Opinion
The defendant, Christopher Allen Sutherland, was convicted in a bench trial of grand larceny in violation of Code § 18.2-95. The sole issue on appeal is whether the Commonwealth proved that the offense was committed within the territorial jurisdiction of the trial court. We find that it did not and reverse the conviction.
I.
Christopher Sutherland was indicted in Chesterfield County for grand larceny of a white 1980 Chevrolet Chevette belonging to Julie Fox. The indictment charged that the offense occurred in Chesterfield County. At the trial of the offense in Chesterfield County, Julie Fox testified that, on the morning of March 26, 1986, as she was leaving her residence at 2907 Sherwin Road, she discovered that her car, a white 1980 Chevrolet Chevette, was not parked in front of the house where she had left it the night before. *380 She did not state in which city or county her residence was located. She immediately reported the theft to “the police.”
Officer Francis of the Henrico County Police Department testified that, on March 28, 1986, he recognized a car fitting the description of Fox’s in Henrico County. A chase ensued and the defendant ultimately was apprehended. The car was towed to the Henrico County impound lot and Officer Francis contacted Chesterfield County police. Chesterfield County police then proceeded to investigate the case.
At the close of the Commonwealth’s case, Sutherland moved to strike the evidence for failure of the evidence to show that he “did take, steal and carry away [Fox’s] automobile from Chesterfield County.” The court overruled the motion, and Sutherland was convicted and sentenced to three years imprisonment.
On appeal, Sutherland contends that the Commonwealth failed to establish venue, in Chesterfield County. The Commonwealth contends that the defendant is procedurally barred from raising the issue on appeal and that, in any event, it has adequately shown by certain indirect and circumstantial evidence the situs of the crime to be within the County of Chesterfield. We disagree.
II.
“[(Questions of venue must be raised before verdict in cases tried by a jury and before the finding of guilt in cases tried by the court without a jury.” Code § 19.2-244. Otherwise, the question of venue is waived. The reason for this rule is simple: “It seldom happens that there is any real merit in an exception based upon a failure to prove venue, unless the question has been developed and made the subject of serious inquiry before verdict.”
West
v.
Commonwealth,
The Commonwealth contends that Sutherland is procedurally barred by Code § 19.2-244 from raising the question of venue on appeal because he did not adequately raise the issue in the trial court prior to a finding of guilt. We disagree. The Virginia Supreme Court has impliedly upheld the use of the motion to strike to challenge venue.
See Randall,
III.
The question of venue being properly before us, we now determine whether venue was, in fact, established. Venue is proper in the city or county where the offense occurred. Code § 19.2-244. “[T]he burden is on the Commonwealth to prove venue by evidence which is either direct or circumstantial. Such evidence must furnish the foundation for a ‘strong presumption’ that the offense was committed within the jurisdiction of the court.”
Pollard
v.
Commonwealth,
In this case, no direct evidence of venue was produced. However, the Commonwealth relies on certain circumstantial evidence to support proof of venue. It asserts that the fact that Fox reported the theft to the police, that Chesterfield County police investigated the case after an Henrico County officer discovered the car in Henrico County, and that the indictment stated that the crime occurred in Chesterfield County, support an inference that the crime was committed in Chesterfield County. The Common
*382
wealth’s reliance on these facts is mistaken. Allegations of venue contained solely in an indictment cannot supply proof.
See Anderson
v.
Commonwealth,
In
West
v.
Commonwealth,
It thus appeared that [the wife], from her home on Sycamore Street, where the offense was committed, called in the “local police officers,’- who proceeded to make an investigation and arrest, which resulted in the indictment and trial of the accused in Petersburg. The “local police officers” were unquestionably Petersburg officers, and there is small room for doubt that [the wife] telephoned to them and that they responded to her call because her residence was in the city, and therefore within their jurisdiction.
Id.
at 751,
In
Keesee
v.
Commonwealth, 216
Va. 174,
We find that the present case is more analagous to Keesee than to West. Fox merely testified that she telephoned “the police.” Unlike West, where the wife testified she called the “local police” and “local police” responded to her call and investigated the crime, there is no indication in the record which police Fox called. Although Chesterfield police officers investigated the case and testified at trial, so too did a Henrico County police officer who investigated the case and testified at trial. Finally, although a trial court can take judicial notice of locations within its territory, we cannot assume that the trial court did so in this case. Even if Sherwin Road was a geographical location of such common knowledge that it was capable of being judicially noticed, it does not appear from the record that the trial court took judicial notice of its location.
Consequently, we find that the Commonwealth did not meet its burden of proving venue and reverse the conviction. However, the indictment need not be dismissed. “Proof of venue ... is not regarded as material, so far as the merits of the prosecution are concerned, and so the allegation of venue is not a part of the crime.”
Randall,
Reversed and remanded.
Koontz, C.J., and Benton, J., concurred.
