Traish v. Commonwealth

549 S.E.2d 5, 36 Va. App. 114, 2001 Va. App. LEXIS 407
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJuly 10, 2001
Docket2056994
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 549 S.E.2d 5 (Traish v. Commonwealth) 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
Traish v. Commonwealth, 549 S.E.2d 5, 36 Va. App. 114, 2001 Va. App. LEXIS 407 (Va. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

CLEMENTS, Judge.

Hisham Traish was tried by jury and convicted of grand larceny, assault and battery, and five counts of attempted petit larceny. On appeal, he contends the trial court erred (1) in denying his motion to have the charges involving different victims tried separately, (2) in denying his motion to strike the grand larceny and assault and battery charges because the evidence was insufficient to support his convictions, (3) in denying his motion to strike the attempt charges where Traish obtained money from the victims because there was a fatal variance between the indictment and the proof, and (4) in denying his motion to strike the attempt charges because the legal impossibility of completing the offenses precluded conviction on those charges. Finding no error, we affirm the convictions.

I. BACKGROUND

Under well-settled principles of appellate review, we examine the evidence and all reasonable inferences fairly deducible therefrom in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, the prevailing party below. Burlile v. Commonwealth, 32 Va.App. 796, 798, 531 S.E.2d 26, 27 (2000).

The charges against Traish were as follows:

Date of Case # Offense Offense Victim

99-418 Attempted Petit Larceny 12/16/98 Ms. Flanagan

99-417 Grand Larceny 12/17/98 Ms. Lyon

99-424 Assault and Battery 12/17/98 Ms. Lyon

99-425 Assault and Battery 12/17/98 Ms. Lyon 1

*120 99-419 Attempted Petit Larceny 12/19/98 Ms. Evans

99-420 Attempted Petit Larceny 12/26/98 Ms. Austin 2

99-421 Attempted Petit Larceny 1/05/99 Ms. Hammond

99-422 Attempted Petit Larceny 1/05/99 Ms. Condon

99 — 423 Attempted Petit Larceny 1/06/99 Ms. Pittman

Prior to trial, Traish moved the trial court to grant him separate trials on each of the charges involving different victims. He conceded the grand larceny and assault and battery charges could properly be tried together because they involved the same victim and were part of the same transaction. The trial court denied Traish’s motion to sever the trial of the offenses, and all of the charges were tried together before the same jury.

At trial, the evidence established that, on December 16, 1998, Adelaide Flanagan, a woman in her eighties, returned home alone from the bank and parked her car in the parking lot of the retirement community in Arlington County where she lived. Traish, wearing a black leather jacket and driving an older, large, blue car, pulled in behind her, got out of his car, and accused her of hitting his car in a local grocery store parking lot. He said: “Why didn’t you stop? I honked at you and a cab nearby honked too. You struck my car.” Flanagan, who had not heard anyone honking, denied hitting Traish’s car. He showed her a mark on the back of her car, a spot where the car had been scratched almost a year earlier. When she again denied hitting his car, Traish showed her a dent on his car where he claimed she hit it. The mark on Traish’s car was “much lower” than the mark Traish pointed out on her car. Traish told her he had put in a lot of work getting his car ready to sell but could not sell it now that it was damaged. Flanagan looked at Traish’s driver’s license *121 and told him she would report his claim to her insurance company once she got in the house. She did not write his name down at the time, but it was, she recalled, something like “Hashin Frasier.”

At that point, Stacy Heil, an employee of the retirement community, came over to assist Flanagan. Traish told Heil that Flanagan had just backed into him in the grocery store parking lot next to the retirement community. Traish again pointed out the marks on the two cars where they had hit. There was, however, Heil noted, a difference of eight to ten inches in the heights of the two marks pointed out by Traish. She took down the name Traish gave her, “Hisham”; his phone number, which turned out to belong to someone else; the temporary license tag number on his car, which expired January 15, 1999; and a description of his car, a 1988 silvery blue Lincoln. She also gave Flanagan the phone number of the police. Feeling Traish’s accusation “was not on the up and up,” Heil asked Flanagan if she wanted to go inside, and Flanagan responded affirmatively.

Flanagan’s encounter with Traish lasted approximately thirty minutes. Flanagan never offered any money to Traish and he never asked for any. Flanagan called the police within a day or two of the incident to report it. At trial, both Flanagan and Heil identified Traish as the man they encountered that day, even though, according to Heil, his hairstyle had changed.

On December 17, 1998, Helen Lyon was driving by herself in Arlington County when she heard someone behind her honking. Traish, who was wearing a black leather jacket, pulled up beside her, rolled down his window, and told her she had hit his car. Lyon, who was returning home after shopping for groceries, pulled over to the side of the road and got out of her car. She knew she had not hit anybody. Traish also pulled over, got out of his car, and pointed to a spot on his car where he claimed Lyon hit it in the grocery store parking lot. She denied hitting his car, saying, “I could not have done that because my car could not have made that [mark].” She *122 suggested they drive to her house where she would call the police and inform her husband.

Traish, however, insisted they handle it there and then and took out his driver’s license and showed it to her. She could not identify the picture on it because it was “shiny,” but “noticed the name was a long last name.” Deciding the best thing to do was to also show him her driver’s license, Lyon got back in her car, shut the door, located her license in her wallet, rolled the driver’s side window down, and, while sitting in her car, held her wallet up so that Traish could look at her driver’s license. At that point, Traish reached through the window, grabbed Lyon’s wallet out of her hand, and ran back to his car with the wallet. He got in his car and shut the door. The wallet contained more than five dollars.

Lyon got out of her car and ran to Traish’s car to try to retrieve her stolen wallet. In hopes of grabbing either the wallet or Traish’s keys so he could not drive away, Lyon attempted to open Traish’s car door. However, as Lyon was opening the door, Traish pushed the door into her leg, causing a large bruise, and then quickly pulled the door shut. Lyon opened the door again, but Traish pulled it shut again and drove off with her wallet.

Lyon then drove home and called the police. She described the man who assaulted her and stole her wallet as being thirty-one or thirty-two years old, five feet nine or ten inches tall, and having sandy colored hair and a very small mustache.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
549 S.E.2d 5, 36 Va. App. 114, 2001 Va. App. LEXIS 407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/traish-v-commonwealth-vactapp-2001.