The trial court convicted Kenyon E. McEachern of grand larceny of a vehicle in violation of Code § 18.2—95(ii). On appeal, McEachern argues the evidence failed to prove he intended to permanently deprive the victim of her vehicle. We disagree and affirm.
I.
On appeal, we review the evidence in the “light most favorable” to the Commonwealth.
Commonwealth v. Hudson,
The evidence at trial established that the victim, McEachern’s pregnant girlfriend, drove him in her vehicle to his mother’s house in Newport News. On the way, McEachern angrily accused the victim of being unfaithful to him. When she attempted to make a call on her cell phone, McEachern snatched it from her and threw it out the car window. The victim stopped her vehicle and stepped out to find her cell phone. McEachern followed her, grabbed her by the hair, forced her back into the vehicle, and ordered her to continue driving him to his mother’s home. During the drive, McEachern physically assaulted the victim (smacking or pushing her in the head multiple times) and announced that she was “going to make [him] fucking hurt [her].”
When they arrived at his mother’s house, McEachern “put the car in park himself and took the keys out of the ignition.” The victim asked to leave. McEachern said he would “beat [her] ass” if she did not accompany him into the house. Once inside, the victim asked McEachern’s mother to retrieve her car keys from McEachern so she could leave. When the victim said she would press criminal charges against McEac *682 hern, he choked her and pushed her up against a wall with enough force to displace her arm. This display of violence prompted McEachern’s mother and another man in the house to come to the victim’s aid. At that point, McEachern brandished a handgun and left the home with the victim. As they walked to the vehicle, McEachern said he intended to drive to the James River Bridge, kill her there, and then commit suicide. The victim escaped on foot when McEachern returned briefly into the home to retrieve something.
Bleeding and exhausted, the victim ran to a local church and called the police. Shortly after the police arrived, the victim observed McEachern drive by in her vehicle. After midnight that evening, the victim telephoned McEachern. By this time, the police had either called McEachern or attempted to call him. During a tirade of “yelling” at the victim, McEachern demanded to know why she gave the police his cell phone number. The victim, in turn, demanded the return of her vehicle. McEachern said he abandoned the vehicle with the keys in it at a nearby gas station. The victim took a taxicab to the gas station and found her vehicle there early the next morning.
The Commonwealth proceeded to trial against McEachern on several charges including grand larceny of the victim’s vehicle. Specifically finding the “Commonwealth’s witnesses are credible,” the court rejected McEachern’s attack on the credibility of the victim’s account of the crime. Finding McEachern guilty, the trial court stated: “It’s my determination that the evidence of the Commonwealth is the evidence that the court adopts.”
II.
Sufficiency of the Evidence—Intent to Permanently Deprive
On appeal, McEachern does not challenge the trial court’s finding of a trespassory taking. He instead contends the evidence failed to prove he intended to permanently *683 deprive the victim of the vehicle. 1 That he later abandoned the vehicle at the victim’s request, McEachern argues, demonstrates he intended only to temporarily deprive the victim of the vehicle. He concludes with the assertion that the evidence “merely supported a conviction for the lesser-included offense [of] unauthorized use of an automobile under Va.Code § 18.2-102.” Appellant’s Br. at 14.
Settled principles govern our standard of review. “Sufficiency-of-the-evidence review involves assessment by the courts of whether the evidence adduced at trial could support any rational determination of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.”
United States v. Powell,
“In Virginia, larceny is a common law crime.”
Bryant v. Commonwealth,
We accept the first premise upon which McEachern builds his argument. “The main difference between common law larceny and the statutory offense of unauthorized use is that in the former there must be an intent to deprive the owner of his property
permanently,
while in the latter the intent is to deprive the owner of possession of his automobile
temporarily
and without any intent to steal the same. The intent with which property is taken determines the offense.”
*685
Overstreet v. Commonwealth,
In Virginia, absent countervailing evidence of an intention otherwise, “the wrongful taking of the property in itself imports the
animus furandi.” Bryant,
The
animus furandi
inference has a long history in Virginia cases distinguishing car theft from mere unauthorized use. In
Slater,
own testimony discloses that he intended to deprive the owner of the car permanently, for he said that he never intended to return the car but intended to abandon it in Bluefield, West Virginia. When one wrongfully takes property of another with intent to deprive the owner thereof, larceny is complete, though the accused afterwards abandons it. Evidence of the offense of unauthorized use is entirely absent. That of larceny is full handed.
Id.
at 267,
Consider, too,
Briley v. Commonwealth,
Finally, in
Tarpley,
Applying the above-stated standard of review, we conclude that the evidence is insufficient as a matter of law to establish Tarpley’s larcenous intent at the time he drove Bruce’s [the victim’s] car away from the fight. There was no evidence that Tarpley attacked Bruce during the fight or that he assisted anyone who struck Bruce. Although the trial court was entitled to disbelieve Tarpley’s account of the fight, the court received no evidence that Tarpley actually participated in the altercation.
Id.
at 256,
Unlike
Tarpley,
McEachern directly participated in the violent circumstances surrounding the trespassory taking of the victim’s vehicle. This fact confirms, rather than refutes, the
animus jurandi
inference. Having physically subdued his victim, predicted he would “fucking hurt” her, brandished a firearm to enforce his will, and taken exclusive control over her vehicle, McEachern announced his intent with unmistakable clarity: He told the victim he intended to drive her to the James River Bridge and kill her.
3
His professed plan, had it come to pass as he hoped, would have permanently deprived
*688
the victim of her vehicle as well as her life.
See generally Cullen v. Commonwealth,
That the intended murder never occurred due to the victim’s fortuitous escape does not vitiate McEachern’s larcenous intent during the trespassory taking. When McEachern later abandoned the vehicle at a gas station, he was not returning it after a brief, unauthorized loan. The evidence permits an entirely different conclusion—that he was retreating from a foiled attempt at stealing the vehicle and murdering the victim after it became apparent to him the police were involved. ‘When one wrongfully takes property of another with intent to deprive the owner thereof,
larceny is complete,
though the accused afterwards abandons it.”
Slater,
III.
The evidence supports the rationality of the trial court’s finding that McEachern took the victim’s vehicle with the *689 intent to permanently deprive her of it. We thus affirm McEachern’s conviction for grand larceny in violation of Code § 18.2-95(ii).
Affirmed.
Notes
. The Court granted McEachern’s petition for appeal only as to his Question Presented I: “Was the evidence sufficient to prove McEachern guilty of grand larceny where the Commonwealth failed to prove that McEachern intended to deprive [the victim] of her car permanently?” Petition for Appeal at 8-19. We did not grant, and thus do not now address, Question Presented II, which challenged the trial court’s finding that the vehicle had a value exceeding $200. We similarly do not decide any other larceny issue (trespassory taking, caption, asportation) unaddressed by any question presented in McEachern’s petition for appeal. Under Rule 5A: 12(c), only questions "presented in the petition for appeal will be noticed by the Court of Appeals.”
Clifford v. Commonwealth,
. This deferential standard of review "applies not only to the historical facts themselves, but the inferences from those facts as well.”
Crowder v. Commonwealth,
. At trial, McEachern presented a very different account of the incident which, if believed, would lead to very different inferences. The factfinder, however, was at liberty to discount a criminal defendant’s "self-serving statements as little more than lying to conceal his guilt.”
Coleman v. Commonwealth,
.
See also People v. Abilez,
