Timothy Wayne Jones v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJuly 5, 2023
Docket0592223
StatusUnpublished

This text of Timothy Wayne Jones v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Timothy Wayne Jones 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
Timothy Wayne Jones v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Humphreys, O’Brien and Chaney UNPUBLISHED

Argued at Lexington, Virginia

TIMOTHY WAYNE JONES MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 0592-22-3 JUDGE VERNIDA R. CHANEY JULY 5, 2023 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF PITTSYLVANIA COUNTY Stacey W. Moreau, Judge

John S. Koehler (Justin A. Steele; The Law Office of James Steele, PLLC, on brief), for appellant.

Leanna C. Minix, Assistant Attorney General (Jason S. Miyares, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

Following a bench trial, the circuit court convicted Timothy Wayne Jones of statutory

burglary and maliciously shooting a firearm within an occupied building, in violation of Code

§§ 18.2-91 and 18.2-279, respectively.1 On appeal, Jones challenges the sufficiency of the evidence

to sustain these convictions. For the following reasons, this Court affirms the circuit court’s

judgment.

BACKGROUND

“In accordance with familiar principles of appellate review, the facts will be stated in the

light most favorable to the Commonwealth, the prevailing party” in the circuit court. McGowan v.

* This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A). 1 Jones does not challenge his related misdemeanor convictions for brandishing a firearm and property damage. Commonwealth, 72 Va. App. 513, 516 (2020) (quoting Gerald v. Commonwealth, 295 Va. 469, 472

(2018)).

Jones and the victim, P.H., dated from November 2020 until July 25, 2021, when Jones

broke into P.H.’s house, fired a gun at her bedroom wall, and held the gun to P.H.’s head.2

When Jones removed the gun from P.H.’s head, P.H. ran to the bathroom and locked the door.

After waiting there for a while, P.H. determined that Jones had left her house. P.H. testified that

she was not injured and she did not require any medical treatment.

Before Jones broke into P.H.’s house on July 25, he was inside her house behaving

belligerently after they both had been drinking alcohol. When Jones went outside, P.H. locked

the door so he would leave. Realizing that P.H. had locked him out, Jones “flipped out in a rage”

and “punched through the door” to re-enter.

Although Jones and P.H. resided separately, they sometimes stayed overnight at each

other’s homes and Jones kept some of his belongings at P.H.’s house. But Jones did not pay rent

or utilities for P.H.’s house. Before July 25, Jones had stayed overnight at P.H.’s house for six

consecutive nights. Many months after the violent incident on July 25, Jones returned to P.H.’s

house and recovered his motorcycle and some clothes he left there.

At trial, after the Commonwealth rested its case, Jones moved to strike the evidence on

the statutory burglary charge. Jones contended that he was an invitee at P.H.’s home and, as

such, had a right to be there. Jones also argued that after P.H. locked him out, he had no intent to

do some other unlawful act at the time he entered the house. In denying Jones’s motion to strike,

the circuit court found that P.H. locked the door after Jones went outside because “[s]he did not

2 For the sake of the victim’s privacy, we refer to her by her initials throughout this opinion. -2- want him back in.” The circuit court also found that Jones “forced his way in, went straight to

the bedroom where [P.H.] was, and immediately picked up a firearm.”

After the circuit court denied the motion to strike, Jones testified in his own defense.

Jones claimed that he “was in the process of moving in with [P.H.]” on the alleged offense date

and he had been living with P.H. and staying overnight at her house for the prior two months.

Although Jones acknowledged that he was renting another residence and paid no rent or utility

bills for P.H.’s house, Jones testified that all his clothes and almost all his other belongings were

at P.H.’s house. According to Jones’s testimony, before he and P.H. argued on July 25, they

went out to dinner, bought some vodka, and then “went back home to [P.H.’s] house.” Jones

alleged that after drinking wine and a few shots of vodka, P.H. screamed and cursed at him about

“a one-night stand” involving Jones and another person. Jones further alleged that around

12:30 a.m. on July 25, P.H. angrily slapped him and then continued screaming and cursing at

him. Jones claimed that he unsuccessfully tried to calm P.H. down. As P.H. acknowledged in

her testimony, she left the house that night and went on a brief drive. Jones testified that after

P.H. returned home, he went outside to smoke a cigarette and P.H. locked him out. Jones

admitted that he then “flipped out in a rage” because everything he owned—including his keys,

phone, wallet, sleeping machine, clothes, and gun, among other things—was locked inside P.H.’s

house. Jones testified that to retrieve his property before leaving, he “punched through the

door . . . to get back in to leave.” Jones contended that “[w]hen [he] picked the gun up, the gun

went off and shot through the bottom of the wall.” Jones stated that just before he left the house,

P.H. followed him while screaming at him, “if you leave this time[,] you’ll, you’ll never be, be

back.”

After Jones testified, he called P.H. as a defense witness. P.H. denied that Jones had been

living at her house, and she denied slapping Jones that night.

-3- At the conclusion of all the evidence, Jones incorporated his renewed motion to strike in

his closing argument. Jones again moved to strike the evidence on the burglary charge on the

grounds that P.H. had expressly invited him to stay at her house overnight, giving Jones a

“possessory right” to be there. Additionally, Jones contended that the evidence failed to show

that he had the requisite intent for statutory burglary: the intent to commit some other unlawful

act at the time he re-entered P.H.’s house. Jones contended that his only intent in re-entering the

house after P.H. locked him out was “to get his property and leave.”

Jones also argued that he did not maliciously discharge a firearm within an occupied

building, but that he merely handled the gun recklessly after drinking, with no intention to fire

the gun.3 Additionally, Jones challenged the credibility of P.H.’s testimony denying that Jones

resided with her and denying she had slapped Jones in anger before he went outside to smoke a

cigarette.

After closing arguments, the circuit court noted Jones’s admission that he “flipped out

and went into a rage, and punched through” the door after P.H. locked him out. The circuit court

found that Jones did not reside at P.H.’s house, but he was merely P.H.’s invitee until she

rescinded the invitation when she locked him out. The circuit court expressly rejected Jones’s

testimony that P.H. “was chasing [him] down the hallway saying ‘if you leave you’re not coming

back.’” The circuit court also found that after Jones punched in the door and broke into P.H.’s

house, he did not go to get his wallet or keys, but went to the bedroom, grabbed and shot the gun,

and then held the loaded gun to P.H.’s head. The circuit court concluded that Jones broke in

with the intent to commit an assault and battery against P.H. Based on these findings, the circuit

court denied Jones’s renewed motion to strike and found him guilty as charged.

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