Jerry Lamont Barnes v. Commonwealth

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 9, 2007
Docket2589052
StatusUnpublished

This text of Jerry Lamont Barnes v. Commonwealth (Jerry Lamont Barnes 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.

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Jerry Lamont Barnes v. Commonwealth, (Va. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Benton, Clements and Beales Argued at Richmond, Virginia

JERRY LAMONT BARNES MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 2589-05-2 JUDGE JEAN HARRISON CLEMENTS JANUARY 9, 2007 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF HOPEWELL W. Allan Sharrett, Judge

(Christopher B. Ackerman, on brief), for appellant. Appellant submitting on brief.

Karen Misbach, Assistant Attorney General (Robert F. McDonnell, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

Jerry Lamont Barnes was convicted in a jury trial of malicious wounding, in violation of

Code § 18.2-51. On appeal, he contends the trial court erred in (1) finding the prosecutor’s use of a

peremptory strike to remove a member of the jury panel was not racially motivated, (2) refusing to

instruct the jury that malice may not ordinarily be inferred from a blow with a fist, and (3) refusing

to instruct the jury on heat of passion. Finding no error, we affirm the trial court’s judgment and

appellant’s conviction.

As the parties are fully conversant with the record in this case, and because this

memorandum opinion carries no precedential value, this opinion recites only those facts and

incidents of the proceedings as are necessary to the parties’ understanding of the disposition of this

appeal.

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

Barnes was indicted for feloniously and maliciously causing bodily harm to Andra Childers,

a household member, with the intent to maim, disfigure, disable, or kill her.

During jury selection, the prosecutor exercised a peremptory strike to remove Donna

Pettaway, an African-American woman, from the jury panel. Barnes’s attorney objected, arguing

that the removal of Pettaway was racially motivated. The prosecutor explained her use of a

peremptory strike to remove Pettaway from the jury panel as follows: “Pettaway is a familiar name

in the Commonwealth’s Attorney’s office. I’m not sure if she is related to them or not. Hopewell is

a small town. I . . . had two Pettaways on my docket yesterday. I was concerned about her family’s

dealings with my office.” Defense counsel responded, “They are not good reasons to be removing

[her].”

In the ensuing discussion with the trial judge, the prosecutor acknowledged that Pettaway

did not indicate during voir dire questioning of the jury panel that any member of her family had

been charged with a crime. When asked by the judge why she did not follow up on Pettaway’s lack

of a response by privately asking her if anyone in her family had been arrested, the prosecutor

explained that there were “many different Pettaways and [she] did not call specific names to

follow-up on that.” She further explained that she had already decided at that point to use a

peremptory strike to remove Pettaway from the jury panel, rather than attempt to do so for cause.

After initially finding the defense had “made out a prima facie case of purposeful

discrimination,” the trial judge concluded that the prosecutor’s explanation for striking Pettaway

was neither inherently discriminatory nor a pretext for racial discrimination. Accordingly, the

judge overruled the defense’s objection to the peremptory strike.

At trial, two very different versions of the events of the night in question emerged.

Childers testified that she and Barnes were living together in an apartment at the time of the

-2- alleged assault. According to Childers, she was drinking alcoholic beverages and playing cards

with friends at a neighbor’s apartment in the same building on March 25, 2005. When Barnes

came home that night, he went to the apartment where Childers was playing cards and angrily

dragged her down the hallway to their apartment. There, he hit her once with his open hand and

stepped on her face when she fell to the floor. She said she remained in her apartment in bed

until the next day when her neighbors discovered her and called the police.

Robert Gregory testified that he hosted the card game attended by Childers on March 25,

2005. He said that, when Barnes arrived at the card game, he grabbed Childers’s shirt and pulled

her down the hall to their apartment. Shortly thereafter, he heard noises from their apartment

that “sounded like a woman getting hurt.” He further testified that, when he saw Childers the

next day, her face was “black and blue” and “swollen” and that it was not like that the night

before.

Richard Barbie, a neighbor of Childers and Barnes, testified that Barnes approached him

in the hallway of the apartment building on March 26, 2005, and said he “need[ed] somebody to

talk to, bad.” After speaking with Barnes, Barbie went to Childers and Barnes’s apartment, and

knocked on the door. When Childers answered the door, Barbie saw she had a “[m]essed up

face.” Barbie called 911.

The police officer who investigated the call testified that Childers told him she had been

“beaten” by Barnes but did not report that Barnes had kicked or stepped on her. He noted in his

report that Childers stated that Barnes “had punched her in the face several times with his fist.”

The officer also testified that, when he went to Childers and Barnes’s apartment, he saw “blood

splatter” on the bed where she was sitting. He also observed that “the left side of her face was

very swollen,” her eye was “bruised” and “half swollen shut,” and she had “blood trickling from

her nose and from her mouth area.”

-3- The doctor who treated Childers in the emergency room on March 26, 2005, testified that

Childers told him she had been punched in the face the previous day. He ordered a CAT scan to

evaluate her facial injuries. The scan revealed that her cheekbone, jawbone, and “two bones

deeper inside the face” were fractured. The doctor testified that the fractures were recently

inflicted and the result of “very significant trauma to her face” caused by blunt force. The doctor

further testified that Childers “was so swollen and bruised,” he could not tell whether the injuries

had been caused by one punch or multiple punches.

Barnes testified at trial that he and Childers had a romantic relationship and had lived

together for six months. According to Barnes, he returned home from work on the night of

March 25, 2005, and found Childers asleep in bed with another man who lived in their building.

Childers and the man were nude and highly intoxicated. Barnes, who had previously spoken to a

police officer about this man visiting his apartment, became “frustrated” by what he saw. He

woke the man and asked him to leave. A scuffle ensued. Barnes and the man “got locked up or

tangled up, fists were flying, open hands were flying.” Childers “woke up . . . while [Barnes]

and [the other man were] tussling, [and] some kind of way she got hit” when she sat up in the

bed during the commotion. After the struggle, the man grabbed his clothes and ran from the

room. Barnes talked with Childers, trying to get an explanation, and then left the apartment.

Barnes testified the room was “dim and lit from the light on the TV” during these events. He

further testified that he did not “see [Childers] get hit.” He denied stomping on her face. He also

testified that the events related to the card game had happened a week before the events of March

25, 2005.

During a discussion regarding jury instructions, Barnes’s attorney asked the judge to

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