Tina Dione Woodson v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedMay 3, 2022
Docket0610212
StatusPublished

This text of Tina Dione Woodson v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Tina Dione Woodson 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
Tina Dione Woodson v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA PUBLISHED

Present: Judges Huff, Lorish and Callins Argued by videoconference

TINA DIONE WOODSON OPINION BY v. Record No. 0610-21-2 JUDGE LISA M. LORISH MAY 3, 2022 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF HANOVER COUNTY Jan L. Brodie, Judge Designate

Dennis J. McLoughlin, Jr. (McLoughlin Law PLC, on brief), for appellant.

Robin M. Nagel, Assistant Attorney General (Mark R. Herring,1 Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

Virginia, like every other state, permits parents to discipline their children with corporal

punishment. This “parental privilege” excuses what would otherwise be battery in the ordinary

course. To fall within this justification, discipline must be reasonable and not excessive. Our

caselaw sets out a series of factors that help distinguish between acceptable and undue discipline.

But in each case decided by the Supreme Court and our Court upholding a lower court’s

conclusion that discipline was excessive, the parent or caregiver inflicted significant physical

harm on the child. The harm was readily evident from the presence of more than transient

physical pain or temporary marks.

Tina Dione Woodson was convicted of assault and battery for disciplining her

twelve-year-old twins with a belt. While each child had some transient bruise or mark afterward,

neither was seriously injured. This case, therefore, requires us to consider for the first time

1 Jason S. Miyares succeeded Mark R. Herring as Attorney General on January 15, 2022. whether the combination of other facts was enough for criminal liability to result. For the

reasons set forth below, we must reverse and dismiss Woodson’s convictions.

Background2

On the morning in question, Woodson’s twelve-year-old twins (“son” and “daughter”)

were getting themselves and their younger siblings ready for the school day. Son had a cell

phone, and his phone alarm went off while he was out of the room. Daughter picked up the

phone to turn off the alarm. Woodson saw her and suspected daughter was using the phone in

violation of Woodson’s rules about appropriate phone use. Woodson took the phone and noticed

a message on it, which concerned her because she had forbidden the twins from giving out the

phone number to anyone. Woodson then questioned the twins about who was sending messages

to the phone and which one of them had given out the phone number. Daughter acknowledged

the message was from someone at school who was friends with both twins. But both son and

daughter denied being the one who gave out the number, each blaming the other.

Woodson asked son to get a belt from her closet and told the twins to lay on the bed. She

then hit them with the non-buckle end of the belt. Daughter testified that the belt hit her on the

bottom and legs, “more than between six and ten times,” whereas son testified only that he was

spanked without additional detail. Woodson was 5’5” tall, weighed 135 pounds, and was

recovering from surgery. Daughter testified that she weighed about 57 to 59 pounds then, and

photographs suggest son was also small for his age. The twins then went to school for the day.

2 “In accordance with familiar principles of appellate review, the facts will be stated in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, the prevailing party at trial.” Gerald v. Commonwealth, 295 Va. 469, 472 (2018) (quoting Scott v. Commonwealth, 292 Va. 380, 381 (2016)). In doing so, we discard any of appellant’s conflicting evidence, and regard as true all credible evidence favorable to the Commonwealth and all inferences that may reasonably be drawn from that evidence. Id. at 473. -2- Later that day, while at school, son approached the Hanover County sheriff’s deputy

working as a school resource officer and said that he did not feel safe going home. The record is

unclear on the full extent of what son reported that day. At a minimum, he told the school

resource officer, as well as a later-arriving investigator from the sheriff’s office, about a

“whipping” his father had given him with a belt over the weekend, and also that his mother had

“spanked” him that morning with a belt. Son said he was sore from the spanking that morning.

The school resource officer and investigator also spoke to daughter, who confirmed that she also

did not feel safe going home. Neither child specifically identified their mother as the reason that

they were afraid.

Both the school resource officer and investigator testified at trial that they observed

bruises and marks on the twins, but there was some confusion over the source of the marks. The

investigator had originally noted red marks and discoloration on son’s thigh and face, but son

explained that those marks had come from his father. The investigator testified that she saw

bruises and marks consistent with a belt strap on daughter’s back and thighs when she spoke to

daughter that day, and she identified those same marks on the photographs introduced at trial.3

Two family services specialists from the Hanover County Department of Social Services

also testified at trial, called by Woodson. Both had interviewed the twins after they left school

that day. Both testified that while they observed some discoloration on the twins, they saw

nothing that they would describe as linear marks or bruising.

The twins testified at trial and identified bruises in photographs that the investigator had

taken. They told the court that those bruises came from Woodson’s actions. Daughter pointed to

marks on her back in a photograph and testified they looked like belt marks she had seen on her

3 The investigator also said that the bruise on daughter’s back looked like “the outline of a belt buckle,” but daughter specifically testified that Woodson only used the “long” part of the belt, not the metal portion. -3- skin when she looked in the mirror right after the incident. On cross-examination, however, she

admitted telling the family services specialists that she had seen no red marks on her skin from

the belt that day. Son identified a single mark on his leg in a photograph as originating from

what he described as Woodson’s “spanking.”

Daughter also testified that she had been the one to give out the number to her brother’s

cell phone and that she had lied to her mother that morning. She also acknowledged that she had

been in trouble with her mother for lying previously. Finally, daughter testified that Woodson

messaged her after the incident telling daughter to go to the principal’s office and say that she

had lied about the event.

Woodson testified and denied using corporal punishment that day. She explained that

daughter was not allowed to have a phone because of her prior behavior, but that she observed

her using son’s phone that morning. Woodson testified that she used other forms of punishment,

such as restricting phone use and taking away the ability to do special activities.

Woodson moved to strike the Commonwealth’s evidence, arguing that if the court found

she had used corporal punishment, the evidence established a permissible spanking and not

excessive discipline. This motion was renewed after the close of all the evidence. The trial court

denied these motions and found Woodson guilty of two counts of assault and battery. The court

explained that the testimony of son and daughter was “very credible,” and found notable that

they were scared to go home. The judge also observed that “[t]his was over a texting violation.

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