State v. Garner

410 S.E.2d 861, 330 N.C. 273, 1991 N.C. LEXIS 804
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 6, 1991
Docket532A90
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 410 S.E.2d 861 (State v. Garner) 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. Garner, 410 S.E.2d 861, 330 N.C. 273, 1991 N.C. LEXIS 804 (N.C. 1991).

Opinion

FRYE, Justice.

On 8 May 1989, an Alamance County grand jury indicted defendant for first-degree murder and first-degree kidnapping of Debbie Leigh Mills Brown. The grand jury, on the same day, also indicted defendant for discharging a firearm into occupied property, first-degree burglary of Charles Steven Barbour’s mobile home, assault by pointing a gun on David B. Sperling and Barbour, and communicating threats to Barbour. On 22 December 1989, the State drafted a superseding information as to the first-degree burglary and first-degree kidnapping, and defendant signed a waiver of indictment *279 on both charges and agreed as to those two charges to be tried upon the information. These informations were filed on 27 December 1989.

Defendant entered a plea of not guilty to all the charges, and the jury convicted defendant of all the charges. After a sentencing proceeding held pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 15A-2000, the jury recommended a sentence of life imprisonment for the murder conviction. The trial judge found aggravating and mitigating factors in the burglary case and arrested judgment in the kidnapping case. Defendant received a life sentence for the first-degree murder, a consecutive life sentence for the burglary, a consecutive three-year sentence for discharging a firearm, and a concurrent six-month sentence for the assaults and communicating threats convictions. Defendant appeals his conviction for first-degree murder to this Court as a matter of right, and on 4 January 1991, this Court granted defendant’s motion to bypass the Court of Appeals on his appeal of the noncapital convictions.

In his appeal defendant raises eleven issues. We find that defendant’s trial was free of prejudicial error.

Defendant and the victim met in 1981 and lived together “off and on” until the victim’s death in April 1989. About a month prior to the victim’s death, defendant and the victim were living together in a home with their child Natasha, who was born in 1983, and with the victim’s two children from a previous marriage. Defendant moved out of their home in March 1989 and moved into his mother’s mobile home. However, defendant did not move all of his possessions out of the house he had shared with the victim and continued to spend some nights there with her after he moved out of the home. On 9 April 1989, Barry Mills, Jr., the victim’s brother, moved into the home she and defendant had shared.

Mills testified that when he was living with the victim during the week of April 9-14 defendant called the victim many times on the telephone, and they argued during the conversations. Over defendant’s objection, Mills further testified that the victim told him “that she wished that Vernon Garner would leave her alone, that the relationship as far as she was concerned had . . . ended, and that she just wanted to be left alone by him so that she could do what she had to do for herself and her life and for her children.” Mills related, over defendant’s objection, that on 14 April he and the victim had taken defendant’s daughter to spend the *280 weekend with defendant and that the victim told defendant “that she did not wish to talk with him.”

After leaving their daughter Natasha with defendant at his mother’s home, the victim and her brother went to the Party Time Lounge about 7:20 p.m. on 14 April. The victim would on occasion work as a waitress at the Party Time Lounge which was owned by Barbour. While the victim was at the lounge, defendant called and asked Barbour if he could speak with the victim. Defendant testified that he called the victim to tell her that their daughter was sick and that the victim told him that she would talk to him later when the lounge closed.

After the lounge closed, about 2 a.m. on the morning of 15 April, Barbour, David Sperling, Jennifer Shatterly, and the victim went to Barbour’s mobile home which was beside the lounge. Barbour cooked a meal for the group while the other three talked. The telephone rang, Barbour answered it, and defendant asked to speak to the victim. Barbour testified, over defendant’s objection, that the victim came to the telephone and told defendant “to leave her alone and not call her anymore.”

After the group finished eating, Barbour, Sperling, and the victim remained seated at the kitchen table, and Shatterly fell asleep on the living room couch. Barbour, Sperling, and Shatterly all testified that defendant, holding a sawed-off .410 shotgun, came in the front door of the mobile home without knocking and asked the victim to go outside with him. Barbour testified that defendant told Barbour and Sperling to get on the floor or he would kill them. Barbour further testified that the victim resisted going with defendant and told him that she was not going with him, but defendant grabbed the victim’s arm and “sort of half way threw her out the door.” Barbour testified that after defendant and the victim left the mobile home, he went to his bedroom and got a gun and told Sperling to call 911. After Barbour heard a shot, he looked out of the window of the mobile home and saw defendant and the victim standing next to each other in the center of the parking lot located between his mobile home and the Party Time Lounge. Barbour opened the front door of the mobile home and saw that defendant and the victim were still talking in the parking lot. Barbour saw the victim move toward defendant and saw defendant hit the victim in the mouth and face with the shotgun. She fell to the ground. According to Barbour, defendant reached down and *281 grabbed the victim’s ankle, the victim reached up, and the gun fired. Barbour testified that after the .shot was fired, defendant walked toward the mobile home and, as he was reloading his shotgun, he told Barbour that Barbour could have the victim. Barbour got down on the floor of the mobile home when he realized that defendant was getting ready to fire the shotgun. A shot was fired through a window into the mobile home. After Barbour heard defendant walking away, he went out to assist the victim and saw defendant driving away.

A sheriff’s deputy and an ambulance arrived shortly after defendant left. The victim told the officer that her stomach was hurting, and when the officer asked the victim if she had been shot, the victim replied, “No.” The ambulance took the victim to the hospital where she died about thirty minutes later as a result of a gunshot wound to her upper abdomen which caused massive internal bleeding.

Defendant testified that he left his mother’s home about 2 a.m. that night and went to the victim’s house to look for her to tell her about their sick child. Defendant found that the victim was not at her home, but he saw her car in the parking lot at the Party Time Lounge which was next to Barbour’s mobile home. Defendant testified that he had his shotgun with him because he had received a threatening telephone call in early April warning him to leave the victim alone.

Defendant testified that after seeing the victim’s car near Barbour’s mobile home, he got his shotgun and walked up to the door of the mobile home. According to defendant, he knocked on the door and Barbour told him to come inside. Defendant said that the victim asked him what he was doing there, and he told her that he wanted to talk with her and asked her to go outside with him.

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Bluebook (online)
410 S.E.2d 861, 330 N.C. 273, 1991 N.C. LEXIS 804, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-garner-nc-1991.