Stephanie Denise Hillmon v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedApril 26, 2022
Docket1027214
StatusUnpublished

This text of Stephanie Denise Hillmon v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Stephanie Denise Hillmon 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
Stephanie Denise Hillmon v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Chief Judge Decker, Judges Ortiz and Causey UNPUBLISHED

Argued at Fairfax, Virginia

STEPHANIE DENISE HILLMON MEMORANDUM OPINION * BY v. Record No. 1027-21-4 CHIEF JUDGE MARLA GRAFF DECKER APRIL 26, 2022 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY Carroll A. Weimer, Jr., Judge

Christopher Leibig (Law Office of Christopher Leibig, on brief), for appellant.

Lindsay M. Brooker, Assistant Attorney General (Jason S. Miyares, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

Stephanie Denise Hillmon appeals her conviction for misdemeanor animal cruelty in

violation of Code § 3.2-6570(A)(i). She asserts that the trial court erred first by permitting the

Commonwealth to amend the indictment against her and later by concluding that the crime is a strict

liability offense. We hold that the trial court did not commit reversible error. Consequently, we

affirm the appellant’s conviction.

I. BACKGROUND1

The appellant was charged with felony animal cruelty in violation of Code § 3.2-6570(F)

following the death of her dog from heat stroke.

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. 1 An appellate court reviewing a challenge to a criminal conviction views the evidence, and all reasonable inferences flowing from that evidence, in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, the party who prevailed in the trial court. See Sullivan v. Commonwealth, 280 Va. 672, 676 (2010). The evidence at trial proved that on September 10, 2019, the appellant walked her two

small dogs for about an hour in humid 92-degree weather. One of the dogs, Bones, was an older

obese dog. Near the end of the walk, several witnesses watched as the appellant crossed a

six-lane intersection with the dogs. Before they crossed, Bones was lying on his side at the end

of his leash, panting and “visibly distressed.” When the traffic signal changed, while the dog

remained on his side, the appellant “dragg[ed]” the limp dog across the entire intersection,

“walking full force” with her arm behind her. At least two drivers yelled to the appellant to

indicate that “something [was] wrong with [her] dog.” The appellant looked back at the dog,

which she was still dragging, and kept walking. After crossing all six lanes of traffic, the

appellant “jerked [Bones] up.”

Detective Amon Weaver, of the Prince William County Police Department, was on duty

and noticed the appellant and her dogs before she crossed the intersection. Due to one dog’s

obvious distress, Weaver turned his vehicle around and approached the appellant. By the time

the detective reached her, she had crossed the street. She was holding the dog, whose stomach

was bloated and exhibited abrasions. Additionally, the dog was “hyper-breathing,” his tongue

was protruding, his eyes were bulging, and he was hot to the touch. Although Bones had white

fur, Weaver saw darker areas on the dog’s side, which he believed were caused by dragging.

Weaver thought that Bones was clearly “about to die” and said so. The appellant responded that

“nothing [was] wrong with [her] dog.”

Detective Weaver and Lieutenant Meghan Kidwell, an animal control officer who

responded to a call for assistance, provided the dog with emergency treatment. Kidwell told the

appellant that Bones needed additional medical attention and asked the appellant to either

accompany her to a nearby veterinarian’s office or call to arrange payment. The appellant

replied that she could not go with Kidwell and added that her dogs did not receive treatment at

-2- that veterinarian’s office. 2 Throughout the appellant’s encounter with law enforcement, she did

not seem “very concerned” about her dog. After Weaver told the appellant that Bones had died,

she did not react to the death and instead asserted that she was an attorney with no criminal

record.

At the close of the Commonwealth’s evidence, the appellant made a motion to strike

either the “entire case” or “anything above” the misdemeanor in subsection (A) of Code

§ 3.2-6570, which she characterized as a lesser-included offense. When the judge expressed

doubt that the evidence proved a direct causal link between the dragging of the dog and his

death, as required to prove the felony under subsection (F), the prosecutor made a motion to

amend the indictment to charge a misdemeanor under subsection (A). The court granted the

motion over the appellant’s objections. It rearraigned the appellant on all lesser offenses in

subsection (A), and she again entered a plea of not guilty.

The appellant then presented evidence and testified in her own behalf. She admitted that

Bones had sought shade twice on their long walk, including at the intersection at issue

immediately before they crossed the street, and that the side of the intersection they were on did

not have any shade. Nonetheless, she claimed that when the traffic light changed, the dogs were

“ready to go.” The appellant admitted that she heard people honking and yelling about her dog.

She claimed, though, that she thought Bones was “running behind” her and she did not realize

that he was lying down until she reached the fifth of the six lanes. According to the appellant,

she thought that she did not “have time to consider” other options, so she simply “pull[ed] Bones

to [her].” She then picked up the dog when she reached the sixth traffic lane because people

When Bones arrived at the veterinarian’s office, his body temperature was too high to 2

be measured, and the treating veterinarian noted additional symptoms of extreme hyperthermia. The veterinarian who performed Bones’s necropsy noted that symptoms of heatstroke prior to a dog’s death could include seeking shade, increased panting, and collapsing. -3- continued to honk and yell. The appellant denied Detective Weaver’s assertion that Bones’s

eyes were bulging or that his tongue was sticking out.

On cross-examination, the prosecutor challenged the appellant’s representation that she

did not notice that she was pulling the twenty-three-pound dog on his side. The appellant

repeated her claim that she did not know she was dragging Bones until she reached the fifth lane.

She also asserted that one of her psychiatric conditions prevented her from being “aware of

everything that a normal person would be aware of.”

At the close of all the evidence, the appellant renewed her motion to strike. She argued

in part that the evidence did not prove that she had “overdriven” or “deprived the dog [of]

anything” or acted intentionally or knowingly. The trial court denied the motion.

Following closing argument, the court found the appellant guilty of the misdemeanor of

“ill-treating” the dog. In argument on sentencing that immediately followed, counsel for the

appellant “respect[ful]ly disagree[d]” that she “was knowing about what happened.” The judge

asked whether the misdemeanor required proof that the ill-treatment was intentional. The

appellant acknowledged that the statute did not contain such an element but asserted that due

process “require[d] more than strict liability.” In response, the judge expressly rejected the

appellant’s testimony that she did not know that she was “dragging the dog across all of the lanes

of traffic on its side,” and he held that this action “was the ill-treatment, if nothing else.” The

judge later clarified that he meant that “she [knew] something was going on from the very

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