State v. Clemmons

353 S.E.2d 209, 319 N.C. 192, 1987 N.C. LEXIS 1889
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 4, 1987
Docket159A86
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 353 S.E.2d 209 (State v. Clemmons) 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. Clemmons, 353 S.E.2d 209, 319 N.C. 192, 1987 N.C. LEXIS 1889 (N.C. 1987).

Opinion

WHICHARD, Justice.

The State’s evidence, in pertinent part, showed the following:

The victim first saw defendant about two weeks before the incident alleged when the victim’s son “darted out” in front of a car driven by defendant. After defendant ascertained that the boy was not injured, he “started asking [the victim] if [she] was married.” She told him she was. Defendant then “started asking if [the victim would] like to go out with him.” The victim told defendant she was married and did not want to go out with him, but defendant nevertheless “pursued the issue” by asking her “over again.” She then grabbed her son’s hand and went home.

The victim next saw defendant the following Wednesday. Her neighbor’s child came to tell her that “there was a man out there interested in buying a car.” The victim was attempting to sell her brother’s car, so she went out to talk to the man. When *194 she saw the man’s car, she realized that he was the defendant. They talked about the car for another “couple of minutes,” and defendant then asked “about coming over on Monday” to discuss the car. She told him he would have to come when her husband was there, and defendant said “something like ‘Why don’t you let me come over?’ ” She told him he would have to come when her husband was at home, and she then went inside because she “didn’t feel comfortable.”

The victim saw defendant again the following Monday standing on the porch at his place of employment. She had asked him his name and where he worked so her mother could talk to him further about the car. She showed her mother where defendant worked, and her mother later “went [by] to talk to him.”

The victim next saw defendant on the occasion of the incident in question. She was at home with her two children around noon when she heard a knock at the door. When she asked who was there, a man answered that he “had a package for Devlin Dorsey.” The victim had a son named Devlin Oyer who frequently received packages from his father, and the difference in the surnames did not occur to her. She opened the door slightly, and defendant “forced his way through.” When she screamed, defendant grabbed her year-old daughter and told the victim that if she did not cooperate he would hurt the daughter. Defendant held a knife in his hand that “looked like a switch blade.” He took the daughter into a bedroom, where the victim’s other child was, and shut the door. When he returned to the living room, the knife was still in his hand. He told the victim they “were going to have some fun.” He then pushed her down onto an easy chair, and she “slid down into a half-sitting half-lying position.”

Defendant thereupon crouched over the victim, “took [her] robe apart,” and “took off [her] panties.” He still had the knife in his hand. He told her “it was going to be good” and proceeded to have intercourse with her. The victim stated: “He penetrated, he went inside me.” Defendant then arose to go to the bathroom with the knife still in his hand.

When defendant returned, he told the victim “not to go to the police or ... he would harm [her] daughter.” He then told her he would see her again, and he left.

*195 After defendant left, the victim called a friend and told her she had been raped. The friend called the police, and both the friend and the police came to the victim’s home. The victim related the foregoing events to the police.

Two days later the victim was admitted to a hospital where she stayed for two weeks under the treatment of a psychiatrist. She was hospitalized because she “couldn’t seem to handle things,” “felt like [she] was going crazy,” “felt like [she] was losing [her] mind.” She was unable to take care of her children, her husband or herself.

On cross-examination the victim stated: “I was scared. He had a knife and he was twice the size of me. I don’t take chances with my children’s lives.” She responded in the negative when asked: “Didn’t you freely give this man sex?” She further testified that she could see the knife in defendant’s hand “the whole time he was there,” and that defendant had his hand pressed against her shoulder during the sexual union.

The victim’s friend testified, corroborating the victim’s testimony that the victim had called her following the incident and said that she had been raped. When she arrived at the victim’s home the police were already there. She described the scene at the home as follows: “[T]he place was a wreck like there had been a struggle .... There was a lamp tipped over on the floor and things were thrown everywhere.”

The victim’s sister testified, corroborating the victim’s testimony that defendant had been to the victim’s home prior to the incident to talk about the car and had asked if he could “come over Monday . . . .” The neighbor’s child testified, also corroborating the victim’s testimony about defendant’s prior visit.

A police officer testified that she saw the victim at the hospital on the date of the incident. She described the victim as “obviously traumatized.” She stated: “She was shaking, she had been crying, she was very upset, she appeared to be confused and very frightened.” The victim gave the officer a statement on that occasion which corroborated the victim’s testimony at trial.

Soong Lee testified as “an expert medical doctor specializing in the field of psychiatry.” He indicated that the victim had been brought to the emergency room on 25 June 1985, the day follow *196 ing the incident, because “she had passed out.” He described her condition upon that admittance as follows: “Recollection of that incident [ie., the alleged rape] [was] coming back to her mind over and over again and she was unable to function.”

Dr. Lee subsequently admitted the victim to the hospital from 26 June through 11 July. His diagnosis was “post traumatic stress disorder.” He again indicated that the victim was “having that recollection of the event coming back over and over again.” The victim told him that she was “unable to sleep, . . . frightened, . . . afraid that something was going to happen to her.” She was “re-experiencing what happened to her and . . . she was unable to function.” She was withdrawn and uncommunicative.

On cross-examination defense counsel asked Dr. Lee if marital problems could cause post traumatic stress disorder. He responded: “No, it has to be more acute.”

Defendant testified in his own behalf. He admitted that he “ha[d] sex” with the victim, but denied that he carried a knife or used force. He testified that the “sexual relationship [was] by consent” and that he returned to the victim’s house on 24 June because she “told [him] to come back then.” According to defendant, the sexual union was “both our ideas.” Defendant denied taking the victim’s daughter to the bedroom and stated that both the victim’s children were in the room with them when they “had sex.”

Finally, a police officer testified as a witness for defendant. He stated that at some time in June 1985 he had seen the victim at defendant’s service station.

The jury returned a verdict of guilty of rape in the first degree. Defendant appeals and presents two arguments.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Cartwright
629 S.E.2d 318 (Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 2006)
State v. Strickland
387 S.E.2d 62 (Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 1990)
State v. Martin
367 S.E.2d 618 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1988)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
353 S.E.2d 209, 319 N.C. 192, 1987 N.C. LEXIS 1889, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-clemmons-nc-1987.