State v. Grier

300 S.E.2d 351, 307 N.C. 628, 1983 N.C. LEXIS 1111
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 8, 1983
Docket258A82
StatusPublished
Cited by90 cases

This text of 300 S.E.2d 351 (State v. Grier) 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. Grier, 300 S.E.2d 351, 307 N.C. 628, 1983 N.C. LEXIS 1111 (N.C. 1983).

Opinion

*632 BRANCH, Chief Justice.

I.

Defendant assigns as error the trial court’s admission into evidence of a blood sample purportedly taken from the victim and the admission of testimony concerning the results of blood typing tests performed on the sample.

The State presented evidence of the victim’s blood type in an effort to show that semen stains found on the dress Mrs. Lee was wearing on the night of the rape and on the sheets removed from her bed were consistent with defendant’s blood type and inconsistent with Mrs. Lee’s. Criminalist Jane Burton’s testimony tended to show that the blood characteristics of the stains did not match Mrs. Lee’s. The stains were, however, totally consistent with defendant’s blood groupings. In fact, Burton testified that defendant’s blood characteristics, an A reaction in the ABO grouping and a 2-1 reaction in the PGM grouping, were shared by only 11% of the population.

Defendant maintains that the evidence regarding the inconsistency of the victim’s blood type should have been excluded because there was no evidence establishing that the blood tested was actually taken from the victim.

Dr. Rita Kay Williams examined the victim shortly after the rape on 22 September 1981. She testified that although she did not actually see the blood drawn from Mrs. Lee, she signed a blood sample that was supposedly taken from the victim by a laboratory technician either immediately before or after the examination. The technician who drew the blood did not testify.

Defendant, relying on Robinson v. Life and Casualty Ins. Co., 255 N.C. 669, 122 S.E. 2d 801 (1961), argues that the chain of custody was insufficient to permit submission of evidence concerning the blood test. His position is that the person who actually draws the blood specimen must testify in order to lay a proper foundation for the admission of this evidence.

We do not interpret Robinson to hold that the person who draws the blood must testify in every case in order to establish a proper foundation for the admission of this evidence.

*633 In Robinson, the issue was whether the deceased insured had been drinking at the time of an accident. Defendant attempted to offer a coroner’s report indicating that the deceased was intoxicated when the collision occurred. This Court upheld the trial court’s ruling excluding that report because there was no evidence as to who took the sample or when the sample was taken. The lack of such evidence was crucial in Robinson because it was necessary to determine whether the sample had been taken before or after the deceased had been injected with embalming fluid. There was, then, good reason to require specificity as to who drew the blood and when the blood was drawn since the injection of embalming fluid would obviously taint any findings as to the presence of alcohol in the bloodstream.

Robinson is easily distinguished from the case before us. Here no foreign matter had been injected into the bloodstream of the victim. The uncontested evidence shows that a sample of Mrs. Lee’s blood was taken in accordance with normal hospital procedure. The laboratory technician took the sample concomitantly with Dr. Williams’ examination of the victim. The vial purportedly containing Mrs. Lee’s blood was signed by Dr. Williams immediately upon its presentation to her by the technician. We, therefore, find defendant’s reliance upon Robinson misplaced. Rather, we are of the opinion that the question before us is controlled by State v. Detter, 298 N.C. 604, 260 S.E. 2d 567 (1979). There, defendant argued that a chain of custody was insufficient because it was not shown which laboratory employee picked up the deceased’s specimens at the post office and because several people had supervision over the bench where the specimens were first placed. We held in Detter that the chain of custody of the deceased’s specimens was sufficiently established because “the possibility that the specimens were interchanged with those from another body [was] too remote to have required ruling this evidence inadmissible.” Id. at 634, 260 S.E. 2d at 588.

Here, as in Detter, the possibility that Mrs. Lee’s blood sample was confused with someone else’s is simply too remote to require exclusion of this evidence. Any weakness in the chain of custody relates only to the weight of the evidence and not to its admissibility. Id. This assignment of error is overruled.

*634 II.

Defendant next assigns as error the trial court’s denial of his motion to exclude testimony regarding conclusive results of a polygraph examination since defense counsel was not permitted to cross-examine the polygraphist regarding an earlier test, the results of which were deemed inconclusive.

The trial court permitted polygraph examiner W. 0. Holm-berg to testify to the results of a polygraph test he administered to defendant on 27 January 1982. Holmberg’s opinion was that defendant’s answers denying involvement in the burglary at the Lee home were deceptive. The court refused, however, to permit defendant to cross-examine Holmberg regarding the earlier test administered on 22 January 1982. In determining that the results of the first examination were inadmissible, the trial judge relied on the following provision of a stipulation entered into between the parties:

5. That the results of the polygraphic examination so taken or offered shall be admissible into evidence in the trial of the above styled case(s) irrespective of the results, except that if the results of such examination are deemed inconclusive by the operator, then such inconclusive results will not be admissible for any purpose by either side, and that the undersigned hereby agree to waive any and all objections to the testimony of the results as to the competency, weight, relevancy, remoteness, or admissibility of such testimony based upon public, legal, judicial, social policy, due process of law, and/or such rules of evidence as might otherwise govern.

The trial court ruled that the language prohibiting inconclusive results was absolute and that no evidence regarding inconclusive results was permissible under any circumstances.

We do not agree. It is our conclusion that the language forbidding the introduction of inconclusive results was intended to cover the situation where the only results obtained were inconclusive. In our opinion, the parties simply did not contemplate the exclusion Of inconclusive results when a series of examinations were conducted and the examiner interpreted the results of these examinations inconsistently.

*635 There are sound reasons for excluding an inconclusive result when no other results are obtained. An inconclusive result, standing alone, is meaningless. It does not tend to show the defendant’s propensity to tell the truth, nor does it lead to the conclusion that he is deceptive. It is simply irrelevant for purposes of weighing the defendant’s credibility.

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Bluebook (online)
300 S.E.2d 351, 307 N.C. 628, 1983 N.C. LEXIS 1111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-grier-nc-1983.