Marcus C. Holman, s/k/a Marcus Cleophus Holman v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedApril 18, 2023
Docket0629222
StatusPublished

This text of Marcus C. Holman, s/k/a Marcus Cleophus Holman v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Marcus C. Holman, s/k/a Marcus Cleophus Holman 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
Marcus C. Holman, s/k/a Marcus Cleophus Holman v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges O’Brien, Ortiz and Raphael PUBLISHED

Argued at Richmond, Virginia

MARCUS C. HOLMAN, SOMETIMES KNOWN AS MARCUS CLEOPHUS HOLMAN OPINION BY v. Record No. 0629-22-2 JUDGE DANIEL E. ORTIZ APRIL 18, 2023 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF KING WILLIAM COUNTY B. Elliott Bondurant, Judge

Charles E. Haden for appellant.

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

Though narrow, the “ends of justice” exception to the contemporaneous objection rule

should negate a conviction for use of a firearm in the commission of a malicious wounding when

the trial court affirmatively found an absence of malice. Here, the King William County Circuit

Court held a bench trial and convicted Marcus Holman of unlawful wounding and use of a firearm

in the commission of a felony, in violation of Code §§ 18.2-51 and -53.1,1 after Holman discharged

a shotgun and permanently injured his girlfriend, Selena Spurlock. Holman was indicted on

aggravated malicious wounding, but the trial court granted his motion to strike and proceeded on the

lesser-included unlawful wounding. On appeal, Holman argues that the evidence did not support

his convictions for unlawful wounding or use of a firearm in the commission of a felony. After

reviewing the evidence, the record supports Holman’s conviction for unlawful wounding but does

1 Holman was also convicted of discharging a firearm in public and possession of a firearm by a felon, in violation of Code §§ 18.2-280 and -308.2, but he does not challenge these convictions. not support his conviction for use of a firearm in the commission of a felony. We affirm in part and

reverse in part.

BACKGROUND

Marcus Holman was the domestic partner of Selena Spurlock. He was a hunter and owned a

shotgun. In the morning of November 14, 2020, Holman went hunting. When it became late,

Spurlock called to ask what time Holman would come home, which escalated into a “big

argument.” She went to Holman’s mother’s house to retrieve her license plates and cell phone,

because she believed that Holman was drinking and did not want him to drive with her plates.

When she arrived, the couple began fighting. Spurlock testified that Holman yelled, took a license

plate off the truck, and “hit [her] in the face with it.” Spurlock then hit Holman in the back of the

neck, causing him to fall. She then went home.

Three hours later, Spurlock was upstairs when her security camera notified her that someone

was approaching the house. From her bedroom window, she observed Holman “pull in, sit there for

a minute,” and then back out as if he were leaving. He backed into another vehicle, exited the truck,

and tried to enter the house. He could not enter because he did not have a key. Spurlock then

contacted Holman’s sister, Nikki, and asked her to get Holman. Nikki arrived twenty minutes later

with her boyfriend, Shawn. Spurlock went to the second-floor bathroom and opened the window to

look outside. When Holman saw his sister and Shawn, he jumped out of his truck and started

yelling, while holding his shotgun. Through the open bathroom window, Spurlock told Holman to

give the gun to his sister and that she was calling the police. Holman pointed the shotgun at

Spurlock and told her to “come outside. You wanna hide behind the window, come outside.”

Nikki and Shawn tried to take the shotgun, but Holman would not let go. Spurlock dialed

the non-emergency police line and placed her cell phone on the windowsill so that Holman could

hear the call. He continued to yell and curse at Spurlock and told her that if the police arrived there

-2- would be “a shootout.” She testified that he was angry, “pissed,” frustrated, “really, really drunk,”

and acting erratically. As Spurlock spoke to the police, Holman pointed the gun toward the window

where Spurlock was standing and fired. One shotgun pellet struck the side of the house, to the left

of the window, and another struck the windowpane. Spurlock was hit in the face. She suffered a

broken nose, shattered sinuses, and permanent blindness and remained in the hospital for two

weeks. Holman fled the scene.

Although Holman admitted to police that he fired the shotgun twice, he stated that he fired it

into the air because he was frustrated. Captain Hamm, a responding officer, interviewed Holman

after the shooting. He testified that Holman told him at least twice that the shooting was not

intentional and that “he did not take aim at the window.” He also testified that Holman began

crying when he was told the extent of Spurlock’s injuries.

After the Commonwealth rested, Holman moved to strike the evidence, arguing that it failed

to prove the requisite elements of malice and intent to maim, disfigure, disable, or kill necessary to

sustain a conviction for aggravated malicious wounding. Holman argued that, at best, the

Commonwealth’s evidence rose to the level of “unlawful wounding.” The trial court denied the

motion to strike at that time.

Holman then testified that he did not intend to shoot or injure Spurlock but, rather, that he

fired the shotgun because he was frustrated and humiliated. Although he admitted to arguing with

Spurlock at his mother’s house, he denied hitting her with a license plate. He stated that when he

could not get into the house, he planned to sleep in the truck. But he was upset when Nikki arrived

and felt frustrated and humiliated that Spurlock called her. Holman admitted that he exited the truck

and told Nikki and Shawn that he was tired of needing to leave every time Spurlock got mad. He

testified that he could hear Spurlock yelling “leave” but told Nikki that he was not going anywhere.

He also testified that he knew Spurlock was at one of the windows but did not know which one. He

-3- denied that he threatened a shootout and stated that he was not angry enough to hurt Spurlock.

Finally, he claimed that after Nikki and Shawn left, he shot the gun twice in the air. He denied

aiming it at the house and testified that he did not know Spurlock was hurt when he left.

Shawn testified that Holman was sleeping in his truck when he and Nikki arrived. Nikki

woke Holman and told him to go with them. Although Shawn did not smell alcohol, Holman

appeared to have been drinking. Nikki and Holman argued, as Holman did not want to leave

without his belongings. He appeared upset and stated that he was “tired of this.” As the argument

escalated, Shawn heard Spurlock say that they needed to leave before she called the police.

Although Shawn could not see Spurlock, it sounded like she was upstairs. Shawn testified that he

did not see Holman with a shotgun and that there was no struggle. He stated that he did not hear

Holman threaten a shootout. Finally, Shawn testified Holman became emotional when he learned

that Spurlock was injured.

After the defense rested, Holman renewed his motion to strike. He argued that the evidence

failed to prove the specific intent necessary for malicious wounding and the element of malice,

arguing that Holman acted in “the heat of passion.” Although Holman acknowledged that use of a

gun “creates a presumption of malice,” he emphasized that every witness stated that he was

“angry, upset, frustrated, pissed off,” and drunk, especially Spurlock, the victim. Holman also

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Marcus C. Holman, s/k/a Marcus Cleophus Holman v. Commonwealth of Virginia, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marcus-c-holman-ska-marcus-cleophus-holman-v-commonwealth-of-virginia-vactapp-2023.