State v. Carson

445 S.E.2d 585, 337 N.C. 407, 1994 N.C. LEXIS 400
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJuly 29, 1994
Docket431A93
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 445 S.E.2d 585 (State v. Carson) 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. Carson, 445 S.E.2d 585, 337 N.C. 407, 1994 N.C. LEXIS 400 (N.C. 1994).

Opinion

MEYER, Justice.

On 6 July 1992, a Buncombe County grand jury indicted defendant Algerio Steffon Carson for the murder of Walter Samuel Rice and for assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill inflicting serious injury upon Lois Elaine Wallin. On 3 August 1992, the grand jury also indicted defendant for discharging a firearm into occupied property, a vehicle occupied by Rice and Wallin. Defendant was tried capitally at the 30 November 1992 Criminal Session of Superior Court, Buncombe County. The jury found defendant guilty of first-degree murder under the felony murder rule, guilty of assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill, and guilty of discharging a firearm into an occupied vehicle. On 11 December 1992, Judge Downs entered judgments sentencing defendant to consecutive terms of life imprisonment for the first-degree murder conviction and five years’ imprisonment for the assault conviction. The conviction for discharging a firearm into an occupied vehicle was merged with the first-degree murder conviction; thus, there was no additional sentence imposed for, and defendant does not appeal from, that conviction.

Defendant brings forward two assignments of error. First, he contends the trial judge erred when he denied defendant’s motion to dismiss for insufficiency of the evidence because the State failed to prove that defendant personally inflicted the murder victim’s fatal wound. Second, he argues that the trial court’s jury instruction on the doctrine of transferred intent permitted application of an unconstitutional conclusive presumption in the jury’s consideration of the assault charge. We conclude that defendant’s assignments of error are without merit.

The evidence taken in the light most favorable to the State showed the following. On 20 December 1991, Terri Roberson; her sister, Lois Wallin; and Wallin’s boyfriend, “Sammy” Rice, left Cowboy’s Nightlife bar to purchase some cocaine. Roberson drove the threesome to Deaverview Apartments in her black Ford Ranger truck.

*409 Deaverview apartment complex is divided into an upper and lower level. Each level has its own separate, noncontiguous entrance, and a footpath connects the upper and lower levels of the complex.

Roberson drove into the upper level of the complex in search of a drug dealer. Roberson and Rice got out of the truck; Wallin remained inside. Roberson told Sharee Lynch that she wanted to buy some cocaine, and Lynch directed her to a man standing nearby. Roberson testified that she had $220.00 in her back pocket. She removed $60.00 from her pocket and told the man to get two or three needles and syringes. The man left to get the syringes.

Roberson testified that the man returned with one syringe and wanted $5.00 for it. Roberson refused to pay the asking price because it was too high. The next thing Roberson knew, she had been hit and knocked to the ground in front of the truck. She discovered that her money was gone and heard gunshots in the lower part of the apartment complex.

Sharee Lynch stated to the police that defendant ran up from the lower level of the complex and shot at Roberson’s truck just after the altercation on the upper level. Roberson and Rice jumped into the truck and Roberson drove out of the parking lot. According to Lynch, defendant was still shooting at the truck as Roberson drove out of the upper level parking lot. Lynch heard bullets hitting the side of the truck. She heard defendant shoot six times and then watched him reload the gun.

Roberson drove out of the upper level of the complex and into the parking lot of the lower level. Rice sat on the passenger side of the truck, and Wallin sat in the middle. Roberson parked in front of her brother’s apartment. According to Roberson, she left Rice and Wallin waiting in the truck while she went into her brother’s apartment to borrow his shotgun. She testified, “I’d been robbed, and I was going to kill somebody, or hurt them.” Roberson admitted that she was drunk and “ranting and raving.”

While inside her brother’s apartment, Roberson heard four or five gunshots outside. Roberson ran outside and opened the driver’s door to find her sister slumped over in the driver’s seat, with Rice lying on top of her. Both Rice and Wallin had been hit by gunfire. Roberson heard Rice struggling to breathe, and he died soon thereafter.

Wallin testified that while Roberson was in her brother’s apartment, two black men, one short and one tall, came down the hill to *410 the track. She later identified the short man as defendant and the tall man as Theodis Burgin. She testified that Burgin leaned part of his body inside the passenger window and began hitting Rice in the chest. She and Rice tried to push Burgin out of the window. Wallin stated that Burgin stepped aside, and she saw defendant standing there with a gun. According to Wallin, defendant was the only man with a gun. She recalled that the gun “just went off, bam, bam, bam, bam,” and she saw smoke. Rice pushed Wallin over in the seat. Wallin received grazing bullet wounds to her wrist and back. No bullets were recovered from her body.

In his statement to the Asheville Police Department, defendant confessed to firing three shots from a black .38-caliber revolver into the truck in the lower level of the complex:

As far as a robbery, I don’t know anything about it, except stories that I have heard about. We were having a party, and I was in the house, and I heard some guns — gunshots. Three people were shooting at the bottom of the hill and two people were standing— were shooting at the top of the hill. I came outside of the apartment I was in, which was Wanda Brown’s. I shot two times in the air. I then went back inside and reloaded the two shells I shot.
Someone came inside and said that there was a fight up on the hill. I went up there and I saw Sherri [sic] up there saying, “I need a hit.”
We went back down the hill. The truck which I think was a black — I think it was black with a red line and gray on the bottom was parked down across from where the party was. I saw a girl who was white and a dude who was also white inside the truck. They were just sitting inside the truck. A dude named Boo, also known as Theodis Burgin, started hitting the white man in the face a couple of times. We moved out of the way, and I was standing behind him, and I started shooting. I shot three times with a .38 which was black with brown handle. I heard the window bust and the guy said “Stop it,” so I stopped shooting. Also think the woman said, “Stop it.” There was a bunch of people shooting.

Dr. Richard Landau, the pathologist who performed the autopsy on Rice, testified that Rice received two gunshot wounds. Landau could not determine the order in which the two wounds occurred. Nor could he determine the caliber of the bullets or type of gun that was used to inflict the wounds.

*411 Landau testified that the fatal wound was caused by a bullet that entered Rice’s right back area and exited his left shoulder. The bullet followed a right-to-left and slightly upward path, passing through the victim’s right lung, vertebral column, aorta, and major vessels in the left lung. Landau concluded that Rice bled to death as a result of this wound.

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Related

State v. Byrd
596 S.E.2d 860 (Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 2004)
State v. Lindsey
455 S.E.2d 909 (Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 1995)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
445 S.E.2d 585, 337 N.C. 407, 1994 N.C. LEXIS 400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-carson-nc-1994.