Jordan Darrell Morris v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedMay 9, 2023
Docket1194212
StatusPublished

This text of Jordan Darrell Morris v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Jordan Darrell Morris 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
Jordan Darrell Morris v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Chief Judge Decker, Judges Humphreys, Beales, Huff, O’Brien, AtLee, Malveaux, PUBLISHED

Athey, Fulton, Ortiz, Causey, Friedman, Chaney, Raphael, Lorish, Callins and White Argued at Richmond, Virginia

JORDAN DARRELL MORRIS OPINION BY v. Record No. 1194-21-2 JUDGE LISA M. LORISH MAY 9, 2023 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

UPON A REHEARING EN BANC

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF HENRICO COUNTY Randall G. Johnson, Jr., Judge

H. Pratt Cook, III (Law Office of H. Pratt Cook, III, on briefs), for appellant.

Stephen J. Sovinsky, Assistant Attorney General (Jason S. Miyares, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

Virginia’s overdose reporting statute, Code § 18.2-251.03, shields from arrest or

prosecution individuals who, in good faith, seek or obtain emergency medical assistance because

they are experiencing a drug overdose. The trial court found Morris did not qualify for immunity

under the statute. A panel of this Court reversed, dividing on how to interpret and apply the

definition of “overdose” set out in Code § 18.2-251.03(A), as well as the requirement that an

individual be “experiencing an overdose.” After rehearing en banc, we affirm the trial court for a

different reason—Morris failed to meet the independent requirement in Code

§ 18.2-251.03(B)(2) that he “remain[] at the scene of the overdose or at any alternative location

to which he . . . has been transported until a law-enforcement officer responds to the report of an

overdose.” BACKGROUND

After law enforcement first encountered Jordan Darrell Morris outside the Short Pump

emergency room, Morris was charged with possession of a Schedule I or II controlled substance

(in violation of Code § 18.2-250) and driving under the influence of drugs, first offense (in

violation of Code § 18.2-266).

The Commonwealth gave notice of its intent to use at trial a lab analysis showing that

Morris’s blood tested positive for cocaine and that cocaine residue was found on a smoking

device in the car he was driving. Morris moved to suppress the drug evidence and to dismiss the

drug-possession charge under the immunity provision of Code § 18.2-251.03. Morris argued that

he “was actively seeking medical care for himself when the Henrico police developed the

evidence against him.” The motion explained:

Morris was trying to seek medical attention at Short Pump Emergency Room when he stopped the vehicle in the middle of the roadway adjacent to the emergency hospital. Henrico police officers Cirillo and Steelman observed that Morris was under the influence of drugs, and Morris told them he had recently smoked crack cocaine. Morris told the officers he was contemplating suicide because of drugs and made suicidal statements at the hospital.

The Commonwealth’s written opposition asserted that Morris “had produced no evidence or

testimony from any medical personnel present that evening, nor any other evidence, that he was

experiencing an overdose.”

At a hearing on Morris’s suppression motion and motion to dismiss, both sides “agreed to

proffer the facts.” Paraphrasing the police report, Morris’s counsel represented that Henrico

police officers observed a white Ford Edge trying to turn onto the road next to the Short Pump

emergency room. The vehicle nearly struck a curb in the turn lane and then stopped in the

middle of the road, blocking through-traffic. The officers approached the vehicle, driven by

-2- Morris, and asked him to park the car. Morris said that “he was there to get help,” telling the

officers that he had smoked crack cocaine. The officers thought he appeared to be under the

influence of drugs and escorted Morris into the emergency room.

As medical personnel drew a blood sample, Morris “made suicidal statements.” In

response to law enforcement questioning, Morris said that he worked at Food Lion; he was high

while at work and asked to sit in his boss’s car to call his mother; he had called his mother

“because he was thinking about committing suicide”; and he had driven away from the Food

Lion and had driven around awhile before heading to the Short Pump emergency room. When

asked whether his mother had told him to “go to the ER,” Morris said he “chose to do so

himself” because “he was thinking about suicide.” When an officer asked why he was

considering suicide, Morris responded, “drugs.” Morris said that he used heroin, fentanyl, and

cocaine, that he had smoked crack cocaine in his boss’s car, and that he “came to the ER to get

help for the suicidal thoughts and his drug problem.” Morris alerted the officers to a crack pipe

in the vehicle, which they found tucked in the crevice of the passenger seat. The Commonwealth

agreed to “the Defense version” of the facts.

The Commonwealth argued that Morris was required to present expert testimony that he

was in fact experiencing an overdose and that it was not enough to simply take his word for it.

Morris’s counsel argued that the immunity statute applied because the lab tests showed cocaine

in Morris’s blood, Morris drove himself to the emergency room seeking treatment, and he said

three times that he was suicidal because of his drug use.

Ruling from the bench, the trial court denied Morris’s motions to suppress the drug

evidence and to dismiss the drug possession charge. The court saw “no evidence that [Morris]

was experiencing a life-threatening condition.” It was “not going so far as to say” that a medical

professional had to be called as a witness to prove an overdose—circumstantial evidence could -3- suffice. But the court found the proffer insufficient: “[J]ust because” the drugs “affected his

behavior [did] not mean we’re in a life-threatening situation.” The court also observed that there

must be “some showing” that Morris’s expression of wanting to kill himself “was caused by the

ingestion of cocaine and this overdose situation.”

Morris subsequently pleaded no contest to the charges against him, reserving his right to

appeal the immunity ruling on the drug-possession charge. The trial court accepted the pleas,

finding Morris guilty on both charges.

ANALYSIS

The proper interpretation of Code § 18.2-251.03 is a question of law that we review de

novo. Broadous v. Commonwealth, 67 Va. App. 265, 268 (2017).

Virginia’s overdose reporting statute was first enacted in 2015, 2015 Va. Acts chs. 418,

436 (codified at Code § 18.2-251.03), and has been amended three times since then, each time

expanding its protections. In its current form, the statute provides full immunity from “arrest or

prosecution” for qualifying individuals (prior versions had characterized the immunity as an

“affirmative defense”). And it now covers not only someone who helps another experiencing an

overdose, but also the person who “is experiencing an overdose”—assuming other criteria in the

statute are met. Before these expansions, we observed that the “clear purpose” of the law was to

“encourage . . . prompt emergency medical treatment [for] those who have suffered an overdose

as a result of ingesting a controlled substance.” Broadous, 67 Va. App. at 271. The recent

amendments reinforce this goal.

We briefly review the structure of the statute before applying it to the facts proffered

below. The statute opens by defining “overdose” as “a life-threatening condition resulting from

the consumption or use of a controlled substance, alcohol, or any combination of such

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