A jury convicted the appellant, Joshua Tart, of pandering in violation of Code § 18.2-357. On appeal, Tart contends the trial court erred by improperly instructing the jury regarding the elements of the offense. We disagree and affirm Tart’s cоnviction.
I. Background
“On appeal, when the issue is a refused jury instruction, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the proponent of the instruction.”
Lynn v. Commonwealth,
About a week after sixteen-year-old B.H. met appellant in March 2006, she ran away frоm home with him and two other *275 acquaintances. Because the group had no source of income, B.H. engaged in prostitution to support herself and her companions. Using Tart’s computer and nude photos he took of her, B.H. рosted advertisements on the Internet. Clients responded by email and arranged to meet B.H. in hotel rooms and other places. B.H. relied upon Tart to obtain the hotel rooms and provide her with transportation to meet the clients. During B.H.’s meetings with clients, Tart also waited nearby to provide her with any needed protection. The clients paid B.H. for performing sexual intercourse and other acts with them. B.H. earned $600 to $800 per day in the prostitution enterprise.
B.H. gave the money she earned to Tart. She testified that “a lot of the money went to drugs” and alcohol that Tart purchased for their use. Tart also occasionally used the money to pay for the hotel rooms where B.H. met cliеnts; indeed, on the night the police arrested her, B.H. and Tart were staying in such a hotel room. Because B.H. was the sole source of income for the group during the relevant time, Tart also used some of the money that she earned to pay for the group’s gasoline expense, food, and lodging.
At the conclusion of the evidence, the trial court gave the Commonwealth’s Instruction 11 which told the jury that, to convict Tart of the crime of pandering, the Commonwеalth must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that he “knowingly received money or any other valuable thing from the earnings of [B.H.], a person engaged in prostitution.” The trial court refused Tart’s proposed Instruction H, which, in addition to thе elements included in Instruction 11, told the jury that the Commonwealth must also prove “[t]hat Mr. Tart did not provide any consideration, deemed good and valuable in law.”
II. Analysis
Code § 18.2-357 provides: “Any person who shall knowingly receive any money or othеr valuable thing from the earnings of any male or female engaged in prostitution, except for a consideration deemed good and valuable in law, shall be guilty of pandering, punishable as a Class 4 felony.” (Empha *276 sis added). Tart argues that the trial court committed reversible error when it refused his proposed jury instruction which placed the burden on the Commonwealth to prove that he did not give “consideration[ ] deemed good and valuable in law” in exchange for earnings he received from B.H.’s prostitution. The Commonwealth, in contrast, contends that the exception language establishes an affirmative defense, rather than an element of the offense. The Commonwealth therefore reasons that the proffered instruction was properly denied. We аgree that the trial court correctly denied the instruction and affirm the conviction.
A.
“It is elementary that the burden is on the Commonwealth to prove every essential element of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Powers v. Commonwealth,
In Virginia, a criminal defendant typically bears the burden of “producing evidence in support of [an affirmative defense] sufficient to raise a reasonable doubt of [his or her] guilt.”
Regular Veterans Assoc., Ladies Auxiliary v. Commonwealth,
Jury instructions, like those at issue here, play a critical role in criminal trials. Jury instructions must “set forth the essential elements of the crime” as they exist in “the definition of the crime”—whether the definition is codified in a statute or is found in the common law.
Darnell v. Commonwealth,
Finally, “both the Commonwealth and the defendant are entitled to appropriate instructions telling the jury the law applicable to each version of the case, provided such instructions are based upon the evidence adduced.”
Banner v. Commonwealth,
B.
The language of Code § 18.2-357 contains an exception. A qualification, exception, or exemption in a statute may be construed as an element of the offense that the prosecution must disprove.
See United States v. Vuitch,
On the other hand, an exception may also be construed as a “statutory defense, which the accused cаn assert to defeat the
*279
prima facie
case of the prosecution.”
Mayhew v. Commonwealth,
In
Saunders v. Commonwealth,
The statute pronounces the crime when a person knowingly receives money from the earnings of a prostitute except for a good or valuable consideration. The character of the consideration becomеs important only when evidence is offered that there was consideration. If such evidence is offered, the Commonwealth would have to show that the consideration was not good or valuable....
Id. (emphasis added).
Based on our Supreme Court’s construction of the statute in
Saunders,
we conclude that the exception language in Codе § 18.2-357 creates an affirmative defense that places the
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burden of production on the defendant to show that there was some consideration given in exchange for the earnings of the prostitute.
Id.-, see also Regular Veterans Assoc.,
C.
Because the exception language in Code § 18.2-357 is not an element of the offense, but rather an affirmative defense, Tart was required to satisfy his burden of producing or pointing to evidence that would allow him to invoke the exception. In оther words, before he would have been entitled to Jury Instruction H, Tart was required to establish that he provided something that the law deems consideration. Because Tart failed to meet that threshold burden, the trial court did not err by refusing Jury Instructiоn H.
Cf. Sands,
Virginia has long recognized that “consideration must not only be valuable; but it must be a lawful consideration, and not repugnant to law, or sound policy, or good morals.”
Burke v. Shaver,
III. Conclusion
Based on this analysis, we conclude that the evidence did not support Tart’s proposed Instruction H and that the trial court properly refused it. Therefore, we affirm.
Affirmed.
Notes
. We note, however, thаt there is no uniform rule in Virginia regarding the burden of persuasion for affirmative defenses. Instead, the deter
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mination of which party has the burden of persuasion turns on which affirmative defense is being asserted.
Compare Simopoulos v. Commonwealth,
.
Saunders
involved a challenge to an indictment for pandering.
. At that time, pandering was criminalized by then Code § 4579, stating in pertinent part “that the offense is committed when any person 'shall knowingly receive any money or other valuable thing from the earnings of any female engagеd in prostitution, except for a consideration deemed good or valuable in law.”
Saunders,
. Because we decide that there was no evidence in the record to support Tart’s proffered instruction, we need not consider whether the instruction properly stated the law.
