Affirmed by published opinion. Judge DAVIS wrote the opinion, in which Judge KING and Judge KEENAN concurred.
OPINION
Earnest Robert Baxter pled guilty to one count of possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). Baxter was sentenced under the Armed Career Criminal Act (“ACCA”), 18 U.S.C. § 924(e), to the mandatory minimum period of incarceration: 180 months. Baxter appeals his sentence, contending, as he did before the district court,
see United States v. Baxter,
Under the ACCA, a defendant may be sentenced as an armed career criminal (and thus subject to a fifteen-year mandatory minimum sentence) if he violates 18 U.S.C. § 922(g) and has at least three prior convictions for violent felonies and/or serious drug offenses. 18 U.S.C. § 924(e)(1). Whether a prior conviction qualifies as a predicate offense under § 924(e) is a question of statutory construction we review de novo.
United States v. Brandon,
To determine whether an offense under state law falls within the definition of a violent felony, courts generally employ a categorical approach, under which consideration is given only to the essential elements of the offense and the fact of conviction.
See United States v. White,
While a sentencing court normally may look only to the statutory elements of an offense and the fact of the conviction, because some statutes (like the Virginia provisions at issue here) define burglary broadly to encompass enclosures other than “a building or structure,” the categorical approach “may permit the sentencing court to go beyond the mere fact of conviction” in certain cases.
Id.
at 602,
Baxter correctly argues that the Virginia statute under which he was convicted in 1976 contains a definition of burglary that is broader than the
Taylor
definition of generic burglary: it encompasses not only unlawful entry into “a building or structure,” but, under some circumstances, an automobile, truck, ship, or railroad car, as well.
See
Va.Code Ann. § 18.2-90.
1
At sentencing, the government produced to the district court three relevant documents: (1) the indictment, which charged Baxter with breaking and entering into a “shop”; (2) the order memorializing Baxter’s guilty plea; and (3) the order imposing sentence.
Baxter,
As the district court correctly concluded, however, Baxter’s contention founders on the definitive construction of the Virginia statute by the Virginia Supreme Court in
Graybeal v. Commonwealth,
Significantly, the prosecution sought to salvage the conviction by reliance on the theory that a “trailer” might be deemed an “other house” within the meaning of the *478 statute. Id. In rejecting the prosecution’s alternative argument, the court reasoned as follows:
The Commonwealth argues that even if the convictions cannot be upheld on the basis of breaking and entering twelve trailers, they can be upheld because the structures fall under the category “other house” that is set forth in Code § 18.2-90. We find no merit in this argument. The phrase “other house” is a general phrase placed at the end of a list of specific references to various structures [i.e., any office, shop, manufactured home, storehouse, warehouse, banking house, church ... ]. Those specific structures share the common element of being improvements affixed to the ground, that is, they are realty. Under the doctrine ejusdem generis, the general phrase “other house” must look for its meaning to the specific items which precede it. See Martin v. Commonwealth,224 Va. 298 ,295 S.E.2d 890 (1982). The structures into which Graybeal entered were not realty. Thus, they do not fall within the scope of “other house.” In our opinion, it would violate sound principles of statutory construction and strain the clear intendment of the statute to hold that a trailer not used as a dwelling nevertheless falls under the definition of “other house.”
Id. (emphasis added).
As can be seen, therefore, the grand jury’s use of the term “shop” in the indictment to which Baxter pled guilty in 1976 did not take his conviction outside of the sweep of the
Taylor
holding on the meaning of “burglary” under the ACCA.
3
To the contrary, as the district court correctly found, the reference to “shop” in the indictment “necessarily established” that Baxter’s burglary conviction was based on his entry into a structure that was
“affixed to the ground," id.
(emphasis added), namely, “a building.”
Taylor,
For the reasons set forth, the judgment of the district court is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. In pertinent part, the 1976 version of the applicable Virginia statute provided:
If any person in the nighttime enters without breaking or in the daytime breaks and enters or enters and conceals himself in a dwelling house or an adjoining, occupied outhouse or in the nighttime enters without breaking or at any time breaks and enters or enters and conceals himself in any office, shop, manufactured home, storehouse, warehouse, banking house, church...., or other house, or any ship, vessel or river craft or any railroad car, or any automobile, truck or trailer, if such automobile, truck or trailer is used as a dwelling or place of human habitation, with intent to commit [a crime] ..., he shall be deemed guilty of statutory burglary....
Va.Code Ann. § 18.2-90. The parties have sparred over the import of a 2004 amendment to the statute,
see Baxter,
.
See Johnson v. United
States, -U.S.-,
. Baxter suggested at oral argument that the fact that he pled guilty to burglary and was sentenced years before the Virginia Supreme Court rendered its definitive interpretation of the Commonwealth’s burglary statute in
Graybeal
forecloses the application of that case in his federal sentencing proceeding. He cited no support for this proposition and we reject it.
Cf. Rivers v. Roadway Express, Inc.,
