A jury found Travis Jermaine Isaac guilty of aggravated involuntary manslaughter in violation of Code § 18.2-36.1. Both before and during trial, Isaac unsuccessfully objected to the Commonwealth’s evidence of a blood alcohol test showing Isaac’s state of intoxication. On appeal, Isaaс argues the trial court erred in admitting this evidence. We affirm without addressing the merits of his argument because Isaac introduced substantially similar evidence during his case in chief, thereby waiving his earlier objection and rendering harmless any alleged error.
I.
In March 2009, while driving eastbound in the westbound lanes of Interstate 495, Isaac ran head-on into a vehicle driven by Cristina L. Palese. Police officers and rescue teams immediately responded to the scene of the collision. One of the paramedics smelled alcohol inside Isaac’s vehicle and on Isaac’s рerson as he was transported by ambulance to the hospital. Virginia State Police Trooper Rosemary Daly found a bottle of vodka on the floorboard of Isaac’s vehicle. At the hospital, Daly smelled alcohol on Isaac’s clothing. The trooper informed Isаac at the hospital that he was under arrest for driving under the influence. Trooper Daly advised Isaac of the implied consent law and requested that the attending nurse obtain a blood sample. Test results revealed Isaac’s blood alcohol content (BAC) was 0.16% by weight by volume. Isаac requested and received a second blood alcohol test. The second test resulted in a finding of 0.14% BAC by weight by volume.
Given Isaac’s extensive injuries and the ongoing medical attention he was then receiving, Trooper Daly did not handcuff or otherwise physically restrain Isaaс in the hospital. Instead, state troopers maintained an around-the-clock custodial presence outside Isaac’s room. While Isaac was still in the hospital, Trooper Daly appeared before a local magistrate and obtained warrants for his arrest. Eight days later, officers transferred Isaac from the hospital directly into the Fairfax County Adult Detention Center.
Palese died from her injuries arising out of the collision. A grand jury indicted Isaac for aggravated involuntary manslaughter, alleging he caused Palese’s death while “driving under the influence” and acting in a manner “so gross, wanton and culpable as to show a reckless disregard for human life.” Code § 18.2-36.1(A), (B). Prior to trial, Isaac sought to suppress the 0.16% BAC certificate of analysis on the ground that Trooper Daly did not have probable cause to make a DUI arrest.
After the trial court denied the motion to suppress, Isaac argued a separate motion
in limine
asserting an alternative ground to exclude the same BAC certificate of analysis. Citing
Bristol v. Commonwealth,
to extend the Bristol analysis to cover the facts of this case—as Mr. Isaac urges—would create a hazardous requirement that a law enforcement officer intrude into a sanitary operating room, thereby interrupting the medical personnel and potentially endangering a suspect’s lifе, merely to physically touch an unconscious suspect for the sole purpose of ensuring the “legality” of an “arrest.” This Court refuses to require such an ill-advised and dangerous gesture in interpreting Code § 18.2-268.2.
Letter Op. at 6-7 (Dec. 31, 2009) (Klein, J.). 1
An agreed jury instruction advised the jurors that they had “received evidence of the alleged blood alcohol content” and cоuld “give this evidence such weight as you see fit in determining the issue of guilt or innocence.” The trial judge also explained: “If at the time that a person was operating a motor vehicle, that person’s blood alcohol level was .08 or higher, you are permitted to infer that such a рerson was then under the influence of alcohol unless from all the evidence you have a reasonable doubt that the person was under the influence of alcohol.” See Code § 18.2-269(A)(3). With both BAC certificates in evidence, the jury convicted Isaac of aggravated involuntary manslaughter under Code § 18.2-36.1(A), (B) (causing death while “driving under the influence” and acting in a manner “so gross, wanton and culpable as to show a reckless disregard for human life”).
II.
On appeal, Isaac challenges the trial court’s denial of his motions to exclude from evidence the Commonwealth’s 0.16% BAC сertificate. He was either arrested without probable cause or he was never arrested at all, Isaac argues. Both arguments, Isaac concedes, seek only to defeat the admission into evidence of the Commonwealth’s 0.16% BAC certificate of analysis. See Oral Argument Audio at 18:55 to 20:10. We see no reason to decide these issues, however, given that Isaac introduced substantially similar evidence during his case in chief.
Under Virginia law, a litigant waives an objection to evidence when he introduces “evidence dealing with the same subject
as part of his ovm case-in-chief.” Pettus v. Gottfried,
This same-evidence principle has none of the weaknesses of judicial novelty, for it has stood in roughly the same form for well over a century.
See New York Life Ins. Co. v. Taliaferro,
An exception to the same-evidence principle exists for evidence elicited “during cross-examination of a witness or in rebuttal testimony.”
Zektaw v. Commonwealth,
In the context of the same-evidence principle, Virginia courts have applied the rebuttal exception in very limited circumstances. For example, in
Snead v. Commonwealth,
The rebuttal exception, however, does not apply when the defendant presents in his case in chief the same or similar evidence he previously objected to in order to explain it away or to offer a more favorable interpretation. For example, in
Snarr v. Commonwealth,
This point highlights the harmless error underpinnings of the same-evidence principle,
Taliaferro,
No doubt Isаac would protest this reasoning—whether described as waiver or as an analogue of harmless error—by pointing out he would
not
have offered his 0.14% BAC certificate into evidence the trial court had excluded the Commonwealth’s 0.16% BAC certificate as Isaac had earlier requеsted. Perhaps so, but this observation does not authorize us to excise from the record Isaac’s own evidence, offered by him during his case in chief, addressed by the trial court in its instructions to the jury, considered by the jurors during their deliberations, and unchallenged by any party on appeal.
See Taliaferro, 95
Va. at 523-24,
As for the
scope
оf the same-evidence principle, an objecting party waives his objection when he introduces in his case in chief exactly the same evidence he previously objected to.
See
Taliaferro,
In this casе, Isaac introduced into evidence a 0.14% BAC certificate of analysis. This evidence deals with the same subject as, and is sufficiently similar to, the Commonwealth’s 0.16% BAC certificate. Both certificates address the same topic: the blood alcohol content in Isaac’s blood. Both establish BAC levels in excess of 0.08%, thereby triggering the inference of Code § 18.2-269(A)(3) “that the accused was under the influence of alcohol intoxicants at the time of the alleged offense.” See also Code § 18.2-36.1(A), (B). The two certificates differ in degree, though only slightly, but not in kind.
III.
In sum, we need not address whether the trial сourt erred in admitting into evidence the Commonwealth’s 0.16% BAC certificate. Isaac waived his objection by introducing sufficiently similar evidence during his case in chief. For this reason, we affirm Isaac’s
Affirmed.
Notes
. See generally 2 William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England 287, n. 14 (George Sharswood ed. 1892) (citing Williams v. Jones, 95 Eng. Repr. 193 (King's Bench 1736) (Hardwicke, C.J.)); William Waller Hening, The Virginia Justice 77 (4th ed. 1825) (Under the common law, "if an officer comes into a room, and tells the party he arrests him, and locks the door, this is an arrest; for he is in custody of the officer.'').
.
See also Snead v. Commonwealth,
. The principle is "properly and logically applicable in any case, regardless of the order of introduction, if the party who has brought out the evidence in question, or who has permitted it to be brought out, can be fairly held responsible for its presence in the case.”
Pettus,
.
See also Brooks v. Bankson,
. Code § 8.01-678 makes “harmless-error review required in
all
cases.”
Ferguson v. Commonwealth,
. "It is well settled in this jurisdiction that a party waives an objection to evidence, claimed to be irrelevant, by introducing the
same character of evidence
himself.”
Hoier v. Noel,
