State v. Allen

343 S.E.2d 893, 317 N.C. 119, 1986 N.C. LEXIS 2403
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 3, 1986
Docket413PA85
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 343 S.E.2d 893 (State v. Allen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Allen, 343 S.E.2d 893, 317 N.C. 119, 1986 N.C. LEXIS 2403 (N.C. 1986).

Opinion

EXUM, Justice.

We allowed defendant’s petition for discretionary review to consider the following question: Whether the trial court commit *120 ted reversible error by instructing the jury in this armed robbery case that: “The term ‘dangerous weapon’ also includes pistols which look like firearms such as cap pistols. An instrument is a dangerous weapon if it is apparently a weapon capable of inflicting a life threatening injury.” We answer the question affirmatively and reverse the Court of Appeals.

The state’s evidence tended to show as follows: A black male wearing a ski mask entered the Quick Snack store in Williamston shortly before 11 p.m. on 10 September 1983, pointed what appeared to be a small caliber pistol at the clerk, Dorothy Davenport, and demanded the money in the cash register. Ms. Davenport saw the gun’s barrel. When she gave the man the money, which included one or two $20 bills, she noticed a regular customer, . Rudy Brown, an off-duty employee of the North Carolina Department of Correction, drive up to the store. As the masked man left the store still holding what appeared to be a small revolver, he met Brown and told him, “Get back or I’ll shoot.” Brown also saw the revolver’s barrel.

The man fled on foot east on Highway 64 toward Martin General Hospital. Brown got in his car and pursued the man, stopping on the way to alert Chief Deputy Sheriff Jerry Beach. Brown saw the masked man, whom he identified as defendant, run into a wooded area, and observed him minutes later sitting behind the wheel of a car parked nearby. Defendant was out of breath and perspiring heavily when Brown and law enforcement officers apprehended him. Brown recognized defendant as the man who had confronted him at the Quick Snack store, although when apprehended the man was not wearing a ski mask. When the arresting officers searched him they found part of a gun in his pocket and a crumpled $20 bill in his pants. They found another crumpled $20 bill on the front seat of the car and defendant’s wallet under the seat. When confronted by Deputy Sheriff Beach, defendant told him, “I’m on coke.”

The state also offered defendant’s statement to Beach indicating defendant had used a “cap pistol” to rob the store and had no intention of hurting the clerk. Defendant said he lost the money, ski mask and the front part of the cap pistol in the woods. The next morning Beach and other law enforcement officers combed the woods through which defendant had fled and found *121 the ski mask, but were unable to locate the money and the barrel of the pistol.

A gun dealer, Clifton Hollis, testified for the state that the gun taken from defendant was the lower half of an RG-10, .22 caliber pistol. The barrel and cylinder appeared to have been broken off at the lower trigger hammer. Hollis believed if a cylinder and barrel were attached to the part of the pistol in evidence, it would fire. In contrast, Deputy Sheriff Beach testified on cross-examination that defendant had told him on the night of his arrest that the barrel of the cap pistol he used had come off and he had reattached it with a rubber band. Consequently, the cap pistol would not fire.

Defendant offered no evidence.

The trial court instructed the jury it could find defendant guilty of armed robbery, common law robbery or not guilty. Pursuant to the state’s request, and over defendant’s objection, the trial court instructed the jury as follows:

The term ‘dangerous weapon’ includes firearms. A .22 caliber pistol is a firearm within the meaning of the law as it applies to this case. The term ‘dangerous weapon’ also includes pistols which look like firearms such as cap pistols.
An instrument is a dangerous weapon if it is apparently a weapon capable of inflicting a life threatening injury.

The jury found defendant guilty of armed robbery.

Armed robbery is defined in N.C.G.S. § 14-87(a) as follows:

(a) Any person . . . who, having in possession or with the use or threatened use of any firearms or other dangerous weapon, implement or means, whereby the life of a person is endangered or threatened, unlawfully takes or attempts to take personal property from another . . . shall be guilty of a Class D felony.

Id. We first note there is no contention that defendant used the pistol as anything but a pistol. He did not use it as a club. Having used the pistol only as a pistol, defendant argues the trial court’s definition of the term “dangerous weapon” creates an impermissi *122 ble mandatory presumption that whatever appears to be a dangerous weapon, even if in fact it is not, is in law a dangerous weapon. The state concedes inoperative firearms, and cap, or toy, pistols are not dangerous weapons within the meaning of the statute because they cannot endanger or threaten life when used as firearms. Nevertheless, the state argues that even if the instruction of the trial court was erroneous in the abstract, the error is not reversible because there is no credible evidence in this case that defendant in fact used an inoperative firearm or a cap pistol.

The Court of Appeals held “the evidence [that defendant had used a cap pistol] was not so compelling as to prevent a permissive inference of danger or threat to life or to require a directed verdict in defendant’s favor as to the charge of robbery with a dangerous weapon.” State v. Allen, 74 N.C. App. at 453, 328 S.E. 2d at 617. The Court of Appeals also concluded as follows:

The evidence is clear that the object used by defendant in the commission of the robbery, notwithstanding the fact that it may have been an inoperable pistol or a cap pistol, was perceived by the victim to be a real gun. Accordingly, the trial court’s instruction to the jury that a cap pistol could be a dangerous weapon if it is apparently capable of inflicting a life threatening injury, was not error.

Id. at 455, 328 S.E. 2d at 618. We agree that a permissive inference that the weapon defendant brandished was a firearm or other dangerous weapon may be drawn from the witnesses’ testimony that it appeared to be so. But in the presence of evidence that a toy or cap pistol was in fact used, the law does not transform such an instrument into a dangerous weapon merely because it appears to be one.

We think both the trial court and the Court of Appeals misapplied some of our recent decisions on the “dangerous weapon” element of armed robbery. We begin with State v. Thompson, 297 N.C. 285, 254 S.E. 2d 526 (1979). In Thompson the state’s evidence tended to show that defendant, brandishing what appeared to be a pistol, took cash belonging to a business from the presence of several employees. Defendant was accompanied by another man armed with a shotgun. On cross-examination, one of the employees, a state’s witness, stated that “she did not know *123 whether the shotgun was a real gun, a fake gun, a toy gun or what kind of gun, it was metal and did not look like a toy.” Id. at 288, 254 S.E. 2d at 527.

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Bluebook (online)
343 S.E.2d 893, 317 N.C. 119, 1986 N.C. LEXIS 2403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-allen-nc-1986.