State v. Billings

409 S.E.2d 707, 104 N.C. App. 362, 1991 N.C. App. LEXIS 1069
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 5, 1991
Docket9014SC1226
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 409 S.E.2d 707 (State v. Billings) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals 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. Billings, 409 S.E.2d 707, 104 N.C. App. 362, 1991 N.C. App. LEXIS 1069 (N.C. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

PARKER, Judge.

Defendant was tried before a jury for attempted first degree rape, robbery with a dangerous weapon, assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill inflicting serious injury, felonious breaking and entering, felonious larceny and possession of stolen goods. The jurors convicted defendant of robbery with a dangerous weapon, felonious breaking and entering, assault with a deadly weapon inflicting serious injury, felonious larceny of a motor vehicle, and felonious possession of a motor vehicle. Finding aggravating and mitigating factors, the trial court sentenced him to consecutive terms totalling seventy years of imprisonment and arrested judgment as to defendant’s conviction of felonious possession of a motor vehicle.

Defendant’s three contentions on appeal relate solely to the guilt phase of his trial. Defendant brings forward forty-four assignments of error but in his brief mentions and presents arguments in support of only twenty-five of these. The other nine *365 teen are, therefore, deemed abandoned. See N.C.R. App. P. 28(b)(5). Defendant first contends the court erred in denying his motion to suppress a witness’ out of court and in court identifications of him in that (i) there was insufficient evidence to support fourteen of the trial court’s findings of fact in the written order denying the motion to suppress or (ii) procedures used in the out of court identification were impermissibly suggestive and tainted the in court identification. We find these contentions to be without merit.

State’s evidence tended to show that the victim vividly recalled what happened to her on 16 June 1989, when she returned home shortly before noon and was stabbed and robbed in her house on the corner of Markham and Washington Streets in Durham, North Carolina. She did not see her assailant’s face because at first he remained behind her and later covered her head with a pillow case from her bed. From seeing his arm and hearing his voice, she knew that he was male and of African American descent; but she could not positively identify defendant’s voice as that of her assailant. After her assailant took her car keys and attempted to drive away in her car, the victim heard the car stall three times.

Within minutes of the assault and robbery, Dorothea Jean Davis drove her 1978 Pontiac Bonneville automobile from Green Street onto Washington Street. At trial she testified that her friend Joyce Whitted was sitting in the front passenger seat of the Bonneville and the windows were down, but Davis could not recall if the radio was playing. When Davis turned onto Washington Street, she saw a car stopped in the street. Other cars were driving around the stopped car. The position of the stopped car forced other cars to cross into the oncoming traffic lane to pass by. As Davis drove her car around the stopped car, she could see into the driver’s side. She saw an African American man. Defense counsel objected to Davis’ identifying defendant as the driver she saw, and a lengthy voir dire ensued.

On voir dire, Officer Eric Hester of the Durham Police Department testified that on the Friday following the date of the crime he and other officers conducted a door to door investigation in the Washington Street area, using fliers showing the victim’s car. Hester approached two men in the 500 block of Green Street, and one of them led him to Davis. Davis then told Hester she had seen a “Crime Stoppers” bulletin on television which included a photograph of a car that she recognized. She stated further that *366 on first seeing the actual stopped car she became angry; and as she drove by it, she looked at the driver and said, “If you don’t know how to drive a stick, get out of the street.” In a statement signed on Friday, 23 June 1989, she said the driver was an African American man with a baby face and short cropped hair that looked like it was messed up in the front.

The same afternoon, Davis worked with technician Allison Hudgins on a composite sketch of the driver. Since Davis and Hester were unsatisfied with this sketch, Hester called in a free lance artist. The artist’s sketch was published the following Monday, 26 June, and the next day, Hester received additional information about the crime. Hester testified further that he went to Davis’ residence and asked her to look at an array of photographs. He showed Davis photographs of six men; one photograph had been taken of defendant several years earlier. Upon seeing defendant’s photograph, Davis stated, “It looks real close. The hair is right. It looks messed up. The complexion is right, but he is just not full enough in the lower facial area, mainly the chin area.”

On 28 June, Hester showed Davis another photographic array at the police station. Again, there were six photographs, including one photograph of defendant made only a day or two before the second viewing. Defendant was the only subject whose photograph was in both arrays. Davis picked out the photograph of defendant. Hester testified that only after Davis picked out defendant’s photograph from the second array did he tell Davis the two arrays had included different photographs of the same person.

On voir dire, Davis’ testimony on direct examination essentially corroborated Hester’s account of the circumstances surrounding her viewing of the arrays. On cross-examination, using the court reporter for purposes of illustration, Davis demonstrated how she had turned and spoken to the defendant. In addition, with respect to the second viewing, the following colloquy took place:

Q. Now, after you picked that picture out, did you say anything to Detective Hester?
A. I told him that I felt sure about that picture.
Q. Did you go on to say to him that you were concerned about anything?
A. Not that I can recall. No.
*367 Q. Did you think of the first line-up at all while you were looking at the second line-up?
A. Yes.
Q. You had been thinking about both of them, weren’t you?
A. In a way, yes, because at the first line-up I felt like I was looking at one picture and he was similar to the guy, but, you know, it wasn’t him, and then on the second pictures I felt sure about this, but I did not know then that it was the same person, but I had felt concern about it.
Q. Did it help you [to] see the picture two times to be sure?
A. No, because I didn’t know that the picture .... [I]n other words, [at] the first line-up I didn’t feel certain about it. [At] the second one I did.
Q. I’m not clear why Detective Hester thought you were concerned?
A. I guess it was because I told him that in the first line-up I felt that this could be the guy, but I could not make a positive identification of the guy.
Q. Were you worried that you were picking the wrong person, is that what you mean?
A. No.
Q.

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Bluebook (online)
409 S.E.2d 707, 104 N.C. App. 362, 1991 N.C. App. LEXIS 1069, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-billings-ncctapp-1991.