Kelso v. Com.
This text of 710 S.E.2d 470 (Kelso v. Com.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Harry Murphy KELSO
v.
COMMONWEALTH of Virginia.
Supreme Court of Virginia.
*471 Melissa W. Friedman (Anthony F. Anderson, Roanoke; Anderson & Friedman, on briefs), for appellant.
Rosemary V. Bourne, Assistant Attorney General (Kenneth T. Cuccinelli, II, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.
Present: KINSER, C.J., LEMONS, GOODWYN, MILLETTE and MIMS, JJ., and LACY and KOONTZ, S.JJ.
OPINION BY Senior Justice ELIZABETH B. LACY.
The dispositive issue in this appeal is whether venue in Hanover County was proper for the prosecution and conviction of Harry Murphy Kelso for three counts of causing a juvenile to assist in the distribution of marijuana to a third party in violation of Code § 18.2-255(A)(ii).
BACKGROUND
The facts are not in dispute. On three occasions in the spring of 2007, Hanover County Sheriff's deputies provided a confidential informant $500 for the purchase of marijuana. On each occasion the confidential informant purchased marijuana from M.B. with the money provided by the deputies. M.B. was seventeen years of age at the time the confidential informant made these purchases.
On the first occasion, the confidential informant met M.B. in Hanover County. M.B. got into the informant's car and they traveled to Kelso's apartment in Henrico County. The informant waited in his vehicle while M.B. entered Kelso's apartment and returned with the marijuana. M.B. and the confidential informant then traveled back to Hanover County where the transaction was consummated. On the two subsequent occasions, the informant met M.B. in Hanover County, M.B. traveled alone to Henrico County to meet Kelso and obtain the marijuana, and then returned to Hanover County to complete the sale of marijuana to the confidential informant. Hanover County Sheriff's deputies conducted surveillance of each transaction which included installing a camera and an audio listening device in the informant's vehicle and following M.B. and the informant during the transactions.
The evidence further established that Kelso also sold M.B. a quarter-pound of marijuana each week since April of 2007 and that he knew M.B. was seventeen or eighteen years of age. M.B. testified that he began selling marijuana to friends and people he knew at Atlee High School in Hanover County, that he had smoked marijuana with Kelso and that between August 2006 and August 2007 he had purchased approximately fifteen pounds of marijuana from Kelso. Occasionally, friends from high school would accompany M.B. to Kelso's apartment, however, Kelso would sell marijuana only to M.B., who in turn sold it to his friends.
Kelso was indicted by a multijurisdictional grand jury for three counts of violating Code § 18.2-255(A)(ii) and tried in the Circuit Court of Hanover County.[1] At the close of *472 the Commonwealth's evidence, Kelso argued that venue in Hanover County was improper and the indictments should be dismissed because there was no evidence that he was in Hanover County or conducted any transaction involving the distribution of drugs in that county. The trial court disagreed, denied the motion to dismiss and entered judgments of conviction on each of the three counts. The Court of Appeals affirmed Kelso's convictions, Kelso v. Commonwealth, 57 Va.App. 30, 41, 698 S.E.2d 263, 268 (2010).
DISCUSSION
Kelso argues here, as he did in the Court of Appeals and the trial court, that his indictments for violation of Code § 18.2-255(A)(ii) should be dismissed because the evidence established that he did not undertake any action relating to the sale of marijuana in Hanover County. His distribution of marijuana to M.B. occurred solely in Henrico County. Because the prosecution of a crime must be conducted "in the county or city in which the offense was committed," Code § 19.2-244, Kelso asserts that the indictments should have been dismissed and subsequent convictions should be vacated.
Kelso correctly recites the general venue statute providing for prosecution of a crime in the county or city in which the crime was committed, except as otherwise provided by law. Code § 19.2-244. Application of this statute requires a determination of where a specific crime was "committed." This determination is straightforward when the crime is a discrete act. For example, the distribution of marijuana to a juvenile in violation of Code § 18.2-255(A)(i) is a discrete act which when completed constitutes the commission of the crime.[2]Moreno v. Baskerville, 249 Va. 16, 18-19, 452 S.E.2d 653, 655 (1995).
The crime at issue here is a violation of subsection (A)(ii) of Code § 18.2-255. That subsection makes it a crime for any person over the age of 18 to knowingly or intentionally cause a person under the age of 18 to assist in the distribution of marijuana. This crime involves a number of actions which must be taken by more than one person. To secure a conviction, the Commonwealth must prove that the defendant not only knowingly or intentionally performed an act which caused the juvenile to assist in the distribution of the contraband, but also that the juvenile assisted in the actual distribution of the contraband to a third party. If there is no distribution to a third party, there is no violation of Code § 18.2-255(A)(ii). Furthermore, the actions of the defendant and those of the juvenile who assists in the distribution of the contraband may not always be in the same jurisdiction.
We have addressed the issue of venue for prosecution of other crimes in which actions involving the commission of the crime occur in different places, in the absence of a special venue statute.[3] In doing so, we have looked to the nature of the crime charged and the location of the acts constituting the crime. For example, in considering the proper venue for the crime of embezzlement, we acknowledged that, although venue was generally appropriate in the jurisdiction in which the conversion was consummated, such venue was not exclusive and the crime also could be prosecuted in the jurisdiction in which the perpetrator formed the intent to appropriate the goods to his own use. Rhodes v. Commonwealth, 145 Va. 893, 895, 134 S.E. 723, *473 724 (1926).[4] Similarly, we held that venue is proper in the jurisdiction where the direct and immediate result of an illegal act occurred, even if the illegal act causing the injury occurred in another jurisdiction. Gregory v. Commonwealth, 237 Va. 354, 355, 377 S.E.2d 405, 406 (1989). See also United States v. Blecker, 657 F.2d 629, 632 (4th Cir.1981) (when statute defining substantive offense does not indicate where the place of committing the crime is to be, the locus delicti must be determined from the nature of the crime alleged and the location of the act or acts constituting it.)
The nature of the crime at issue here is not that of a "continuing crime" as in the case of a larceny. A larceny is deemed to be repeated every time the object of the theft is transported to another jurisdiction; thus the crime is "continuing" in nature and subject to prosecution in each venue. Gheorghiu v. Commonwealth, 280 Va.
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710 S.E.2d 470, 282 Va. 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelso-v-com-va-2011.