January 2010

Last Friday, the Supreme Court of Virginia handed down a batch of eighteen opinions and two published orders. One of them, Shapiro v. Younkin, provides a lucid, well-reasoned treatment of the rules regarding transcripts and written statements of fact.

Please ignore it in its entirety. To paraphrase one of Caroline’s favorite writers, there is a monster at the end of this opinion.

Background

At issue in Shapiro was whether the circuit court erred by dismissing a plaintiff’s appeal from the general district court because the plaintiff had failed to secure a court reporter, in violation of the circuit court’s rule requiring that a court reporter be present at the trial of all civil cases.

Shapiro brought a landlord-tenant suit against Younkin in general district court, proceeding pro se. He lost and appealed to the circuit court, where he also appeared pro se. The court’s local rules required that a court reporter be present at all civil trials, and that a party appealing a GDC case arrange to have a court reporter present at the circuit court trial.

Shapiro failed to arrange for a court reporter, so the circuit court dismissed his appeal with prejudice. Later that day, Shapiro submitted a written statement of facts. The trial court declined to enter the statement. Instead, it wrote on the face of the document that the statement did not accurately reflect the events at trial, which were noted in the court’s order.

[Are you still reading? Because there is a monster at the end of this opinion.]

Shapiro–still proceeding pro se–appealed to the Supreme Court. He argued that the dismissal of his case violated Code Section 17.1-128, which provides that the failure to secure a court reporter will not affect the proceeding or trial. He also claimed that the court violated Rule 5:11 by failing to certify his written statement of facts.

Holding

The Supreme Court agreed. It reversed the trial court’s judgment and remanded the case, holding that the trial judge had violated both Code Section 17.1-128 and Rule 5:11.Continue Reading Please Ignore Shapiro v. Younkin. There Is a Monster at the End of This Opinion.

On Friday, the Supreme Court of Virginia handed down 18 published opinions and two orders. As always, Steve Emmert has a witty write-up (along with a new photo on his web page–looking good, Steve). The VLW Blog also discusses some of the highlights. The bulk of January cases are either criminal appeals or habeas proceedings; I haven’t done the math myself, but Emmert breaks it down to 15 criminal appeals/habeas proceedings and 5 civil matters.

As you might have noticed, I wasn’t exactly on top of this breaking news–or much of anything else that happened over the past week, for that matter. Here’s my excuse:

From January 8-14, I attended the the National Trial Advocacy College at the University of Virginia. It’s off-topic, so I won’t bore you with the details, but it was probably the best educational experience of my life. The faculty was spectacular, the exercises were demanding, and the feedback was brutally honest. Further, I got to spend a week with dozens of talented and motivated lawyers working to get better at their job. That was fun. It was also a neat reminder of how lucky we are to do what we do.

But it gets better. I capped that off with an oral argument before the Supreme Court on Friday. For obvious reasons, I can’t discuss the case. But I really treasure the opportunities I get to argue before the Court. Oral argument is the reward for all of the hard work you put into briefing and preparing (although somehow, thinking of it that way doesn’t make me any less nervous). Different people go to law school for different reasons. If you ask me, the coolest thing you can do with a JD is to have a conversation with the Commonwealth’s highest court about what the law is (or should be), and help them get to a fair result that will justly govern future cases. It was a brilliant end to a perfect week.Continue Reading Supreme Court of Virginia Releases January Opinions

Here’s the merits argument lineup for next week in the Supreme Court of Virginia. Civil cases follow after the jump.

We’ll be in Richmond on Friday. Give me a shout if you will be in town and would like to grab lunch.

Criminal Cases

Record Number

Style of Case

Appellants’ Counsel

Appellees’ Counsel

Appealed From

090526

Segretto v. Commonwealth

Kevin L. Leahy; Weimer & Boyce

William C. Mims, Attorney General; Leah A. Darron, Senior Assistant Attorney General

Court of Appeals of Virginia

090813

Neria, etc. v. Commonwealth

Patrick M. Blanch; Elders & Zinicola

William C. Mims, Attorney General; Jennifer C. Williamson, Assistant Attorney General

Court of Appeals of Virginia

090979

Jones v. Commonwealth

Cassandra M. Hausrath, Assistant Public Defender

William C. Mims, Attorney General; Leah A. Darron, Senior Assistant Attorney General

Court of Appeals of Virginia

091015

Fullwood v. Commonwealth

Charles E. Haden

William C. Mims, Attorney General; Jennifer C. Williamson, Assistant Attorney General

Court of Appeals of Virginia

091031

Friend v. Commonwealth

Joseph A. Sadighian, Senior Assistant Appellate Defender

William C. Mims, Attorney General; Benjamin H. Katz, Assistant Attorney General

Court of Appeals of Virginia

091120

Ghameshouly, etc. v. Commonwealth

Justin W. Esworthy, Assistant Public Defender

William C. Mims, Attorney General; Eugene Murphy, Senior Assistant Attorney General; Mark D. Stiles, City Attorney; Christopher S. Boynton, Deputy City Attorney; Natalie P. Mann, Assistant City Attorney

Court of Appeals of Virginia

091299

Roberson v. Commonwealth

John D. Hooker, Jr.; Steven P. Letourneau; Hooker & Associates

William C. Mims, Attorney General; Virginia B. Theisen, Senior Assistant Attorney General; Mark D. Stiles, City Attorney; Christopher S. Boynton, Deputy City Attorney; Natalie P. Mann, Assistant City Attorney

Court of Appeals of Virginia

091177

Harris v. Commonwealth

Joseph T. Brown; Rebecca K. Glenberg

William C. Mims, Attorney General; Susan M. Harris, Assistant Attorney General

Court of Appeals of Virginia

Continue Reading Supreme Court of Virginia January Argument Docket