Court Opinion

ID: 9897722
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-11-14 19:24:15.127143+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:15:19.400896
License: Public Domain

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

              Present: Chief Judge Decker, Judges Athey and White
UNPUBLISHED

              Argued at Richmond, Virginia

              MARK MARSH, SOMETIMES KNOWN AS
               MARK V. MARSH
                                                                            MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY
              v.     Record No. 0552-22-2                                  JUDGE CLIFFORD L. ATHEY, JR.
                                                                                OCTOBER 17, 2023
              COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

                           FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF CHARLOTTESVILLE
                                             Richard E. Moore, Judge

                              Elliott M. Harding (Harding Counsel, PLLC, on brief), for appellant.

                              Rachel A. Glines, Assistant Attorney General (Jason S. Miyares,
                              Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

                     Mark V. Marsh (“Marsh”) appeals from the final order of the Circuit Court of the City of

              Charlottesville (“trial court”) convicting him of felony carjacking under Code § 18.2-58.1 and

              sentencing him to 12 years and 9 months of active incarceration. On appeal, Marsh contends that

              the trial court erred by: (1) “materially amending the indictment and conviction order previously

              entered pursuant to a plea agreement in violation of Code § 19.2-231[,]” and (2) “granting the

              Commonwealth’s motion to amend the pre-sentence report and sentencing guidelines and entering a

              sentence pursuant to such amended guidelines.” Since we find that Marsh waived these claims

              under the approbation and reprobation doctrine, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

                     *
                         This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A).
                                          I. BACKGROUND

       On October 19, 2020, Marsh was indicted for multiple offenses,1 including carjacking

“by means of violence to the person, assault, putting one in fear of serious bodily harm, threats,

or by presenting a firearm or other deadly weapon.” The Virginia Crime Code2 (“VCC”)

indicated on the indictment was ROB-1217-F9. Marsh subsequently pled guilty to the carjacking

indictment pursuant to the terms of a written plea agreement. The plea agreement listed the

offense that Marsh was pleading guilty to as “CR20-123-01 Carjacking w/firearm.” The plea

agreement also “capped” Marsh’s period of active incarceration “at the midpoint of any

applicable Sentencing Guidelines.”

       On August 24, 2021, during Marsh’s plea colloquy, the trial court advised Marsh, in part,

that he was charged in the indictment with carjacking “by presenting a firearm.” Following the

colloquy, Marsh pled guilty as charged in the indictment; he also pled guilty to a charge of

assault and battery. Marsh also stipulated to violating his probation during the plea colloquy and

confirmed his understanding that his sentencing guidelines were discretionary in nature. Marsh

confirmed that under the plea agreement, the sentence would be within the trial court’s

discretion, but that the plea agreement limited his active incarceration to the midpoint of

“whatever the official sentencing guidelines are.” He was also advised that his sentence for the

       1
         Marsh was indicted for seven charges arising from the same event along with a
probation violation. He pleaded guilty under his plea agreement to a misdemeanor assault and
battery and the felony carjacking charges and stipulated to his probation violation. In exchange,
charges for robbery, violent felon in possession of a firearm, use of firearm during a carjacking,
assault and battery, and brandishing a firearm were nolle prosequied by motion of the
Commonwealth.
       2
         The Virginia crime codes are an offense identification system based on the Code of
Virginia and developed by the Virginia Criminal Sentencing Commission. See Code
§§ 17.1-800 to -806. VCC references are required inclusions in “any criminal . . . indictment”
that “involves a jailable offense,” but “shall only be used to facilitate administration and
research[] and shall not have any legal standing as they relate to a particular offense or offenses.”
Code § 19.2-390.01.
                                                 -2-
probation violation would run concurrent with the sentences imposed for the carjacking and

assault and battery convictions. Following the plea colloquy and after confirming that Marsh

was “pleading guilty because [he] was guilty,” the trial court accepted Marsh’s guilty pleas as

free and voluntary. Marsh acknowledged that he had read and signed the plea agreement and

requested that the trial court enter the written plea agreement.

       Next, the Commonwealth proffered the relevant facts related to the carjacking

indictment. The Commonwealth first proffered that on the morning of January 10, 2020,

Charlottesville police responded to 932 Rives Street for a report of “disorder with a weapon.”

Based on an interview with Tiera Churchman (“Churchman”), the Commonwealth further

proffered that Marsh had assaulted Churchman as she was walking to her vehicle parked on

Rives Street. Churchman knew Marsh as she had “dated him off and on” for the last few years.

Bryan Brubaker (“Brubaker”) also advised law enforcement that he initially drove by the

altercation but stopped when a neighbor, Sarah Njanjom (“Njanjom”), asked Brubaker to assist

Churchman. Brubaker backed up, exited his vehicle, demanded that Marsh get off Churchman,

and called 911. As Brubaker spoke to the 911 operator, Marsh pointed a “chrome revolver” at

him, and Marsh then took Brubaker’s cell phone and vehicle, driving from the scene. The 911

call recorded Brubaker pleading for his life as Marsh demanded that Brubaker get out of

Brubaker’s car. Njanjom also called 911 as she watched from the front window of her house.

She reported that a man pulled a gun on her neighbor and took his vehicle. Although Churchman

recanted her statement to the police the following day, Brubaker and Njanjom maintained their

statements. Upon his arrest several months later, Marsh confessed to taking Brubaker’s phone

and vehicle. The Commonwealth noted during its proffer that “the most significant charge is the

carjacking using a firearm.”

                                                -3-
       When the trial court asked if there were any corrections or addendums to the proffer,

Marsh acknowledged that the proffered facts “would be the essence of the Commonwealth’s

evidence.” Marsh’s only “very minor” correction was that he was “not aware of any

record[ing]” of Brubaker’s pleading for his life, but agreed that would only be relevant for

sentencing, not for a finding of guilt to the charge of carjacking. He did not dispute the presence

or use of the firearm to commit the carjacking. The trial court then found Marsh guilty of

“carjacking with a firearm,” with no objection from Marsh.

       At the sentencing hearing on December 7, 2021, the Commonwealth moved to correct the

VCC on the indictment to reflect the proper VCC for carjacking with the use of a firearm.3

Marsh objected on the grounds that such an amendment after a finding of guilt would violate

Code § 19.2-231. The trial court granted the Commonwealth’s motion over Marsh’s objection,

stating that “the charging language is not changing, the code section is not changing, the plea

agreement is not changing, and the facts summary that was given is the same.” Marsh never

made a motion to withdraw his guilty plea. The Commonwealth then submitted amended

sentencing guidelines that altered the range midpoint from 9 years and 7 months to 18 years and

7 months. The trial court offered to continue the hearing to allow Marsh time to prepare with the

changed guidelines, but Marsh requested to move forward that same day. The trial court heard

testimony and arguments regarding sentencing, but then continued the hearing as it needed

additional time to consider all the circumstances before delivering a sentence.

       Before the next hearing, Marsh filed a “Brief in Opposition to the Commonwealth’s

Motion to Amend the Pre-Sentence Guidelines” that again objected to the change of the VCC in

the indictment and sentencing guidelines for the same reasons cited in the previous hearing.

       3
      The proper VCC for the offense of carjacking specifically with the use of a firearm was
ROB-1224-F9, not ROB-1217-F9 as stated in the indictment.
                                           -4-
During the next sentencing hearing on February 15, 2022, the trial court agreed to reopen the

matter. Marsh argued that he “never pleaded or admitted to the presence of a firearm” and that

the plea agreement he signed was specifically for a type of carjacking that matched the VCC of

the original indictment. Marsh alleged he “explicitly den[ied] the presence of a firearm at all

times” and that the trial court needed to follow the VCC that “Marsh pleaded guilty to.” The

trial court noted that Marsh appeared to assert there was no “meeting of the minds” about the

plea agreement, and if so, then “[Marsh] can get out of [the plea agreement], he can plead not

guilty, and we can go to trial on all seven charges.” But Marsh refused to move to withdraw his

guilty pleas. The trial court then overruled Marsh’s objection to the change in the VCC and

entered a final order sentencing Marsh to 12 years and 9 months of active incarceration on the

carjacking with a firearm offense. This appeal followed.

                                           II. ANALYSIS

       On appeal, Marsh alleges the trial court erred by: (1) granting the Commonwealth’s

motion to amend the VCC in the indictment in violation of his plea agreement, and (2) granting

the Commonwealth’s motion to amend the sentencing guidelines under that new VCC. Marsh

contends that altering the VCC constitutes a material amendment to the indictment barred by

Code § 19.2-231, in part, because Marsh never agreed to plead guilty to carjacking using a

firearm. However, “we are nonetheless barred by the approbate and reprobate doctrine from

reaching the merits” of Marsh’s claims, as his arguments are inconsistent with his plea, made

voluntarily and in accordance with the written agreement. Nelson v. Commonwealth, 71

Va. App. 397, 403 (2020).

       A “party may not approbate and reprobate by taking successive positions in the course of

litigation that are either inconsistent with each other or mutually contradictory.” Id. (quoting

Rowe v. Commonwealth, 277 Va. 495, 502 (2009)). “The ‘doctrine against approbation and

                                                -5-
reprobation’ applies both to assertions of fact and law, and precludes litigants from ‘playing fast

and loose’ with the courts, or ‘blowing hot and cold’ depending on their perceived self-interests.”

Id. at 403-04 (quoting Babcock & Wilcox v. Areva, 292 Va. 165, 204-05 (2016)).

       Here, Marsh alleges that he was found guilty and sentenced to a crime to which he

neither entered a plea nor to which he agreed to plead guilty. However, the language in the

indictment clearly contemplated carjacking while using a firearm. Also, his own written plea

agreement listed the offense as “Carjacking w/firearm.” In addition, the trial court confirmed,

during the colloquy, that Marsh pleaded guilty voluntarily pursuant to the terms of the plea

agreement. The facts proffered by the Commonwealth specified the use of a firearm and

emphasized the significance of the use of that firearm in the commission of the crime.

Accordingly, the trial court found Marsh guilty of carjacking with the use of a firearm. Marsh

even agreed on the record that the proffered facts were the Commonwealth’s evidence, his only

question was whether a witness (Brubaker) made certain recorded statements. Marsh also never

challenged or corrected the Commonwealth’s proffer or the trial court’s finding that a firearm

was used.

       Marsh now argues that correcting the VCC in the indictment was “in violation of the

Code, due process, and contractual principles governing plea agreements.” However, the trial

court asked Marsh if he claimed there was no “meeting of the minds” regarding his plea

agreement, and if Marsh had answered in the affirmative, the trial court was willing to entertain a

motion to withdraw his guilty plea. When requested before sentencing, a motion to withdraw a

guilty plea “should be granted if the guilty plea was ‘made involuntarily’ or ‘entered inadvisedly,

if any reasonable ground is offered for going to the jury.’” Brown v. Commonwealth, 297 Va.

295, 299 (2019) (quoting Parris v. Commonwealth, 189 Va. 321, 325 (1949)). Instead, Marsh

                                                -6-
affirmed there was a “meeting of the minds” regarding the plea agreement and declined the offer

to move to withdraw his plea to the indictment with the now corrected VCC.

       Marsh cannot maintain all the benefits accruing from his guilty plea while simultaneously

challenging his sentence under that plea. His decision to plead guilty to “Carjacking w/firearm”

and his failure to contest the Commonwealth’s proffer of facts about the use of the firearm

prevents him from now contending on appeal that he did not plead guilty to carjacking with the

use of a firearm. See Rowe, 277 Va. at 502-03 (holding that defense counsel’s agreement about a

lesser-included offense at trial precluded his ability to argue that issue on appeal). If there was

some mistake about the facts that formed the basis for accepting his plea, Marsh’s remedy was to

withdraw his guilty plea and his refusal to do so is inconsistent with his arguments.

                                         III. CONCLUSION

       For the foregoing reasons, the trial court is affirmed.

                                                                                            Affirmed.

                                                -7-