State v. Godwin

383 S.E.2d 234, 95 N.C. App. 565, 1989 N.C. App. LEXIS 813
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 19, 1989
Docket8816SC1214
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 383 S.E.2d 234 (State v. Godwin) 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. Godwin, 383 S.E.2d 234, 95 N.C. App. 565, 1989 N.C. App. LEXIS 813 (N.C. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

BECTON, Judge.

A jury convicted the defendant, Harold Godwin, of first degree rape, first degree sexual offense, and second degree kidnapping. The judge sentenced defendant to consecutive life terms for the rape and sex offense convictions, and to a concurrent nine-year term for the kidnapping count. Defendant appeals, assigning as error the presence of an alternate juror in the jury room during the deliberation stage of the trial, the judge’s entry into the jury room without defendant being present, the judge’s decision to allow defendant to represent himself, and the judge’s instruction to the jury on the elements of first degree sexual offense. We agree with defendant that prejudicial error occurred at his trial, and, therefore, we vacate the judgment and award a new trial.

The State’s evidence tended to show that the prosecutrix was returning to her home at approximately 2:00 A.M. on 14 June 1986. A pickup truck, with only its parking lights turned on, followed her car. At a spot about a mile and a half from the prosecu-trix’s home, the driver of the truck pulled in front of her car and stopped. Defendant, Harold Godwin, exited the truck, came back *567 to the car and forced his way inside. As he held onto the prosecu-trix, he ordered her to pull her car off the road. Defendant then forced the prosecutrix to get into the pickup truck. At one point, he told the prosecutrix that he was going “to screw” her.

Defendant drove down a dirt road and stopped the truck. Taking a handgun from behind the seat, defendant told the prosecutrix he would hurt her if she did not obey him. Defendant undressed and then removed the prosecutrix’s clothing. Defendant forced the prosecutrix to perform fellatio on him while he performed cunnilingus upon her. Defendant then drove the truck farther down the road and stopped in a cornfield. There, he forced the prosecutrix to engage in vaginal intercourse with him. Following this, defendant returned the prosecutrix to her car and released her. The prosecu-trix reported the assault and, on 20 June 1986, the police arrested the defendant.

Defendant presented testimony from two witnesses that they had seen the prosecutrix on several occasions at defendant’s apartment. This evidence was in contrast to the prosecutrix’s testimony that she did not know defendant and had never seen him prior to the morning of 14 June.

I

Defendant brings forward four assignments of error on appeal. Three of these, we believe, are a basis upon which to award him a new trial. As the fourth issue, involving jury instructions, is unlikely to arise at a second trial, we do not address it. The three remaining issues are closely related by the circumstances at trial; we begin by laying out their factual background.

A

The record reflects that after the judge instructed the jury, they retired to deliberate at 12:15 P.M. The court reporter subsequently told the judge that a thirteenth juror had gone into the jury room, and, at 12:24 P.M., the judge returned the jury to the courtroom. By this point, the jury members had elected one of their number as foreperson. The judge told the jury to stop its deliberations, and he recessed the trial for lunch.

Following the recess, the judge asked the parties if they had any motions they wished to make. The State suggested that the *568 alternate juror be removed from the jury room. The following then occurred between the judge, defendant’s lawyer, and defendant:

[Defense Lawyer] Barrington: May it please the Court, during the luncheon recess after the jury was brought back in, I, about 20 minutes ’til two this afternoon, went back in one of the conference rooms and advised him of this. Basically my client’s position is — and I think your Honor should question him as to his position — his position is he no longer wants me speaking for him.
The Court: Mr. Godwin, you want to speak for yourself, sir?
Defendant: Yes, sir. I just want to get it over with today. He said something about getting a mistrial declared. I don’t want no mistrial. It’s been a burden to my wife and my family and all, and I just want to get it over with today, your Honor. One way or the other I want it over with.
The Court: You do not wish you or your attorney to make a motion for a mistrial based upon the fact that the 13th juror went into the jury room?
Defendant: No sir, I don’t .... I’m not putting nothing on the State to retry me over again. I just want to get it over with today.
The Court: Mr. Godwin, you realize the Court will have to remove the 13th juror.
Defendant: Yes, sir.

The judge then brought the alternate juror into the courtroom and asked her: “[d]id you deliberate or participate in [the jury] deliberations up to this point”; “[h]ad you said anything in there”; “[h]ad you expressed an opinion to the other jurors about how you felt about this matter”; “[h]ave they asked your opinion”; “[h]ave you said anything at all in there”; “[h]ave you talked to any of them in there?” To each of these questions, the alternate gave a negative answer. Pursuant to a suggestion from defendant’s lawyer, the judge asked the alternate if the jury had “taken a vote on these matters in there,” to which the alternate replied that no vote had been taken. The judge then heard from the State and *569 from defendant, who again said he did not want a mistrial and that he did not want his lawyer to speak for him on that subject.

After putting findings of fact into the record, the judge returned the jury to the courtroom and instructed them not to consider anything resulting from the alternate’s presence in the jury room. The jury retired to deliberate at 2:36 P.M. and returned its verdict seven minutes later.

Following the verdict, the judge sent the jury back to the jury room. He told them, “I will be back to talk with you in just a moment.” The judge then ordered a short recess and went into the jury room for approximately ten minutes. When court reconvened, the judge returned the jury to the courtroom for the purpose of making additional findings of fact. In response to a question by the judge, the foreperson said that, at the time the alternate’s presence was discovered, the jury had not begun its deliberations. The judge told the other jury members that if “deliberations had begun during the time [the alternate was in the jury room] to the extent that you feel that she influenced you in any way, please raise your hand . . . .” None of the members responded. The judge then dismissed the jury and held the sentencing hearing.

B

Defendant alleges that prejudicial error occurred when the alternate juror retired to the jury room with the other twelve members and when, following the return of the verdict, the judge met privately with the jury members in the jury room. Although defendant has made these allegations the basis of two assignments of error, we shall discuss these issues together.

An alternate juror’s presence in the jury room after a criminal case has been submitted to the regular panel of twelve “is always error.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
383 S.E.2d 234, 95 N.C. App. 565, 1989 N.C. App. LEXIS 813, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-godwin-ncctapp-1989.