COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
Present: Chief Judge Felton, Judges McCullough and Decker
PUBLISHED
Argued at Chesapeake, Virginia
SHONTRINA CHARON FOUNTAIN
OPINION BY
v. Record No. 2212-13-1 JUDGE STEPHEN R. McCULLOUGH
NOVEMBER 4, 2014
COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF VIRGINIA BEACH
Glenn R. Croshaw, Judge
Bassel Khalaf, Assistant Public Defender (Office of the Public
Defender, on briefs), for appellant.
Robert H. Anderson, III, Senior Assistant Attorney General (Mark R.
Herring, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.
Shontrina Charon Fountain challenges her conviction of misuse of the 9-1-1 system, in
violation of Code § 18.2-429(B). She argues that the evidence fails to establish that she possessed
the requisite intent “to annoy, harass, hinder or delay emergency personnel in the performance of
their duties” at the time she “caus[ed] the telephone to ring.” We agree and reverse her conviction.
BACKGROUND
On March 25, 2013, at approximately 8:50 p.m., appellant was driving with her two
daughters, aged eight and eleven, in the back seat. Officer J.D. Gates of the Virginia Beach Police
Department observed appellant’s vehicle briefly drift in and out of the adjacent lane. He initiated a
traffic stop, and appellant pulled over to the side of the road. Due to the proximity of the vehicles to
an intersection, Officer Gates, for safety purposes, asked appellant to move her car to the nearby
parking lot of a check cashing business. He gestured with his hand to that effect.
Although the entrance of the parking lot was well-lit, the area of the lot located “more than
two car lengths” beyond the entrance was fairly dark. Officer Gates did not specify that appellant
should park in the well-lit portion of the lot. Appellant pulled into the parking lot, slowed down,
made a U-turn away from the check cashing business, and abruptly reversed her vehicle. In the
process, she struck but did not damage the building. She reoriented her vehicle so that the front of
her car was facing the police vehicle and the exit of the parking lot. She then rolled her car toward
Gates’s police vehicle, stopped briefly, and rolled forward once more. She came to a complete stop
approximately three feet from the police cruiser. Appellant later explained that she turned her
vehicle around to be closer to the light.
Because appellant repeatedly moved her car toward the police vehicle, a second officer
reached into appellant’s car and placed it in park while Officer Gates removed her keys from the
ignition. Officer Gates testified that, due to appellant’s failure to follow his commands (which the
record does not specify), he told appellant that he would drag her from her car and pepper-spray her
if she did not obey. Appellant then insisted on calling her attorney. Officer Gates told her that she
had no right to do so.
At this point, appellant locked her vehicle and dialed 9-1-1 from her cell phone. She
testified that she felt unsafe because Officer Gates directed her to pull into a poorly lit portion of the
parking lot and threatened to drag her from her vehicle and pepper-spray her. She stated that she
wanted “everything recorded and documented because this is not normal for police to ask you to
pull in the back of a dark parking lot, threaten to drag you out, and threaten to pepper-spray you.
There’s nothing normal and okay about that.” Appellant repeatedly voiced concerns to the
dispatcher that she was not allowed to call her attorney. She stated multiple times that she feared for
her safety because of Officer Gates’s threats to use physical force and pepper-spray her if she did
not comply with his requests. She testified that her children were “freaked out,” that she was
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merely heading home from church, and that she did not know why Officer Gates had pulled her
over. She repeatedly stated that the officer directed her to pull into the back of a dark parking lot
and that she did not feel safe.
About twelve minutes into the call, Officer Gates’s supervisor, Sergeant N.C. Creekmore,
arrived at the parking lot. Creekmore asked appellant to put down her cell phone and speak to him.
Appellant refused. She said that she did not want the dispatcher to go “because [she] want[ed] to
record it.” The dispatcher at one point said, “I’ll let you go now,” to which appellant responded,
“[N]o ma’am, I don’t want you to get off. I don’t want you to get off.” Appellant resisted Sergeant
Creekmore’s entreaties to hang up the phone. Appellant told the dispatcher, “Ma’am, I don’t want
you to get off [the phone] because I’m scared. I’m scared of him. I’m scared of him.” She
explained that she dialed 9-1-1 because “they always have to pick up,” she “want[ed] everything
recorded and documented,” and she “want[ed] it all recorded.”
About twenty minutes into the call, the dispatcher informed appellant that she needed to
conclude the call because Sergeant Creekmore was on the scene. After the dispatcher had twice told
appellant she needed to conclude the call, appellant stated that she still did not feel safe. She asked
to speak with the dispatcher’s supervisor. The dispatcher agreed to transfer the call, but the call was
disconnected. The parties stipulated that appellant called back for the sole purpose of reestablishing
a connection with the dispatcher’s supervisor. She then spoke with the 9-1-1 supervisor, Matthew
Berg.
Appellant told Berg that she did not feel safe, the officers would not allow her to call an
attorney, and she did not want to get off the phone. Berg told appellant she needed to comply with
the police officers at the scene. He said she would be placed on hold while he spoke with Sergeant
Creekmore. Appellant replied, “Okay, I just don’t want to be disconnected until I’m able to drive
off and I have my keys back in my hand and I can call my attorney.”
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While she was on hold, the call was again inadvertently disconnected. Berg called appellant
back to reestablish a connection. He explained that the officers were trying to issue her traffic
tickets and that she would be free to leave after they had been issued. Appellant asked Berg to stay
on the phone while the tickets were being issued. She obtained reference information from Berg
about the case number of the 9-1-1 call and the names of the officers involved. Appellant then
thanked Berg for his assistance and ended the call. Appellant’s entire interaction with 9-1-1
personnel lasted approximately thirty-seven minutes.
In a motion to strike, appellant argued, among other things, that the evidence did not prove
that she had the intent to annoy, harass, hinder, or delay emergency personnel when she placed the
9-1-1 call, as required by Code § 18.2-429(B), and that she placed the call because she felt
frightened. She renewed that argument at the close of the evidence.
Following a bench trial, the court convicted appellant of violating Code § 18.2-429(B).
Appellant was fined $500 and given a thirty-day sentence, which was suspended on condition of
good behavior for two years. The court found that, although appellant initially placed the call
because she felt terrified, the fact that she did not hang up the phone after Sergeant Creekmore
arrived on the scene, combined with the fact that she remained on the phone for the thirty-seven
minutes duration of the call, showed that “she certainly developed an additional intent to, perhaps,
intimidate the officers, by remaining on the phone with the 9-1-1 dispatchers.” This appeal
followed.
ANALYSIS
I. APPELLANT’S ARGUMENT IS NOT PROCEDURALLY DEFAULTED.
At the outset, the Commonwealth asserts that appellant’s central argument is procedurally
defaulted. We disagree. The written statement of facts, which the trial court signed, shows that
appellant repeatedly argued at trial that she did not possess the requisite intent “at the time the
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emergency call was placed.” This is the argument appellant makes on appeal. The purpose of Rule
5A:18 is “to alert the trial judge to possible error so that the judge may consider the issue
intelligently and take any corrective actions necessary to avoid unnecessary appeals, reversals and
mistrials.” Martin v. Commonwealth, 13 Va. App. 524, 530, 414 S.E.2d 401, 404 (1992) (en banc).
“In addition, a specific, contemporaneous objection gives the opposing party the opportunity to
meet the objection at that stage of the proceeding.” Weidman v. Babcock, 241 Va. 40, 44, 400
S.E.2d 164, 167 (1991). The arguments made by appellant at trial, as reflected in the statement of
facts, satisfy Rule 5A:18.
II. UNDER THE PLAIN LANGUAGE OF THE STATUTE, THE ACCUSED MUST POSSESS
THE INTENT TO ANNOY, HARASS, HINDER, OR DELAY EMERGENCY PERSONNEL
AT THE TIME HE CAUSES A TELEPHONE TO RING.
Appellant argues that Code § 18.2-429(B) requires an appellant to possess the “intent to
annoy, harass, hinder or delay emergency personnel” at the time the 9-1-1 call is placed, i.e., when
the caller “causes a telephone to ring.” The fact that a caller may develop such an intent after the
call is placed, she asserts, does not constitute a violation of the statute. The Commonwealth presses
a different reading of the statute, contending that such a statutory reading is inconsistent with the
purpose of the statute and would lead to anomalous results.
The question before us is one of statutory construction. We review such questions de novo
on appeal. Kozmina v. Commonwealth, 281 Va. 347, 349, 706 S.E.2d 860, 862 (2011). Courts
apply the plain meaning of a statute “‘unless the terms are ambiguous or applying the plain
language would lead to an absurd result.’” Baker v. Commonwealth, 284 Va. 572, 576, 733 S.E.2d
642, 644 (2012) (quoting Boynton v. Kilgore, 271 Va. 220, 227, 623 S.E.2d 922, 926 (2006)).
Code § 18.2-429(B) provides that
[a]ny person who, with or without intent to converse, but with
intent to annoy, harass, hinder or delay emergency personnel in the
performance of their duties as such, causes a telephone to ring,
which is owned or leased for the purpose of receiving emergency
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calls by a public or private entity providing fire, police or
emergency medical service, and any person who knowingly
permits the use of a telephone under his control for such purpose,
is guilty of a Class 1 misdemeanor.
The statutory language is not ambiguous, and the Commonwealth does not argue to the
contrary. Read according to its plain meaning, Code § 18.2-429(B) requires that the intent be
present when a person “causes a telephone to ring.” An intent to “annoy, harass, hinder or delay”
that arises during the call, i.e., after the 9-1-1 telephone has been caused to ring, does not fall within
the scope of the statutory prohibition. The trial court here found that appellant did not possess the
requisite intent when she made the call but that she developed an intent to intimidate the officers as
she remained on the telephone. This finding, which served as the basis for conviction, cannot be
squared with the statute’s plain language.1 In the absence of the required intent, appellant cannot be
convicted of violating the statute.
In support of affirmance, the Commonwealth points out that appellant called 9-1-1 not just
once but twice. The Commonwealth contends that, under the deferential standard of review for the
sufficiency of the evidence, we should conclude that appellant possessed the requisite intent when
she made this second phone call. The Commonwealth notes that the call was disconnected after
approximately twenty minutes and, by that time, Sergeant Creekmore had arrived at the scene.
Sergeant Creekmore’s presence, according to the Commonwealth, should have allayed any of
appellant’s fears. The difficulty with this contention is that the Commonwealth stipulated at trial
that appellant called back, after the first call disconnected, “for the sole purpose of reestablishing a
connection with the dispatcher’s supervisor.” After the call was disconnected again, Berg called
1
The final clause of Code § 18.2-429(B), which applies the statutory prohibition to “any
person who knowingly permits the use of a telephone under his control for such purpose,” clearly
does not apply to appellant here. First, the same offending intent applies, namely, an intent to
cause the telephone to ring. Second, appellant is the one who placed the call; she did not permit
another person to use her phone to place a call knowing it would be made with the intent to
annoy, harass, hinder, or delay.
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and reestablished the connection. Parties are bound by their factual stipulations. See Barrick v. Bd.
of Supervisors of Mathews Cnty., 239 Va. 628, 631, 391 S.E.2d 318, 320 (1990).
The Commonwealth also argues that a plain language reading of the statute “makes little
sense” because it would sanction a brief call for which the offending purpose is immediately
apparent but would not punish a caller, like appellant, who was on the phone with emergency
personnel for over thirty minutes. We see nothing absurd about a plain language interpretation of
Code § 18.2-429(B). It is perfectly logical for the General Assembly to choose statutory language
that does not discourage persons with real or perceived emergencies from calling 9-1-1. Should the
purpose of the call change from a concern about genuine or a perceived emergency to a call
maintained for the purpose of annoying, harassing, hindering, or delaying emergency personnel,
9-1-1 personnel can resort to the simple expedient of hanging up the phone. More fundamentally,
we are not at liberty to rewrite the statute.
When the language of a statute is plain and unambiguous, we are
bound by the plain meaning of that statutory language. Thus,
when the General Assembly has used words that have a plain
meaning, courts cannot give those words a construction that
amounts to holding that the General Assembly meant something
other than that which it actually expressed.
Lee Cnty. v. Town of St. Charles, 264 Va. 344, 348, 568 S.E.2d 680, 682 (2002) (citations
omitted).
CONCLUSION
We reverse the judgment of the trial court.
Reversed and final judgment.
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