State v. Carter

739 S.E.2d 548, 366 N.C. 496, 2013 WL 1501703, 2013 N.C. LEXIS 344
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedApril 12, 2013
Docket507PA11
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 739 S.E.2d 548 (State v. Carter) 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. Carter, 739 S.E.2d 548, 366 N.C. 496, 2013 WL 1501703, 2013 N.C. LEXIS 344 (N.C. 2013).

Opinion

*497 BEASLEY, Justice.

In this appeal we consider whether the trial court’s failure to give the jury an instruction on the lesser-included offense of attempted first-degree sexual offense constituted plain error in defendant’s trial for two counts of first-degree sexual offense. This Court concludes that defendant failed to show plain error under the standard we set forth in State v. Lawrence, 365 N.C. 506, 723 S.E.2d 326 (2012). Consequently, we reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals and reinstate the jury’s verdict and the trial court’s judgment.

On 13 October 2008, defendant was indicted in Iredell County on two counts of first-degree statutory sexual offense with a child under the age of thirteen on the basis of acts alleged to have occurred in June of 2008 with defendant’s eight-year-old stepdaughter. Defendant pleaded not guilty to both counts and the case proceeded to trial.

At trial the State’s evidence tended to show the following facts. In 2007, while living with her family in South Carolina, the victim reported to her mother that defendant had come into her bed while she was asleep, cuddled with her, and “put his penis in her ‘butt crack.’ ” Her mother did not report the incident. The family later moved to North Carolina. In August of 2008 the victim again informed her mother that defendant had sexually abused her. The victim’s mother then took her to the Dove House Children’s Advocacy Center for a medical examination and reported the abuse to the police department.

Tammy Carroll, a Dove House nurse, examined the victim and found a small anal fissure, which Ms. Carroll described at trial as a tear or erosion attributed to a trauma to that area. Ms. Carroll explained that a penis inside the “butt crack” or on the “butthole,” or even on the “butt cheeks,” could cause such a fissure, as could frequent diarrhea or constipation, although there was no evidence of either condition. While at Dove House the victim also spoke with Julie Gibson, an Iredell County Sheriff’s Captain and backup forensic interviewer for Dove House, and told her that defendant “put his penis in [her] butt 50 times.” (Emphasis added.)

At trial the victim testified and described several incidents in which defendant put his “doodle” either “on” or “in” her anus in some manner. She stated, “He took a certain part of his body and stuck it on another part of my body.” (Emphasis added.) She was then asked, “You said he took a certain part of his body and stuck it in a certain part of your body,” to which she replied, “Yes.” (Emphasis added.) *498 She again replied, “Yes,” when the State proffered, “You said he stuck a certain part of his body which you call his doodle or his penis in a certain part of your body.” (Emphasis added.) The State asked her to explain how defendant’s “doodle went, was stuck into [her] bottom,” and she stated, “Well, it would be between my butt cheeks, as I call it, and like right there over my butthole or hole in my anus.” (Emphases added.) In providing another description she said, “Well, my Daddy Dave was pushing his doodle in really, really hard, and for some reason I’m very, very delicate, and he was pushing it really hard and it would make it feel very sore and stuff. And sometimes it would feel like it would be bleeding.” (Emphasis added.) The State later asked the victim if she remembered “drawing a picture” of defendant placing his penis “in” her “bottom” and she answered affirmatively. (Emphasis added.) She also demonstrated that she understood the difference between “in” and “on” by using a checkbook and blank checks and identifying when the checks were “in” or “on” the checkbook.

On cross-examination, in response to defendant’s request that she clarify her testimony that he had put his penis “on [her] butthole,” she stated, “Well, this is a bad example, but like he would put his doodle between my butt cheeks and it will be sort of pressing on my butt hole.” (Emphases added.) She later testified that defendant put his penis “in” her butt fifty or one hundred times. When defense counsel asked which it was, she replied, “I’m not sure, but he did do it a lot.”

Defendant did not request an instruction on attempt. On 27 May 2010, a jury convicted defendant of (1) first-degree sex offense based on “ [insertion of male sex organ into the mouth of the alleged victim” (File No. 08 CRS 057285) and (2) first-degree sex offense based on “[insertion of the male sex organ into the anus of the alleged victim” (File No. 08 CRS 057286). The trial court found defendant to have a prior record level of I and sentenced him within the presumptive range to two consecutive terms of 192 to 240 months each. The trial court further required defendant to register as a sex offender npon his release from prison and ordered him to enroll in satellite-based monitoring (SBM) for life.

Defendant appealed both convictions and the order for SBM to the Court of Appeals, which, in a unanimous opinion, vacated and remanded the SBM order and held that there was no error with respect to the first offense. The Court of Appeals held, however, that the trial court’s failure to give an instruction on the lesser-included offense was plain error and granted a new trial with respect to the *499 second offense. The Court of Appeals based its holding upon the existence of a conflict in the evidence presented at trial. In explaining its finding of plain error, the Court of Appeals wrote:

Although certain portions of [the victim’s] testimony tended to show that anal penetration had occurred, her statements that [defendant put his penis “on” or “between my butt cheeks” or that he “pressed against” her anus with his penis support an inference to the contrary. Moreover, although “evidence that no trauma occurred to [the victim] is not sufficient to establish a conflict of evidence as to penetration,” Ms. Carroll’s testimony indicated that [the victim’s] anal fissure could have resulted from attempted, as well as completed, penetration. As a result, a jury could rationally have found [defendant guilty of attempted first-degree sexual offense in File No. 08 CrS 57286.

State v. Carter, — N.C. App. —, —, 718 S.E.2d 687, 698 (2011) (third alteration in original) (internal citation omitted) (emphases added).

We allowed the State’s petition for discretionary review of the Court of Appeals’ holding with regard to the conviction for “insertion of the male sex organ into the anus of the alleged victim.”

The State’s argument is twofold. First, the State contends that the failure to give the instruction was not error because the State only needed to prove that penetration occurred, however slightly, on one occasion in that defendant was only charged with one count of the offense for multiple acts occurring sometime in June 2008.

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739 S.E.2d 548, 366 N.C. 496, 2013 WL 1501703, 2013 N.C. LEXIS 344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-carter-nc-2013.