State v. Fox

790 S.E.2d 752, 2016 N.C. App. LEXIS 749, 2016 WL 3889383
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedJuly 19, 2016
DocketNo. COA 15–1392.
StatusPublished

This text of 790 S.E.2d 752 (State v. Fox) 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. Fox, 790 S.E.2d 752, 2016 N.C. App. LEXIS 749, 2016 WL 3889383 (N.C. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

HUNTER, JR., ROBERT N., Judge.

A jury convicted Garrett Fox ("Defendant") of two counts of trafficking by selling four grams or more but less than fourteen grams of opium or heroin. Defendant appeals a final judgment sentencing him to two consecutive terms of seventy to ninety-seven months imprisonment. Defendant contends the court committed plain error in admitting lay opinion testimony from a detective concerning the credibility of his informant and instructing the jury to decide a question the State conceded at trial. We hold the court did not plainly err.

I. Facts and Procedural History

The Haywood County grand jury indicted Defendant for two counts of trafficking in opium or heroin by selling four grams or more but less than fourteen grams. The offenses occurred on 22 May 2013 and 20 June 2013. Both the State and Defendant consented to joinder of the offenses.

During the pre-trial conference, Defendant informed the court he planned to admit essential elements of the offenses. He admitted he possessed, sold, and transported four or more but less than fourteen grams of opium or heroin on two separate occasions. Defendant's counsel notified the court he wished to raise the defense of entrapment as to both counts of trafficking by sale.

The case came for trial on 23 March 2015. The State presented four witnesses: Mark Mease, Mitch McAbee, Holly Newsome, and Jennifer Robertson. The evidence presented at trial relevant to the appeal tended to show the following. Sergeant Mark Mease, a detective with the Haywood County Sheriff's Office, testified Danny Price, a confidential informant, told him 100 dosage units of oxycodone could be purchased illegally for $1000. Mease agreed if the potential target was willing to sell directly to an undercover officer, then he would complete the transaction. According to Mease, in an undercover operation, because informants tend to be unreliable buyers, police prefer to set up a transaction where an undercover officer is the buyer.

In both transactions, Detective McAbee purchased the pills directly from the Defendant. On 22 May 2013, McAbee drove an undercover vehicle to a predetermined location, met with Defendant, and completed the transaction. Mease's informant then contacted him about the possibility of a second transaction involving Defendant. At the same price, Mease agreed. Mease conducted surveillance during the transaction, which took place at a local Ingles food store. He witnessed Defendant and his girlfriend, Candy Brady, walk up to the undercover vehicle and complete the transaction with Detective McAbee.

On cross-examination, the following exchange occurred:

Q: Okay. In your experience working with Mr. Danny Price in 2013 with respect to the cases against Mr. Fox, did he prove to you to be reliable or unreliable?
A: He proved to be reliable in those cases.

The defense did not object to this testimony.

Detective McAbee, a detective with the Haywood County Sheriff's Office, testified on 22 May 2013, he met Defendant undercover at the informant's residence and purchased pills. Upon entering the residence, he saw Defendant and his girlfriend seated in the living room with a bag of pills on the coffee table. He paid Defendant $1000 and took the pills from the table. They had a brief discussion about setting up a future transaction.

On 20 June 2013, he met Defendant again, this time outside Ingles grocery store in a pickup truck. Defendant and Price arrived soon after Detective McAbee, and they both got in McAbee's truck. Detective McAbee gave Defendant $1000 for 100 oxycodone pills. After a brief discussion regarding the possibility of future transactions, the parties parted ways. The State rested.

Defendant moved to dismiss all charges. The court denied Defendant's motion.

Defendant testified on his own behalf. Defendant testified Price tried to convince him to sell his prescription pills in April 2013. Defendant stayed at the home of his friends, Nate and Rhonda, and Price showed up with the intention of selling Nate and Rhonda his prescription pills. When he discovered they were not at home, he offered to sell Defendant the pills. Defendant refused, saying that he had his own prescription. Price then asked him if he would be willing to sell some of his prescription, and he refused. Price called him several times over the next few weeks trying to convince him to sell his prescription. He denied Price's requests at first, but eventually gave in when Price said he would "get [him] in a place" if he sold his prescription. The cost of moving into a new place and turning the electricity on would be around $1400, and his desire to move his family motivated him to set up the transactions. He agreed to sell 100 of his oxycodone pills for $1000, and he received another $400 from Price in exchange for a promise to sell 100 more from his next prescription. He gave Price ten extra pills during this first transaction as a thank you for helping him afford a place to live. At the next transaction on 20 June, he sold McAbee ninety pills for $900 dollars.

The defense called Irene Griffin, a registered pharmacist, to the stand. Griffin verified Defendant had a lawful prescription for oxycodone with acetaminophen, ten milligrams/325 milligrams, which he filled on 11 January 2013. The prescription contained 180 pills. Griffin also verified Defendant filled a prescription for 180 oxycodone pills on 21 May 2013. The defense rested.

In rebuttal, the State called Danny Price, the informant, to testify. Price claimed Defendant approached him, asking if Price knew where he could sell his pills. Price did not testify about a date or timeline of when Defendant approached him. Price never offered to sell any pills during his April 2013 visit to Nate and Rhonda's house, but offered to ask around to see if he could accommodate Defendant's request to sell his pills. Defendant called Price multiple times after their April meeting to see if he found a buyer. After the first sale in May 2013, Defendant began calling him again to see if they could set up a second sale after he was able to refill his prescription.

Price then explained a judge accepted his plea agreement 28 January 2014, prior to his testimony in this trial. The State read his plea agreement into the record:

"The defendant shall plead guilty by way of bill of information to two counts of maintaining a dwelling place or vehicle for controlled substances. Pursuant to plea, the State shall dismiss the remaining charges delineated hereinafter in this transcript." Price testified he did not testify in this case pursuant to any deal.

At the close of all the evidence, Defendant again moved for dismissal of all charges. Defendant also requested the court dismiss the charges of trafficking by sale and hold he was entrapped as a matter of law. The State conceded the third element of entrapment, that Price acted as an agent of the State in his interactions with Defendant, but argued the presence of the first element is a question for the jury. The State also requested entrapment be denied as a matter of law because Defendant cannot satisfy the second element, that Defendant was subject to persuasion or trickery. The State addressed Defendant's first argument of lawful possession by stating that the evidence does not definitively prove that the pills sold to McAbee were the same pills Defendant was prescribed, and that this was a factual question for a jury to decide. The court denied Defendant's motion to dismiss the two charges of trafficking by sale.

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Bluebook (online)
790 S.E.2d 752, 2016 N.C. App. LEXIS 749, 2016 WL 3889383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-fox-ncctapp-2016.