted their mother and asked her to pick

them up. After spending the afternoon at a park near their home, B.M. wrote a note to her

mother explaining what had happened at the birthday party and that Moison had been sexually

abusing them since they were young children. Colvard read the note and spoke with the girls

about their allegations. K.M. testified that she had delayed reporting the abuse to her mother

because she did not think she would be believed. The next day, at a child support hearing at

which Colvard was seeking child support from Moison, she spoke with her attorney. The

attorney recommended that she contact Child Protective Services (“CPS”). Colvard then

contacted CPS and also obtained a protective order against Moison on behalf of the girls. After

reporting Moison’s abuse and ceasing all contact, the girls “began to flourish,” and Colvard “saw

genuine love in their face[s].”

Jessica Arrington was qualified as an expert witness in forensic interviewing and delayed

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