Justin Metro Arehart v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedMay 20, 2014
Docket0555133
StatusUnpublished

This text of Justin Metro Arehart v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Justin Metro Arehart 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
Justin Metro Arehart v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Chief Judge Felton, Judges Alston and Chafin Argued at Salem, Virginia UNPUBLISHED

JUSTIN METRO AREHART MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 0555-13-3 JUDGE TERESA M. CHAFIN MAY 20, 2014 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF AUGUSTA COUNTY Victor V. Ludwig, Judge

Dana R. Cormier for appellant.

Victoria Johnson, Assistant Attorney General (Kenneth T. Cuccinelli, II, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

In a bench trial, Justin Metro Arehart (“Arehart”) was convicted of unlawful wounding in

violation of Code § 18.2-51. On appeal, he maintains the trial court erred in excluding evidence

regarding the victim’s specific incidents of prior violent conduct to establish his character for

“turbulence and violence” and to corroborate Arehart’s evidence that he acted in self-defense.

For the reasons that follow, we affirm the decision of the trial court.

Background

“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) (quoting Martin v. Commonwealth, 4 Va. App.

438, 443, 358 S.E.2d 415, 418 (1987)). So viewed, the evidence showed that on August 1, 2012,

Arehart was at the home of his girlfriend, Tammy Halterman, who lived “caddy-corner” from

Stephen McNeal. McNeal, Arehart, and Halterman were all outside when McNeal began to

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. verbally taunt Arehart by making vulgar comments about Halterman. This taunting turned into a

verbal argument between the two men which escalated when McNeal made a discourteous

comment about Halterman’s moral character. At this point, Halterman went inside her home,

activated the surveillance cameras attached to her house, and recorded the encounter between the

two men. 1

Arehart threw an empty Mountain Dew bottle at McNeal and then crossed the street.

When Arehart reached McNeal, he hit McNeal in the head, knocking him to the ground. Once

McNeal was on the ground, Arehart hit him several more times. Arehart then got up and walked

back towards Halterman’s house, leaving McNeal on the ground.

When Deputy Thomas Pultz and Sergeant David Lotts of the Augusta County Sheriff’s

Department arrived, they found McNeal sitting in a chair on his front porch, bleeding and

disoriented. His wife took him to the hospital. McNeal’s cheek bone and “the interior and

posterior walls of [his] maxillary sinus” were fractured, and he had bleeding in the soft tissue

around his right eye. Due to the injuries he sustained, McNeal must now wear glasses and

suffers headaches.

Arehart told the officers that McNeal was the aggressor in the fight. After he made the

vulgar comments about Halterman, Arehart claimed that McNeal left his driveway and walked

across the street to “[Arehart] and either hit him or tried to hit him.” Arehart claimed to have hit

McNeal in self-defense.

At trial, Arehart again asserted that he acted in self-defense and sought to establish

McNeal’s character for violence in support of that defense. Arehart presented evidence that

McNeal and Halterman had a troubled past arising from a property dispute. After Halterman

1 Although Halterman recorded the confrontation between Arehart and McNeal and later viewed the recording with the investigating officers, Halterman recorded over the video prior to trial. The officers testified as to the contents of the video at trial, and the trial court relied upon the officers’ testimony in making its factual findings. -2- testified she tried to avoid McNeal, Arehart asked what McNeal had done to make her avoid him.

The Commonwealth objected on relevance grounds. Arehart responded:

[McNeal’s] character and behavior in the past is relevant to [Arehart’s self-defense claim], to what Mr. Arehart perceived when he had this confrontation with Mr. McNeal on August 1, 2012. It didn’t come out of nowhere. I’m asking Ms. Halterman to tell us about her past experiences with Mr. [McNeal]. And they’ve been [sic]- - already been testimony that Mr. Arehart told the police that Mr. McNeal had made threats or had made comments about Ms. Halterman during the altercation.

The trial court rejected the officers’ testimony as a basis for a self-defense claim, as it was

“merely transactional information” that could not form “the basis for the introduction of this

evidence.” The trial court sustained the Commonwealth’s objection, and Arehart resumed

questioning Halterman.

At the conclusion of Halterman’s testimony, Arehart revisited the evidentiary rulings

concerning the victim’s character and argued evidence of McNeal’s physical threats to

Halterman was admissible under Virginia Rule of Evidence 2:404(a)(2), which makes admissible

“evidence of a pertinent character trait or acts of violence by the victim of the crime offered by

[an] accused who has adduced evidence of self-defense.” The trial court reviewed the rule and

explained the basis for its evidentiary holding was that Arehart sought to present evidence of

threats of violence, rather than acts of violence, against Halterman:

What I ruled was, you got in the character trait that his reputation, in this particular instance, peacefulness is not good. Then acts of violence by the victim of the crime. Well, what I said was, if you want to put in acts of violence, it’s going to have to be acts of violence against somebody. I’m not going to let you put in evidence of throwing rocks at her house or eggs or tomatoes or whatever. Not going to let you get into threats of violence. It has to be acts of violence before it’s going to come in. . . . [Y]ou weren’t even asking about an act of violence, you were asking about something much broader than that, so I’ll . . . stick to my ruling. . . . You’ve got acts of violence against [Halterman], who happens to be the witness on the stand right now, I’ll admit it.

-3- Arehart proffered the evidence he sought to introduce was: “Threats of violence

specifically that Mr. McNeal had made against Ms. Halterman’s children would be the specific

acts that I would try to get in.”

Another of McNeal’s neighbors, Howard Chandler, testified that McNeal had a

reputation as “a liar.” Sabrina Smith, a former neighbor of McNeal, testified that McNeal had a

bad reputation for both truthfulness and peacefulness. Smith further recounted that

approximately ten years earlier, McNeal “flipped” hot cigarette ash on her son’s back, causing a

scar. The Commonwealth objected to Smith’s testimony on the grounds that the incident was too

attenuated in time to be relevant to McNeal’s present character and that there was no evidence

Arehart was aware of the incident. The trial court concluded the incident was sufficiently recent,

but admitted the evidence “provisionally,” concluding that whether the evidence “will be

considered at all will be dependent on whether there is evidence that [Arehart] knew about it.”

Finally, Arehart testified on his own behalf and alleged that, as their verbal altercation

escalated, both he and McNeal moved out into the middle of the road. According to Arehart,

McNeal “flicked a cigarette” at him and, after the two exchanged more insults, McNeal “stiff

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