State v. Austin

357 S.E.2d 641, 320 N.C. 276, 1987 N.C. LEXIS 2168
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJuly 7, 1987
Docket297A86
StatusPublished
Cited by67 cases

This text of 357 S.E.2d 641 (State v. Austin) 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. Austin, 357 S.E.2d 641, 320 N.C. 276, 1987 N.C. LEXIS 2168 (N.C. 1987).

Opinion

MARTIN, Justice.

The state’s evidence at trial tended to show the following: In April 1985 defendant and Mary Sue “Susie” Blankenship White were living together in a house on Jenkins Road in Burke County with Susie’s two daughters, Sheila Renee, aged nineteen, who was mentally handicapped, and Christy, aged fourteen. They had lived *278 together as a family for about eight years. Defendant had received total disability from Social Security because of some serious injuries he had sustained in a car accident some ten years previously. He was also a chronic alcoholic. Although he had quit drinking for about eight months because of some medications he was taking, he had resumed drinking after he had been bitten by a dog about a week prior to the events in question.

On Friday night, 5 April 1985, Susie’s mother, Elizabeth Blankenship Murphy, who lived in a trailer directly behind Susie’s house, was visiting at her daughter’s house. Defendant was in the bedroom and the door was shut, and Mrs. Murphy and Susie were in the living room. Susie said, “Momma, I have. lost sleep, I can’t take this much longer.” She continued, “If I can make it until the 3rd of next month, I’m going to see if I can’t get me one of those FHA homes.” Susie went on to explain to her mother that she could not get any rest or sleep because of defendant’s drinking. Susie made similar statements to her brother’s wife, Carol Blankenship, while they were conversing at Susie’s kitchen table the following day. This conversation was interrupted, however, when defendant entered the kitchen and sat down at the table. Susie quickly changed the subject. Defendant asked Carol if she were doing okay. When she said yes, he replied, “Well, that’s good, because if you wasn’t, I was going to shoot you.” He laughed and they began talking about something else. Carol testified that he appeared to be “[a]bout half way” drunk, which was normal for him. She also said that “[h]e wasn’t himself that day, he just acted like he had something on his mind.” Testimony at trial established that defendant thereafter became increasingly more withdrawn, preoccupied, and morose.

Sometime between 12:30 and 1:00 p.m. on Easter Sunday, Jim and Carol Blankenship went over to Susie’s house to use the telephone. They knocked several times on the door leading into the carport, but no one answered. Jim walked around to the master bedroom window, knocked loudly with his fist, and then rapped on it several times with his pocketknife. Through the window he could see the defendant lying on the bed. Defendant stirred and grunted and Jim saw his arm “flop over.” Thinking that defendant was coming to let them in, Jim returned to the carport and talked to his wife and his mother, Mrs. Murphy, who had seen them out the window and had walked over. When de *279 fendant still did not come to the door, Jim returned to the bedroom window and again knocked on it loudly with his knife. He heard defendant’s voice call out, “Is that you, Jim?” Jim replied, “Yeah, I need to use the telephone. Would you get up and let me in? The drain has come out of Carol’s side.” Defendant responded, “Go away and leave me alone.” Jim returned to the carport and told the women what defendant had said. Mrs. Murphy then went around to the bedroom window and called out for defendant and Susie. Getting no answer, she walked around to the children’s bedroom window and called their names. Thinking that perhaps defendant and Susie were in bed and didn’t want to be bothered, Jim and Carol went to use Carol’s mother’s phone to call the doctor, and Mrs. Murphy went home. At trial, Jim testified that he believed that defendant “was either asleep or drunk, one thing.”

Sheila and Christy White had planned to have Easter dinner with their grandparents, Albert and Opal White, after church on that Easter Sunday at about 1:15 p.m. Albert and Opal got home from church and waited for their granddaughters to arrive. When the girls failed to show up, Opal called her former daughter-in-law’s house to find out what had happened. When no one answered, Opal hung up, waited about five minutes, and at 2:10 p.m. dialed again. This time defendant answered. When Opal told him that the girls were supposed to be there for lunch and asked him where they were, defendant said, “They’re in the bedroom, I’ll tell them.” Opal was going to ask to speak to Christy, but defendant hung up. Opal turned to her husband and said, “Norris is drunk.” She then dialed back, but no one answered. Opal and Albert discussed what had just transpired, decided something was wrong, and decided to drive up to Susie’s house. Albert peered into the porch window and a large picture window, saw nothing unusual, and got back in his car and drove around to Mrs. Murphy’s trailer. Meanwhile, defendant had telephoned his brother at about 3:00 p.m. and said that he wanted to be taken to get some more beer. Bill and his wife, Reba, left their house and went to pick up defendant. When Mrs. Murphy, Albert, and Opal saw Bill and Reba drive up the driveway, Albert got back in his car and returned to Susie’s house. By the time he arrived, defendant had come out to his brother’s car. Reba Austin testified that defendant’s clothing was “all in a mess,” but that she wouldn’t say *280 he was drunk, “[h]e looked like somebody who was just getting over a real bad hangover.” Both she and her husband also testified that defendant had defecated in his clothing, which was also wet with urine. When Albert asked defendant where Susie and the children were, defendant responded that they had gone off with Jim. Albert got in his car and began backing out of the driveway. However, when he saw defendant get into Bill’s car and drive off, he pulled back up and went into the house. He walked through the kitchen, turned, looked into the bathroom, and saw Sheila, still dressed in her nightclothes, slumped over the bathtub, her legs out of the tub and her head, shoulders, and arms in it. Thinking that she was washing her hair but then noticing that there was no water in the tub, Albert picked Sheila up and laid her flat on her back. The tub was full of blood and blood was on Sheila’s face and clothes. After he had laid Sheila down, Albert looked into a bedroom and saw Susie, dressed in a nightgown, lying “flat on the floor on her face,” between the two beds. A “whole pond of blood” was under her face, Albert testified, and he touched her and she was stiff. Albert then turned and saw Christy in one of the beds, lying on her right side. A pool of blood was under her body and she also was stiff. Albert left the house and returned to Mrs. Murphy’s trailer. He told Mrs. Murphy and his wife, “Well, he’s killed them all,” and said, “[sjomebody call the law.” They then went over to Susie’s house to wait for the ambulance and the sheriffs department personnel. This time both Albert and Opal went in the house. Around 3:49 p.m., sheriffs department personnel arrived to clear and secure the crime scene, and Sergeant Max Quarles and Detective Robin Dale went into the house to check on the location of the bodies and to interview Mr. White.

Shortly thereafter, at about 4:00, Bill Austin returned with defendant. Defendant was put in Quarles’ patrol car and transported to the Burke County Jail, where he gave his consent to search the residence. A .22 semiautomatic Remington Speed-master rifle was found under the covers of the bed in the master bedroom. The safety was off.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
357 S.E.2d 641, 320 N.C. 276, 1987 N.C. LEXIS 2168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-austin-nc-1987.