William Roland Massey, III v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedMarch 24, 2015
Docket0359142
StatusUnpublished

This text of William Roland Massey, III v. Commonwealth of Virginia (William Roland Massey, III 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
William Roland Massey, III v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA UNPUBLISHED

Present: Judges Humphreys, Petty and Decker Argued at Richmond, Virginia

WILLIAM ROLAND MASSEY, III MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 0359-14-2 JUDGE MARLA GRAFF DECKER MARCH 24, 2015 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF DINWIDDIE COUNTY Paul W. Cella, Judge

William T. Linka (Richmond Criminal Law, on brief), for appellant.

Susan Mozley Harris, Assistant Attorney General (Mark R. Herring, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

William Roland Massey, III, appeals his conviction for obtaining money or property by false

pretenses in violation of Code § 18.2-178. On appeal, he raises four claims in the context of two

assignments of error. He contends that the evidence failed to prove that he used a false pretense or

had an intent to defraud at or before the time that the false representations were made. He further

asserts that the evidence did not establish that he was a principal of the corporation with which the

victim entered into the contract or that he received any money or property belonging to the victim.

We hold that to the extent the appellant preserved these claims for appeal, the evidence was

sufficient to support his conviction. Therefore, we affirm the conviction.

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. I. BACKGROUND1

The transaction for which the appellant was convicted involved timber rights to land in

Dinwiddie County owned by Janeshwar Upadhyay and his wife. The evidence established that in

the years leading up to the instant offense, the appellant repeatedly represented that he was in the

business of buying and selling timber rights. He did this first through a North Carolina-based

corporation of which the contracts indicated he was a “[m]anaging [m]ember.” He then continued

through a Virginia-based corporation purportedly managed by an individual named R.W. Hasty,

who may have been the appellant’s uncle.

The appellant engaged in similar courses of behavior with two different families in North

Carolina in 2009, the Bakers and the Hendersons. In each case, he executed a written contract to

purchase the family’s timber rights and promised to make payment of a particular amount. The

timber was harvested, but the appellant failed to make payment as promised. In the case of the

Bakers, the appellant paid about $15,000 of the $50,000 that he had estimated that they would

receive. The appellant failed to cooperate with arbitration, as required in the contract he had

provided, and the Bakers obtained a judgment for an additional $15,000 in a civil suit on the

contract. In the case of the Hendersons, after their timber had been cut, they received “[a] lot of

false promises” from the appellant, who set up and then canceled numerous meetings in order to

make payment of the $15,000 contract price. The appellant eventually offered the Hendersons

partial payment. They rejected the offer and still had not been paid several years later.

From 2010 to 2011, the appellant engaged in similar transactions in Virginia under the name

of Mossy Oak Timber, LLC. The appellant entered into a verbal agreement with Donnie Fitzgerald

to purchase timber rights to his property in Dinwiddie County for $12,000. An amount of $5,000

1 On appellate review of a criminal conviction, this Court views the evidence and all reasonable inferences flowing from the evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Hudson, 265 Va. 505, 514, 578 S.E.2d 781, 786 (2003).

-2- was due up front, and the balance was to be paid after the timber had been cut. The contract

memorializing this agreement, dated December 29, 2010, listed Mossy Oak as the buyer and

provided that the seller would receive full payment before any timbering occurred. The appellant

signed the contract as “buyer” for Mossy Oak and included a check for $5,000 rather than the full

contract price of $12,000. The check was drawn on the account of Union Lumber and was signed

by the appellant. A few weeks later, Fitzgerald saw that the timber had been cut, so he telephoned

the appellant. The appellant acknowledged that he owed Fitzgerald $7,000 and claimed the check

was “in the mail.” In subsequent phone calls, the appellant continued to make excuses and then

stopped answering his phone. In early April 2011, Fitzgerald telephoned Mossy Oak, and “[t]hey

said that [the appellant] . . . was not an agent or affiliated with them[] [and] that their attorneys

would be looking into it.”

Fitzgerald contacted the Dinwiddie Sheriff’s Department. The appellant then called him to

arrange payment. After checks drawn on the Union Lumber account were returned for insufficient

funds, Fitzgerald again called the Sheriff’s Department. A few days later, the appellant met

Fitzgerald in person, gave him $6,200 in cash and had him sign a release. Fitzgerald dealt only with

the appellant throughout the entire transaction.

In December 2010, around the same time that the appellant entered into the agreement with

Fitzgerald, he contacted Upadhyay and expressed an interest in purchasing the timber rights to two

different parcels of land in Dinwiddie County owned by Upadhyay and his wife, a smaller tract on

Route 40 (the Route 40 parcel) and a larger tract on Route 624 (the Route 624 parcel). On January

20, 2011, the appellant and Upadhyay met and agreed to a sale of the timber rights to the Route 40

parcel for $36,000. The parties executed a written contract. After the timber on the Route 40 parcel

was harvested, the appellant paid the agreed amount of $36,000. However, the appellant “had not

performed exactly like he had promised” in that the “money . . . was paid to [Upadhyay] a little

-3- more slowly than [Upadhyay] would have liked” and the appellant failed to fulfill a contract

provision requiring him “to clean and plant and fertilize and spray.”

Later, Upadhyay orally agreed to sell the appellant the timber on the Route 624 parcel for

$60,000. The appellant promised to deliver “better performance this time” than in the previous

transaction. This time, however, the appellant failed to make any payments in a timely fashion, and

Upadhyay received only $15,000 of the $60,000 the appellant had promised to pay him.

In the course of the parties’ dealings regarding the second parcel, the appellant presented

Upadhyay with a contract very similar to the first one, which Upadhyay signed on February 23,

2011. This contract, like the first one, listed Mossy Oak Timber, LLC, as the buyer, and it was

signed on behalf of the corporation by R.W. Hasty, “Managing Member.” Upadhyay also indicated

that as to both contracts, he negotiated and dealt only with the appellant. The appellant expressly

represented to Upadhyay that “this [was] his contract, he [was] responsible for it, he [would] pay the

money[,] and [Upadhyay] would be dealing with him.” Upon questioning from Upadhyay about

Hasty’s identity, the appellant represented that he and Hasty were “partners” and “ha[d] been

working together for a long time.”

Following execution of the first contract for $36,000, the appellant sold the timber rights to

Richard Short, the owner of a timber company called Real Tree, for the lesser sum of $30,000.

Following execution of the second contract for $60,000, the appellant almost immediately sold the

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