Mark O'Hara Wright v. Andrew C. Graves, Esq.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedOctober 17, 2023
Docket1079223
StatusPublished

This text of Mark O'Hara Wright v. Andrew C. Graves, Esq. (Mark O'Hara Wright v. Andrew C. Graves, Esq.) 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
Mark O'Hara Wright v. Andrew C. Graves, Esq., (Va. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA PUBLISHED

Present: Judges Raphael, Lorish and Callins Argued at Lexington, Virginia

MARK O’HARA WRIGHT OPINION BY v. Record No. 1079-22-3 JUDGE STUART A. RAPHAEL OCTOBER 17, 2023 ANDREW C. GRAVES, ESQ.

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ROCKINGHAM COUNTY Michael S. Irvine, Judge Designate

Mark O’Hara Wright, pro se.

Brittany E. Shipley (Rosalie Pemberton Fessier; Timberlake, Smith, Thomas & Moses, P.C., on brief), for appellee.

In this legal-malpractice case, Mark O’Hara Wright seeks compensatory damages from

Andrew C. Graves, the defense lawyer who represented him in a 2012 criminal trial in which

Wright was convicted on multiple charges, resulting in an 11-and-a-half-year prison term. The most

serious conviction was for grand larceny from the person, for which Wright received a ten-year

sentence. In June 2021, about three months before Wright’s scheduled release, the United States

Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit concluded that Wright was entitled to federal habeas relief

on that conviction due to Graves’s ineffective assistance of counsel. Wright v. Clarke, 860 F. App’x

271 (4th Cir. 2021).

Wright sued Graves for legal malpractice in the Circuit Court of Rockingham County, but

the trial court sustained Graves’s demurrer and dismissed Wright’s amended complaint, concluding

that Wright failed to plead that he was actually innocent of the offense for which he was convicted.

Taking the facts in the light most favorable to Wright, however, we find that Wright successfully

pleaded that element. So we reverse and remand this case for further proceedings. BACKGROUND

In reviewing a trial court’s decision sustaining a demurrer, “we accept as true all factual

allegations in the complaint ‘made with “sufficient definiteness to enable the court to find the

existence of a legal basis for its judgment.”’” Patterson v. City of Danville, 301 Va. 181, 197

(2022) (quoting Squire v. Va. Hous. Dev. Auth., 287 Va. 507, 514 (2014)). But we are not bound by

the pleader’s conclusions of law that are couched as facts. Id. In evaluating the sufficiency of

Wright’s allegations, the trial court treated Wright’s “amended complaint” to include his original

complaint as supplemented by his “motion to amend.” Wright’s motion to amend incorporated by

reference the Fourth Circuit’s opinion in Wright v. Clarke. As Graves does not challenge the

sources used by the trial court to evaluate Wright’s allegations, we rely on the same sources here to

set out the operative facts.

In March 2012, Wright, his brother Robert, and Robert’s 15-year-old stepson drove to a

grocery store in Harrisonburg and shoplifted some sandwiches and two cases of beer. Wright, 860

F. App’x at 274. The store’s security guard, Garret Atkins, confronted them in the parking lot in

front of the minivan that Wright was driving. Atkins

took one of the cases of beer from Robert’s hands. At that point, Robert’s stepson stepped out of the minivan—with Wright on the opposite side of the van, out of Atkins’s view—and “took a fighting stance” . . . . Robert then grabbed the beer back from Atkins, and Wright, Robert, and Robert’s stepson left in the minivan, taking with them the sandwiches and beer.

Id. The grand jury indicted Wright for robbery by means of violence, premised on “Robert’s

physical taking of the beer from Atkins in the parking lot.” Id. The prosecution amended the

indictment on the day of trial to charge Wright with “robbery as a principal in the second degree,

meaning that Wright was present for and aided or abetted Robert’s taking of the beer.” Id. The

punishment if Wright were convicted of that offense was “a sentence of five years to life in

prison.” Id. -2- At the close of evidence, “the Commonwealth asked that the jury be instructed not only on

robbery but also on grand larceny from the person—which, unlike the robbery charge, would not

require proof of force or intimidation, and carrie[d] a lower sentence of zero to 20 years’

imprisonment.” Id. Although the Commonwealth argued that larceny from the person was a lesser-

included offense of robbery, that was plainly wrong under Virginia precedent that was “unequivocal

and long-standing.” Id. at 278 (citing Ali v. Commonwealth, 280 Va. 665, 669 (2010)). But Graves

did not know that, so he agreed to the Commonwealth’s proposed instruction. Id. at 274.

The jury acquitted Wright of robbery but convicted him of grand larceny from the person.

Id. at 275. The trial court accepted the jury’s recommendation to impose a ten-year prison sentence

on that conviction. Id. Wright was also convicted of two other charges: “petit larceny, for

originally taking the sandwiches and beer from the store without paying for them; and contributing

to the delinquency of a minor, for the involvement of Robert’s stepson,” id. at 274 n.1, for which

Wright was sentenced to a total of one-and-a-half years, id. at 275 n.2.1 His scheduled release date

from prison was September 7, 2021. Id. at 275.

With about three months left to serve in his sentence, Wright won federal habeas relief from

the Fourth Circuit on the grand-larceny-from-the-person conviction because of Graves’s ineffective

assistance of counsel in failing to object to the erroneous jury instruction. Id. at 282-83. The Court

found that Graves’s “failure to perform even a minimal investigation of the law cannot be said to

reflect a ‘reasonable decision’ or trial strategy.” Id. at 279. “Because no ‘reasonable professional

judgments’ can justify counsel’s lack of investigation into the relevant law, his failure to object to

1 Wright was also convicted and sentenced on two other charges “relating to events that transpired when Wright and his brother were arrested after leaving the grocery store,” but those convictions were overturned on direct appeal by the Supreme Court of Virginia. Wright, 860 F. App’x at 275 n.2 (citing Wright v. Commonwealth, 292 Va. 386 (2016)). -3- Jury Instruction 10 [was] similarly unreasonable, and his performance deficient under Strickland.”

Id. (quoting Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 691 (1984)).

In November 2021, Wright sued Graves for legal malpractice. Graves demurred on the

ground that “[t]he complaint fails to allege facts sufficient to establish actual innocence, which is an

element of a legal malpractice case arising from criminal proceedings.”2 The trial court sustained

the demurrer on that ground, with leave to amend. Wright then filed a “motion to amend” with an

accompanying affidavit, which Graves and the trial court treated as the amended complaint. Graves

again demurred “for the same reason” as before. The trial court sustained the demurrer, this time

with prejudice, finding that Wright’s amended complaint “fails to establish Plaintiff’s actual

innocence.”

Wright noted a timely appeal.

ANALYSIS

We review a trial court’s decision sustaining a demurrer de novo. Taylor v. Aids-Hilfe Koln

e.V., 301 Va. 352, 357 (2022). Even if “a trial court believes [that] a claim brought by a pro se

[plaintiff] may ultimately fail, at the pleading stage the trial court is bound by the same procedures,

rules and policies which apply to a party represented by counsel.” Ogunde v. Prison Health Servs.,

Inc., 274 Va. 55, 65 (2007). We take the facts alleged and the inferences reasonably derived from

those facts in the light most favorable to the plaintiff. Id.

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