Saunders v. Com.

706 S.E.2d 350, 281 Va. 448
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 4, 2011
Docket100906
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 706 S.E.2d 350 (Saunders 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.

Bluebook
Saunders v. Com., 706 S.E.2d 350, 281 Va. 448 (Va. 2011).

Opinion

706 S.E.2d 350 (2011)

Shandre Travon SAUNDERS
v.
COMMONWEALTH of Virginia.

Record No. 100906.

Supreme Court of Virginia.

March 4, 2011.

David D. Embrey for appellant.

Susan M. Harris, Assistant Attorney General, (Kenneth T. Cuccinelli II, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

Present: KINSER, C.J., LEMONS, GOODWYN, and MILLETTE, JJ., and CARRICO and KOONTZ, S.JJ.[*]

*351 Opinion by Senior Justice HARRY L. CARRICO.

In this criminal appeal, we decide whether a person under the age of eighteen may be sentenced by a jury rather than a judge on one or more charges specified in Code § 16.1-269.1(B) and (C). Pursuant to that Code section, charges against the defendant, Shandre Travon Saunders, then sixteen years of age, for aggravated malicious wounding, Code § 18.2-51.2(A), and use of a firearm in the commission of a felony, Code § 18.2-53.1,[1] were certified to the grand jury on June 11, 2008, by the Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court of the City of Lynchburg (the juvenile court). On July 7, 2008, a grand jury indicted Saunders for these two offenses and also for participation in an act of violence in association with a criminal street gang. Code § 18.2-46.2.

BACKGROUND

These three charges arose out of an incident that occurred on September 7, 2007. Greg Powell, a taxicab driver and part-time football coach, was driving his cab near the intersection of Garfield Avenue and Twelfth Street in Lynchburg. As he drove past a gas station, Saunders, who was standing in a parking lot on the opposite side of the street, fired a .380 caliber handgun two or three times, striking Powell in the side of his face, causing him to lose control of his vehicle and crash into a tree. Powell suffered severe injuries, including facial fractures and an injury to the left carotid artery in his neck. Several days later, he suffered a stroke and permanent brain damage. He is paralyzed in the right side of his body and cannot speak or process speech.

The shooting was gang-related. Saunders was a leader in a gang called the Garfield Avenue Bloods that was involved in home-invasion robbery, malicious wounding, and drug dealing.

Saunders' trial in circuit court on the three charges was set before a jury. Pretrial, he moved that the jury be precluded from sentencing him if it found him guilty of any of the charges, arguing that Virginia law does not allow juries to fix the punishment for defendants under the age of eighteen.

However, on March 21, 2008, before the three charges were certified by the juvenile court on June 11, 2008, the circuit court had tried Saunders on a charge of shooting into an occupied dwelling, Code § 18.2-279, had convicted him as an adult on his plea of guilty, and on June 6, 2008, had sentenced him to ten years' imprisonment, with eight years suspended. Saunders had waived the jurisdiction of the juvenile court on the occupied dwelling shooting on February 13, 2008, and it was not related in any way to the three charges currently under review.

Saunders' conviction on March 21, 2008, of shooting into an occupied dwelling arose out of an incident that occurred on September 21, 2007, two weeks after Saunders shot Powell. Armed with the same .380 caliber gun he had used on Powell, Saunders went to an apartment in Lynchburg and shot at several men inside the apartment. They returned fire, and then everyone fled. The shooting was drug-related.

The circuit court entered an order denying Saunders' motion to preclude the jury from sentencing him on the three charges and directing that Saunders "be sentenced by a jury if convicted." On January 26, 2009, the jury convicted Saunders of all three charges and fixed his punishment at forty years' imprisonment on the charge of aggravated malicious wounding, three years on the charge of use of a firearm in the commission of a felony, and ten years on the charge of participation in an act of violence in association with a criminal street gang, totaling fifty-three years in all. The circuit court imposed the punishment fixed by the jury.

Saunders sought an appeal from the Court of Appeals of Virginia, assigning error only to the circuit court's order allowing the jury *352 to fix his sentence. The Court of Appeals awarded an appeal, upheld the circuit court's denial of Saunders' motion for non-jury sentencing, and affirmed his conviction. Saunders v. Commonwealth, 56 Va.App. 139, 692 S.E.2d 252 (2010). We awarded Saunders this appeal.

Sections 16.1-271 and 16.1-272 in Chapter 11, Article 7 of Title 16.1 of the Code of Virginia are at the heart of the issue in this case. Code § 16.1-271 provides in pertinent part as follows:

Conviction of a juvenile as an adult pursuant to the provisions of this chapter shall preclude the juvenile court [from] taking jurisdiction of such juvenile for subsequent offenses committed by that juvenile.
Any juvenile who is tried and convicted in a circuit court as an adult under the provisions of this article shall be considered and treated as an adult in any criminal proceeding resulting from any alleged future criminal acts and any pending allegations of delinquency which have not been disposed of by the juvenile court at the time of the criminal conviction.
All procedures and dispositions applicable to adults charged with such a criminal offense shall apply in such cases, including, but not limited to, arrest; probable cause determination by a magistrate or grand jury; the use of a warrant, summons, or capias instead of a petition to initiate the case; adult bail; preliminary hearing and a right to counsel provisions; trial in a court having jurisdiction over adults; and trial and sentencing as an adult.

Code § 16.1-272 provides in pertinent part as follows:

A. In any case in which a juvenile is indicted, the offense for which he is indicted and all ancillary charges shall be tried in the same manner as provided for in the trial of adults, except as otherwise provided with regard to sentencing. Upon a finding of guilty of any charge, the court shall fix the sentence without the intervention of a jury.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

Whether a defendant under the age of eighteen must be sentenced by a judge rather than a jury in certain cases "presents a pure question of law and is accordingly subject to de novo review by this Court." See Jones v. Commonwealth, 276 Va. 121, 124, 661 S.E.2d 412, 414 (2008). "[P]enal statutes must be strictly construed against the State and ... such statutes cannot be extended by implication or construction, or be made to embrace cases which are not within their letter and spirit. We determine the General Assembly's intent by the words used in a statute, and when a statute is unambiguous, we are bound by the plain meaning of its language." Id. (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). "[T]he accused is entitled to the benefit of any reasonable doubt about the construction of a criminal statute." Stevenson v. City of Falls Church, 243 Va. 434, 436, 416 S.E.2d 435, 437 (1992) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).

ANALYSIS

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
706 S.E.2d 350, 281 Va. 448, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saunders-v-com-va-2011.