CHRISTOPHER L. LASH v. COUNTY OF HENRICO
No. 1146-89-2
Richmond
Decided July 28, 1992
14 Va. App. 926
J. Burkhardt Beale, for appellant.
Gary K. Aronhalt, Assistant Commonwealth‘s Attorney, for appellee.
UPON REHEARING EN BANC
OPINION
BARROW, J.-A rehearing en banc was granted in this appeal from a decision of the panel in which there was a dissent.1 The appeal is from convictions of reckless driving and eluding a police officer arising out of a single series of events. The defendant contends that, while he is guilty of one of the offenses, conviction of the other is barred by
The charges against the defendant arose out of a traffic stop. A Henrico County police officer stopped the defendant and issued him a summons for driving on defective tires and for failing to have a front license plate. The officer told the defendant that his automobile was unsafe and that he would have to park it. The defendant responded by telling the officer that he could not tell him what to do, ran back to his vehicle, and drove away. When he left, he accelerated so quickly that his automobile left sixty to seventy feet of tire marks on the highway.
A high speed chase followed. The officer, using his siren and blue lights, followed the defendant at speeds of sixty to seventy miles per hour in a posted thirty-five mile per hour speed zone. Finally, the defendant drove through a red stop signal and into a supermarket parking lot where he drove through the lot at speeds of thirty to forty miles per hour. Upon apprehending the defendant, the officer charged him with eluding a police officer and reckless driving.
The Commonwealth argues that the defendant is barred under Rule 5A:18 from asserting on appeal that the provisions of
The contemporaneous objection rule requires only that a party inform the trial court of the action it wishes the court to take or its objection to the action of the court and the “grounds therefor.”
At trial, the defendant requested the court to “merge the two offenses into one violation.” Merger, a common law principle, recognizes that certain offenses arising from the same occurrence may merge into a single offense. See Pinkerton v. United States, 328 U.S. 640, 643 (1946). For example, “simple assault is ordinarily held to merge into the offense of assault with a dangerous weapon.” Whalen v. United States, 445 U.S. 684, 686 (1980); Spickard v. City of Lynchburg, 174 Va. 502, 505, 6 S.E.2d 610, 611 (1940) (reckless driving does not merge with driving while intoxicated); Ramsey v. Commonwealth, 2 Va. App. 265, 272, 343 S.E.2d 465, 470 (1986) (Wharton‘s Rule not a “merger” rule). Similarly,
If the “same act” is a violation of two or more statutes, conviction under one of the statutes is “a bar to a prosecution or proceeding under the other.”
In this case, at least two separate and distinct acts supported the two different offenses with which the defendant was charged and convicted. The manner in which the defendant drove away from the police officer and the manner in which he drove through the red traffic signal and through the supermarket parking lot were acts upon which the charge of reckless driving could have been based. The defendant‘s failure to stop in response to the police officer‘s flashing light and siren after he drove away and before he reached the supermarket intersection was a separate and distinct act upon which the offense of eluding a police officer was based. Therefore, because two or more separate and distinct acts constituted two or more offenses,
The convictions are, therefore, affirmed.
Affirmed.
Coleman, J., Duff, J., Moon, J., Willis, J., Elder, J., and Bray, J., concurred.
The “act” which led to Lash‘s convictions of reckless driving and eluding a police officer was driving his vehicle on March 9, 1989 in one distinct, “continuous, uninterrupted course of [operating his] motor vehicle” bounded closely in terms of place and time. See Padgett v. Commonwealth, 220 Va. 758, 761, 263 S.E.2d 388, 389-90 (1980). The majority concludes, however, that Lash committed “at least two separate and distinct acts” which constituted two statutory offenses and, thus, that
In the original panel decision in this case, reported Lash v. Commonwealth, 13 Va. App. 251, 410 S.E.2d 689 (1991), I reviewed the legislative history of
The General Assembly enacted the original version of
Thereafter, in Hundley v. Commonwealth, 193 Va. 449, 69 S.E.2d 336 (1952), the Court held that the predecessor to
It is conceivable for a person under the influence of intoxicants to drive properly. Many people not under the influence of intoxicants drive recklessly. A test of the identity of acts or offenses is whether the same evidence is required to sustain them; if not, then the fact that several charges relate to and grow out of one transaction or occurrence does not make a single act or offense where two separate acts or offenses are defined by statute, as in the instant case.
Id. (emphasis added) (citations omitted).
Subsequent to the Hundley decision and apparently in response to it, the General Assembly enacted
Standing alone, Estes supports the elements of the offenses analysis adopted by the majority in the present case. However, in Padgett, decided subsequent to Estes, the Court held that the language, “same act or acts,” contained in
Hundley and Estes illustrate the particular difficulty in applying
The present appeal illustrates that the distinction between the constitutional claim analysis and the statutory claim analysis may be critical to the proper determination of a
I do not suggest that
Although the majority does not reach the issue of whether
Accordingly, I would reverse the decision below and remand the case with directions that the trial court impose sentence in only one of the two convictions and dismiss the other.
