GREGORY LEON HAMMER v. COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA; GREGORY LEON HAMMER v. COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
Record No. 0819-20-3 | Record No. 1033-20-3
COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
JANUARY 18, 2022
STUART A. RAPHAEL
Present: Judges Humphreys, AtLee and Raphael; Argued by videoconference
OPINION BY JUDGE STUART A. RAPHAEL
FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF WAYNESBORO Paul A. Dryer, Judge
FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ROCKINGHAM COUNTY Thomas J. Wilson IV, Judge
A. Gene Hart, Jr. (A. Gene Hart, Jr., P.C., on briefs), for appellant.
Timothy J. Huffstutter, Assistant Attorney General (Mark R. Herring,1 Attorney General, on briefs), for appellee.
Hammer also appeals thе decision of the Circuit Court of Rockingham County to revoke Hammer‘s probation (and to reimpose the sentence on Hammer‘s earlier convictions in that court) on account of the Waynesboro convictions. Because the Waynesboro court did not err in imposing the convictions, the Rockingham court did not err in finding Hammer in violation of the terms of his supervised probation.
So we affirm both judgments.
I. BACKGROUND
In May 2012, the Circuit Court of Rockingham County convicted Hammer on charges of grand larceny, felony eluding, reckless driving, driving as a habitual offender, two counts of resisting arrest, and possession of a Schedule I or II controlled substance. The sentencing order imposed twenty years and eighteen months of incarceration, with seventeen years and nineteen months suspended, conditioned on Hammer‘s successfully completing supervised probation upon his release.
The events giving rise to the Waynеsboro convictions occurred six years later, while Hammer was still on supervised probation in Rockingham County. Consistent with the standard of review when a criminal appellant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence, we recite the evidence below “in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, the prevailing party in the trial court.” Commonwealth v. Cady, 300 Va. 325 (Oct. 28, 2021) (citation omitted).
On the evening of November 27, 2018, Officer Brandon Mawyer was patrolling in his police cruiser in the City of Waynesboro when he received a “be on the lookout” alert for a “possibly-abducted female . . . named Morgan Hammer.” The alert said that Morgan may have been abducted by Hammer—her husband—and “that they may be en route to their apartment” in Waynesboro. Mawyer was familiar with Hammer and his wife. He had seen Hammer “up close and personal” while working on other matters. He had examined photographs of Hammer, including pictures оf Hammer‘s tattoos. Mawyer had also spoken to both spouses during a traffic stop. Knowing where they lived, Mawyer drove to the Hammers’ apartment in Waynesboro, but the lights were off and no one was home.
Within about a minute, Mawyer spotted a car approaching rapidly from behind. Mawyer activated his radar and clocked the vehicle doing sixty-three miles an hour in the thirty-five-mile-an-hour zone.
As the vehicle passed him, Mawyer saw Hammer behind the wheel and Morgan in the passenger seat, looking out the window towards him. Hammer leaned forward—looking around Morgan to see into Mawyer‘s patrol car—and “actually made eye contact” with Mawyer. Mawyer recognized both immediately. Mawyer also saw the distinctive tattoo on Hammer‘s hand as Hammer held the steering wheel. Mawyer activated his emergency lights and siren and commenced pursuit. Hammer fled, accelerating to speeds over 100 mph, driving the wrong way on a divided highway and forcing an oncoming car off the road to avoid a head-on collision. Because Mawyer had positively identified Hammer, and to reduce the risk of an accident, Mawyer slowed down and turned off his emergency equipment, continuing to follow at a safe distance. After entering Augusta County, Hammer briefly “crash[ed]” and continued to drive erratically, on and off the road. An Augusta sheriff‘s deputy joined the pursuit.
After running out of gas, Hammer‘s car came to a stop in Fishersville. Mawyer observed for about ten seсonds as Hammer exited his car, ran down the embankment, climbed over a barbed-wire fence, and disappeared into the woods behind. Hammer was wearing a black leather jacket. Because he could not see Morgan, Mawyer rushed to the Hammers’ car, finding her alive on the passenger floorboard. Mawyer then ran after Hammer, but by then Hammer had escaped into the woods beyond.
Mawyer returned to check on Morgan. Shе was “scared,” telling Mawyer that she‘d been abducted. She also gave a written statement about what had happened.
The next morning, Mawyer received a be-on-the-lookout alert for a car stolen in Fishersville, “fairly close” to where Hammer had fled on foot. Mawyer and another officer drove to the Hammers’ apartment, finding the stolen car parked across the street. After obtaining a search warrant, the officers fоund Hammer inside the apartment. They also found the key to the stolen car and the black leather jacket that Mawyer had seen Hammer wearing when he escaped.
Hammer was indicted by a Waynesboro grand jury on charges of abduction, felony eluding, and driving after being declared a habitual offender. He elected to represent himself at trial, with backup counsel appointed in case Hammer changed his mind. On the morning of trial, Morgan failed to appear, having been subpoenaed and despite an outstanding capias for a prior failure to appear. Hammer said that he “hope[d]” his wife would “show up,” but he predicted that “the victim” would not, no matter how long the case might be continued. When the trial judge said he would not continue the abduction charge, the prosecutor orally moved to nolle pros it. The Commonwealth proffered that it had made various efforts to locate Morgan and secure her attendance, without success. Hammer objected, asking that the court instead dismiss the abduction charge “outright.” The trial judge orally granted the Commonwealth‘s motion, finding that the Commonwealth had made every reasonable effort to secure Morgan‘s testimony.
But Morgan arrived a few minutes afterwards, thirty-five minutes late to court. With
The court declined to reschedule trial on the abduction charge and allowed the prosecution instead to withdraw the nolle pros request. After the judge asked, “Anything else?[,]” Hammer said nothing. Nor did he object after a brief recess, before the jury was brought in. The court‘s oral nolle pros rulings were never memorialized and are not mentioned in the conviction order.
Officer Mawyer testified at trial to the events recounted above. The prosecution then called Morgan to the stand. But she claimed to have a poor memory and to not recall what had happened. When asked to read the contents of her written statement, given at 3:15 a.m. the morning of the incident, she refused to read it aloud. The prosecutor proffered that Morgan had been “threatened by associates of Mr. Hammer that if she testifies against him today, she will be killed.” Morgan was evasive when responding to questiоns about that, repeating “I don‘t want to be here.” She ultimately denied that her husband had threatened to kill her for testifying and further denied that Hammer had told her what to say. The prosecution called a victim-witness assistant, however, who testified that Morgan admitted, shortly before being called to the stand, that she feared Hammer because he had been “writing letters to people, threatening . . . to kill her.”
Morgan‘s original, contemporaneous statement was admitted into evidence as her prior-recorded recollection. Morgan wrote that she had gotten into the car that evening to go with Hammer to the store and that he “kept driving when [she] told him to stop.” She told Hammer she “wanted to get out of the car, but he kept speeding and wouldn‘t let [her] out.” Once the police started following them, Hammer told Morgan “to hold on[,] we‘re going for a ride.” She “told him to stop and pull over but he refused.” Hammer “kept speeding until we wrecked the car in a ditch and the car ran out of gas.” The Commonwealth also introduced multiple letters from Hammer to Morgan, and transcripts of messages that he sent her from jail, telling her what to say at trial to exonerate him.
Hammer did not move to strike the Commonwealth‘s evidence. In his defense, Hammer called Morgan back to the witness stand. Morgan denied telling the victim-witness assistant that she fearеd Hammer or that he had threatened her life if she testified. Morgan claimed that her written statement to the police was a lie, though she couldn‘t explain why she lied. She claimed that “Tamil,” whose last name she didn‘t remember, was the one who had eluded police, not Hammer, and that Tamil had threatened to kill her. Hammer himself also testified, claiming that he was not the person driving the car and that his wife had lied about him to police. On cross-exаmination, he admitted to having been convicted of “nine or ten” felonies.
The jury found Hammer guilty of all three charges, recommending a prison sentence of two years on the abduction charge, five years for eluding, and five years for driving after being declared a habitual offender. The court denied Hammer‘s motion to set aside the verdict, adjudicated him guilty, and sentenced him in accordance with the jury‘s verdict. Based on the Waynesboro convictions, the Circuit Court of Rockingham County found Hammer in violation of the terms of his supervised probation and imposed the balance of the suspended sentence remaining on his convictions in that court.
Counsel for Hammer noted an appeal in both cases. Unlike at trial in the Waynesboro case, where Hammer represented himself, Hammer has been represented by appointed counsel at all times in this Court.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Hammer waived his challenge to the trial court‘s nolle pros ruling.
“A concept dating from the late 1600s, nolle prosequi means ‘unwilling to prosecute’ in Latin.” Duggins v. Commonwealth, 59 Va. App. 785, 790 (2012). “The term is sometimes ‘used as a verb’ in the United States but ‘shorter forms’ like nolle pros and nol-pros are ‘more common.‘” Bryan A. Garner, Garner‘s Dictionary of Legal Usage 606 (3d ed. 2011).
But Hammer procedurally defaulted that argument because he failed to raise it at trial.
Hammer‘s procedural default is not excused by the “good cause” or “ends оf justice” exceptions in
Hammer‘s counsel offers two other theories to excuse the procedural default, but neither persuades us. First, he claims that the trial court denied Hammer the opportunity to object at trial to reinstating the abduction charge. See
verdict and his twenty-two-page motion for leave to amend that motion. So we fail to see how Hammer was denied an opportunity to make this argument below.
Second, Hammer argues that, once the trial court orally permitted the nolle pros, it lost jurisdiction to reinstate the abduction charge until another indictment issued. He premises this claim on Miller v. Commonwealth, 217 Va. 929 (1977), where the Court said that “[f]or the prosecution to proceed” after a nolle pros has been “entered,” a “new indictment is required.” Id. at 935. If a new indictment was required on the abduction charge, Hammer reasons, the trial judge lacked jurisdiction to reinstate it himself, thus excusing Hammer‘s procedural default. After all, “a challenge asserting a circuit court lacked subject matter jurisdiction may be raised for the first time on appeal.” Riddick v. Commonwealth, 72 Va. App. 132, 142 (2020). “Deeming an order void ab initio effectively sidelines procedural default principles, including Rule 5A:18‘s rеquirement that arguments on appeal first be presented and ruled upon by the trial
But the trial court‘s oral allowance of the nolle pros did not oust it of jurisdiction to change its mind only minutes later. “In Virginia, a nolle prosequi is regulated by statute . . . .” Moore v. Commonwealth, 59 Va. App. 795, 807 (2012). Under the statute, a nolle pros may be “entered” in the trial court‘s discretion.
Even if the trial judge had entered a written nolle pros order, the order could have been “modified, vacated, or suspended for [21] days after the date of entry.”
B. Officer Mawyer‘s testimony identifying Hammer as the perpetrator was not inherently incredible.
The third assignment of error claims that Officer Mawyer‘s testimony identifying Hammer as the perpetrator was “inherently incredible” and that the trial judge erred by declining to set aside the verdict on all three charges. We disagree.
Ordinarily, issues of witness credibility and the weight afforded a witnеss’ testimony “are matters solely for the fact finder[,] who has the opportunity to see and hear that evidence as it is presented.” Gerald v. Commonwealth, 295 Va. 469, 486 (2018) (quoting Elliott v.
Commonwealth, 277 Va. 457, 462 (2009)). An appellate court “must accept ‘the trial court‘s determination of the credibility of witness testimony unless, “as a matter of law, the testimony is inherently incredible.“‘” Lambert v. Commonwealth, 70 Va. App. 740, 759 (2019) (quoting Nobrega v. Commonwealth, 271 Va. 508, 518 (2006)). Witness testimony will not be found inherently incredible “unless it is ‘so manifestly false that reasonable men ought not to believe it’ or ‘shown to be false by objects оr things as to the existence and meaning of which reasonable men should not differ.‘” Gerald, 295 Va. at 487 (quoting Juniper v. Commonwealth, 271 Va. 362, 415 (2006)). We will not disturb a trial court‘s finding that a witness was not inherently incredible unless that determination is “plainly wrong or without evidence to support it.” Elliott, 277 Va. at 463.
Mawyer‘s testimony was corroborated by other evidence: Morgan‘s written statement identifying Hammer аs abducting her and eluding police; and the photograph received into evidence showing the well-illuminated location on Route 340 where Mawyer waited to intercept them. Not only that, Mawyer had a view of Hammer for about ten seconds as Hammer, wearing a black leather jacket, bolted into the woods after his car ran out of gas. That black leather jacket was found, along with Hammer, in the couple‘s apartment later that morning. Also found in the apartment was the key to the car stolen from Fishersville, “fairly close” to where Hammer had fled on foot just hours before.
To be sure, Morgan offered testimony at trial inconsistent with her contemporaneous written statement to Mawyer. But the prosecution also offered testimony that Morgan feared Hammer, that he threatened her if she testified against him, and that he scripted what he wanted her to say on the witness stand. The jury received the standard instruction that, after considering all the evidence, it was free to “accept or discard all or part of the testimony of a witness” as the jury thought proper. See Jones v. Commonwealth, 71 Va. App. 70, 92 (2019) (discussing Va. Model Jury Instr. No. 2.020). So the jury could reasonably accept as true Morgan‘s contemporaneous written statement to Mawyer and reject her trial testimony, given the evidence that Hammer had coerced her. The jury was alsо free to disbelieve Hammer, who by his own admission was a convicted felon “nine or ten” times over.
In short, the trial court did not err in refusing to find Mawyer inherently incredible and declining to set aside the jury verdict. Nothing compelled the trial court to find Mawyer‘s testimony “so manifestly false” that it could not be believed, nor was his testimony “shown to be false” by evidence on which reasonable persons could not differ. Gerald, 295 Va. at 487.
C. The probation revocation was proper.
Because we affirm the Waynesboro cоnvictions, we must affirm the Rockingham court‘s decision finding Hammer in violation of the terms of his supervised probation. The Commonwealth and Hammer agree that the first finding compels the second.
D. Hammer‘s pro se motions are denied.
Although represented by appellate counsel here, Hammer has filed multiple pro se motions having little if anything to do with the granted assignments of error. At oral argument, Hammer‘s counsel advised that he was aware of Hammer‘s filings and that he incorporated into his argument whatever points counsel thought meritorious.
We appreciate counsel‘s candor.
We recognize that a good lawyer “need not advance every argument, regardless of merit, urged by the appellant . . . and must play the role of an active advocate.” Fitzgerald v. Bass, 6 Va. App. 38, 56 (1988) (quoting Evitts v. Lucey, 469 U.S. 387, 394 (1985)). “Effective appellate counsel should not raise every nonfrivolous argument on appeal, but rather only those arguments most likely to succeed.” Davila v. Davis, 137 S. Ct. 2058, 2067 (2017). “While ‘the accused has the ultimate authority’ to decide whether to ‘take an appeal,’ the choice of what sрecific arguments to make within that appeal belongs to appellate counsel.” Garza v. Idaho, 139 S. Ct. 738, 746 (2019) (quoting Jones v. Barnes, 463 U.S. 745, 751 (1983)). No constitutional duty requires defense counsel “to raise every nonfrivolous issue requested by the defendant.” Townes, 234 Va. at 321 (quoting Barnes, 463 U.S. at 751). “Experienced advocates since time beyond memory have emphasized the importance of winnowing out weaker arguments on appeal . . . .” Barnes, 463 U.S. at 751.
At the same time, a court need not permit “‘hybrid’ representation.” Muhammad v. Commonwealth, 269 Va. 451, 503 (2005). And Hammer identifies no rule of court that would enable a party who is represented by counsel to file pro se pleadings separately from those found worthy by his lawyer. See
Because Hammer is represented by appellate counsel here, his pro se motions are denied.
III. CONCLUSION
We affirm both judgments.
Record No. 0819-20-3, Affirmed. Record No. 1033-20-3, Affirmed.
