Holley v. Commonwealth

604 S.E.2d 127, 44 Va. App. 228, 2004 Va. App. LEXIS 515
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedNovember 2, 2004
Docket0509031
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 604 S.E.2d 127 (Holley v. Commonwealth) 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
Holley v. Commonwealth, 604 S.E.2d 127, 44 Va. App. 228, 2004 Va. App. LEXIS 515 (Va. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

ROBERT J. HUMPHREYS, Judge.

James E. Holley appeals his conviction, following a bench trial, for attempted malicious wounding of a law enforcement *230 officer (in violation of Code §§ 18.2-26 and 18.2-51.1). 1 Specifically, Holley advances the following Question Presented: “Was the Commonwealth’s evidence sufficient to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Mr. Holley acted with the intent to maim, disfigure, disable or kill as required by Virginia Code Section 18.2 — 51[.l] and as alleged in Count One.” 2 For the reasons that follow, we affirm Holley’s conviction, but remand solely for the purpose of correcting a clerical error in Holley’s sentencing order. 3

I. Background

When sufficiency of the evidence is challenged on appeal, we “review the evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, granting to it all reasonable inferences fairly deducible therefrom.” Archer v. Commonwealth, 26 Va.App. 1, 11, 492 S.E.2d 826, 831 (1997) (citation omitted). So viewed, the evidence establishes that on September 3, 2002, Holley approached an employee, Cindy Anderson, at a Portsmouth Food Lion and “said that he needed some boxes.” After failing to find “a few boxes” “by the dairy department,” Anderson called her assistant manager to ask if they could “get [Holley] a box or two.” Anderson’s assistant manager *231 responded, “Yes, send him over here by the grocery room.” Holley then walked away.

A few moments later, Anderson saw Holley leaving the store. Holley was carrying a box. Anderson observed “cartons of Marlboros sticking out of the top of the box.” After asking a cashier if Holley had paid for the cigarettes, Anderson “went out the door,” observed Holley “jump[ ] into a van,” and heard him say “Go, go, go.” Anderson told her coworkers to call the police.

Officer Jorge Quiros, of the Portsmouth Police Department, happened to be “doing a direct patrol” at the shopping center at that time. Officer Quiros was driving a “marked police K-9 Unit” and was in “full uniform.” As he was “driving around,” he noticed a blue van parked “near the front of the shopping center close to the Food Lion.” He observed a woman wearing a “Food Lion type uniform” waving at him and pointing at Holley. Quiros saw that Holley was walking toward the blue van at a “quick pace.”

As Quiros drove his patrol unit toward the van, he could hear Holley “yelling.” Quiros rolled down his window, and the Food Lion employee (Anderson) advised Quiros that “[Holley] had just stolen some merchandise from the store.” “As this conversation was taking place,” Quiros observed Holley approach the van, “yelling and screaming.” Officer Quiros then saw people emerging from the van, and “it appeared ... that [Holley] extracted a young lady out of the vehicle.” Anderson yelled, “Look out!” Quiros then realized that Holley had started the van motor and begun to accelerate. The woman Holley had “extracted” from the van yelled, “He’s stealing my van.” Quiros had to move his “K-9 truck out of the way before” the van struck him. The van “took off at a high rate of speed,” and Quiros pursued after activating his “lights and sirens.”

Holley drove the van “around [the] little shopping area twice at a high rate of speed,” despite the fact that “[i]t was a very busy night for that shopping center” and “there were people scattering.” Without slowing, Holley exited onto *232 Portsmouth Boulevard, causing “traffic to lock up with brakes and skid.” Holley then accelerated and “forced traffic to open up for him,” apparently ignoring the red light at the intersection. Holley continued driving, “jump[ing] the median” several times and driving in the wrong direction on busy roads. At one point, Holley turned and drove back in the direction he had come from. Because of his earlier erratic driving, traffic was “congested,” and several cars “were actually in a ‘V’ where they had [earlier] been forced off onto the sidewalk and to the median.” “It was so tight” there that Holley had to bring the van to a complete stop. At that time, Officer Quiros “came around facing him head-on approximately 15 to 20 feet away.” As Officer Quiros stepped out of his patrol unit and drew his weapon, Holley “looked in [his] direction, accelerated the van, and came right at [him],” passing between two cars. Quiros had to “dive back into his K-9 truck,” slamming the door shut behind him, to “avoid being struck.” The van “passed within inches of [Quiros’s] truck.”

Due to the “traffic and everybody else around [him],” Quiros realized “there was no way [he] could continue that pursuit on [Holley].” Accordingly, Quiros called to request a marked unit to take over the pursuit.

Holley was ultimately apprehended after Officer Roberta Monell, also of the Portsmouth Police Department, joined in the pursuit. Monell was able to stop Holley when she “moved [her] police car forward and pushed the rear of his van against [a] guardrail so he could not proceed anymore” — all of this occurring after Holley had already backed into Monell’s police car in an effort to “get away from [Monell].”

Holley was charged with one count of eluding police, one count of driving in a manner so as to endanger the life, limb, or property of another after having been declared an habitual offender, one count of destruction of property, one count of grand larceny of an automobile, one count of grand larceny, and two counts of attempted malicious wounding of a police officer.

*233 During Ms trial, Holley made a motion to strike with respect to both charges of malicious wounding of a law enforcement officer. Holley’s counsel argued that the Commonwealth failed to produce evidence that Holley possessed the requisite intent to maliciously wound the officers and that, instead, the evidence merely proved that Ms intent was to “get away from the police.” The trial court demed the motion and ultimately found Holley guilty of all the charges, with the exception of the charge of attempted malicious wounding of Officer Monell. In dismissing that count, the trial court held that “the evidence [was] insufficient as it relate[d] to Officer Monell.”

II. Analysis

On appeal, Holley contends that the trial court erred in findmg the evidence sufficient “to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that [Holley] acted with the intent to maim, disfigure, disable or kill” Officer Quiros, “as required by Virginia Code Section 18.2 — 51[.l] and as alleged in Count One” of the indictment. Holley asks us to reverse and dismiss his conviction for attempted malicious wounding.

Code § 18.2-51.1 states, in relevant part:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
604 S.E.2d 127, 44 Va. App. 228, 2004 Va. App. LEXIS 515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holley-v-commonwealth-vactapp-2004.