State v. Gibson

424 S.E.2d 95, 333 N.C. 29, 1992 N.C. LEXIS 670
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 18, 1992
Docket488A90
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 424 S.E.2d 95 (State v. Gibson) 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. Gibson, 424 S.E.2d 95, 333 N.C. 29, 1992 N.C. LEXIS 670 (N.C. 1992).

Opinion

LAKE, Justice.

The defendant was indicted on 8 January 1990 for one count of first-degree murder, one count of robbery with a dangerous weapon, and one count of conspiracy to commit murder and robbery with a dangerous weapon. The cases came on for joint capital trial at the 12 March 1990 Criminal Session of Superior Court, Duplin County.

On 29 March 1990 the jury returned verdicts of guilty as charged on all counts, and, following a sentencing hearing, recommended a sentence of life imprisonment for the first-degree murder. Defendant was sentenced to consecutive terms of life imprisonment for first-degree murder, forty years imprisonment for robbery with a dangerous weapon, and ten years imprisonment for conspiracy to commit murder and robbery with a dangerous weapon. Upon consideration of all assignments of error, we find no prejudicial error.

The evidence at trial showed that on 2 July 1989, Douglas Coffey was boating on the Neuse River with his father and seven-year-old son when he found a decomposing naked body with a chain around its waist floating face down in the river. The body of the victim, Russell Allan Kelly, had a number of tattoos on it and one of the hands was missing a little finger.

The evidence further showed that at a Halloween party in October 1988, the defendant met Larry Darnell, a tattoo artist, known to his friends as “Wizard” because he studied various forms of parapsychology, including numerology, palm reading, tarot cards, fortune telling, and ESP. Between October 1988 and June 1989 defendant visited Darnell several times for tattoos and once for Darnell to do a numerology chart on him. Darnell knew defendant by the nickname “Jibo.”

In early summer 1989, defendant had a series of conversations with Darnell about the possibility of selling his Harley-Davidson motorcycle to Darnell. Defendant told Darnell he had traded a Chevelle and some money for the motorcycle. A week or so later, defendant asked Darnell if he was interested in trading some tattoo *34 equipment for a Chevelle. Remembering that defendant had earlier said he had traded the Chevelle for the motorcycle he was trying to sell, Darnell asked defendant how he had both the motorcycle and the car. Defendant responded, “I had to do a dirty deed.” Defendant then told Darnell he had shot a guy who was a Marine.

Darnell went home and saw a newscast reporting that a body had been found in the Neuse River. He pondered the matter, then called the police and told them he might know who had killed the person whose body had been found. Darnell told an officer that he would try to get some information from defendant. There followed a series of conversations between Darnell and defendant in which Darnell induced defendant to confess to the crimes in full detail. Darnell told defendant of dreams he had had about a murder. He insinuated details provided to him by the police to build defendant’s confidence in his psychic powers. He warned defendant to “watch his back” for fear of “Bob,” the ex-Marine with whom defendant acted in concert in the murder. Darnell even promised to kill Bob himself if Bob killed defendant, and further boosted his credibility by saying he had killed two other people previously.

Feeling befriended, defendant told Darnell how he and Bob Jennings, a “crazy Virginia hillbilly,” had planned the murder over two weeks prior to committing it and how they carried it out. A friend of Jennings’ named Russell Kelly was due to be discharged from the Marines with a lot of money. Jennings and Kelly came to defendant’s trailer and the three of them went out in a van, supposedly to buy three motorcycles. On a given signal, defendant was to say that he had to stop to urinate. Defendant sat between Kelly and Jennings so Kelly had to get out of the van to let defendant out. Defendant told Darnell that they did stop the van and that as Kelly got out, defendant shot him with a .357 magnum pistol.

The defendant went on to say that he “freaked out” when Kelly said, “Oh, God, he shot me.” At that point, Jennings yelled to defendant to shoot Kelly again, and defendant shot the victim a second time. Defendant got out of the van and stood over Kelly. Jennings also jumped out of the van, grabbed the gun from defendant and told defendant to get Kelly’s gun. Defendant said he was concerned that Jennings might shoot him and take all the money, but Jennings placed the gun at Kelly’s head at point blank range and pulled the trigger.

*35 Jennings and defendant cut the victim’s clothes off, wrapped an old logging chain around his waist and ankles, and dumped the body into the river. They then drove back to defendant’s trailer where they washed out the blood, dismantled the gun and drove over the gun barrel. Defendant shot the lock off of Kelly’s briefcase and found $6000. They found $250 in the victim’s clothing. Defendant also admitted he “must have blowed [the victim’s left] little finger off.”

A few days after this confession, the police asked Darnell if he would be willing to wear a “wire” and set up another conversation with defendant. Darnell did so, and the State introduced at trial a taped recording of defendant’s confession, which was essentially the same as his previous statement. According to the transcript of the taped conversation, defendant told Darnell, “I pulled the . . . hammer back and shot [him] in the head and I’m not too proud of it.”

An autopsy of the victim showed two gunshot wounds, one to the chest and one to the left cheek. Most of the tissue of the left little finger was missing. The experts at trial agreed that the wound to the head would have killed the victim within at least a few minutes. There was expert testimony that the victim might have survived the chest wound alone with medical care, but that it probably would have been fatal without medical care.

Dr. Victor Mallenbaum, a clinical psychologist, testified that defendant, a Native American, suffered from alcoholism, “schizotypal personality disorder,” a severe neurosis, and had a borderline I.Q. of 77. He also opined that defendant was intellectually capable of fully understanding his actions.

I.

The defendant’s first assignment of error concerns the jury instructions given by the trial court regarding proximate cause as it relates to first-degree premeditated and deliberated murder and felony murder. The trial judge instructed the jury on two theories: (1) intervening causation, which defendant challenges in this assignment of error; and (2) contributing causation and concerted action, which is not contested. In essence, defendant contends that based on the submission of both a proper and an improper instruction, the following principle requires this Court to find reversible error:

*36 Where the trial judge has submitted the case to the jury on alternative theories, one of which is determined to be erroneous and the other properly submitted, and we cannot discern from the record the theory upon which the jury relied, this Court will not assume that the jury based its verdict on the theory for which it received a proper instruction. Instead, we resolve the ambiguity in favor of the defendant.

State v. Pakulski, 319 N.C. 562, 574, 356 S.E.2d 319, 326 (1987).

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Bluebook (online)
424 S.E.2d 95, 333 N.C. 29, 1992 N.C. LEXIS 670, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gibson-nc-1992.