Stephen James Purvis (appellant) appeals from his bench trial convictions for two counts of statutory burglary and one count of petit larceny. On appeal, he contends that the trial court erroneously denied his motion to sever unrelated offenses for trial under Rule 3A:10 and that this refusal constituted reversible error. We agree that the refusal to sever was error but hold that the error was harmless. Therefore, we affirm appellant’s convictions.
I.
FACTS
On July 6, 1998, a Virginia Beach grand jury charged appellant, in multiple counts of the same indictment, with one count of statutory burglary occurring in September 1997 and one count each of statutory burglary and grand larceny occurring in November 1997. All counts were set for trial on September 14,1998.
On the morning of trial, appellant moved to sever the September 1997 burglary charge from the November 1997 burglary and grand larceny charges. He argued that two months had passed between the offenses, that they involved different witnesses and different evidence, and that joinder would cause “overwhelming prejudice” to appellant. The trial court commented that appellant’s argument would “be more reasonable” if a jury were involved and said, “We do this all the time in ... bench trials.” He then gave appellant’s counsel thirty minutes to “get [the court] compelling argument or case law why [the court] should sever this.”
When court reconvened about an hour later, appellant cited to the court
Godwin v. Commonwealth,
The substantive evidence offered at trial established that on September 21, 1997, Patricia Corey discovered that the office of her employer, Veda, Incorporated, a government contractor, had been broken into. Her locked filing cabinet had been forced open with a screwdriver or crowbar, but nothing was missing. In an adjoining suite, she discovered that a locked cash box had been broken into and $90 to $100 removed from it.
On November 17, 1997, Shelly Smith Flood discovered that the office of her employer, dentist Theodore R. Smith, Jr., had been broken into. The front door had been damaged and was ajar, and the cash box was out of place. Missing was an envelope, addressed to Dr. Smith, that contained five 100-stamp rolls of first-class postage stamps.
On November 18, 1997, Detective R.J. Mlinscek questioned appellant about a series of larcenies and eventually arrested him at the request of a neighboring jurisdiction. Pursuant to that arrest, Mlinscek inventoried appellant’s car, in which he found a crowbar, a screwdriver, and the envelope containing postage stamps and addressed to Dr. Theodore Smith which had been taken from Smith’s office. Officer H.W. Holmes took appellant’s fingerprints. At Detective Mlincsek’s request, Holmes compared appellant’s fingerprints to the prints obtained from Patricia Corey’s damaged filing cabinet and determined that they matched.
At the conclusion of the Commonwealth’s evidence, appellant moved to strike the September
II.
ANALYSIS
A.
JOINDER OF OFFENSES FOR TRIAL
Rule 3A: 10(c) provides that “[t]he court may direct that an accused be tried at one time for all offenses then pending against him,
if
justice does not require separate trials
and (i)
the offenses meet the requirements of Rule 3A:6(b)
or (ii)
the accused and the Commonwealth’s attorney consent thereto.” Rule 3A: 10(c) (emphasis added). This rule provides the “trial court [with] limited discretion to order an accused to be tried for more than one offense at the same time.”
Godwin v. Commonwealth,
To meet the requirements of Rule 3A:6(b), the offenses must be “based on the same act or transaction, or on two or more acts or transactions that are connected or constitute parts of a common scheme or plan.” Whether the trial is a jury trial or a bench trial is irrelevant to the question of whether the offenses meet the criteria of Rule 3A:6(b).
In appellant’s case, the trial court did not specifically discuss the requirements of Rules 3A:10(c) or 3A:6(b), and it appears to have made its decision based solely on the fact that no jury was involved. Appellant represented that the offenses involved “two different dwellings and/or businesses,” “two remote places in time” almost two months apart, as well as different witnesses and different evidence. The Commonwealth made no argument to the contrary, either at trial or on appeal, and the trial court made no finding to the contrary. Nevertheless, we examine whether the offenses fall into any of the three categories listed in Rule 3A:6(b) — whether they were “based on the same act or transaction, or on two or more acts or transactions that are connected or constitute parts of a common scheme or plan.”
Two offenses do not meet the “same act or transaction” requirement if “each [offense] was a separate act which occurred at a different time and place.”
Godwin,
Two offenses do not “arise out of ‘two or more acts or transactions that are connected’ ” if “[t]hey occur[ ] on differ
ent days, at different places, and no evidence link[s] or connects” one offense with the other.
Id.
In
Godwin,
we held that two robberies of two different Flowers Bakery stores within five days and three and one-half miles of each other, where “[t]he method of each offense was similar, but not unusual,” did not meet this test.
Id.
at 120, 122,
In appellant’s case, the burglaries were of two different types of businesses — a
Thus, the burglaries met the requirements for joinder only if they “constitute^] parts of a common scheme or plan.” The evidence does not support a finding that they did.
A “common plan” exists when the “relationship among offenses ... is dependent upon the existence of a plan that ties the offenses together and demonstrates that the objective of each offense was to contribute to the achievement of a goal not attainable by the commission of any of the individual offenses.” A conspiracy involving more than one offense is a typical example of offenses involving a common plan. Offenses using a “common plan,” however, should be “distinguished from similar character offenses (where the offenses merely duplicate each other).”
Id.
at 122-23,
Here, as in
Godwin,
“there was no evidence of conspiracy or other common plan underlying the two [offenses].”
Godwin,
Because the two burglaries did not meet the requirements of Rule 3A:6(b), 3 joinder of the burglaries for trial was improper under Rule 3A:10(c). Therefore, we hold that the trial court erred in denying appellant’s severance motion.
B.
HARMLESS ERROR
Although the trial court erred, the error does not necessarily require reversal.
See, e.g., Charity v. Commonwealth,
Non-constitutional error is harmless “[w]hen it plainly appears from the record and evidence given at trial that the parties have had a fair trial on the merits and substantial justice has been reached.” Code § 8.01-678;
see Lavinder v. Commonwealth,
Conversely, such error may not be harmless if evidence related to each of the counts would have been inadmissible in a separate trial of any of the other counts. This is so because, in a jury trial, “the introduction of inadmissible evidence of another crime ... ‘confuses one offense with the other, ... and, by showing that the accused has a criminal propensity, tends to reverse his presumption of innocence.’ ”
Godwin,
We recently held that “[t]he harmless error doctrine should not be used prospectively by a trial court as a basis to disregard an established rule of law.”
Hackney,
Therefore, we hold that the erroneous refusal to sever offenses is harmless in a bench trial absent clear evidence that the trial court (1) considered inadmissible evidence in convicting the accused of the charged offenses,
see Hall,
First, no evidence suggests that the trial court considered inadmissible evidence
Furthermore, the record contains no indication that the trial court used a harmless error analysis prospectively as a basis for denying appellant’s motion to sever under Rule 3A:10. The trial court specifically observed, “We do this all the time in ... bench trials,” and gave no indication that it believed such a practice violated the rules of court. In short, the trial court simply erred as a matter of law in believing that trying the cases before a judge rather than a jury made joinder lawful. Therefore, we conclude that the trial court’s actions did not violate the policy set out in Hackney.
For these reasons, we hold that the trial court erred in refusing appellant’s motion to sever but that the resulting error was harmless under the facts of this case. Therefore, we affirm appellant’s convictions.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The Commonwealth agreed that the evidence did not prove the value of the stamps exceeded $200 and conceded that the grand larceny charge should be reduced to petit larceny.
. Godwin was decided under Rule 3A: 10(b). Rule 3A:10 was amended January 1, 1994, and former subsection (b) was redesignated as subsec tion (c). The amendment effected no substantive change in the part of the rule at issue in this case.
. Appellant challenges only the joinder of the offenses for trial and does not challenge the inclusion of multiple counts in the indictment itself.
. Further supporting the reliability of this principle is the fact that, although joinder of two unrelated offenses in the same bench trial may constitute error under the Rules, no statute, rule or common law principle prevents the same judge from trying the same defendant, in immediate succession, for multiple unrelated charges, each of which would be inadmissible at the trial of the other charges. Holding that one judge’s trying multiple unrelated offenses in a bench trial presumptively constitutes reversible error while holding that the same judge’s trying the same offenses separately but in rapid succession presumptively is not error would be to exalt form over substance.
