COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
Present: Judges Beales, AtLee and Chaney
PUBLISHED
Argued at Norfolk, Virginia
SAMUEL ELLIS, JR.
OPINION BY
v. Record No. 0818-21-1 JUDGE RICHARD Y. ATLEE, JR.
JULY 19, 2022
COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF NEWPORT NEWS
Gary A. Mills, Judge
Daniel B. Winegard, Assistant Public Defender, for appellant.
Tanner M. Russo, Assistant Attorney General (Jason S. Miyares,
Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.
Appellant Samuel Ellis, Jr. appeals his conviction for driving while his license was
suspended due to no insurance, in violation of Code § 46.2-302. On appeal, he argues that his
conviction should be vacated because the original charging document, a Virginia Uniform
Summons, “was void and could not be amended.” For the following reasons, we disagree and
affirm his conviction.
I. BACKGROUND
“In accordance with familiar principles of appellate review, the facts will be stated in the
light most favorable to the Commonwealth, the prevailing party at trial.” Green v.
Commonwealth, 72 Va. App. 193, 197 n.1 (2020) (quoting Gerald v. Commonwealth, 295 Va.
469, 472 (2018)).
On November 1, 2019, a law enforcement officer issued Ellis a Virginia Uniform
Summons, which charged Ellis with “Driving Suspended DUI Related” in violation of “[Virginia
Code §] 18.2-272 ([Newport News Ordinance §] 26-8).” On the summons, the officer checked
the “city” box, indicating Ellis was charged with a city offense.
On February 27, 2020, the general district court convicted Ellis of driving on a suspended
license, DUI related. The general district court imposed a $500 fine, with $250 suspended, and it
sentenced him to 365 days in jail, with 345 days suspended for a period of one year. As is
customary, the general district court’s conviction order was written on the left and bottom
portions of the summons.
Ellis appealed his conviction to the circuit court. On July 7, 2021, Ellis entered into a
written plea agreement. The plea agreement stated that Ellis was charged with “one count of
Driving under Suspension: Failure to Maintain Insurance, a Misdemeanor, in violation of
§ 46.2-302 of the Code of Virginia.” Under the agreement, Ellis pleaded guilty to the charge,
and the Commonwealth agreed that the proper disposition was 180 days of confinement with all
180 days suspended for one year, conditioned on Ellis’s good behavior and payment of court
costs.
That same day, the circuit court issued an order accepting and giving effect to the plea
agreement. The circuit court’s order reflected that Ellis had initially been charged with driving
on a suspended license, DUI related, and that he was pleading “[g]uilty to [an a]mended
[c]harge” under Code § 46.2-302, for driving on a suspended license, insurance related. The
circuit court accepted the plea agreement and imposed the sentence agreed to by the parties.
On August 4, 2021, Ellis filed a motion to vacate his conviction. He argued that the
summons was void ab initio because Newport News Ordinance § 26-8 does not incorporate Title
18.2 of the Virginia Code, meaning that the summons failed to state an offense. He also argued
that his conviction in the circuit court for violating Code § 46.2-302 was void ab initio because
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the circuit court was without power to amend a void charging document. The circuit court
denied his motion, and this appeal followed.
II. ANALYSIS
A. A summons cannot be void ab initio because it is not an act of a court.
Ellis argues that his conviction is void ab initio because it is based on a summons that is
itself void ab initio. Ellis’s argument makes at least one crucial mistake—the summons is not an
act of the court and thus cannot be void ab initio.
The Constitution of Virginia sets out the general powers of the judiciary, and the
Constitution grants power to the General Assembly, subject to certain limitations, to determine
the jurisdiction of the courts of the Commonwealth. Kelley v. Stamos, 285 Va. 68, 75 (2013).
The term void ab initio applies when a court acts outside of such jurisdiction or authority. Id.
Thus, a court’s action is void ab initio if
entered by a court in the absence of jurisdiction of the subject
matter or over the parties, if the character of the order is such that
the court had no power to render it, or if the mode of procedure
used by the court was one that the court “could not lawfully
adopt.”
Id. (quoting Singh v. Mooney, 261 Va. 48, 51-52 (2001)). This applies to any act of a court,
including orders, judgments, and sentences. See, e.g., Amin v. Cnty. of Henrico, 63 Va. App.
203, 210 (2014) (holding that a conviction order was void ab initio because it was based on “an
offense that did not exist”); Rawls v. Commonwealth, 278 Va. 213, 221 (2009) (holding that a
sentence in excess of statutory limits was void ab initio because it was outside the court’s
power); Collins v. Shepherd, 274 Va. 390, 402-03 (2007) (holding that a dismissal order was
void ab initio because the circuit court utilized a mode of procedure it could not lawfully adopt).
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The summons at issue here was issued by a law enforcement officer—not a court.1
Therefore, it cannot be void ab initio because it is not an act of the court, and Ellis’s argument
that the summons was void and could not be amended fails.
B. The summons was not so defective as to render the final judgment void ab initio.
While a summons cannot be void ab initio, a charging document can be so defective as to
violate the Constitution, in which case the final judgment will be void. Reed v. Commonwealth,
281 Va. 471, 481 (2011). Although Ellis alleges in his assignment of error that the summons
was “void,” even if we were to construe his argument more broadly to include an argument that
the summons was defective, his argument is still without merit.
Code § 19.2-227 provides that, “Judgment in any criminal case shall not be arrested or
reversed upon any exception or objection made after a verdict to the indictment or other
accusation, unless it be so defective as to be in violation of the Constitution.” To avoid
constitutional defectiveness, a charging document must give an accused “notice of the nature and
character of the accusations against him so that he can prepare an adequate defense.” Reed, 281
Va. at 481. Where the error is a misrecital of applicable statutes or ordinances, the charging
1
We recognize that the general district court convicted Ellis of the charge stated in the
summons, which is an act of the court. But a defendant may appeal a general district court
conviction “to the circuit court for a trial de novo.” Turner v. Commonwealth, 49 Va. App. 381,
385 (2007) (quoting Kenyon v. Commonwealth, 37 Va. App. 668, 673 (2002)). “[T]hese de novo
appeals actually vacate the decision of the lower court as if it had never occurred and provide a
new trial in the circuit court.” Wright v. Commonwealth, 52 Va. App. 690, 706 n.9 (2008) (en
banc); see also Corbin v. Commonwealth, 44 Va. App. 196, 208 (2004) (“[B]ecause the appeal
of a conviction from the general district court to circuit court results in a trial de novo, perfecting
the appeal in the district court renders the judgment a nullity.”).
Moreover, “[w]e are a court of limited jurisdiction.” Wright, 52 Va. App. at 707 n.10.
We have statutory authority to “hear appeals arising from final orders of conviction entered in
the circuit courts—not orders of the district courts.” Id.; see also Code § 17.1-406(A) (“Any
aggrieved party may present a petition for appeal to the Court of Appeals from (i) any final
conviction in a circuit court of a traffic infraction or a crime . . . .” (quoting version in effect at
the time of the offense)). The conviction order entered by the district court was annulled when
proceedings began in the circuit court, and it is not before us now.
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document is nevertheless valid if it puts the accused on notice of the “gravamen of the crime”
charged. Williams v. City of Petersburg, 216 Va. 297, 302 (1975).
1. The summons simply misrecited the applicable local ordinance provision.
The summons incorrectly cites Ordinance § 26-8 as the local ordinance incorporating
Code § 18.2-272. Although the summons cited the wrong ordinance number, § 26-8, there is a
Newport News Ordinance, § 26-72,2 that legally incorporates Code § 18.2-272, meaning the city
had the legal authority to charge Ellis under its existing ordinances. Both the Supreme Court and
this Court have consistently held that a misrecital of a code provision in a charging document
does not necessarily invalidate a conviction. See, e.g., Williams, 216 Va. at 302 (affirming a
conviction that referenced an incorrect statute); Williams v. Commonwealth, 5 Va. App. 514,
516-17 (1988) (affirming a conviction where the summons referenced a non-existent code
subsection).
Rather than recognizing that the summons merely misrecited the applicable provision,
Ellis contends that this case is similar to Amin, 63 Va. App. 203, where this Court held that a
conviction was void ab initio because it was based on a summons that recited an offense that did
not exist. In Amin, the summons charged the defendant with “Henrico County Ordinance 22-2
incorporating Virginia Code Section 18.2-308,” and the circuit court convicted him of that
2
Ordinance § 26-72 provides:
Article 2 (Section 18.2-266 et seq.) of Chapter 7 of Title 18.2,
Code of Virginia, as amended and as they shall be amended in the
future, except those provisions and requirements the violation of
which constitute a felony, and except those provisions and
requirements which, by their very nature, can have no application
to or within the city, is hereby adopted and made a part of this
chapter as fully as though set out at length herein. It shall be
unlawful for any person within the city to violate or fail, neglect or
refuse to comply with any section of the Code of Virginia as
adopted in this section.
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charge. Id. at 207. Henrico County Ordinance § 22-2 incorporated Title 18.2, Chapter 7, Article
2 of the Code of Virginia, but it did not incorporate Article 7, in which the charged offense, Code
§ 18.2-308, was located. Id. at 208. Not only did Ordinance § 22-2 fail to incorporate Code
§ 18.2-308, but no other Henrico County ordinance incorporated that provision. Indeed, no
ordinance could have done so because the General Assembly had not authorized the county to
incorporate that provision. Id. Consequently, this Court reversed the conviction as void ab initio
because the circuit court did not have the power to convict the defendant of “an offense that did
not exist.” Id. at 210.
But Amin is inapplicable to the facts here. The local ordinance at issue in Amin did not
incorporate the state code provision—and legally, neither it nor any other ordinance could have
done so because the locality did not have the authority. Id. at 209. In this case, however, the city
was authorized to incorporate Code § 18.2-272 into its local ordinances, Code § 46.2-1313, and
it in fact did so in Newport News Ordinance § 26-72.3 Therefore, unlike in Amin, the summons
here did not charge Ellis with an offense that does not exist.
This case is more akin to Williams, 216 Va. 297. In that case, a warrant charged the
defendant with refusing to take a breath test, but it incorrectly cited the statutory provision for
preliminary field sobriety tests rather than the statutory provision for refusing a breath test. Id. at
301-02. Despite the misrecital of the statutory provision, the Supreme Court concluded that the
description of the offense otherwise set out the “gravamen” of the offense; thus, “the misrecital
3
Furthermore, the Court in Amin vacated the conviction because the defendant was
convicted of the non-existent offense, not because the summons itself was void. Amin, 63
Va. App. at 210. Even assuming that the offense charged in the summons here “did not exist,”
Ellis was not convicted of the offense charged in the summons. The circuit court here amended
the charge to a valid offense—in accordance with the plea agreement to which Ellis knowingly
and voluntarily entered. Thus, unlike the conviction order in Amin, the conviction order in this
case was not a conviction for an offense that did not exist, and the circuit court was not without
power to convict Ellis of an offense under Code § 46.2-302.
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[did] not invalidate the conviction.” Id. at 302. Here, like in Williams, the summons provided
Ellis with the gravamen of the offense charged by describing the charge as “Driving Suspended
DUI Related” and referencing Code § 18.2-272. Therefore, the mere misrecital of Ordinance
§ 26-8, rather than Ordinance § 26-72, does not invalidate the conviction.
2. The summons provided Ellis adequate notice of the gravamen of the offense.
“Gravamen” means the “substantial point or essence” of the crime. Gravamen, Black’s
Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014); see also Groffel v. Commonwealth, 70 Va. App. 681, 689
(2019) (describing “gravamen” as the “essence” of the crime).
Here, the summons plainly and clearly described the offense as “Driving Suspended DUI
related.” See Lankford v. Commonwealth, No. 0883-92-4 (Va. Ct. App. Feb. 22, 1994) (finding
“driving under revocation/suspension” sufficient to provide notice of the offense).4 The
summons also expressly referenced Code § 18.2-272, the state provision that prohibits driving
with a suspended driver’s license, rather than some other possible driving-related suspension as
suggested by the dissent.5 The dissent also contends that this description is insufficient because
the description could be interpreted in more than one way, including a different DUI-related
offense under Code § 18.2-272.6 But the charging document is required to give notice of the
4
“Although not binding precedent, unpublished opinions can be cited and considered for
their persuasive value.” Mitchell v. Commonwealth, 73 Va. App. 234, 248 n.9 (2021) (quoting
Blowe v. Commonwealth, 72 Va. App. 457, 468 n.10 (2020)).
5
The entirety of the description of the offense is set out in Code § 18.2-272. The local
ordinance does not contain any further description of the offense. The sole purpose of the local
ordinance is to incorporate the fully described state offense into the local code. Thus, the
absence of the correct incorporating provision does not detract from, and its presence could not
add to, whether the summons states the “nature and character of the offense.”
6
Additionally, while a charging document may list the particular subsection of a statute
under which the Commonwealth intends to proceed, it is not required. Mueller v.
Commonwealth, 15 Va. App. 649, 652-53 (1993) (holding that an indictment supported a
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“nature and character,” or gravamen, of the crime charged—not necessarily every particular.
Williams, 5 Va. App. at 516; Williams, 216 Va. at 302. Even if the summons had cited the
correct ordinance (§ 26-72), which would be an unquestionably valid charging document, it still
would not provide the particulars that the dissent contends are necessary.
An incorrect code or ordinance citation will not render a summons invalid “when the
defendant plainly had notice of the true nature of the charge against him or her.” Flaherty v.
Commonwealth, 14 Va. App. 148, 152 (1992). Ellis “does not contend that he did not know the
nature of the charge against him or that he did not have an opportunity to defend against that
charge.” Williams, 5 Va. App. at 517. Ellis was able to mount a defense to the crime charged
and was able to negotiate a plea agreement that resulted in a conviction for a lesser offense. He
had ample notice of the crime with which he was charged. Because Ellis had sufficient notice of
the gravamen of the offense, the misrecital of the ordinance number did not render the summons
“so defective as to be in violation of the Constitution.” Code § 19.2-227. Accordingly, the
conviction is not void.
III. CONCLUSION
Because the summons was an act of a law enforcement officer and not the act of a court,
it cannot be void ab initio. The summons gave Ellis notice of the gravamen of the offense and
thus it was not fatally defective. As such, the circuit court did not err by amending the charged
conviction under either subsection where the indictment cited the code section without reference
to a particular subsection and the language of the charge description did not narrow the offense).
Furthermore, Ellis, who can be assumed to have knowledge of his own prior convictions,
would not need further notice of the reason his license was suspended. The gravamen of the
offense is that he was driving after his license was suspended related to a prior conviction for
driving under the influence, and the description of that charge in the summons, along with the
inclusion of the relevant code provision, is adequate to give him sufficient notice.
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offense and convicting Ellis of driving with a suspended license, insurance related, under Code
§ 46.2-302. The decision of the circuit court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
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Chaney, J., dissenting.
Because the circuit court never acquired jurisdiction to try and convict Mr. Ellis, the
circuit court’s conviction order is void ab initio. Therefore, I respectfully dissent from the
majority’s decision affirming Mr. Ellis’s conviction for misdemeanor driving on a suspended
license without insurance, in violation of Code § 46.2-302.
I. THE CIRCUIT COURT’S JURISDICTION IS PREDICATED ON A VALID GDC CONVICTION ORDER.
The circuit court’s jurisdiction in a de novo appeal in a criminal case is pursuant to Code
§ 16.1-132, which provides that “[a]ny person convicted in a district court of an offense not
felonious shall have the right, at any time within ten days from such conviction, and whether or
not such conviction was upon a plea of guilty, to appeal to the circuit court.” (Emphases added).
Significantly, a conviction order that is void ab initio is “a complete nullity.” See Singh v.
Mooney, 261 Va. 48, 52 (2001). Thus, a void ab initio conviction order is no conviction at all.
See Gray v. Stuart, 74 Va. 351, 358 (1880) (“[A] void judgment[ ] . . . is no judgment at all. It is
a mere nullity.”). Therefore, if the general district court’s (“GDC”) conviction order is void ab
initio, an appeal therefrom could not confer jurisdiction on the circuit court to try and convict
Ellis. Such a lack of jurisdiction here would render the circuit court’s conviction order a nullity.
See Singh, 261 Va. at 52.
The majority adopts the Commonwealth’s position that it is irrelevant whether the GDC
conviction order is void ab initio because (i) “de novo appeals [from GDC to circuit court]
actually vacate the decision of the lower court as if it had never occurred and provide a new trial
in the circuit court,” (quoting Wright v. Commonwealth, 52 Va. App. 690, 706 n.9 (2008) (en
banc), and (ii) “because the appeal of a conviction from the general district court to circuit court
results in a trial de novo, perfecting the appeal in the district court renders the judgment a
nullity,” (quoting Corbin v. Commonwealth, 44 Va. App. 196, 208 (2004)). The majority fails to
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distinguish between the legal effect of a de novo appeal of a valid conviction order and the legal
effect of an attempted de novo appeal of a conviction order that is void ab initio. A de novo
appeal of a valid conviction order has the legal effect of vacating that conviction order, rendering
it a nullity, but a void ab initio conviction order is a nullity that cannot be appealed.
II. THE GDC CONVICTION ORDER WAS VOID AB INITIO.
Ellis contends that the original charging summons for violating City of Newport News
Ordinance “18.2-272 (26-8) DRIVING SUSPENDED DUI RELATED” failed to state an
offense. Ellis is correct. Therefore, the GDC order finding Ellis “guilty as charged” in the
summons is void ab initio. See Amin v. Cnty. of Henrico, 63 Va. App. 203, 209 (2014).
A. Amin v. County of Henrico
In Amin, this Court held that a conviction order is void ab initio where the charging
document fails to charge an offense. Amin, 63 Va. App. at 209. As the Court explained in Amin,
when the trial court entered an order that purported to convict the defendant of a non-offense, the
court “exerted its power in a way not warranted by the law.” Id. (citing Anthony v. Kasey, 83 Va.
338, 341 (1887)); see also Burrell v. Commonwealth, 283 Va. 474, 480 (2012) (holding that an
order was void ab initio because “the character of the judgment was not such as the [C]ourt had
the power to render” (quoting Rawls v. Commonwealth, 278 Va. 213, 221 (2009) (alteration in
original))).
The conviction order at issue in Amin stated that the trial court found the defendant
“guilty of carrying a concealed weapon (Henrico County Ordinance 22-2 incorporating Virginia
Code Section 18.2-308), as charged in the summons.” Amin, 63 Va. App. at 207. On appeal to
this Court, the defendant argued that the purported conviction order was void ab initio because
Henrico County Ordinance No. 22-2 did not incorporate Virginia Code § 18.2-308. Id. at 206.
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As stated in Amin, at the time the defendant was charged with a violation of Henrico County
Ordinance No. 22-2, Ordinance No. 22-2 provided:
Pursuant to the authority in Code of Virginia, § 46.2-1313,7 all of
the provisions and requirements of the laws of the state contained
in Code of Virginia, title 46.2 (Code of Virginia, § 46.2-1-101 et
seq.) and Code of Virginia, title 18.2, ch. 7, art. 2 (Code of
Virginia, § 18.2-266 et seq.), and Code of Virginia, title 16.1,
ch. 11, art. 9 (Code of Virginia, § 16.1-278 et seq.) except those
provisions and requirements the violation of which constitutes a
felony, and except those provisions and requirements which by
their very nature can have no application to or within the county,
are hereby adopted and incorporated in this chapter by reference
and made applicable within the county.
Id. at 207-08 (citing Henrico County Ordinance No. 22-2). As this Court observed in Amin,
“Code § 18.2-308, which proscribes the act of carrying a concealed weapon, is located in Title
18.2, Chapter 7, Article 7 of the Code of Virginia. Ordinance 22-2 adopts and incorporates Title
18.2, Chapter 7, Article 2, but not Article 7.” Id. at 208. Therefore, Henrico County Ordinance
No. 22-2 did not incorporate Virginia Code § 18.2-308.
After this Court found in Amin that Henrico County Ordinance No. 22-2 did not
incorporate Virginia Code § 18.2-308, the Court noted, “[f]urthermore, Code § 46.2-1313, which
is the legislative authority allowing Ordinance 22-2 to incorporate by reference certain Virginia
7
This Court in Amin noted that Code § 46.2-1313 reads:
Ordinances enacted by local authorities pursuant to this chapter
may incorporate appropriate provisions of this title, of Article 9
(§ 16.1-278 et seq.) of Chapter 11 of Title 16.1, and of Article 2
(§ 18.2-266 et seq.) of Chapter 7 of Title 18.2 into such ordinances
by reference. Nothing contained in this title shall require the
readoption of ordinances heretofore validly adopted. Local
authorities may adopt ordinances incorporating by reference the
appropriate provisions of state law before the effective date of such
state law; provided that such local ordinances do not become
effective before the effective date of the state law. The provisions
of this section are declaratory of existing law.
Amin, 63 Va. App. at 207 n.2 (quoting Code § 46.2-1313).
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Code sections, does not authorize incorporation by reference of Title 18.2, Chapter 7, Article 7.”
Id. Thus, “Ordinance 22-2 legally could not have validly incorporated Code § 18.2-308.” Id.
This Court’s finding in Amin that Henrico County Ordinance No. 22-2 could not have
legally incorporated Code § 18.2-308 necessarily implied that there was no valid Henrico County
ordinance that incorporated Code § 18.2-308. Therefore, it was not possible that the charging
document merely misrecited the ordinance number of another valid Henrico County ordinance.
Accordingly, this Court held in Amin that “the trial court did not have the power to convict [the
defendant] of ‘Henrico County Ordinance 22-2 incorporating Virginia Code Section 18.2-308,’
an offense that did not exist.” Id. at 210.
One way to ascertain whether an alleged violation of a local ordinance charges a
non-offense is to determine whether the General Assembly has authorized the incorporation of
the state code provision that is purportedly incorporated in the local ordinance. If the General
Assembly did not authorize the incorporation of a particular state code provision, then such lack
of authorization is a sufficient basis for concluding that a conviction for violating the stated local
ordinance “incorporating” that state code provision is a non-offense. However, even if the
General Assembly had authorized local authorities to incorporate Code § 18.2-308 into local
ordinances, the fact that the Henrico County Code of Ordinances did not incorporate Code
§ 18.2-308 would render “carrying a concealed weapon (Henrico County Ordinance 22-2
incorporating Virginia Code Section 18.2-308)” a non-offense. See Mitchell v. Hanover Cnty., 1
Va. App. 486, 489 (1986) (“Having found that Virginia Code § 18.2-266 et seq. was not
incorporated into the Hanover County Code at the time of Mitchell’s arrest [for driving under the
influence of alcohol], we must conclude that County Code § 15-2, at that time, did not state an
offense.”). Therefore, the lack of legislative authorization to incorporate a particular state code
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provision is sufficient—but not necessary—for a violation of a local ordinance “incorporating”
that state code provision to be a non-offense.
B. The GDC Conviction Order
Ellis’s GDC conviction for violating Newport News City Ordinance “18.2-272 (26-8)
DRIVING SUSPENDED DUI RELATED” is a conviction for a non-offense because
(1) Newport News City Ordinance No. 26-8 does not incorporate Virginia Code § 18.2-272 and
(2) the description of the offense in the charging summons is not sufficient to charge an offense
under another valid Newport News City ordinance.
1. Ordinance No. 26-8 does not incorporate Virginia Code § 18.2-272.
Newport News City Ordinance No. 26-8, in relevant part, provides:
(a) Pursuant to the authority of Sections 46.2-1313 and 1-220
of the Code of Virginia, all of the provisions and requirements
of the laws of the state contained in Title 46.2 of the Code of
Virginia, as amended, except those provisions and
requirements the violation of which constitutes a felony, and
except those provisions and requirements which, by their very
nature, can have no application to or within the city, are hereby
adopted and incorporated in this chapter by reference and made
applicable within the city. . . .
Virginia Code § 18.2-272 is not adopted and incorporated in Newport News City Ordinance
No. 26-8, which adopts and incorporates only provisions of Title 46.2 of the Code of Virginia.
Id.
2. The description of the offense in the charging summons is not sufficient to charge an
offense under Newport News City Ordinance No. 26-72.
The Commonwealth argues that Ellis’s GDC conviction order is not void because the
City of Newport News not only legally could have incorporated Code § 18.2-272 into a city
ordinance pursuant to Code § 46.2-1313, Newport News did incorporate Code § 18.2-272 into
Newport News City Ordinance No. 26-72. Newport News City Ordinance No. 26-72 provides:
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Article 2 (Section 18.2-266 et seq.) of Chapter 7 of Title 18.2,
Code of Virginia, as amended and as they shall be amended in the
future, except those provisions and requirements the violation of
which constitute a felony, and except those provisions and
requirements which, by their very nature, can have no application
to or within the city, is hereby adopted and made a part of this
chapter as fully as though set out at length herein. It shall be
unlawful for any person within the city to violate or fail, neglect or
refuse to comply with any section of the Code of Virginia as
adopted in this section.
This ordinance adopts some of the provisions of Article 2 (§ 18.2-266 et seq.) of Chapter 7 of
Title 18.2, including the non-felony offenses stated in Code § 18.2-272.
The Commonwealth argues that this Court should read the GDC conviction order as if it
states a conviction for violating Newport News City Ordinance No. 26-72 rather than Ordinance
No. 26-8. Although the evidence on appeal is viewed in the light most favorable to the
Commonwealth, the party prevailing below, that favorable light does not make “26-8” appear as
“26-72,” and a violation of Ordinance No. 26-72 cannot be inferred from a violation of
Ordinance No. 26-8.
When Ellis was convicted in the GDC for violating Newport News City Ordinance
No. 26-8 purportedly incorporating Virginia Code § 18.2-272, Ellis was convicted of a
non-offense—unless the description of the offense set out in the summons stated the gravamen of
an offense under another valid Newport News City ordinance. See Williams v. City of
Petersburg, 216 Va. 297, 301-02 (1975). In Williams, the Virginia Supreme Court affirmed a
conviction even though the statutory reference on the warrant was incorrect because “the warrant
specifically charged the defendant with refusing to take a ‘breath test to determine probable
alcoholic contents of his blood after having been arrested for driving under the influence of
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alcoholic beverage(s) or other self-administered drugs.’ This is the gravamen of the crime set
out in Code § 18.1-55.1.”8 Williams, 216 Va. at 301-02.
In accordance with Williams, because Newport News City Ordinance No. 26-8 does not
incorporate Code § 18.2-272, this Court must examine the description of the offense stated in the
charging summons to determine whether the summons identifies the gravamen or essence of an
offense under another valid Newport News City ordinance. If the description of the offense
stated in the summons—apart from the referenced ordinance and code sections—is insufficient
to identify the gravamen of an offense, then the summons charging a violation of Newport News
City Ordinance No. 26-8 incorporating Code § 18.2-272 fails to charge an offense.
Here, the only description of the offense on the charging summons is “driving suspended
DUI related.” This description fails to identify the gravamen of an offense because the words
“driving suspended DUI related” are susceptible of more than one interpretation. The words
“driving suspended” are insufficient to inform Ellis what is allegedly suspended. Although
Virginia police officers and legal practitioners may readily interpret the words “driving
suspended” as elliptical for driving while one’s privilege or license to drive is suspended or
revoked, the phrase “driving suspended” could refer to other driving-related things that may be
suspended, e.g., vehicle registration or license plates. See Code § 46.2-609. The words “DUI
related” modifying “driving suspended” may also be understood in more than one way. The
majority adopts one possible interpretation by construing “DUI related” as a reference to a prior
DUI-related conviction. Alternatively, driving suspended “DUI related” could reasonably be
interpreted to mean driving suspended under the influence of alcohol. See, e.g., Code
8
Former Code § 18.1-55.1 is the predecessor to Code § 18.2-268.3 which provides that
“[i]t is unlawful for a person who is arrested for a violation of § 18.2-266 or 18.2-266.1 or
subsection B of § 18.2-272 or of a similar ordinance to unreasonably refuse to have samples of
his breath taken for chemical tests to determine the alcohol content of his blood.”
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§ 18.2-272(B). Because the words “driving suspended DUI related” are ambiguous and Newport
News City Ordinance No. 26-8 does not incorporate Virginia Code § 18.2-272, the summons
fails to clearly identify the gravamen of an offense. Therefore, the summons fails to charge an
offense. Thus, it is error to read the reference to Newport News City Ordinance No. 26-8 in the
GDC conviction order as a mere misrecital of Ordinance No. 26-72.
Because (i) Newport News City Ordinance No. 26-8 does not incorporate Virginia Code
§ 18.2-272 and (ii) the description of the offense in the charging summons is not sufficient to
charge an offense under another valid Newport News City ordinance, Ellis’s GDC conviction for
“18.2-272 (26-8) DRIVING SUSPENDED DUI RELATED” is a void ab initio conviction for a
non-offense.
III. THE CIRCUIT COURT CONVICTION ORDER IS VOID AB INITIO.
The circuit court had jurisdiction to convict and sentence Ellis only if an appeal was
taken from a conviction in the general district court, pursuant to Code § 16.1-132. Because the
GDC conviction order was void ab initio and no conviction at all, no appeal could be taken
therefrom. Thus, the circuit court did not acquire jurisdiction. Because the circuit court never
acquired jurisdiction over Ellis’s attempted appeal from the void ab initio GDC conviction order,
the circuit court’s conviction order is void ab initio.9 Therefore, I would vacate the circuit court
conviction order as void ab initio and I would remand the GDC conviction order with
9
A void ab initio order can be challenged at any time. Singh, 261 Va. at 51. Therefore,
Code § 19.2-227 does not bar reversal of Ellis’s conviction. See Epps v. Commonwealth, 66
Va. App. 393, 398 n.3 (2016) (“While Code § 19.2-227 provides that ‘[j]udgment in any criminal
case shall not be arrested or reversed upon any exception or objection made after a verdict to the
indictment or other accusation, unless it be so defective as to be in violation of the Constitution,’
this statute does not control because appellant’s argument does challenge the jurisdiction of the
court to conduct the trial.”), aff’d, 293 Va. 403 (2017).
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instructions to vacate the order as void ab initio and to dismiss the charging summons, which
fails to state an offense.
For these reasons, I respectfully dissent.
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