State v. Frogge

481 S.E.2d 278, 345 N.C. 614, 1997 N.C. LEXIS 31
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 7, 1997
Docket413A95
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 481 S.E.2d 278 (State v. Frogge) 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. Frogge, 481 S.E.2d 278, 345 N.C. 614, 1997 N.C. LEXIS 31 (N.C. 1997).

Opinion

MITCHELL, Chief Justice.

Defendant Danny Dean Frogge was indicted on 3 July 1995 for the first-degree murders of Robert Edward Frogge and Audrey Yvonne Frogge. He was tried capitally to a jury at the 28 August 1995 Criminal Session of Superior Court, Forsyth County. The jury found defendant guilty of both counts of first-degree murder on the basis of malice, premeditation, and deliberation and under the felony murder rule. After a capital sentencing proceeding, the jury recommended a sentence of life imprisonment as to the murder of Robert Frogge and a sentence of death as to the murder of Audrey Frogge. The trial court sentenced defendant accordingly.

The State’s evidence tended to show inter alia that on 4 November 1994, defendant stabbed and killed his father, Robert Frogge, and his invalid stepmother, Audrey Frogge. After his arrest, defendant was incarcerated in the Forsyth County jail, where he met Gregory Tew, another jail inmate. Tew testified that about four months prior to trial, defendant approached Tew and asked Tew to pay him $5,000 in exchange for defendant’s full story concerning the murders. Defendant told Tew, who was awaiting trial on rape charges, that Tew could help himself with authorities by recounting defend *616 ant’s story to them. Tew could not raise that amount. Defendant ultimately reduced the demand by half, but Tew never paid him anything.

Tew also testified that about two months prior to trial, defendant recounted the killings to Tew, and the recounting consisted of the following: Defendant, who lived with his father and stepmother in his father’s house, got home from work on 4 November 1995 and began drinking. At some point between 8:00 and 9:00 p.m., his stepmother and father told defendant to get out of the house since he was drinking. Defendant refused, and an argument ensued between defendant and his father in which his father struck him with a metal bar. The blow left a bruise on defendant’s side and arm where he blocked it. Defendant then stabbed his father with a butcher knife he obtained from the kitchen. Defendant did not indicate in what room of the house the initial confrontation occurred, but said that it ended in the bedroom, where he stabbed his father in the back as his stepmother watched. From her bed, Audrey Frogge said, “Please don’t kill me,” and defendant stabbed her in the stomach. Defendant related that he then changed his clothes; disposed of his bloody clothing and the knife in the woods; and drove to a friend’s house, where he drank and partied. He returned to the house at around 4:00 or 4:30 a.m. and called the police. Defendant then removed his father’s wallet from the back pocket of his father’s pants, and, removing some money in order to fake a robbery, defendant laid the wallet and its remaining contents beside his father’s body.

According to Tew’s testimony, defendant also explained to Tew that he had been drinking the night of the murders and that he had problems with his father while defendant was growing up. When asked on direct examination whether defendant stated why he stabbed his stepmother, Tew stated that he did not. While Audrey Frogge was hospitalized for diabetes, defendant told his father that it would be a mess if she came back into the house. Defendant also told Tew that he remembered stabbing her more times than he stabbed his father. On cross-examination during trial, Tew testified that defendant felt telling Tew the background surrounding the killings would assist defendant in avoiding the death penalty and that Tew’s testimony at defendant’s trial would assist Tew as well. Tew also testified that no money ever changed hands.

In an assignment of error, defendant argues that the trial court erred by admitting a noncorroborative and inadmissible prior statement which Gregory Tew made to the Winston-Salem police. *617 Defendant argues that Tew’s unsworn statement was not admissible under the prior consistent statement exception to the hearsay rule because it contradicted Tew’s trial testimony and contained information grossly prejudicial to defendant. Thus, defendant contends that he was prejudiced by the admission of conflicting evidence under the guise of corroboration and is entitled to a new trial. We agree.

The State called Gregory Tew to testify about statements defendant allegedly made to him while they were incarcerated together in the Forsyth County jail. Later, over defendant’s objection, the State called Detective Dennis Scales to read aloud the contents of a statement Tew made to him on the day Tew entered into a plea agreement with the State regarding his statutory rape charge. The statement was offered for corroborative purposes and was received into evidence subject to the court’s instruction that the jury not consider the statement as substantive evidence, but only in determining Tew’s credibility.

Defendant points to three instances in which Tew’s prior statement conflicts with his trial testimony. In the first instance, Tew testified that defendant stated that Robert Frogge, Audrey Frogge, and defendant were arguing when Robert struck defendant with a metal bar. Tew testified that defendant told him that after his father struck him, defendant got a knife from the kitchen and stabbed Robert and then Audrey. Yet in his statement to the police, Tew said that he did not remember whether defendant said he had the knife first or his dad had the bar first. Second, Tew testified that after the murders, defendant went to Kim Hairston’s house and partied, after which he returned to the home around 4:30 a.m. According to Tew’s testimony, after returning home, defendant removed money from his father’s wallet in order to make it look like a robbery. Yet contrary to this testimony, Tew told the police that defendant got the wallet out of his father’s pocket and removed money from it prior to driving to Kim Hairston’s house. Finally, with regard to the killing of Audrey Frogge, Tew testified that defendant did not say why he stabbed his stepmother. Yet in his statement to police, Tew stated that defendant told him he hated his stepmother because she was always “bossing” him around and threatening to throw him out of the house.

Defendant argues that prior contradictory statements do not corroborate a witness’ testimony and may not be admitted under such a theory. We agree. The official commentary to Rule 613 of the North Carolina Rules of Evidence states that “foundation requirements for admitting inconsistent statements will be governed by case law.” *618 N.C.G.S. § 8C-1, Rule 613 official commentary (1992). We therefore look to our cases decided after the North Carolina Rules of Evidence were enacted as a guide to determine the propriety of admitting non-corroborative testimony. We have stated that a “witness’s prior statements as to facts not referred to in his trial testimony and not tending to add weight or credibility to it are not admissible as corroborative evidence.” State v. Ramey, 318 N.C. 457, 469, 349 S.E.2d 566, 574 (1986). Moreover, we also stated in Ramey that “the witness’s prior contradictory statements may not be admitted under the guise of corroborating his testimony.” Id.

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Bluebook (online)
481 S.E.2d 278, 345 N.C. 614, 1997 N.C. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-frogge-nc-1997.