COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
Present: Judges Malveaux, Fulton and Friedman
UNPUBLISHED
Argued at Norfolk, Virginia
ERICK LAWRENCE PLUMMER, SOMETIMES KNOWN AS
UNIQUE RAJOR LAWRENCE, SOMETIMES KNOWN AS
UNIQUE DIOR LAWRENCE
MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY
v. Record No. 0039-22-1 JUDGE MARY BENNETT MALVEAUX
OCTOBER 18, 2022
COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF CHESAPEAKE
John W. Brown, Judge
Meghan Shapiro, Senior Assistant Public Defender (Virginia
Indigent Defense Commission, on briefs), for appellant.
Justin B. Hill, Assistant Attorney General (Jason S. Miyares,
Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.
Following a bench trial, the Circuit Court of the City of Chesapeake convicted appellant of
driving as a habitual offender, second or subsequent offense, in violation of Code § 46.2-357, and
sentenced him to eighteen months of incarceration.1 On appeal, appellant argues that his conviction
violates due process because he drove in good faith reliance upon the issuance of a driver’s license
by the Virginia Department of Motor Vehicles (“DMV”) following his declaration as a habitual
offender. In addition, appellant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain his conviction
and contends that the trial court abused its sentencing discretion. For the following reasons, we
affirm the trial court’s judgment.
*
Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication.
1
On July 1, 2021, the General Assembly abolished the statutory scheme criminalizing
driving as a habitual offender by repealing Code §§ 46.2-355.1 to 46.2-363. 2021 Va. Acts Spec.
Sess. I, ch. 463.
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.” Poole v. Commonwealth,
73 Va. App. 357, 360 (2021) (quoting Gerald v. Commonwealth, 295 Va. 469, 472 (2018)). In
doing so, we discard any of appellant’s conflicting evidence, and regard as true all credible
evidence favorable to the Commonwealth and all inferences that may reasonably be drawn from
that evidence. Gerald, 295 Va. at 473.
The Evidence at Trial
On July 24, 1998, the DMV declared appellant a habitual offender. Three days later, it
mailed a revocation order to appellant’s address notifying him of his habitual offender status and
explaining that his “privilege to operate motor vehicles in Virginia is revoked indefinitely
effective August 26, 1998.” During a traffic stop on September 22, 1998, appellant signed a
DSA10 form acknowledging his status as a habitual offender. On December 10, 2013, the
Circuit Court of the City of Norfolk convicted appellant of driving as a habitual offender.
On May 24, 2019, Chesapeake Police Officer Rega stopped appellant for driving with a
defective brake light. When Rega confronted appellant regarding his habitual offender status,
appellant said that “laws do not apply to him” because he had been “traveling,” not “driving,”
and was “a sovereign citizen.” Rega arrested appellant for driving as a habitual offender, second
or subsequent offense.
At trial, appellant testified that he never received notice of his habitual offender status or
license revocation.2 He denied remembering his first conviction for driving as a habitual
offender, claiming that he suffers from memory deficits due to “brain damage” and other mental
2
Appellant acknowledged that he was a felon with misdemeanor convictions for crimes
of moral turpitude.
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health disorders. His mother, Helen Plummer, testified that he “has a thinking problem” from a
congenital head injury.
At the conclusion of the evidence, counsel for appellant argued, “[I]f you look at the
elements, it appears that they have been met.” Nevertheless, counsel for appellant asserted that
appellant “doesn’t recall being convicted in 2013” and “thought that he was okay to drive”
because “[h]e’s got some brain issues.” The trial court found that appellant had been declared a
habitual offender and was subsequently “notified by law enforcement.” In addition, the court
found that appellant’s “explanation to the police officer implies that he was a habitual offender”
and had received notice that he “shouldn’t [have been] driving.” Accordingly, the trial court
convicted appellant.
Sentencing
At sentencing, the trial court considered a presentence report detailing appellant’s
criminal history and the applicable discretionary sentencing guidelines. Appellant’s criminal
record included convictions for eighty-one felonies and eighteen misdemeanors. The sentencing
guidelines recommended an active sentence between six months and a year and six months.
In mitigation, appellant’s mother testified that since childhood, appellant has suffered
from “mild retardation,” including “deficits in his language development” and “auditory memory
and processing.” Appellant also previously underwent psychiatric hospitalizations to evaluate
his competency to stand trial, receiving diagnoses for “schizophrenia, paranoid type, chronic
malingering, and mental retardation, mild.” Appellant’s mother testified that she would assist
him with “keeping his medical . . . and mental health appointments” upon his release from
incarceration.
Appellant also introduced a document from the DMV titled “Receipt for Surrendered
Driver’s License/ID Card” dated June 8, 2019, a few weeks after the offense. The document
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states that the “receipt acknowledges that the driver’s license/ID card of [appellant] has been
surrended [sic] to the Virginia Department of Motor Vehicles.” It also states that the driver’s
license/ID card surrendered was issued on August 3, 2018, that the “[r]eason for [s]urrender”
was “voluntary surrender,” and that the “[l]icense [i]ssue [t]ype” was “duplicate.” Appellant
testified that he surrendered his “Virginia license” to DMV and that the license was issued to him
in 2018 and was not expired or revoked at the time he surrendered it. Appellant further testified
that the license was a driver’s license, not an identification card. He also agreed with the court’s
description of the license as a “duplicate driver’s license.” The Commonwealth’s attorney noted
that appellant’s DMV transcript reflected that no license had been issued to him since he had
been declared a habitual offender in 1998.
In addition, appellant introduced an order reflecting that he had successfully petitioned
the Circuit Court of the City of Portsmouth to restore his driving privileges in October 2019.
The trial court found that appellant suffered from “some mental health issues” but also
observed that “it’s been 18 years you’ve been trying, quote/unquote.” Citing appellant’s lengthy
criminal history, the trial court found appellant to be “somebody who hasn’t really given trust to
other people who can offer [him] the help” he requires. Accordingly, the trial court sentenced
appellant to eighteen months of incarceration. This appeal followed.
ANALYSIS
A. Due Process Violation
Appellant argues that his conviction violates due process because he relied in good faith
on the DMV’s representation that he was permitted to drive. In Miller v. Commonwealth, 25
Va. App. 727, 737, 739 (1997), this Court recognized an affirmative due process defense
available to a defendant “for reasonably and in good faith doing that which he was told he could
do” by “a public officer or body charged by law with responsibility for defining permissible
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conduct with respect to the offense at issue.” Appellant asserts that he reasonably believed he
was lawfully driving at the time of the offense based on his receipt of a driver’s license from the
DMV following his declaration as a habitual offender. However, on appeal, we do not consider
appellant’s argument because it was waived under Rule 5A:18.
Rule 5A:18 provides that “[n]o ruling of the trial court . . . will be considered as a basis
for reversal unless an objection was stated with reasonable certainty at the time of the ruling,
except for good cause shown or to enable this Court to attain the ends of justice.” Thus, “this
Court ‘will not consider an argument on appeal [that] was not presented to the trial court.’”
Farnsworth v. Commonwealth, 43 Va. App. 490, 500 (2004) (alteration in original) (quoting
Ohree v. Commonwealth, 26 Va. App. 299, 308 (1998)), aff’d, 270 Va. 1 (2005). Moreover,
appellate courts “will not consider an argument that differs from the specific argument presented
to the trial court, even if it relates to the same general issue.” Edwards v. Commonwealth, 41
Va. App. 752, 761 (2003) (en banc) (citing Floyd v. Commonwealth, 219 Va. 575, 584 (1978)).
“Rule 5A:18 applies to bar even constitutional claims.” Farnsworth, 43 Va. App. at 500
(quoting Ohree, 26 Va. App. at 308). “Specificity and timeliness undergird the
contemporaneous-objection rule [and] animate its highly practical purpose.” Bethea v.
Commonwealth, 297 Va. 730, 743 (2019). “Not just any objection will 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.” Id. (quoting Dickerson v. Commonwealth, 58 Va. App. 351, 356
(2011)).
Appellant’s sole argument at trial was that he had “thought that he was okay to drive”
because he did not “recall being convicted [for driving as a habitual offender] in 2013” due to
“some brain issues.” Appellant never asserted any specific constitutional due process argument
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based on his receipt of a driver’s license from the DMV.3 Accordingly, appellant failed to
preserve his due process argument for appellate review. See Swanson v. Commonwealth, 56
Va. App. 147, 157 n.7 (2010) (declining to consider defendant’s due process argument under
Miller for the first time on appeal).
Nevertheless, appellant asks us to consider his arguments for the first time on appeal “to
attain the ends of justice” under Rule 5A:18. “The ‘ends of justice’ exception to Rule 5A:18 is
‘narrow and is to be used sparingly.’” Pearce v. Commonwealth, 53 Va. App. 113, 123 (2008)
(quoting Bazemore v. Commonwealth, 42 Va. App. 203, 219 (2004) (en banc)). Whether to
apply the ends-of-justice exception involves two questions: “(1) whether there is error as
contended by the appellant; and (2) whether the failure to apply the ends of justice provision
would result in a grave injustice.” Commonwealth v. Bass, 292 Va. 19, 27 (2016) (quoting
Gheorghiu v. Commonwealth, 280 Va. 678, 689 (2010)). “The burden of establishing a manifest
injustice is a heavy one, and it rests with the appellant.” Holt v. Commonwealth, 66 Va. App.
199, 210 (2016) (en banc) (quoting Brittle v. Commonwealth, 54 Va. App. 505, 514 (2009)). “In
order to avail oneself of the exception, a defendant must affirmatively show that a miscarriage of
justice has occurred, not that a miscarriage might have occurred.” Melick v. Commonwealth, 69
Va. App. 122, 146 (2018) (quoting Redman v. Commonwealth, 25 Va. App. 215, 221 (1997)).
Specifically related to appellant’s due process claim, we have held that “[t]he denial of
due process involves the denial of a fundamental constitutional right and falls within the ambit of
Rule 5A:18 to attain the ends of justice.” Allen v. Commonwealth, 36 Va. App. 334, 338-39
(2001). We will consider a due process challenge that was not raised in the trial court if “under
3
Nor did any evidence at trial support such an argument, as it was not until sentencing
that appellant introduced the DMV receipt purporting to show that the DMV issued him a license
following his declaration as a habitual offender.
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the facts and circumstances of [the] case, a manifest injustice has occurred.” Duck v.
Commonwealth, 8 Va. App. 567, 571 (1989).
We conclude that appellant has failed to show that a manifest injustice has occurred;
therefore, we decline to apply the ends-of-justice exception. Appellant argues that the trial court
erred in convicting him because he acted in reasonable, good-faith reliance on the DMV’s
issuance of a driver’s license to him. However, the document introduced at sentencing does not
affirmatively establish that appellant was issued a valid driver’s license following his
adjudication as a habitual offender. The document only states that it is a “receipt” that
“acknowledges” that the “driver’s license / ID card of [appellant] has been surrended [sic] to the
Virginia Department of Motor Vehicles.” There is no indication from this document whether the
item surrendered by appellant was in fact a valid Virginia driver’s license. While appellant
testified that he had surrendered a valid Virginia driver’s license that had been issued to him in
2018, appellant’s testimony itself does not affirmatively establish that the item he surrendered
was a valid Virginia license. Further, he confirmed at trial that the license was a duplicate, and
his DMV transcript reflected that no license had been issued to appellant since he was declared a
habitual offender in 1998.
Here, appellant failed to introduce evidence establishing a due process defense under
Miller. Accordingly, the ends-of-justice exception does not apply, and Rule 5A:18 bars
consideration of appellant’s due process argument.
B. Sufficiency of the Evidence
Appellant also contends that the evidence failed to prove that he knew that “his
revocation was ‘in effect’ at the time” of the incident.
“In this Court’s review of the sufficiency of the evidence to support a conviction, we
affirm the decision unless the trial court was plainly wrong or the conviction lacks evidence to
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support it.” Peters v. Commonwealth, 66 Va. App. 743, 746 (2016). “The dispositive question
that we must resolve ‘is whether “any rational trier of fact could have found the essential
elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.”’” Id. (quoting Seaborn v. Commonwealth, 54
Va. App. 408, 413-14 (2009)). When considering a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence
supporting a conviction, this Court views the facts “in the light most favorable to the
Commonwealth, the prevailing party at trial.” Gerald, 295 Va. at 472 (quoting Scott v.
Commonwealth, 292 Va. 380, 381 (2016)).
Assuming without deciding that appellant preserved this assignment of error, we reject
appellant’s argument because his knowledge that his revocation was in effect at the time he was
driving was not an element that the Commonwealth needed to establish to sustain a conviction
under Code § 46.2-357. At the time of the indictment, Code § 46.2-3574 provided, in relevant
part, that “[i]t shall be unlawful for any person determined or adjudicated an habitual offender to
drive any motor vehicle . . . on the highways of the Commonwealth while the revocation of the
person’s driving privilege remains in effect.”
In order to obtain a conviction against a defendant charged
with a violation of Code § 46.2-357, the Commonwealth must
prove, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defendant drove a
motor vehicle on a public highway while his driving privilege was
revoked; that the defendant had been determined or adjudicated an
habitual offender; and that the defendant received actual notice of
his status as an habitual offender.
Bishop v. Commonwealth, 275 Va. 9, 13 (2008). However, a conviction under Code § 46.2-357
does not require proof of a defendant’s actual knowledge of his status as a habitual offender or
the validity of his license at the time of the offense; rather, it requires proof only that the
defendant drove after receiving notice of his declaration as a habitual offender. See Claytor v.
4
The General Assembly repealed Code § 46.2-357 effective July 1, 2021. 2021 Va. Acts
Spec. Sess. I, ch. 463.
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Commonwealth, 62 Va. App. 644, 653 (2013) (holding that prior case law concerning Code
§ 46.2-357 “does not require that a driver receive notice of his current status, but rather that he
receive notice that he has been declared an habitual offender”).5
Here, the Commonwealth established that appellant was adjudicated to be a habitual
offender, received notice of that adjudication, and was driving a vehicle in the Commonwealth.
In July 1998, the DMV declared appellant a habitual offender. During a traffic stop in
September 1998, appellant signed a DSA10 form acknowledging his status as a habitual
offender. Because the evidence in the record demonstrated that appellant received notice of his
habitual offender adjudication, and because his “subjective knowledge or belief regarding his
status [as a habitual offender] [was] irrelevant” for purposes of Code § 46.2-357, we conclude
that the evidence was sufficient to sustain appellant’s conviction under that code section.
Claytor, 62 Va. App. at 654.
C. Sentencing
Finally, appellant argues that the trial court abused its sentencing discretion by failing to
properly weigh “mitigating factors.” Appellant asserts that the court “gave too much weight” to
his previous convictions for driving on a revoked license and inadequate consideration to his
indigency, mental health conditions, mistaken belief that his license was valid, and successful
restoration of his driving privileges after years of eligibility. We disagree.
5
Appellant contends that Claytor should be “reversed, overturned, or modified.” Under
the doctrine of interpanel accord, however, “a decision of a panel of the Court of Appeals
becomes a predicate for application of the doctrine of stare decisis until overruled by a decision
of the Court of Appeals sitting en banc or by a decision of [the] [Supreme] Court.” Brown v.
Commonwealth, 68 Va. App. 44, 51 n.1 (2017) (second alteration in original) (quoting Johnson
v. Commonwealth, 252 Va. 425, 430 (1996)). “This principle applies not merely to the literal
holding of the case, but also to its ratio decidendi—the essential rationale in the case that
determines the judgment.” Hutton v. Commonwealth, 66 Va. App. 714, 724 n.5 (2016) (quoting
Clinchfield Coal Co. v. Reed, 40 Va. App. 69, 73-74 (2003)). Thus, we decline appellant’s
invitation to discard or modify established precedent.
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“We review the trial court’s sentence for abuse of discretion.” Scott v. Commonwealth,
58 Va. App. 35, 46 (2011). It is well established that “when a statute prescribes a maximum
imprisonment penalty and the sentence does not exceed that maximum, the sentence will not be
overturned as being an abuse of discretion.” Minh Duy Du v. Commonwealth, 292 Va. 555, 564
(2016) (quoting Alston v. Commonwealth, 274 Va. 759, 771-72 (2007)). “[O]nce it is
determined that a sentence is within the limitations set forth in the statute under which it is
imposed, appellate review is at an end.” Thomason v. Commonwealth, 69 Va. App. 89, 99
(2018) (quoting Minh Duy Du, 292 Va. at 565). Here, appellant’s sentence was within the range
set by the legislature. See Code § 46.2-357(B)(2) (providing that driving as a habitual offender,
second or subsequent offense, is a felony punishable by a mandatory minimum sentence of
twelve months in jail or one year in prison and a maximum of five years).
Moreover, it was within the trial court’s purview to weigh the mitigating evidence
appellant presented. Keselica v. Commonwealth, 34 Va. App. 31, 36 (2000). “Criminal
sentencing decisions are among the most difficult judgment calls trial judges face.” Minh Duy
Du, 292 Va. at 563. “Because this task is so difficult, it must rest heavily on judges closest to the
facts of the case—those hearing and seeing the witnesses, taking into account their verbal and
nonverbal communication, and placing all of it in the context of the entire case.” Id. Here, the
record demonstrates that the trial court reviewed and considered the mitigating evidence
appellant cites on appeal, including appellant’s significant history of mental illness and cognitive
impairment. Balanced against that evidence, however, was appellant’s extensive criminal
record. After considering all the circumstances, the trial court imposed the sentence that it
deemed appropriate. That sentence “does not exceed [the statutory] maximum,” and thus we
conclude that sentence imposed did not constitute an abuse of discretion by the trial court. Id. at
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564; see also Thomason, 69 Va. App. at 99 (“Appellant’s sentence was within the statutory
range, and our task is complete.”).
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm appellant’s conviction and sentence.
Affirmed.
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