Scott Edward Pease v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJune 13, 2023
Docket0846221
StatusUnpublished

This text of Scott Edward Pease v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Scott Edward Pease 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.

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Scott Edward Pease v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA UNPUBLISHED

Present: Judges Humphreys, Huff and Lorish Argued at Norfolk, Virginia

SCOTT EDWARD PEASE MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 0846-22-1 JUDGE ROBERT J. HUMPHREYS JUNE 13, 2023 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF NORFOLK John R. Doyle, III, Judge

J. Barry McCracken, Assistant Public Defender, for appellant.

Jason D. Reed, Assistant Attorney General (Jason S. Miyares, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

After a jury trial in the Norfolk Circuit Court, Scott Edward Pease appeals his convictions of

strangulation, assault and battery, and entering and remaining in the home of a person with a

protective order. Pease argues the circuit court erred by (1) not taking appropriate remedial action

in response to the Commonwealth’s failure to comply with the discovery order, (2) denying his

motion to strike the strangulation charge for lack of sufficient evidence, and (3) entering a final

judgment order of guilty on the charge of entering and remaining in the home of a person with a

protective order because the evidence established the dwelling was not the protected party’s home.

BACKGROUND

I. Facts Surrounding Discovery Order Violation

On January 19, 2022, Pease’s jury trial commenced. At voir dire of the jury pool, the

Commonwealth announced the names of its expected witnesses to determine if the potential

* This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413. jurors were acquainted with them. After the jury was selected and sworn, the Commonwealth

made its opening statement during which it again named its expected witnesses. As the

Commonwealth called its first witness to testify, counsel for Pease objected. He argued that a

discovery order had been in place since September 2021 and that he just learned in the

Commonwealth’s opening statement “for the first time who the Commonwealth intends to call as

witnesses.” Defense counsel objected to testimony by “any witness who has not been disclosed,

per the discovery order, prior to trial.”

The circuit court read paragraph 8 of the discovery order: “The Commonwealth shall

disclose to the defendant before trial, a written list of witnesses including names and addresses

. . . expected to testify for the Commonwealth at trial or sentencing, . . . .” The court noted from

its file that on December 22, 2021, the Commonwealth provided thirty-three items of discovery

to defense counsel, but no list of witnesses.

The Commonwealth conceded that it had inadvertently violated the discovery order.

However, the Commonwealth pointed to the “massive amount of discovery” that it gave to

defense counsel pursuant to the court’s discovery order and argued that there was no bad faith in

its failure to also produce the list of witnesses expected to testify for the Commonwealth. The

prosecutor noted that he and defense counsel had been in contact with each other since the

prosecutor received the case, and it would have been appropriate for defense counsel to just ask

for the witness list or file a motion to compel in advance of trial. The Commonwealth suggested

the appropriate remedy was to adjourn the matter or grant a mistrial.

Pease asserted that he was prejudiced because he was denied his right to prepare his

defense, and due to the massive amount of information provided, he needed to know the list of

expected witnesses to make effective use of that information. He also stated that the

Commonwealth would have been in compliance with the order if it handed the list to counsel

-2- immediately prior to the start of trial, even “30 seconds before trial.”1 Defense counsel argued

that declaring a mistrial or adjourning the matter would prejudice Pease, who would have to

remain in jail for several months awaiting trial, adding that he is an elderly stage 4 cancer

patient. He maintained that the remedy should be to prevent the Commonwealth from calling

witnesses to testify who were not disclosed in accordance with the discovery order.

The circuit court agreed that the Commonwealth had not complied with the discovery

order by failing to provide defense counsel with a witness list. Then the court contemplated

what remedy to fashion. The court considered each witness whom the Commonwealth named in

its opening statement and noted that the court file contained subpoena returns for each of them

except for the forensic nurse examiner. The circuit court noted that the forensic nurse examiner

was not subpoenaed, “however, the defendant was provided with two reports prepared by [the

nurse] and was certainly on notice that [the nurse] was . . . essentially a witness in the case,

because [she] had been involved in that regard.”

The circuit court found no bad faith by the Commonwealth, “no surprise to the

defendant,” and “very little prejudice to the defendant” from the Commonwealth’s failure to

provide him with a list entitled “Witnesses.” The court found that the identity of all of the

witnesses was “readily apparent from the Court file, and in many instances, supplemented by

reports or statements given by different witnesses.” Thus, the circuit court denied the defense’s

motion to prohibit any witnesses from testifying for the Commonwealth.

II. Facts Established at Trial

Pease and Monica Harrison married on July 31, 2010. They lived together until April 1,

2021, when the parties separated, and Pease went to live with his sister. At the time of their

1 Defense counsel based his position on the fact that the discovery order itself set no time limit for producing the witness list. Pease maintains this position on appeal. -3- separation, they were renting a house located on Sheryl Drive in Norfolk, Virginia, where they

had lived for three years. Harrison stopped living there on April 2. On April 5, the landlord

gave Pease and Harrison notice that they would have to leave the residence and completely move

out by the end of May 2021. Initially, Harrison gave Pease “free rein” of the residence for two

or three weeks so he could remove his personal property from the house. Then the landlord

informed Harrison that Pease was done moving his belongings so Harrison could proceed to

moving her property out of the house.

On April 22, 2021, the Norfolk Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court entered a

protective order against Pease, ordering no contact with Harrison, which remained in effect until

April 22, 2023. On Saturday, May 1, the landlord met Harrison at the house. Harrison believed

Pease had been to the house that day and the landlord had observed destruction inside and “gas

all over the house,” so the landlord had the locks changed the next day. On May 2, the landlord

gave Harrison keys to the new locks, and Pease did not have keys to the new locks. Also on May

2, Harrison met a contractor at the house to repair the back door, which had been kicked in many

times.2 Harrison stayed at the house until after the contractor left; when Harrison left, the doors

to the house were all fixed and the house was secured.

On May 3, Harrison arrived at the house after 1:00 p.m. to move her clothes and furniture

out of the house. She entered the residence and took a mattress outside to the truck. She

reentered the house and was looking for other items when she thought she heard something

upstairs.

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