State v. Guin

CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 1, 2022
Docket21-150
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Guin (State v. Guin) 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. Guin, (N.C. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA

2022-NCCOA-133

No. COA21-150

Filed 1 March 2022

Johnston County, Nos. 18 CRS 56087-88; 19 CRS 39-43

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA

v.

CHARLES ROBERT GUIN, JR., Defendant.

Appeal by Defendant from judgments entered 25 February 2020 by Judge

Keith O. Gregory in Johnston County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals

1 December 2021.

Attorney General Joshua H. Stein, by Special Deputy Attorney General Brian D. Rabinovitz, for the State.

Joseph P. Lattimore for Defendant.

GRIFFIN, Judge.

¶1 Defendant Charles Robert Guin, Jr., appeals from the trial court’s judgments

entering jury verdicts finding Defendant guilty of criminal charges arising from a

domestic dispute between Defendant and his wife. Defendant contends the trial court

(1) committed plain error by failing to instruct the jury on attempted voluntary

manslaughter as a lesser-included offense of first-degree murder; (2) failed to ensure

that Defendant knowingly consented to defense counsel’s alleged concessions of guilt STATE V. GUIN

Opinion of the Court

to multiple assault charges; and (3) erred by denying Defendant’s motion to dismiss

the charge of first-degree kidnapping because there was insufficient evidence distinct

from evidence supporting assault. We discern no error.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

¶2 This case arises from a domestic violence incident between Defendant and his

wife, Ms. Gaster, during the night of 29 September 2018. On 14 January 2019, a

grand jury indicted Defendant for seven crimes arising from that domestic violence

incident: (1) attempted first-degree murder, (2) first-degree kidnapping, (3) assault

with a deadly weapon with intent to kill or inflict serious bodily injury

(“AWDWIKISI”), (4) assault inflicting serious bodily injury, (5) assault by

strangulation, (6) violation of a domestic violence protective order, and (7) habitual

misdemeanor assault. Evidence at trial tended to show as follows:

¶3 Defendant and Ms. Gaster met and began to date in 2014 while both attended

a substance abuse treatment class. Defendant and Ms. Gaster moved in together.

During this time, Defendant and Ms. Gaster purchased and consumed drugs

together. Defendant became paranoid about the couple’s drug use, frequently

accusing Ms. Gaster of hiding or overusing their drugs, slapping Ms. Gaster, and

subjecting Ms. Gaster to verbal abuse.

¶4 On 12 October 2016, Defendant and Ms. Gaster married. Defendant’s verbal

and physical abuse of Ms. Gaster continued into their marriage. The abuse often STATE V. GUIN

resulted in police involvement, Ms. Gaster needing medical attention, or both. On

one occasion, Ms. Gaster recalled that Defendant accused her of cheating, physically

assaulted her, and tied her to a tree. Ms. Gaster acquired a domestic violence

protective order (“DVPO”) against Defendant in August 2018.

¶5 On 29 September 2018, despite the DVPO, Ms. Gaster agreed to pick

Defendant up from work to have a “friendly visit.” The couple returned to Ms.

Gaster’s apartment around 10:30 p.m., where they consumed drugs and alcohol.

After about an hour had passed, Defendant accused Ms. Gaster of cheating and began

to physically assault her. Defendant forced Ms. Gaster to sit on her bed, then

discovered that she had hidden knives under her pillow.

¶6 Defendant searched Ms. Gaster’s apartment and found more knives hidden in

each room. Defendant “hit [Ms. Gaster], slapped [her] across the face, and asked [her]

what was [she] doing so wrong in [her] life that [she] needed to protect [her]self like

that[?]” Ms. Gaster testified that Defendant “started curling [her] hair up in his hand

so he could hold [her] face to his,” demanded that she admit to cheating, and dragged

her “back and forth from the kitchen to the bedroom” by her hair. Ms. Gaster

explained that Defendant said he “was going to chop [her] up where nobody would

find [her] body,” “he turned the water on really loud, really on high,” and he “turned

the air condition[ing]—or heat on to where the fan was constantly running so no one

would hear [her] scream.” Ms. Gaster “thought [she] was going to die that night.” STATE V. GUIN

¶7 Defendant eventually “drug [Ms. Gaster] back in the bedroom” and beat her in

the head until she “started seeing bright lights.” Ms. Gaster remembered that

Defendant “had thrown the knives up on the dresser, and [she] reached behind [her]

and [she] grabbed one.” Ms. Gaster “pushed the knife into [Defendant], and he let go

of [her].” Defendant “pulled the knife out, and [Ms. Gaster] pushed it back in him.”

Ms. Gaster attempted to escape the bedroom, but Defendant “grabbed [her] by [her]

hair and pulled [her] back in and started beating [her] some more.” Defendant

continued to beat Ms. Gaster, choke her, and kick her in her stomach and ribs for the

rest of the night.

¶8 Ms. Gaster testified that, when Defendant eventually left her alone, she “could

hear the birds chirping, so she knew it was morning.” Ms. Gaster crawled out of her

back door and sought help from a neighbor, who called for an ambulance. Ms. Gaster

was treated in the trauma unit and hospitalized for about six days. The hospital

trauma center treated Ms. Gaster for “extensive swelling and bruising to face and

neck[,]” fractures to rib bones and bones around her eyes, strangulation, contusions,

and kidney failure induced by toxins released from “skeletal muscle destruction.”

¶9 According to Defendant’s testimony at trial, he and Ms. Gaster bought drugs

and alcohol, then went to Ms. Gaster’s apartment on 29 September 2018. Defendant

explained that he placed the knives on top of the dresser because Ms. Gaster coaxed

him into the bedroom and asked him to “lift up the mattress and give [sic] them five STATE V. GUIN

butcher knives up under the bed.” Defendant and Ms. Gaster then consumed drugs

on the mattress. Defendant placed his portion of the drugs beside him on the

mattress, looked away for a second, then could not find the drugs when he looked

back down at the mattress. Ms. Gaster insisted that they search for the drugs, but

Defendant knew she had taken them because “she was trying to get [him] to put [his]

hands on her.” Defendant testified that he “had just spent a year in jail and three

months in prison[,]” he “had been out three weeks, and there was no way in the world

[he] was going to put [his] hands on this lady, because [he] knew [he] would go to jail.”

¶ 10 Defendant then attempted to leave, but Ms. Gaster kept “antagonizing” him,

“reached across the dresser, picked up the butcher knife[,]” and stabbed him in “both

lungs.” Defendant explained he “was bleeding like a stuck hog” and “thought [he]

was going to die.” Defendant testified,

And after she stabbed me, I’ll be honest with you, I lost my cool. I come back to a couple of hours later and I beat the hell out of her. I’m not -- I'm guilty of that. I’m guilty of beating that woman, but I did not try to kill her. She knows I didn’t try to kill her.

After I quit beating her, I come to, and I knew right then. I said, oh, Lord. I looked at her and said, “Look what you caused me to do because you stabbed me and I beat the hell out of you.”

¶ 11 Defendant then left the apartment and sought medical attention in Tennessee

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State v. Guin, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-guin-ncctapp-2022.