Opinion
Anderson L. Woolfolk, Jr. (appellant) was convicted in a jury trial of stalking in violation of Code § 18.2-60.3 (1992). On appeal, he argues that the statute is unconstitutionally vague and overbroad. In addition, appellant contends that even if the statute is valid, there is insufficient evidence to sustain his conviction. For the reasons set forth below, we find Code § 18.2-60.3 (1992) valid and the evidence sufficient to convict. Accordingly, we affirm.
BACKGROUND
Under well-established principles of appellate review, we restate the evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth. Jane Woolfolk, the victim in this case, divorced appellant in June 1991, after fifteen years of marriage. Ms. Woolfolk retained cus *843 tody of the two minor children born of the marriage, and the final decree of divorce granted appellant the right “to see and visit with the children at reasonable times and places.” By mid-July 1992, Ms. Woolfolk, acting upon the recommendation of appellant’s psychologist, suspended all contact and communication between appellant and the children.
Following appellant’s separation from Ms. Woolfolk in 1987, he engaged in a pattern of conduct that frequently involved following her and maintaining surveillance on her residence.
In the summer of 1992, after Ms. Woolfolk began dating Bill Cаrter, appellant’s surveillance activities increased dramatically. These activities included driving up and down the dead-end street where Ms. Woolfolk lived, parking within sight of the residence, and watching the house for extended periods of time. These activities occurred at both day and night. In addition, appellant followed Ms. Woolfolk or her guests on several occasions with his vehicle. In July 1992, Ms. Woolfolk was “alarmed” after discovering appellant had followed her to an out-of-town wedding she had attended with a female neighbor.
On August 11, 1992, someone let the air out of a tire on Mr. Carter’s car while the car was parked in Ms. Woolfolk’s driveway. Thereafter, appellant was served with a “no trespass” notice, forbidding him from coming in or upon Ms. Woolfolk’s premises. Appellant continued to drive past or park near Ms. Woolfolk’s residenсe.
On September 19, 1992, at 7:00 a.m., Mr. Carter awoke to a telephone call from a male caller who stated, “If you don’t stop seeing her, I’m going to shoot both your asses.” At trial, Mr. Carter testified that he was dating only Ms. Woolfolk during this period of time and that he recognized the caller’s voice as appellant’s. After Mr. Carter received the call, he contacted Ms. Woolfolk and informed her of appellant’s threat. The next day, Mr. Carter saw appellant drive through his, Mr. Carter’s, Fredricksburg apartment complex, forty miles from appellant’s Louisa County residence.
On September 21, 1992, at approximately 10:00 p.m., two days after the threatening telephone call, Ms. Woolfolk saw appellant’s unoccupied car parked near her home. Charlta H. Richardson, *844 one of Ms. Woolfolk’s neighbors, testified that she saw appellant drive down the street several times that night. Ms. Woolfolk became upset and feared that appellant was somewhere near her home on foot. Throughout the following week, appellant continued to park near or in sight of Ms. Woolfolk’s home. He was within view of her residence every day from September 24 until the date of his arrest on September 28, 1992.
The evidence established that in response to appellant’s threat and course of conduct, Ms. Woolfolk carried tear gas in her purse, had motion detector lights installed on the outside of her home, and “slept with a hammer” beside her bed. She watched for appellant everywhere she went and, on one occasion, she obtained a police escort when she drove Mr. Carter’s car back to Fredricksburg.
Appellant denied making the threatening telephone call to Mr. Carter. He stipulated at trial that he was frequently within view of Ms. Woolfolk’s home, that he followed Mr. Carter and that he drove through Mr. Carter’s apartment complex on September 20, 1992. However, appellant argues that he engaged in all these activities to monitor his children’s environment and prepare for a future custody hearing.
SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE
Generally, we decide constitutional questions only when necessary to the appropriate disposition of the case. Accordingly, we first address appellant’s challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence to support his conviction.
See Bissell v. Commonwealth,
*845 Appellant argues that the Commonwealth failed to prove that he acted with the intent to cause emotional distress, and that “[a] fair reading of the record in this case reveals nothing more than a father who was worried and concerned about his children.”
We reject this contention. The jury was entitled to disbelieve appellant’s explanation that he acted only out of concern for his children.
See Speight v. Commonwealth, 4
Va. App. 83, 88,
The Commonwealth proved beyond a reasonable doubt that appellant acted with a specific intent when he engaged in his pattern of “stalking” conduct.
See
Code § 18.2-60.3 (1992). “ ‘[Sjpecific intent may, like any other fact, be shown by circumstances. Intent is a state of mind which can be evidenced only by the words or conduct of the person who is claimed to have entertained it.’ ”
Bell,
The evidence proved that appellant stalked his ex-wife. From mid-summer 1992 until his arrest in September 1992, he persistently followed Ms. Woolfolk. He watched her in her home at all hours of the day and night, and even began to follow her boyfriend, Mr. Carter, who lived in Fredricksburg. Appellаnt threatened to shoot Ms. Woolfolk and Mr. Carter. He followed this threat by driving through Mr. Carter’s apartment complex and repeatedly driving by Ms. Woolfolk’s residence. Ms. Woolfolk testified that appellant’s threat, combined with his persistent course of conduct, “terrified” her. In addition, she believed that appellant wanted to shoot or kill her.
From these facts and circumstances, the jury could properly find that appellant, on more than one occasion and with no legitimate purpose, engaged in conduct intended to cause his ex-wife to
*846
suffer the specific emotional distress generated by placing her in reasonable fear of death or bodily injury.
See Ridley v. Commonwealth,
VAGUENESS
Appellant next argues that Code § 18.2-60.3 (1992) is unconstitutionally vague. The statute in effect in September 1992, provided, in part:
Any person who on more than one occasion engages in conduct with the intent to cause emotional distress to another person by placing that person in reasonable fear of death or bodily injury shall be guilty of a Class 2 misdemeanor.
Code § 18.2-60.3(A) (1992). 1 Appellant argues, inter alia, that “the statutory phrase ‘intent to cause emotional distress’ is hopelessly vague in that it fails to appraise a potential defendant of what sort of conduct might violate its terms.” We disagree.
As a threshold matter, the Commonwealth argues that appellant lacks standing to make a vagueness challenge to former Code § 18.2-60.3 (1992) because “an allegation that a statute is unconstitutionally vague cannot be lodged by one who has engaged in conduct ‘clearly proscribed’ by the statute.” We have previously considered and rejected this argument in
Perkins
v.
Common
*847
wealth,
We reject appellant’s contention that the term “emotional distress” is “hopelessly vague.” “In determining whether a legislative enactment is unconstitutionally vague, the Supreme Court [of the United States] has considered whether the words used have a well-settled common-law meaning, and whether the state’s case law dеmonstrates that the language used, while otherwise vague, has been judicially narrowed.”
Flannery
v.
City of Norfolk,
When statutory construction is required, we construe a statute to promote the end for which it was enacted, if such an interpretation can reasonably be made from the language used.
VEPCO
v.
Board of County Supervisors,
The ordinary meaning of distress is as follows:
Distress commonly implies conditions or circumstances that cause physical or mental stress or strain, suggesting strongly the need for assistance; in application to a mental state, it implies the strain of fear, anxiety, shame or the like.
Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 660 (1981). In addition, Dorland’s Medical Dictionary defines distress as: “physiсal or mental anguish or suffering.” Dorland’s Illustrated Medical Dictionary 398 (26th ed. 1981).
*848 The Supreme Court of Virginia has also discussed the meaning of the term “emotional distress” in the context of civil tort actions. Former Code § 18.2-60.3 (1992) imposes criminal liability for specific conduct that, in the civil arena, could give rise to a claim for damages for the intentional infliction of emotional distress. Those cases which define the elements of the tort of the intentional infliction of emotional distress are instructive as to the intended meaning of the term “emotional distress” used in former Code § 18.2-60.3. In Russo, the Supreme Court of Virginia explained:
The term “emotional distress” travels under many labels, such as, “mental suffering, mental anguish, mental or nervous shock. . . .” But liability arises only when the emotional distress is extreme, and only where the distress inflicted is so severe that no reasonable person could be expected to endure it.
Russo,
“In assessing the constitutionality of a statute, we must presume that the legislative action is valid. The burden is on the challenger to prove the alleged constitutional defect.”
Perkins,
“As generally stated, the void-for-vagueness doctrine requires that a penal stаtute define the criminal offense with suffl
*849
cient definiteness that ordinary people can understand what conduct is prohibited and in a manner that does not encourage arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement.”
Kolender,
[criminal] laws [must] give the person of ordinary intelligence a reasonable opportunity to know what is prohibited, so that he may act accordingly. ... A vaguе law impermissibly delegates basic policy matters to policemen, judges, and juries for resolution on an ad hoc and subjective basis, with the attendant dangers of arbitrary and discriminatory applications.
Id.
at 108-09 (footnote omitted). However, “[i]f the terms of the statute, when measured by common understanding and practices, sufficiently warn a person as to what behavior is prohibited, then the statute is not unconstitutionally vague.”
Stein v. Commonwealth,
We conclude that former Code § 18.2-60.3 gave fair notice of the proscribed activity and is not unconstitutionally vague. Appellant reads the statute as proscribing all conduct done with the intent to cause the victim to suffer any type of emotional distress. In addition, appellant contends that the statute creates a subjective standard requiring “a potential defendant to engage in sheer guesswork as to whether his actions will cause ‘emotional distress’ or not in each specific case.” By attempting to interpret each word separately, instead of reading the statute as a whole, appellant has misconstrued the clear meaning of former Code § 18.2-60.3. 2
In our view, the statute does not create a subjective standard, but in fact creates a “reasonable person” standard, and therefore, the proscribed conduct does not vary with the particular psychological makeup of the victim. In addition, the statute prohibits only conduct engaged in with the intent to cause the specific emotional distress generated by placing a victim in reasonable fear of *850 death or bodily injury. 3 The statute’s application is further narrowed by our interpretation that the emotional distress contemplated by former Code § 18.2-60.3 must be so severe that no reasonable pеrson could be expected to endure it. In addition, the statute requires that the Commonwealth prove that an accused engaged in such activity “on more than one occasion.”
In
Colten v. Kentucky,
The root of the vagueness doctrine is a rough idea of fairness. It is not a principle designed to convert into a constitutional dilemma the practical difficulties in drаwing criminal statutes both general enough to take into account a variety of human conduct and sufficiently specific to provide fair warning that certain kinds of conduct are prohibited.
Id.
at 110. Accordingly, “no more than a reasonable degree of certainty can be demanded.”
Boyce Motor Lines
v.
United States,
As a practical matter, it is impossible to draft legislation delineating every possible act of stalking that would provide adequаte protection for potential victims without infringing upon our
*851
constitutional freedoms. Former Code § 18.2-60.3 struck an appropriate balance between these two concerns by requiring proof beyond a reasonable doubt that an accused acted with a specific intent. “In determining the sufficiency of the notice a statute must of necessity be examined in the light of the conduct with which a defendant is charged.”
National Dairy Products Corp.,
OVERBREADTH
Appellant also contends that former Code § 18.2-60.3 is unconstitutionally overbroad. “An overbroad statute is one that is designed to burden or punish activities which are not constitutionally protected, but the statute includes within its scope activities which are protected by the First Amendment.”
Hill
v.
City of Houston,
In
Broadrick
v.
Oklahoma,
[The function of the overbreadth doctrine is] a limited one at the outset, [and] attenuates as the otherwise unprotected behavior that it forbids thе State to sanction moves from “pure speech” toward conduct and that conduct—even if expressive—falls within the scope of otherwise valid criminal laws that reflect legitimate state interests in maintaining compre *852 hensive controls over harmful, constitutionally unprotected conduct. ... To put the matter another way, particularly where conduct and not merely speech is involved, we believe that the overbreadth of a statute must not only be real, but substantial as well, judged in relation to the statute’s plainly legitimate sweep.
Id. at 615.
Former Code § 18.2-60.3 was designed to proscribe certain impermissible conduct and not speech.
[T]he mere fact that one can conceive of some impermissible application of a statute is not sufficient to render it susceptible to an overbreadth challenge; . . . there must bе a realistic danger that the statute itself will significantly compromise recognized First Amendment protections of parties not before the court for [the statute] to be facially challenged on overbreadth grounds.
City Council v. Taxpayers for Vincent,
Appellant argues that former Code § 18.2-60.3 is broad enough to reach constitutionally protected activities. While we do not agree with appellant’s construction of the statute, it is well settled that “[i]f a statute can be made constitutionally definite by a reasonable construction, the court is under a duty to give it that construction.”
Pedersen
v.
City of Richmond,
CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, we find that former Code § 18.2-60.3 is neither unconstitutionally vague nor overbroad. Also, the evidence is sufficient to prove that appellant violated the statute as we have interpreted it in this opinion. Accordingly, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Moon, C.J., and Hodges, S.J., concurred.
Notes
Code § 18.2-60.3 was amended by the General Assembly during the 1994 regular session. The сurrent statute provides, in part:
Any person who on more than one occasion engages in conduct directed at another person with the intent to place, or with the knowledge that the conduct places, that other person in reasonable fear of death, criminal sexual assault, or bodily injury to that other person or to that other person’s spouse or child shall be guilty of a Class 2 misdemeanor.
It is a wеll settled principle of statutory construction that the whole body of a statute should be examined to determine the true intention of each part. “[A] statute is not to be construed by singling out a particular phrase.”
VEPCO
v.
Citizens for Safe Power,
“[T]he maxim
‘noscitur a sociis,’
which translates ‘it is known from its associates,’ provides that the meaning of a word takes color and expression from the purport of the entire phrase of which it is a part, and it must be read in harmony with its contеxt.”
Turner v. Commonwealth,
