James Hubert Porter v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 15, 2019
Docket0427184
StatusUnpublished

This text of James Hubert Porter v. Commonwealth of Virginia (James Hubert Porter 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
James Hubert Porter v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Chief Judge Decker,* Judges Humphreys and Russell Argued at Arlington, Virginia UNPUBLISHED

JAMES HUBERT PORTER MEMORANDUM OPINION** BY v. Record No. 0427-18-4 CHIEF JUDGE MARLA GRAFF DECKER JANUARY 15, 2019 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF WARREN COUNTY Ronald L. Napier, Judge1

D. Eric Wiseley (Struckmann, White & Wiseley, PC, on briefs), for appellant.

Katherine Quinlan Adelfio, Assistant Attorney General (Mark R. Herring, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

James Hubert Porter appeals the revocation of his suspended sentence. He argues that the

circuit court erred by admitting certain verbal and written evidence. After reviewing the record, we

conclude that the out-of-court verbal statement was non-testimonial. In addition, any error in

admitting the written statement was harmless. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the decision of

the circuit court.

I. BACKGROUND

The appellant’s original sentence resulted from a 1997 conviction for rape. He was released

on probation on July 18, 2017. The following October, while on probation, the Department of

* On January 1, 2019, Judge Decker succeeded Judge Huff as chief judge. ** Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. 1 While the final order in this case was signed by Judge Napier, the Honorable Clifford L. Athey, Jr., presided over the proceedings addressed in this opinion. Corrections rented a motel room for the appellant because he was homeless. A term of the “sex

offender motel contract” required that he “abide by a curfew of 11:00 pm and have no visitors,

alcohol, or drugs in the room.”

Jacie Poe, the appellant’s probation officer, alleged that he violated the terms of his

probation by having another person stay in his room overnight. At the resulting revocation hearing,

Poe was the sole witness. She testified that a woman accompanied the appellant to his first

probation meeting with Poe. Poe explained that during the meeting she told the appellant that he

needed to “re-register” with the local police department. When he said that he did not know where

the police department was located, Poe volunteered to talk to “his friend.” The appellant replied

that “she was not from here.” Poe told him that she would give both of them directions. Poe

approached the woman, introduced herself, and “asked her where she was from.” When the

woman, Emily Morin, responded that she was from Fredericksburg, Poe asked her where she was

staying. Morin said that she had been “staying with” the appellant. The woman also told Poe that

she was homeless and did not have an address or a phone number.

The appellant objected to Poe’s testimony about Morin’s statement that she was staying with

the appellant on the grounds of “confrontation and hearsay.” The Commonwealth responded that

hearsay was admissible in a probation violation proceeding. The parties dispute the court’s ruling

on this objection, as discussed infra.

The Commonwealth entered into evidence a typed statement on Department of Corrections

letterhead. The statement was dated October 24, 2017, and provided: “I, Emily Morin, have been

staying at the Blue Ridge Motel . . . with [the appellant] since Sunday October 22, 2017.” The

document bore signatures in the names of Emily Morin and the probation officer. The appellant

objected to the admissibility of the writing “on [c]onstitutional and hearsay grounds.” Again, the

-2- Commonwealth responded that hearsay was admissible. The circuit court admitted the written

statement into evidence.

The circuit court found that the appellant violated “the terms and conditions of [his]

probation.” The sentencing guidelines recommended a sentence of two to three years, in part due to

the appellant’s previous three or more probation violations. However, the court revoked six months

of the previously suspended sentence and re-suspended any remaining sentences.

II. ANALYSIS

The appellant argues that the circuit court erred by admitting the evidence at his revocation

hearing indicating that Morin had stayed with him overnight in his motel room.

A. Evidence Before This Court on Appeal

The parties disagree on whether the circuit court admitted Poe’s testimony about Morin’s

verbal statement as substantive evidence of the truth of the matter asserted. The appellant suggests

that the court listened to Poe’s testimony about the circumstances surrounding Morin’s statement,

including what Morin told Poe, for the limited purpose of deciding whether to admit the written

statement. The Commonwealth counters that the testimony was admitted as substantive evidence

that the appellant violated a condition of his probation.

When Poe testified about her meeting with the appellant, the Commonwealth asked her to

read aloud the assertion in the “Major Violation Report” that “[t]he female had been staying with”

the appellant. The appellant objected to the statement as hearsay. The circuit court ruled that Poe

could testify to what she wrote in the probation report. The appellant again objected that the

statement was hearsay because it was information told to Poe by an out-of-court asserter. The court

sustained the objection but allowed Poe to testify to “the conclusion she reached” based on her

conversation with the woman.

-3- The appellant objected again based on the rule against hearsay and his right to confront

witnesses. The appellant explained that the Commonwealth’s case against him was based solely on

a statement made by a witness who was not present at the hearing. The circuit court observed that

the Commonwealth had not yet entered the written statement into evidence. The court also

reiterated that it had “sustained the objection at this point.” (Emphasis added).

The Commonwealth then questioned Poe about her meeting with the appellant.

Q . . . . You went out and talked to this woman in the lobby after you discussed this, her appearance with Mr. Porter.

A I discussed her appearance with Mr. Porter with Mr. Porter present.

Q Okay. And Mr. Porter told you what about her?

A That she was a friend that he had met on the street.

Q Okay. And what else did he tell you about her, if anything?

A He didn’t know where she was living.

Q Okay. All right. So based on your conversation with Mr. Porter what did you do then?

A One of the things I instructed Mr. Porter to do was to go back down to the Front Royal Police Department to re-register. He said he did not know where it was located. So I told him that I would talk to his friend who came with him and he said that she was not from here. I said okay, well I will give you guys both directions. When I went out there I introduced myself to her and asked her where she was from and she said she was from Fredericksburg.

[The appellant]: Objection.

[Prosecutor]: This is not going to the truth of the matter as yet, Judge.

THE COURT: Yeah. Right. That is not . . .

[The prosecutor]: Go ahead.

A That she was . . . -4- [The appellant]: Objection to the truth of the matter, Your Honor.

THE COURT: That one is overruled.

THE WITNESS: That she was from Fredericksburg and I asked where she had been staying and she said that she had been staying with Mr. Porter.

[The appellant]: Continuing objection.

Q And did you have her write out any kind of a statement or anything?

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