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Person v. Commonwealth of Virginia - Right-to-Arm Instruction

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Filed March 24th, 2026
Detected March 24th, 2026
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Summary

The Virginia Court of Appeals reversed a conviction, finding the trial court erred by refusing a "right-to-arm" jury instruction. The appellate court determined the instruction was a proper statement of law supported by evidence and that its refusal was not harmless error. The case is remanded for a new trial.

What changed

The Virginia Court of Appeals has reversed a conviction in the case of Jadeen Keivon Person v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Record No. 0691-24-2). The appellate court found that the trial court committed reversible error by refusing to provide the jury with a "right-to-arm" instruction. This instruction, the court stated, is a proper statement of law when supported by evidence, and should include elements of being free from fault and the danger of great bodily harm. The court also noted that the appellant was entitled to an instruction that could negate an inference of malice arising from the use of a gun.

The practical implication of this ruling is that the original judgment against Person has been reversed, and the matter has been remanded for a new trial. Legal professionals involved in criminal defense in Virginia should note the importance of properly requesting and arguing for "right-to-arm" instructions when factual circumstances support them, as their erroneous refusal can lead to a reversal and a new trial. This decision clarifies the conditions under which such instructions must be provided to juries.

What to do next

  1. Review "right-to-arm" jury instruction standards in Virginia criminal cases.
  2. Ensure "right-to-arm" instructions are requested and supported by evidence in relevant cases.
  3. Assess potential impact on pending cases with similar jury instruction issues.

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March 24, 2026 Get Citation Alerts Download PDF Add Note

Jadeen Keivon Person v. Commonwealth of Virginia

Court of Appeals of Virginia

  • Citations: None known
  • Docket Number: 0691242
  • Disposition: Trial court erred by refusing proposed right-to-arm instruction and error not harmless; instruction a proper statement of law and supported by evidence; right to arm instruction should include free from fault and danger of great bodily harm; appellant entitled to instruction to negate inference of malice through use of gun; judgment reversed and matter remanded for new trial

  • Opinion

  • Authorities (24)

  • Cited By (0)

  • Summaries (0)

  • Similar Cases (23.7K)

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Disposition

Trial court erred by refusing proposed right-to-arm instruction and error not harmless; instruction a proper statement of law and supported by evidence; right to arm instruction should include free from fault and danger of great bodily harm; appellant entitled to instruction to negate inference of malice through use of gun; judgment reversed and matter remanded for new trial

Combined Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Friedman, Raphael and White
PUBLISHED

Argued at Richmond, Virginia

JADEEN KEIVON PERSON
OPINION BY
v. Record No. 0691-24-2 JUDGE FRANK K. FRIEDMAN
MARCH 24, 2026
COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF MECKLENBURG COUNTY
S. Anderson Nelson, Judge

Meghan Shapiro (Virginia Indigent Defense Commission,1 on
briefs), for appellant.

Lindsay M. Brooker, Assistant Attorney General (Jason S. Miyares,2
Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

This appeal raises questions involving the inference of malice that arises where a

defendant uses a gun in a killing. Here, the defendant asserts that he armed himself under a

perceived threat of bodily harm to himself and a family member and that this entitled him to a

“right to arm” instruction telling the jury that these circumstances can negate any malice that

may be inferred from his use of a gun.

Jadeen Keivon Person was tried for first-degree murder and the use of a firearm in the

commission of murder in the Circuit Court of Mecklenburg County. A jury convicted Person of

second-degree murder and use of a firearm in the killing. On appeal, Person argues that the court

erred by refusing four jury instructions. He also assigns error to the circuit court’s admission of

1
Counsel was a Senior Appellate Attorney at the Virginia Indigent Defense Commission
at the time of filing. By order entered March 24, 2025, the Court granted her motion to withdraw
as counsel and to continue as appellate counsel in a private capacity.
2
Jay C. Jones succeeded Jason S. Miyares as Attorney General on January 17, 2026.
only 22 minutes of his 2-hour recorded interview with police, the court’s admission of statements

by out-of-court declarants, and the court’s rulings allowing the prosecution to make closing

arguments about the Castle Doctrine. Finding the circuit court erred by refusing Person’s

proposed “right to arm” jury instruction, we reverse and remand.

BACKGROUND

The central focus of this appeal is the trial court’s refusal to grant Person’s “right to arm”

instruction. When reviewing a trial court’s denial of a proffered jury instruction, we recite the

facts in the light most favorable to the proponent of the denied instruction. See Pena Pinedo v.

Commonwealth, 300 Va. 116, 118 (2021). Here, that litigant is Person.

Events on the Night of the Shooting in Best Light to the Defense

On January 19, 2022, Person called the police after D.J.3 Williams and Kevin Edmunds—

Person’s brother—were shot during an altercation in Person’s home. Mecklenburg County Sheriff’s

Deputy Bailey Townsend and South Hill Police Officers Tyler Spillane and James Crawford

responded to the call at 613 North Brunswick Avenue; the officers knocked, then entered the home

when Person opened the door. Person and his other brother Thomas Person (Thomas) were in the

living room when the officers entered. Williams and Edmunds were on the floor with visible

gunshot wounds. Williams died at the scene.

Person’s name is on the lease of the residence where the incident took place. Prior to this

shooting, Person had never been charged or convicted of any crime. In fact, he had previously

worked as a correctional officer. At the time of the incident Thomas was living with Person

because he had nowhere else to go or live. Another friend, Ramon Rhodes, also lived in Person’s

home.

3
D.J. was the nickname of the deceased victim, Demarcus Antonio Williams, Jr.
-2-
During his testimony at trial, Person recalled that on the night of the incident he had come

home from work to find his brothers, Thomas and Edmunds, at his home along with Rhodes and

another friend, Fletcher. Person arrived around 10:30 that night after his shift at New Court Steel.

He proceeded to take a shower and then went straight to his bedroom, alone, to play video games.

While playing a video game, Person heard a gunshot, at which point he grabbed his legally-

owned Glock; he then heard another gunshot, and heard Edmunds calling his name. He testified:

A. So I’m in the room playing the game. I hear a gunshot. So I
get up. I grab my gun. I open the door. It’s another gunshot.

Q. Do you hear anything else before you open the door?

A. I hear my brother yelling my name.

Q. All right. Tell us about it.

A. I hear my brother yelling my name, Jaybug. He call me
Jaybug. It’s my nickname.

....

A. Jaybug, I been shot, Jaybug, I been shot. So when I hears
that I run to the living room.

Person arrived in the living room to find a man, D.J. Williams, wrestling with Edmunds for

a gun:

A. So I rush to the living room. I see the victim overtop of my
brother wrestling for the gun. So I see my brother, like,
losing. So I see my brother kicks him off. And right then
and there before, you know, he can get the gun I react and
then shot the victim.

Person testified that he was “scared” and “afraid” for his own life and his brother’s life when he

fired. Moreover, he indicated the gun was within reach of Williams when he fired and that he

already knew his brother had called out that he had been shot.

After police arrived, Person’s brother, Edmunds, was rushed by rescue services to a local

hospital where he died of his gunshot wound.
-3-
Person acknowledged at trial that he did not tell the investigating officers what had really

happened on the night of the shooting because he did not think they would believe him. Person

testified that he subsequently willingly went to the police in July because his “conscience [was]

messed up. Couldn’t eat. Couldn’t sleep.” Even so, Person stated that he still did not tell the

detectives what happened initially at the meeting in July because he was still scared of the

consequences.4

Person ultimately told the police that he was alone in his room playing video games when

the shooting began and he stated that it was not his “intention to kill anybody”; he was trying to

defend his brother and himself from a threat of grave violence. When he was asked how many

times he shot Williams, Person admitted that he did not know the exact number. Again, Person

insisted he simply intended to “protect [himself] and [his] brother.”

The Rest of the Story

The Commonwealth’s evidence established that Thomas and Williams were

acquaintances. Text messages between the two from the day of the shooting revealed that

Thomas asked Williams to bring some marijuana by the house that evening.

Montavius Royal was with Williams the night he went to Person’s house. Williams told

Royal he “had a play” in South Hill, which could mean “going to see a girl or sell drugs.” Williams

had a red bookbag with him. Williams and Royal arrived at Person’s home, entered, and Royal

asked for something to drink. A third man stayed with the car. Royal testified that “somebody

came from behind the curtain, [and said] like give that shit up for a [n*****]” about 40 to 60

4
At trial, the prosecution played the first 22 minutes of this interview—generally the
portion before Person became more candid about the night’s events. The remainder of the
interview is not in the record. Person contends that the trial court erred by not admitting the rest
of the interview into evidence.
-4-
seconds after they arrived. Royal testified that the assailant had a “big gray [gun] with a long clip

hanging out of it.” Williams subsequently reached for his gun and fired it.

Royal ran for his life, breaking the glass in the front door in the process and cutting his wrist.

Royal sprinted to the car and yelled that someone “just shot D.J.” Royal heard more gunshots as he

fled for help. Royal’s description of the alleged assailant matched the clothing Edmunds was

wearing that night.

Katrina Newsome, Williams’ mother, received a telephone call from a relative saying that

her son “was being held at a house in South Hill by some guys,” that Williams “had been shot,”

and that “they wouldn’t let him out.” A short time later, Williams’ car arrived at the house and

two men exited. They were “frantic” and said that “some guys had [Williams] in a house in

South Hill and they wouldn’t let him out.”5 Newsome called the police.

The police recounted that Person and his brother Thomas were in the living room when

the officers entered and the two gunshot victims, D.J. Williams and Kevin Edmunds, lay on the

floor. Edmunds was still alive, suffering from a single gunshot wound to the abdomen.

Williams was not breathing. Roommate Ramon Rhodes and Fletcher were in a room down the

hall. Officers swabbed Person’s, Thomas’, Fletcher’s, and Rhodes’ hands for gunshot residue.

Williams’ hands were swabbed at the medical examiner’s office.

The officers learned that Person had a Smith & Wesson and a Canik “pistol-style”

firearm on a bedside table in his bedroom, with an extended magazine loaded with 9mm

ammunition. Thomas said he had moved the firearms from the living room where Williams’

body was to Person’s bedroom. When officers announced they were going to search the house,

5
These statements comprised the “out of court” declarations that Person contends were
wrongly admitted in evidence. The utterances were used to support claims of an abduction—
which could lay the groundwork for a first-degree murder verdict based on a killing in the course
of an abduction. See Instruction 15.
-5-
Person privately told the officers that there was a third firearm, a Glock 19 9mm pistol, hidden in

his closet on a top shelf inside a Gatorade box.

Detectives obtained a search warrant for the house. The search yielded a red bookbag

(containing 12 plastic bags of marijuana, 5 empty plastic bags, as well as a digital scale) from

Thomas’ bedroom closet. This was, presumably, the red bookbag Williams arrived with. The

officers also found a projectile on the floor of the bedroom which had passed through the wall

from the living room and hit a television. They found a 9mm Sig brand casing under Williams’

body and a spent T&M brand 9mm casing under the sofa in the living room. Officers further

found a Taurus GTC 9mm handgun in another bedroom. Finally, a Canik 9mm handgun

registered to Williams was found with an empty cartridge in the chamber; it “appeared that the

gun had jammed.”6

Williams’ mother, Newsome, gave police Facebook and text messages between Williams

and Thomas from the night of the shooting from Williams’ phone. These messages confirmed

that Thomas had asked Williams to bring marijuana to his house. Thomas had cautioned

Williams about not parking in front of the house because “people right there be tripping.”

As noted above, detectives formally interviewed Person in July for approximately two

hours. Detective Crawford told Person that he was not under arrest and that he had waited to

interview him until the forensic results were returned. Person’s initial statements in this

interview were inconsistent with his trial testimony. He initially denied shooting Williams.

Eventually, however, Person admitted that he had grabbed the Glock when he heard gunshots

and left his room. After the interview, Person was charged with the murder of Williams and the

use of a firearm in the commission of a murder.

6
Ten casings, one projectile, and the firearms were submitted to the Department of
Forensic Science for analysis, along with the collected gunshot-residue samples from each of the
men.
-6-
Assistant Medical Examiner Dr. Crystal Van Dusen described Williams’ multiple

gunshot wound injuries identified during the autopsy. She testified that Williams suffered

gunshot wounds to his chest, leg, and back that caused extensive internal injuries. The wounds

caused significant internal bleeding. Dr. Van Dusen recovered three projectile fragments

associated with specific entrance wounds and additional fragments not linked to specific wounds.

The forensic evidence revealed that six of the projectiles retrieved during Williams’ autopsy

were fired from the Glock 9mm Luger handled by Person, and one projectile was fired from the

Smith & Wesson 9mm Luger pistol, handled by Edmunds. The bullet retrieved from Edmunds’

autopsy was fired from Williams’ Canik 9mm Luger pistol.

Incidents of Trial

The Commonwealth’s evidence suggested that Williams had arrived to sell marijuana;

Edmunds tried to rob him—and Williams and Edmunds shot each other before Person appeared

in the living room. Person maintained that Williams was not present when he came home from

work and he had no knowledge of Williams’ arrival or of Edmund’s plan to rob him. Person also

denied knowledge that Williams, like Edmunds, had been shot before Person entered the room.

Person contended that he simply left his room, after hearing the gunshots and Edmund’s cry that

he had been shot, and arrived in the living room to find a man standing over his brother.

Person does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence. He does assert that several

significant errors in procedure occurred during the trial.

Instructions Challenged by Person

The Commonwealth requested and received Instruction 19:

You may, but are not required, to infer malice from the deliberate
use of a deadly weapon unless, from all the evidence, you have a
reasonable doubt as to whether malice existed.

-7-
To countervail the inference of malice in Instruction 19, Person tendered Instruction A, which

stated:

A person who reasonably believes that another intends to attack him
or another for the purpose of killing him or another or doing him or
another serious bodily harm has a right to arm himself for his own
necessary self-protection or the protection of another. In such a case,
no inference of malice can be drawn from the fact that he armed
himself.

The circuit court, however, refused the instruction, noting that it was “not a standard jury

instruction” and “from the evidence that was introduced by the defendant that he [Person] didn’t

know what was going on when he armed himself and came out of the room,” the court concluded

“this instruction should not be granted.” In essence, the court determined that the facts did not

support a “right to arm” instruction on this record.

The circuit court did grant a self-defense instruction:

If you believe that the defendant was without fault in provoking or
bringing on the encounter, and you further believe that:

(1) he reasonably feared, under the circumstances as they
appeared to him, that he was in imminent danger of being
killed or that he was in danger of great bodily harm; and

(2) he used no more force, under the circumstances as they
appeared to him, than was reasonably necessary to protect
himself from the perceived harm, then the killing was in
self-defense, and you shall find the defendant not guilty.

See Instruction 23. This instruction explains self-defense, but does not reference defense of

others. The circuit court granted one “defense of others” instruction:

Instruction No. E

The law pertaining to defense of others is that one may
avail himself or herself of the defense only where he or she

-8-
reasonably believes, based on the attendant circumstances, that the
person defended is without fault in provoking the fray.

The court declined to grant several other instructions sought by Person.7

The Police Interview Recording

After extensive argument, and over Person’s objection, the circuit court ruled that the

prosecution could play for the jury the first 22 minutes of Person’s 2-hour recorded interview

with Detective Crawford in July 2022. On appeal Person argues “the prosecution was permitted

to end the interrogation video at that point, leaving out the remaining 90+ minutes in which

[Person] expressed regret, apologies, and an explanation for his initial dishonesty.” The

remaining portion of the interview was not presented to the jury and was not included in the trial

record.

Admission of Statements by Out-of-Court Declarants and Closing Argument

Williams’ mother made numerous statements incorporating alleged statements from

“relatives” and Williams’ associates that her son was being held in a house in South Hill. These

statements were not objected to contemporaneously, but Person invokes the ends of justice

exception to attack the admission of these statements.

Finally, Person claims that the prosecution was wrongly permitted to make a statement in

closing argument relating to instructions that were not given:

In addition to what you’re instructed on, there are certain things
that you didn’t hear anything about that are concepts of law that
are not applicable to this case. And amongst them is that you are
not entitled to use deadly force within your home in this case

7
Most notably, the court refused the related Instruction D offered by Person:

One must reasonably apprehend death or serious bodily harm to
another before he or she is privileged to use force in the defense of
another. The amount of force which may be used must be
reasonable in relation to the harm threatened.
-9-
automatically. You’re not instructed on that. So the fact this
happened at the defendant’s home is not legally significant.8

Verdict

The jury returned convictions on second-degree murder as a lesser-included offense to

first-degree murder, and use of a firearm during the commission of a murder. The circuit court

sentenced Person to 43 years’ incarceration, with 23 years suspended. This appeal follows.

ANALYSIS

The pivotal question here is whether the circuit court erred in refusing to give the jury a

right-to-arm jury instruction. “When reviewing a trial court’s refusal to give a proffered jury

instruction, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the proponent of the instruction.”

Pena Pinedo, 300 Va. at 118.

I. Person Was Entitled to a Right-to-Arm Jury Instruction and the Circuit Court Erred by
Not Giving One

On appeal, Person argues the circuit court erred when it denied his proposed Instruction A, a

right-to-arm jury instruction, because the instruction was a proper statement of law, supported by

the evidence in the case, and was essential due to the circuit court’s inclusion of the

Commonwealth’s instruction on the inference of malice from the use of a deadly weapon. We agree

with Person.

A. Standard of Review

“Both the Commonwealth and the defendant are entitled to appropriate instructions to the

jury of the law applicable to each version of the case, provided such instructions are based upon the

evidence adduced.” Stewart v. Commonwealth, 10 Va. App. 563, 570 (1990) (citation omitted). “A

defendant is entitled to have the jury instructed only on those theories of the case that are supported

by [more than a scintilla of] evidence.” Eaton v. Commonwealth, 240 Va. 236, 255 (1990) (quoting

8
Defense counsel at trial did not seek a Castle Doctrine instruction.
- 10 -
Frye v. Commonwealth, 231 Va. 370, 388 (1986)); see also Hughes v. Commonwealth, 43 Va. App.

391, 403 (2004) (finding a jury instruction is proper “if supported by more than a scintilla of

evidence” (quoting Commonwealth v. Sands, 262 Va. 724, 729 (2001))).

“[T]he weight of the credible evidence that will amount to more than a mere scintilla . . . is a

matter to be resolved on a case-by-case basis[.]” Woolridge v. Commonwealth, 29 Va. App. 339,

348 (1999) (first and second alterations in original) (quoting Brandau v. Commonwealth, 16

Va. App. 408, 412 (1993)). In determining “whether the trial court erred in failing to grant an

instruction, the appellate courts review the record for ‘affirmative evidence’ that supports the

instruction, rather than basing the review upon ‘the jury’s ability to reject evidence that is

uncontroverted.’” Hughes, 43 Va. App. at 403 (quoting Commonwealth v. Vaughn, 263 Va. 31, 37

(2002)).

“[I]f there is evidence in the record to support the defendant’s theory of defense, the trial

judge may not refuse to grant a proper, proffered instruction.” Lienau v. Commonwealth, 69

Va. App. 254, 264 (2018) (quoting King v. Commonwealth, 64 Va. App. 580, 587 (2015) (en

banc)). “Additionally, ‘[w]here the conflicting evidence tends to sustain either the prosecution’s or

defense’s theory of the case, the trial judge must instruct the jury as to both theories.’” Id.

(alteration in original) (quoting King, 64 Va. App. at 587).

B. The Evidence Supported the Instruction and it was a Proper Statement of the
Law

During the trial, Person proposed Instruction A, which, as noted above, states:

A person who reasonably believes that another intends to attack him
or another for the purpose of killing him or another or doing him or
another serious bodily harm has a right to arm himself for his own
necessary self-protection or the protection of another. In such a case,
no inference of malice can be drawn from the fact that he armed
himself.

  • 11 - The jury instruction comes from a model jury instruction, but is slightly modified. See Model

Jury Instrs.—Crim. No. 52.520. The difference in the proposed jury instruction is the addition of

the “or another” language, which Person added to support his defense of another theory.

The circuit court stated that, at the time Person armed himself, he had heard the gunshot

but “didn’t know what was going on.” The court suggested that without knowledge of a specific

or cognizable threat, Person was not entitled to the instruction.

We do not believe Person needed to fully comprehend the exact nature of the threat in

order to “reasonably believe[] that another intended to attack him[.]” See Instruction A

(Refused). What Person did know was that sudden unexpected gunshots erupted from inside his

own home. Person’s brother then cried out that he had been shot.9 Upon hearing gunfire and the

cries of his brother, Person testified that he perceived an immediate threat to himself and his

brother, armed himself, and moved toward the conflict. Viewed in the best light to Person, we

believe this established more than a scintilla of evidence that Person armed himself “for the

purpose of being able to defend himself,” Lynn v. Commonwealth, 27 Va. App. 336, 348 (1998),

aff’d, 257 Va. 239 (1999) (per curiam), and that he had “reasonable grounds to believe” that a

serious threat to his safety “w[ould] be carried into execution,” and thus had the “right to arm

himself in order to combat such an emergency,” Bevley v. Commonwealth, 185 Va. 210, 215

(1946).10

9
Person testified that he suspected there had been some kind of break-in.
10
Under the facts of this case, viewed in best light to Person, we also believe the
evidence supported including the “or another” language in this instruction given the presence of
his brothers in Person’s home and the cries from Edmunds that he had been shot. Even if the “or
another” language in the instruction were deemed improper, the judgment would need to be
overturned because when a “principle of law is materially vital to a defendant in a criminal case,
it is reversible error for the trial court to refuse a defective instruction instead of correcting it and
giving it in the proper form.” Fishback v. Commonwealth, 260 Va. 104, 117 (2000) (quoting
Whaley v. Commonwealth, 214 Va. 353, 355-56 (1973)). Here, under Bevley, Person was
- 12 -
In Bevley, the defendant attended a party where another guest had become intoxicated

and violent. Id. at 212. When the guest threatened to disarm another partygoer and shoot Bevley

and several others, Bevley retrieved a handgun from his car. Id. at 213. Shortly thereafter, an

altercation ignited and Bevley shot and killed the guest. Id. At trial, Bevley was confronted with

the fact that his having consciously and deliberately armed himself could be considered as

evidence of a malicious and premediated killing. Id. at 213-14. The jury was so instructed. Id.

Bevley’s proffered “right to arm” instruction explaining that a person has a right to arm and

defend himself or herself against a perceived attack was refused. Id. at 214. Our Supreme Court

reversed, holding that Bevley was entitled to an instruction “that one who has been threatened

with murderous assaults and who has reason to believe that such assaults will be made, may arm

himself for defense and in such case no inference of malice can be drawn from the fact of

preparation for it.” Id. at 215-16 (quoting State v. Summers, 188 S.E. 873, 875 (W. Va. 1936)).

As the Supreme Court explained in Bevley, whether the accused had reason to believe the

threat would be “carried into execution” was a question for the jury; but if that jury is given an

instruction as to a presumption of malice from the use of a deadly weapon, “then the accused is

entitled as a matter of law to have the jury instructed that he has overcome the presumption, if

they believe the evidence offered in his behalf.” Id. at 215 (emphasis added). Similarly, Person,

here, was entitled to Instruction A not only because it was a correct statement of law, supported

by evidence—but also to counter-balance the Commonwealth’s reliance on Instruction 19,

introducing the inference of malice through Person’s use of a gun.11

entitled to a right-to-arm instruction where the jury had been instructed that it could infer malice
from the mere use of the gun.
11
The right-to-arm instruction, notably, does not include any language about whether the
defendant had the right to use his firearm. It simply instructs the jury that they can decline to
infer malice from Person arming himself as he was leaving his bedroom—if they believe his
testimony that he intended to quell a perceived threat to him and his family.
- 13 -
C. The Instructional Error was Not Harmless

In general, a non-constitutional error is only harmless when “the evidence of guilt [was]

so overwhelming that it renders the error insignificant by comparison such that the error could

not have affected the verdict,” Commonwealth v. Kilpatrick, 301 Va. 214, 217 (2022), and “if the

reviewing court can be sure that the error did not influence the jury and only had a slight effect,”

Lawrence v. Commonwealth, 279 Va. 490, 497 (2010). If we “‘cannot say, with fair

assurance, . . . that the judgment was not substantially swayed by the error, it is impossible to

conclude that [the appellant's] substantial rights were not affected’” and therefore, “the

conviction must be reversed.” Graves v. Commonwealth, 65 Va. App. 702, 712 (2016)

(alterations in original) (quoting Clay v. Commonwealth, 262 Va. 253, 260 (2001).

Here, malice was a central issue in Person’s case. It is an element of first-degree and

second-degree murder. Rhodes v. Commonwealth, 238 Va. 480, 485 (1989) (“Malice, an

essential element of all grades of murder, distinguishes murder from manslaughter.” (citing

Moxley v. Commonwealth, 195 Va. 151, 157 (1953))). During the trial, the Commonwealth

received an instruction informing jurors that they could infer malice from Person’s mere use of a

deadly weapon. Person was denied a corresponding instruction to countervail the inference of

malice instruction.

As in Bevley, the failure to give the instruction here is reversible error, because the jury

was informed that it could conclude malice was present because a gun was used, but the jurors

received no balancing instruction informing them that Person could overcome this inference with

proper evidence. Bevley, 185 Va. at 215. Indeed, when the Commonwealth is allowed to tell a

jury that the law presumes “a person using a deadly weapon to kill another acts with malice” this

“throws upon the accused the burden of disproving malice.” Id. As Bevley notes, in this

circumstance the accused is “entitled as a matter of law to have the jury instructed that he has

  • 14 - overcome the presumption” if the jury believes the accused’s evidence that he armed himself for

the purpose of defending against a reasonably perceived and serious threat against his safety. Id.

No other instruction in this case remotely covered Person’s ability to arm, without malice, to

confront an obvious threat.12 This defect significantly hindered Person’s ability to rebut the

presumption of malice advocated by the Commonwealth.

In this context, where jurors were instructed they could infer malice simply from Person’s

use of a gun, we cannot say that the error could not have affected the verdict. Moreover, the

jurors acquitted Person of first-degree murder, but convicted him of second-degree murder. We

cannot say the requisite malice required for the second-degree murder verdict had no connection

to the instructional error. Accordingly, we remand for a new trial if the Commonwealth be so

advised.13

II. Additional Matters Relevant to Remand

When a judgment is reversed on a specific ground and remanded for a new trial—and

assignments of error remain that relate to issues that are likely to recur in the new trial—it is

appropriate for the appellate court to address the issues that will likely arise in the subsequent

trial. Harman v. Honeywell Int’l Inc., 288 Va. 84, 95-96 (2014) (considering evidentiary matters

that likely would arise on remand where the judgment was reversed on other grounds); Cain v.

12
See Bell v. Commonwealth, No. 0861-95-2, slip op. at 4, 1996 Va. App. LEXIS 422, at
*5 (June 11, 1996) (finding no abuse of discretion for refusing right-to-arm instruction where
other instructions “fully covered the self-defense issue,” and “[t]he Commonwealth made no
contention that malice or criminal intent should be imputed to Bell simply by virtue of his being
armed”).
13
On remand, under double jeopardy principles, Person cannot be re-tried for first-degree
murder since he was acquitted of that charge below. Workman v. Commonwealth, 272 Va. 633,
651
(2006); see U.S. Const. amend. V; Va. Const. art. I, § 8; see also Code § 19.2-285; Burks v.
United States, 437 U.S. 1, 11-18 (1978) (holding that double jeopardy precludes retrial only
when the appellate court “has found the evidence legally insufficient,” and distinguishing such
reversals from those based on trial error).
- 15 -
Lee, 290 Va. 129, 136 (2015) (same). “By corollary, where an evidentiary issue is unlikely to

arise in the same context on remand, the appellate court should decline to reach the sidetrack

issue and avoid rendering, essentially, an advisory opinion.” Reston Anesthesia Assocs. v.

Bandy, 86 Va. App. 54, 77 (2025).

The majority of Person’s remaining assignments deal with issues that are unlikely to

recur on appeal in the same manner presented here.14

One additional jury instruction issue is likely to recur. As noted above, the “right to arm”

is separate and distinct from the concept of self-defense or the right to defend another. Here, the

trial court did grant an instruction dealing with the right to defend others (Instruction E) stating:

“one may avail himself or herself of the defense only where he or she reasonably believes, based

on the attendant circumstances, that the person defended is without fault in provoking the fray.”

This was a correct statement of the law as far as it went; we agree with Person, however,

that the instruction, as given, is incomplete.15 In Foster v. Commonwealth, 13 Va. App. 380

(1991), this Court noted that a defense of others instruction must present the dual concepts that

14
Person argues that we should apply the ends of justice exception to determine whether
it was error to permit Williams’ mother to inject statements by out-of-court declarants regarding
an abduction into her testimony. On re-trial the witness may refrain from raising these
comments to establish abduction and bolster a first-degree murder claim as Person was acquitted
of first-degree murder and cannot be re-tried for it—and, if she does raise them, a
contemporaneous objection may be interjected (rendering an “ends of justice” analysis, requested
here, unnecessary). Accordingly, we decline to reach the question. Similarly, Person objects to
the Commonwealth’s use at trial of only 22 minutes of Person’s lengthy interview with police—
but the rest of the interview is not in the record. On remand, the evidence may be used
differently and the record may be expanded to include the full interview; thus, we will not
address the matter now. Finally, Person also challenges the Commonwealth’s closing argument
dealing with the absence of an instruction on the Castle Doctrine. Again, we cannot say whether
a Castle Doctrine instruction will be tendered on remand or how the parties may choose to argue
their case. Therefore, we decline to reach this issue as well at this juncture.
15
The Commonwealth has not challenged on appeal the granting of a right to defend
others instruction. If the evidence on remand justifies a “defense of others” instruction, the
instruction should be a proper statement of law.
- 16 -
the “other” being defended be “free from fault” and that the actor hold a reasonable belief that

the “other” being defended is in danger of great bodily harm. Id. at 382 n.116; see also Lynn, 27

Va. App. at 353 (“[O]ne may be justified in using deadly force to defend another person where

he or she reasonably believes that the person defended faces an imminent threat of serious bodily

harm or death and that such person was not at fault[.]”). With respect to the reasonable belief of

harm, this legal principle makes the accused’s subjective belief all the more relevant. “A

defendant may always act upon reasonable appearance of danger, and whether the danger is

reasonably apparent is always to be determined from the viewpoint of the defendant at the time

he acted.” McGhee v. Commonwealth, 219 Va. 560, 562 (1978).

Here, the jury was only instructed on the “free from fault” prong, in isolation, and was

never told that Person’s own perspective of danger to his brother was relevant to his defense-of-

others claim. Person’s tendered instructions sought to include both requisite prongs. On

remand, if a “defense of others” instruction is supported by the evidence, it should embrace both

the “free from fault” prong utilized by the trial court and the “serious bodily harm” concept

sought by Person and discussed in Lynn, 27 Va. App. at 353.

CONCLUSION

For the foregoing reasons, Person’s conviction is reversed and the matter is remanded for

a new trial if the Commonwealth be so advised.

Reversed and remanded.

16
In Foster, the proffered instruction failed to address the “without fault” prong and,
thus, was properly rejected. 13 Va. App. at 386.
- 17 -

Named provisions

Right-to-arm instruction

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
VA Courts
Filed
March 24th, 2026
Instrument
Enforcement
Legal weight
Binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive
Document ID
Record No. 0691-24-2
Docket
0691242

Who this affects

Applies to
Legal professionals
Industry sector
5411 Legal Services
Activity scope
Criminal Defense
Geographic scope
Virginia US-VA

Taxonomy

Primary area
Criminal Justice
Operational domain
Legal
Topics
Self-defense Jury Instructions

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