                                               COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA


              Present: Judges Russell, Malveaux and Senior Judge Clements
UNPUBLISHED


              Argued by teleconference


              ANTONIO JERMAINE SPENCER
                                                                            MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY
              v.       Record No. 1044-19-2                              JUDGE MARY BENNETT MALVEAUX
                                                                                  JULY 21, 2020
              COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA


                                  FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF RICHMOND
                                                 Joi Jeter Taylor, Judge1

                                 Lauren Whitley, Deputy Public Defender, for appellant.

                                 Victoria Johnson, Assistant Attorney General (Mark R. Herring,
                                 Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.


                       Antonio Jermaine Spencer (“appellant”) was convicted of carrying a concealed weapon,

              second offense, in violation of Code § 18.2-308, and possession of a firearm by a convicted

              felon, in violation of Code § 18.2-308.2.2 He argues the trial court erred in denying his motion to

              suppress because he was unconstitutionally seized and did not consent to the search that

              ultimately led to the discovery of the firearm. For the following reasons, we affirm the trial

              court.




                       *
                           Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication.
                       1
                       Judge Taylor presided at the June 7, 2019 sentencing hearing from which appellant
              noted his appeal. She also presided at the hearing on appellant’s pretrial motion to suppress.
              The Honorable Walter W. Stout, III, presided at appellant’s jury trial.
                       2
                      Appellant was also convicted of misdemeanor possession of marijuana, in violation of
              Code § 18.2-250.1. That conviction was not appealed.
                                        I. BACKGROUND

       “On appeal of the denial of a motion to suppress evidence, settled principles require the

appellate court to consider the evidence introduced at the suppression hearing and at trial.”

Salahuddin v. Commonwealth, 67 Va. App. 190, 202 (2017). Further, “[u]nder familiar

principles of appellate review, we will state ‘[that] evidence in the light most favorable to the

Commonwealth, the prevailing party [below].’” Chavez v. Commonwealth, 69 Va. App. 149,

153 (2018) (quoting Sidney v. Commonwealth, 280 Va. 517, 520 (2010)).

       So viewed, the evidence demonstrates that on April 10, 2017, appellant visited a friend’s

home in Richmond’s Mosby Court community. At around 10:00–10:30 p.m., appellant left the

home with another friend and began walking back to his wife’s car. As the two men turned a

corner, appellant “was blinded by a flashlight” and “couldn’t see anything.”

       The flashlight was lowered, and appellant could see two police officers standing directly

in front of him. Officers Baer and Kelly of the Richmond Police Department were conducting a

uniformed foot patrol. They stated that they were checking for trespassers in the area, and Baer

asked the men if they lived in Mosby Court. Appellant and his companion replied that they did

not.

       Officer Baer then asked appellant and his companion for identification, and appellant

handed Baer a Virginia I.D. card. While Officer Kelly recorded information from appellant’s

I.D., Baer engaged appellant in “general conversation, just chitchat.” Baer testified that his tone

of voice in speaking with appellant was “casual” and that he neither told appellant that he was

free to walk away nor that appellant could not continue walking.

       According to appellant, he had “already gotten [his] I.D. back” and was “waiting on” the

officers to tell him “that [he] could go” when Baer began to ask him about a pill bottle he could

see in an open cargo pocket of appellant’s pants. Baer testified that he asked appellant “if [he]

                                                -2-
had a prescription for the pill bottle” and that appellant said no. Baer then asked appellant if he

could see the bottle, and appellant removed it from his pocket and handed it to Baer. The bottle

was blue, “kind of translucent,” and lacked a label. Baer opened the bottle and discovered

“[m]ultiple bags of a green leaf substance” which he suspected was marijuana. The officer then

conducted a pat-down search of appellant and found a firearm.

       Appellant filed a pretrial motion to suppress the evidence. He argued that he had been

unlawfully seized by officers who lacked both probable cause and a reasonable articulable

suspicion of criminal wrongdoing and that Baer’s warrantless seizure and search of the pill bottle

had thus been unlawful. Consequently, appellant contended, the subsequent search of his person

“flow[ed] from the illegal seizure” and “the discovered items are therefore inadmissible as ‘fruit

of the poisonous tree.’”

       Following a hearing, the trial court granted appellant’s motion. The court found that

appellant had been seized when he complied with the request for identification, the pill bottle had

been unlawfully seized and searched, and “the discovery of the gun during the pat down of

[appellant’s] person was the direct result of the unlawful seizure and search of the pill bottle.”

       The Commonwealth appealed the trial court’s ruling on the motion to suppress.3 A panel

of this Court unanimously held that appellant was not seized for Fourth Amendment purposes “at

any point prior to the discovery of the marijuana”; rather, appellant’s interaction with the officers

up to that point had been consensual. Commonwealth v. Spencer, No. 1821-17-2, at *4

(Va. Ct. App. May 1, 2018). A majority of the panel also held that when appellant “voluntarily

gave the pill bottle to [Officer] Baer,” a “typical reasonable person would [have] conclude[d]

that consent had been given” for the officer to open the bottle. Id. at *7, *10. Thus, because

appellant’s “actions viewed in context evidenced consent for Baer to open the pill bottle, . . .


       3
           See Code § 19.2-398(A)(2) (permitting such pretrial appeals in felony cases).
                                               -3-
Baer’s doing so did not offend the Fourth Amendment.” Id. at *11. Although there was “no

question that [appellant] was seized for Fourth Amendment purposes after the discovery of the

marijuana . . . , at that point, the officers had probable cause to arrest him as a result of the

discovery of the [drug].” Id. at *7 n.7. The Court reversed the trial court’s ruling on the motion

to suppress and remanded the matter for further proceedings. Id. at *12.

        At trial upon remand, the court heard evidence from Officers Baer and Kelly about their

encounter with appellant and the circumstances of the discovery of the pill bottle, marijuana, and

firearm. When the Commonwealth sought the pill bottle’s admission into evidence, counsel for

appellant objected on grounds of relevance. Specifically, appellant’s counsel stated that “[t]he

pill bottle is not relevant to either of the gun charges that are being tried here today. It [was]

filled with marijuana, but it has nothing to do with the firearm that’s at issue in the case.” The

Commonwealth responded that the bottle was “relevant. This is the reason the pat-down

occurred.” The trial court overruled appellant’s objection “for that reason.”

        Counsel for appellant also objected to the firearm’s admission into evidence. When it

was marked for identification by the trial court, appellant’s counsel stated, “I will have an

objection to the gun, just based on my previous motion to suppress, just to preserve that issue for

appeal. . . . That’s my objection to the gun once chain of custody is established.” The trial court

replied, “I’ll just put that on the record when it comes in so you maintain [the objection] if the

[chain of] custody is established.” When the Commonwealth moved to admit the firearm,

counsel for appellant stated, “we just renew our previous objection.” The trial court replied, “All

right. That is noted and placed in the record.” The trial court did not rule on appellant’s

objection.




                                                  -4-
        The jury convicted appellant of carrying a concealed weapon, second offense, in violation

of Code § 18.2-308, and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, in violation of Code

§ 18.2-308.2. This appeal followed.

                                            II. ANALYSIS

        Appellant argues he had been unconstitutionally seized for Fourth Amendment purposes

at the time that Officer Baer came into possession of the pill bottle. Thus, appellant contends,

any alleged consent by him to the search of the pill bottle was invalid. Appellant also argues that

he did not consent to the search of the pill bottle, because an objectively reasonable person

would not have understood Officer Baer’s request to see the bottle as a request to search it;

instead, such a person would have understood the request to indicate “simply [that the officer]

wanted to observe the outside of the bottle.” Further, appellant contends, “[n]o . . . actions or

circumstances surrounding the interaction establish that [appellant] consented to a search of the

pill bottle.”

        It is well established that “when a party fails to obtain a ruling on a matter presented to a

trial court, there is ‘no ruling [for this Court] to review on appeal.’” Bethea v. Commonwealth,

68 Va. App. 487, 498 (2018) (alteration in original) (quoting Schwartz v. Commonwealth, 41

Va. App. 61, 71 (2003)). See also Williams v. Commonwealth, 57 Va. App. 341, 347 (2010)

(“Because appellant did not obtain a ruling from the trial court . . . , ‘there is no ruling for [this

Court] to review’ on appeal, and his argument is waived under Rule 5A:18.” (quoting Fisher v.

Commonwealth, 16 Va. App. 447, 454 (1993))).

        We hold that appellant failed to preserve his arguments for appellate review because at

trial, he did not obtain any ruling from the court on a Fourth Amendment objection. In his

pretrial motion to suppress, appellant did object to the admissibility of both the pill bottle and the

firearm on Fourth Amendment grounds. The trial court granted appellant’s motion and, upon

                                                  -5-
appeal by the Commonwealth, this Court reversed the trial court’s exclusion of the evidence. At

trial upon remand, evidence about appellant’s encounter with the police and the discovery of the

contraband was presented anew to the trial court. Appellant then “renew[ed] [his] previous

objection” to the firearm’s admission into evidence “based on [his] previous motion to suppress”

on Fourth Amendment grounds.4 However, as noted above, the trial court did not rule on

appellant’s renewed Fourth Amendment objection at trial, stating only that it would “put that on

the record” and that the renewed objection was “noted and placed in the record.” This failure to

obtain a ruling on his Fourth Amendment objection to the evidence at trial leaves us with “no

ruling . . . to review on appeal.”5 Bethea, 68 Va. App. at 498 (quoting Schwartz, 41 Va. App. at

71).

       In reaching our conclusion that appellant’s failure to obtain a ruling on his Fourth

Amendment objection at trial waived any Fourth Amendment arguments on appeal, we find


       4
         We note that although appellant renewed his objection to the firearm’s admission into
evidence on Fourth Amendment grounds, he made no such objection with respect to the pill
bottle. When the Commonwealth sought the bottle’s admission into evidence, appellant raised
only a relevance objection and was silent with respect to his previous Fourth Amendment
objection to the bottle. By not raising at trial an objection based upon the allegedly unlawful
seizure and search of the pill bottle, appellant waived any Fourth Amendment objection to
Officer Baer’s acquisition of the bottle and discovery of the marijuana within. See McDuffie v.
Commonwealth, 49 Va. App. 170, 177 (2006) (noting that “[i]n order to preserve an issue for
appeal, ‘an objection must be timely made and the grounds stated with specificity’” (quoting
Marlowe v. Commonwealth, 2 Va. App. 619, 621 (1986))); Arrington v. Commonwealth, 53
Va. App. 635, 641-42 (2009) (holding that the appellant had waived his argument on appeal that
evidence was the product of an illegal search and seizure when he did not object to its admission
on that basis at trial); Rule 5A:18. In turn, appellant’s waiver of any argument that the discovery
of the marijuana offended the Fourth Amendment necessarily waived any argument that the
firearm found incident to his arrest for drug possession offended the Fourth Amendment.
       5
         In his reply brief, appellant contends that his Fourth Amendment argument was
preserved for appeal because the trial court “ma[d]e a ruling denying [his] motion to suppress.”
This is so, appellant argues, because this Court’s order in Commonwealth v. Spencer “was
adopted by the trial court, therefore denying [appellant’s] motion to suppress.” Appellant does
not indicate where in the record the trial court “adopted” this Court’s order in Spencer and thus
“mad[e] a ruling” denying his motion to suppress. We note that the trial court made no reference
to this Court’s order, either from the bench at trial, in its trial order, or in its sentencing order.
                                                 -6-
instructive our ruling in Satchell v. Commonwealth, 20 Va. App. 641 (1995) (en banc). In

Satchell, as in the instant case, the Commonwealth successfully appealed the trial court’s ruling

granting the defendant’s motion to suppress evidence allegedly obtained in violation of the

Fourth Amendment. Id. at 644-45. Also similar to this case, at trial upon remand in Satchell, the

circumstances of the discovery of the contraband and its admissibility were again at issue and the

court heard further evidence on those matters. Id. at 645-46. Although after hearing the

evidence, the trial court in Satchell “[a]dher[ed] to its previous factual findings and reaffirm[ed]

its earlier conclusion,” it nonetheless acknowledged that it was “fully aware of [its] obligation to

follow the holdings of the Court [of Appeals].” Id. at 646 (final alteration in original). The court

then stated that “for that reason I deny [the objection to the evidence].’” Id. (alteration in

original). Thus, it is clear from Satchell that notwithstanding a reversal by this Court of a trial

court’s suppression of evidence, at trial on remand, a defendant must again raise and obtain a

ruling on his Fourth Amendment objection in order to preserve his Fourth Amendment

arguments for further appellate review.6

                                        III. CONCLUSION

       For the foregoing reasons, we hold that appellant failed to preserve his Fourth

Amendment arguments for appellate review. Accordingly, we affirm.

                                                                                            Affirmed.




       6
          We note that as a logical matter, in the absence of a ruling at trial on appellant’s motion
to suppress on Fourth Amendment grounds, the only ruling left for our review with respect to
that issue would be our own previous ruling in Commonwealth v. Spencer.
                                                 -7-
Russell, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part.

       Although I agree with my colleagues that appellant’s convictions should be affirmed, I

disagree with their rationale. Specifically, I respectfully dissent from the majority’s holding that

appellant waived his motion to suppress/Fourth Amendment objection to the admission of the

firearm into evidence.

       As the majority notes, at trial appellant specifically and unequivocally objected to the

admission of the firearm for the reasons stated in his pretrial motion to suppress. When the issue

was first raised, appellant’s counsel objected to the admission of the firearm “based on my

previous motion to suppress” and noted she was doing so “to preserve that issue for appeal.”7

Demonstrating that it was aware of the objection, the trial court replied “I’ll just put that on the

record when it comes in so you maintain” the objection. Later, when the Commonwealth

actually moved to admit the firearm, counsel for appellant stated, “we just renew our previous

objection.” The trial court replied, “All right. That is noted and placed in the record.”

       The majority acknowledges that appellant timely and specifically objected to the

admission of the firearm for the reasons stated in his pretrial motion to suppress, but contends

that the trial court never ruled on that objection. I disagree. Although it never used the words

“overruled” or “I deny the motion to suppress, and therefore, admit the firearm as evidence,” the

trial court clearly rejected the objection. We know this because, after twice acknowledging

appellant’s objection to the admission of the firearm into evidence, the trial court admitted the

firearm into evidence over that objection. Because the ultimate admission of an exhibit into

evidence is the sine qua non of overruling an objection to the admission of that exhibit, the trial


       7
          Counsel’s statement that she was placing her objection on the record “to preserve that
issue for appeal” cannot be read fairly as a waiver of that objection. Rather, it represents
counsel’s recognition that the trial court could not refuse to admit the firearm as evidence on
Fourth Amendment grounds because we had already ordered it not to do so. Accordingly,
appellant could only vindicate that objection on appeal.
                                                 -8-
court’s admission of the firearm is, in and of itself, a ruling on the objection. Accordingly, I

dissent from the majority’s conclusion that appellant waived his motion to suppress/Fourth

Amendment objection to the admission of the firearm.

       Having concluded that appellant did not waive his Fourth Amendment objection to the

admission of the firearm, I turn to the merits of that objection. For the reasons stated by the

majority in Commonwealth v. Spencer, No. 1821-17-2 (Va. Ct. App. May 1, 2018) (“Spencer

I”),8 I conclude that neither the search that led to the discovery of the firearm nor its seizure

offended the Fourth Amendment. Accordingly, the firearm was properly admitted into evidence

at appellant’s trial. Thus, I would affirm his convictions on that basis, and therefore, concur in

the judgment.




       8
         In Spencer I, Spencer was the appellee, and thus, the evidence was viewed in the light
most favorable to him. Despite this favorable view of the evidence, a majority ruled against
Spencer in Spencer I. Here, Spencer is now the appellant and conceded both on brief and at oral
argument in this Court that, regarding his argument that the search and seizure that led to the
discovery of the firearm violated the Fourth Amendment, we now must view the evidence in the
light most favorable to the Commonwealth. Obviously, this change in our view of the evidence
does not weaken the conclusion of the Spencer I majority that Spencer’s Fourth Amendment
claim fails.
                                               -9-
