W. Roy Tuthill v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedOctober 4, 2022
Docket0064224
StatusPublished

This text of W. Roy Tuthill v. Commonwealth of Virginia (W. Roy Tuthill 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
W. Roy Tuthill v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges O’Brien, Lorish and Senior Judge Annunziata PUBLISHED

W. ROY TUTHILL OPINION BY v. Record No. 0064-22-4 JUDGE MARY GRACE O’BRIEN OCTOBER 4, 2022 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

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

(W. Roy Tuthill, on brief), pro se. Appellant submitting on brief.

(Amy Ashworth, Commonwealth’s Attorney; Kimberly A. Hackbarth, Assistant Commonwealth’s Attorney, on brief), for appellee. Appellee submitting on brief.

W. Roy Tuthill (“appellant”) appeals the denial of his petition to remove his name and

identifying information from the Virginia Sex Offender Registry pursuant to Code § 9.1-910. For

the following reasons, we affirm the court’s ruling.

The material facts are uncontroverted. In September 2001, appellant pled guilty to two

counts of crimes against nature, in violation of Code § 18.2-361. The two offenses occurred on the

same day. The nature of appellant’s convictions required him to register on the Virginia Sex

Offender Registry, which he did. See Code § 9.1-902(A). He complied with all requirements to

verify his registration information, in accordance with Code § 9.1-904, for more than fifteen years.

In September 2021, appellant petitioned the circuit court to remove his name and information from

the registry, based on Code §§ 19.2-908 and -910.

In his petition, appellant stated that he successfully completed probation, including

court-ordered sex offender treatment, and had no criminal record other than his two convictions

from September 2001. He also attached a letter from his former sex offender counselor, who verified appellant’s successful completion of treatment and noted that he was “hard[-]working in

treatment” and “[took] full responsibility for his actions.”

In the Commonwealth’s answer, it agreed that appellant would be “a good candidate for

removal,” if eligible, but opposed the petition because appellant’s convictions for two offenses that

required registration made him ineligible for removal from the registry under Code § 9.1-910. After

a hearing, the court found that appellant did not meet the statute’s eligibility requirements for

removal and denied his petition.

We review a court’s statutory interpretation de novo on appeal. Bennett v. Commonwealth,

60 Va. App. 656, 665 (2012). The Sex Offender and Crimes Against Minors Registry Act, Code

§§ 9.1-900 to -923, “tiers” sex offenders based on the seriousness of their offense and makes

eligibility for removal from the registry contingent on the offender’s tier. See Code § 9.1-902(A)

(categorizing offenses into Tiers I, II, and III); Code § 9.1-910(A) (defining eligibility for removal

from the registry according to tier). Appellant’s two convictions for violations of Code § 18.2-361

are each classified as a Tier I offense. See Code § 9.1-902(A).

Code § 9.1-908 governs the duration of registration requirements, stating that a sex offender

required to register must continue to do so “until the duty to register, reregister, or verify his

registration information is terminated by a court order as set forth in [Code] § 9.1-910.” The statute

further specifies that “any Tier III offense” requires lifetime registration. Code § 9.1-908.

Code § 9.1-910 addresses eligibility for removal as follows:

Any person required to register, other than a person who has been convicted of any (i) Tier III offense, [or] (ii) two or more offenses for which registration is required . . . may petition the circuit court . . . for removal of his name and all identifying information from the Registry. A person who is required to register for a single Tier I offense may petition the court no earlier than [fifteen] years from . . . the date of initial registration . . . .

Code § 9.1-910(A) (emphasis added). -2- Thus, Code § 9.1-910(A) not only reiterates that Tier III offenders are never eligible for

removal from the registry but also excludes individuals “convicted of . . . two or more offenses for

which registration is required”—that is, individuals like appellant who have been convicted of two

Tier I offenses. See Code § 9.1-910(A)(i), (ii); see also Code § 9.1-902(A). The statute also refers

specifically to individuals with a “single Tier I offense” and allows them to petition for removal

after fifteen years. Code § 9.1-910(A).

Appellant asserts that although he was convicted of two counts of a Tier I offense, those two

counts stem from a “single incident that began and ended within the course of [five] minutes,” so

his convictions should be viewed as a single offense for purposes of the removal statute.

Essentially, he argues that Code § 9.1-910(A)(ii) would only render him ineligible if his two

offenses requiring registration occurred at two distinctly different times.

Appellant directs us to language in Code § 9.1-902 defining Tier III offenses for which

lifetime registration is required. Specifically, he notes that certain offenses are only categorized as

Tier III “if the person has been convicted or adjudicated delinquent of any two or more such

offenses, provided that person had been at liberty between such convictions or adjudications.” Code

§ 9.1-902(A).

Appellant asks us to read the same requirement into the provisions for removal from the

registry in Code § 9.1-910(A)(ii), which precludes removal for persons who have been convicted of

“two or more offenses for which registration is required.” He also asks us to disregard the language

limiting removal eligibility to a person who has been convicted of a “single Tier I offense.” Code

§ 9.1-910(A).

“In interpreting [a] statute, ‘courts apply the plain meaning . . . unless the terms are

ambiguous or applying the plain language would lead to an absurd result.’” Taylor v.

Commonwealth, 298 Va. 336, 341 (2020) (alterations in original) (quoting Baker v. Commonwealth, -3- 284 Va. 572, 576 (2012)). No ambiguity exists in the language of Code § 9.1-910(A), and therefore

we apply its plain meaning. See id. The plain meaning of the statutory language requires anyone

convicted of multiple Tier I offenses to remain on the registry, regardless of the temporal proximity

of the crimes. Code § 9.1-910(A). See Williams v. Commonwealth, 61 Va. App. 1, 7 (2012)

(“Where bound by the plain meaning of the language used, we are not permitted ‘to add or to

subtract the words used in the statute.’” (quoting Coles v. Commonwealth, 44 Va. App. 549, 557

(2004))).

Appellant relies on the purpose of the registry, “to protect . . . communities and families

from repeat offenders and to protect children from becoming victims of criminal offenders by

helping to prevent such individuals from being allowed to work directly with children.” Code

§ 9.1-900 (emphasis added). Appellant contends that “repeat offenders” can only be those who fit

the language in Code § 9.1-902 categorizing some offenses as Tier III if the individual “had been at

liberty” between multiple commissions. He argues that he was not a “repeat offender” because his

crimes occurred on the same day.

We note that although the General Assembly included the language “had been at liberty” in

Code § 9.1-902(A) when classifying certain repeat offenses as Tier III, it omitted that language from

Code § 9.1-910(A)(ii), which disallows removal for repeat Tier I offenses. “[W]hen the General

Assembly includes specific language in one . . . statute, but omits that language from another . . .

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