The trial court convicted James Lester Waller for possessing a firearm after having been convicted of a violent felony. See Code § 18.2-308.2(A). On appeal, Waller claims the trial court erred (i) in not acquitting him based upon his necessity defense, and (ii) in admitting prior conviction orders and finding them sufficient to establish Waller’s status as a violent felon. Persuaded by neither assertion, we affirm.
I.
On appeal, we review the evidence in the “light most favorable” to the Commonwealth.
Commonwealth v. Hudson,
The evidence before the trial court showed that a deputy sheriff was dispatched to Waller’s home in response to an alleged threat. The deputy found Waller placing a long-barreled weapon underneath a van in the front yard. After the deputy restrained Waller, the deputy found a loaded handgun in Waller’s back pocket and a shotgun, a rifle, and a pistol under the van. The cylinder and shells for the pistol under the van were found in Waller’s pocket.
Waller took the stand at trial and testified he was 69 years old at the time of the offense. He lived alone and owned the property. His 25-year-old nephew lived nearby. The nephew came by that day, and the two argued in the front yard. Waller accused his nephew of stealing from him. The nephew said: “I’m going to get my gun and I’ll be back.” Waller claimed his nephew intended to kill him. After making these threats, the nephew got in his car and drove off. Waller then “went in the woods” to retrieve various firearms stored on his property. Waller knew where to find them, he admitted, “Cause I know somebody put them there for me.”
Waller had previously placed the weapons under “old table tops” to keep them “from getting rained on and messed up.” He said “somebody” (whom he never named) “was letting [him] use them.” He needed them, Waller argued, to “[protect my life” but admitted that he also used the shotgun for hunting.
After arming himself, he went to the front yard to wait for his nephew’s return. Waller did not retreat, call the police, or call anyone else. Waller’s nephew never returned. Instead, the next person Waller saw was the deputy sheriff. Waller said about 35 to 45 minutes passed between arming himself and the arrival of the deputy.
*575 The Commonwealth introduced into evidence six conviction orders from 1975 issued by the Circuit Court for Henry County, Virginia. Each conviction involved a charge of armed robbery and bore a stamp indicating the book and page number in which the order appears in the circuit court judgment book. Each order identifies Waller’s full name and age as well as his defense counsel. Waller took the stand in his own defense. He admitted he was a convicted felon but could not remember what he did to earn that status. When asked if he went to prison for “armed robbery,” Waller said he did not remember “if it was armed robbery or not.”
On the top of the first order (“Book 36 Page 338”) appears a typewritten heading identifying the date of trial (January 23, 1975) and the name of the circuit court judge (“Honorable John D. Hooker, Judge”). The judge did not sign the orders, and none of the orders has any signature lines or “Enter” blanks. Each order bears an original ink stamp stating:
A COPY TESTE:
Vickie Helmstutler CLERK
BY T.K. Patterson D.C.
The name of the clerk appears to be a stamped signature, but the name of the deputy clerk (“D.C.”) is an original handwritten signature.
Waller’s counsel objected to the admission of the conviction orders because they were not signed by a judge. Counsel acknowledged that the orders bore a “book” and “page number” but noted that no “term order” signed by a judge had been introduced. 1 The Commonwealth argued that *576 the orders had been properly attested and that Waller’s concerns went to the weight, not the admissibility, of the evidence. The trial court agreed, holding that the “record book and page number” evidenced that the conviction orders had been “recorded in the Clerk’s office.” The additional attestation stamp signed by the deputy clerk confirmed that fact.
After hearing this evidence, the trial court rejected Waller’s necessity defense and relied on the armed robbery convictions to trigger the enhanced punishment reserved for those previously convicted of a “violent felony” within the meaning of Code § 18.2-308.2(A) (incorporating by reference Code § 17.1-805(0).
II.
A. Sufficiency of the Evidence-Waller’s Necessity Defense
On appeal, Waller challenges the sufficiency of the evidence. He concedes he possessed firearms but claims the trial court, sitting as factfinder, should have found him not guilty based upon his necessity defense. We disagree.
“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,
It follows that a reviewing court does not “ask itself whether
it
believes that the evidence at the trial established guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Jackson v. Virginia,
The common law defense of necessity applies to violations of Code § 18.2-308.2. The “essential elements” of this defense require a “reasonable belief that the action was necessary to avoid an imminent threatened harm” and a “lack of other adequate means to avoid the threatened harm.”
Byers v. Commonwealth,
*578
The trial court, sitting as factfinder, found that the evidence did not establish the elements of the necessity defense. This conclusion could have been reached from any number of perspectives. The court could have concluded Waller exaggerated the story. The nephew never testified. Nor did anyone else. Only Waller testified that his nephew threatened to kill him. The trial court had no obligation to accept this wholly uncorroborated allegation, offered by Waller in support of his only defense to the charge.
See Coleman v. Commonwealth, 52
Va.App. 19, 25,
On the other hand, the trial court could have accepted Waller’s explanation (either as fact or merely for
arguendo
purposes) but found the alleged threat insufficiently imminent to warrant Waller’s decision to outfit himself with multiple firearms and to lay in wait 35 to 45 minutes for the anticipated shootout with his nephew. Waller did not call the police. He did not walk away from the home to avoid his nephew’s contemplated return. To the contrary, Waller seemed anxious to prepare himself for a mortal gunfight with his nephew. “Implicit in the application of such a defense” is that the felon “may possess the weapon only so long as is necessary to protect himself from the
imminent
threat.”
Humphrey,
*579
In such cases, we cannot discern with certainty “which scenario best describes” what the factfinder was thinking.
Seaton v. Commonwealth,
B. Prior Conviction of a Violent Felony
Waller also challenges the trial court’s decision to admit the armed robbery conviction orders into evidence and its finding that the evidence was sufficient to establish the “violent felony” predicate required by the enhanced punishment provision of Code § 18.2-308.2(A).
(i) Admissibility of the Conviction Orders
The trial court erroneously admitted the conviction orders, Waller contends, because the orders bore no judge’s signature and were unaccompanied by any term order signed by a judge. Our view to the contrary has been set out in some detail. In
Mwangi v. Commonwealth,
We similarly held in
Seaton,
*581 (ii) Evidentiary Sufficiency of Conviction Orders
Even if admissible, Waller contends, the conviction orders should not be accepted as sufficient evidence by the trial court as factfinder. We again disagree. The conviction orders provide “not only permissible evidence of the conviction but prima facie evidence of the conviction.”
Mwangi,
All legal proscriptions barring a negative inference from a criminal defendant’s failure to rebut an incriminating allegation fall away when the defendant takes the stand.
See Williams v. Commonwealth, 52
Va.App. 194, 203,
Stated differently, a testifying defendant “may not stop short in his testimony by omitting and failing to explain incriminating circumstances and events already in evidence, in
*582
which he participated and concerning which he is fully informed, without subjecting his silence to the inferences to be naturally drawn from it.”
Caminetti v. United States,
As we said in
Seaton
when faced with similar circumstances, “The fundamental basis upon which all rules of evidence must rest—if they are to rest upon reason—is their adaptation to the successful development of the truth.”
Seaton,
III.
In sum, we hold that sufficient evidence supports the trial court’s rejection of Waller’s necessity defense and that the court did not err in admitting and relying upon Waller’s armed robbery convictions. We thus affirm Waller’s conviction of possessing a firearm after being previously convicted of a violent felony.
Affirmed.
Notes
. On appeal, Waller includes additional grounds in support of his objection. He argues, for example, that the orders should not have been admitted because the stamp was "not dated,” the "person who signed the stamp is not identified,” the clerk is not identified as the circuit court clerk, and the stamp did not reveal the particular circuit court. Appellant's Br. at 7-8. Rule 5A:18 precludes us from addressing arguments raised for the first time on appeal “as a basis for reversal" of the lower court’s judgment. "As a precondition to appellate review, Rule 5A:18 requires a contemporaneous objection in the trial court to preserve the issue on appeal. Not just any objection will
*576
do. It must be both
specific
and timely—so that the trial judge would know the particular point being made in time to do something about it.”
Thomas 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,
. The Commonwealth also argues that, in any event, Waller constructively possessed the firearms because he placed them in a hiding spot *579 on his own property and essentially conceded he had knowledge, dominion, and control over them immediately prior to the nephew’s alleged death threat—thus mooting Waller's necessity defense. Given our holding, however, we need not analyze this alternative factual basis for Waller’s conviction.
. “Historically, when clerks of court would hand-copy orders, they could not also copy a judge’s signature. Thus, there arose the practice of the clerk attesting copies as genuine. The practice of including or excluding the judge’s signature on a photocopy may vary from jurisdiction to jurisdiction.” 1986-87 Va. Atty. Gen. Op. 46 (Nov. 21, 1986) (opining that "the signature of the judge is not a requisite for 'a copy teste' "). In 1996, the General Assembly standardized the conviction orders used in Virginia courts.
See
Code § 19.2-307 ("The final judgment order shall be entered on a form promulgated by the Supreme Court.” 1996 Va. Acts, ch. 60). The Virginia Supreme Court later issued a conviction order form which includes a specific signature line for the judge.
See
Va. Sup.Ct. Rules, Part 3A, Appendix of Forms, Form 10 (adopted November 14, 1996, and effective January 1, 1997). Rule 1:1 provides that the "date of entry” of an order is when it "is signed by the judge." This proposition, however, presupposes the order is one intended to be signed by a judge—which would include any order not exempted by statute from being individually signed under the historic order book protocols recognized by Code § 17.1-123(A)(ii) or (iii).
Cf. Clephas v. Clephas,
. We acknowledge
Moreau v. Fuller,
