State v. Holder

418 S.E.2d 197, 331 N.C. 462, 1992 N.C. LEXIS 416
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 25, 1992
Docket600A90
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 418 S.E.2d 197 (State v. Holder) 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. Holder, 418 S.E.2d 197, 331 N.C. 462, 1992 N.C. LEXIS 416 (N.C. 1992).

Opinions

[468]*468MEYER, Justice.

On 5 June 1988, defendant was indicted for the first-degree murder of Joyce Varner, assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill inflicting serious injury on William E. Leitch, and the first-degree kidnapping and robbery with a dangerous weapon of Brian Shipp. Defendant was tried capitally in the Superior Court, Guilford County, in May 1990 and was found guilty of all charges. Subsequent to a sentencing proceeding conducted pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 15A-2000, the jury recommended that defendant receive a life sentence for the first-degree murder conviction. The trial court thereafter imposed the life sentence for murder, as well as forty-year sentences for first-degree kidnapping and robbery with a firearm, to run consecutively, and a twenty-year sentence for assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill inflicting serious injury, to run concurrently with the robbery sentence.

The State’s evidence in the guilt phase tended to show the following. Early in 1988, Joyce Varner separated from her husband and lived with her four-year-old daughter, Emily, in an apartment in Greensboro, North Carolina. Ms. Varner, a thirty-year-old. employee of the Richardson-Vicks Chemical Company, dated defendant for a short time after her separation. Dissatisfied because defendant wanted the relationship to be more intense than she wished, Varner attempted to terminate the relationship, but defendant refused to leave Varner alone.

Several witnesses testified about defendant’s attempts to maintain his relationship with Varner. Cindy Blake, a friend of Varner’s, testified that Varner told her that she had dated defendant several times, did not have a serious relationship with him, tried to break it off but could not get rid of defendant, and felt threatened by him. Phillip Purcell, one of the men Varner dated, testified that Varner told him that defendant followed her around, cruised by her house in his car, and left messages and cards on Varner’s desk at work. Varner told Purcell that the relationship with defendant was not a serious one but that defendant thought it was, and that Varner became scared when she discovered that defendant carried a gun. Purcell also testified about several incidents wherein defendant threatened or physically molested Varner because he was upset about her seeing other men. Patrick Goldbeck, another man Varner had dated, testified that wherever he and Varner went, defendant always seemed to appear. In particular, he testified [469]*469that one evening Varner traveled home by cab only to return shortly thereafter because defendant was following her in another cab and she was afraid to go home alone. Varner went home an hour later and told Goldbeck that she saw the cab circling the block around her house. Goldbeck also testified that on one occasion defendant and Varner had a fight in a bar and that defendant kicked a hole in the fence behind the bar.

Carla Delvitto, Joyce Varner’s mother, testified that Varner told her that she had been out with defendant but was afraid of him because he carried a gun and that on one particular Valentine’s Day, defendant left flowers at Varner’s front door, and Varner threw the flowers in a trash can. Delvitto also testified that in April 1988 she was baby-sitting Emily one evening and saw a car drive by the Varner residence very slowly, turn around in the driveway, drive up the street, turn around, and repeat the process three times. Upon being told of the incident by Delvitto, Varner replied: “Don’t worry about that car. It’s just Steve. He’s still up in the parking lot waiting. He does this quite often. He wants to see who I’m coming home with and what time I come home.”

Denise Wetzel, Joyce Varner’s older sister, testified about several incidents regarding Varner’s relationship with defendant. Ón one occasion, Wetzel saw defendant grab Varner by the arm merely because a casual acquaintance said “hello” to her. Varner also told Wetzel about numerous phone calls she received in which the caller immediately hung up the phone without speaking and about numerous other calls from defendant in which he interrogated her about men being at her home with her, what time she arrived home, and other personal matters. Wetzel testified that defendant was very possessive and scared Varner.

The State played a message that defendant left on Varner’s telephone answering machine on 25 April 1988, which was as follows:

[W]omen around where I suspect you to be at. Now, I expect the same consideration from you. That if you say this being friends or whatever, that excuse is wearing kind of thin as much as you’ve been around the boy. But, I want to tell you something, you going to wind up flaunting that stuff in front of me and you going to wind up getting yourself and your man friend hurt; or your men friends, whatever the situation may be. I’m tired of it; I’m tired of trying to be nice to you. I’ve had two months to think about it and you’re just a spoiled [470]*470woman. That’s all there is to it. And there ain’t going to be no more being nice. There’s no need. I’ve done tried it and it don’t work. So, from now on, when you see me out, expect me to mean business.

After receiving the message, Varner phoned her friends to tell them about it. Cindy Blake, Dennis Wetzel, Patrick Goldbeck, and Chuck Varner listened to the message. They testified that Varner was crying and very shaken by the message.

When Phillip Purcell came home on 26 April 1988, he found Varner and her daughter sitting on the steps to his house. Varner told Purcell that she was scared to return home because she had seen defendant around her house and she was afraid for her life.

Varner had a warrant issued for defendant’s arrest for communicating threats to her, and the police arrested defendant on 26 April. As he was being taken to the magistrate’s office, defendant raged that he “didn’t do nothing to that bitch.” When in the magistrate’s office, defendant related: “This bitch got me down here on a shit charge, but that’s okay. I’ll get the bitch.”

On 28 April 1988, Detective Allen Travis of the Greensboro police interviewed defendant. Defendant admitted leaving the message on Varner’s answering machine in which he told her to “stop bringing her male friends around or someone was going to be hurt.”

On the day of the murder, 5 May 1988, Varner got off work at 4:30 p.m. and was picked up by William Leitch, a friend of hers, and her daughter Emily. The three planned to dine together before Leitch was to meet another and drive to his home in Denver, North Carolina. The trio returned to Varner’s house, and as they were deciding where to eat, Varner received several hang-up phone calls. They then went out to dinner and arrived home at approximately 8:30 p.m. Just before leaving to drop Leitch off at a meeting place for his ride, Varner received several more hang-up calls. Emily, Varner, and Leitch then entered the car, which was parked in a detached garage next to the house, with Leitch sitting on the passenger’s side, Varner driving, and Emily in the back seat. Before leaving, Leitch made a final check in his duffel bag to see if he had collected all his belongings. As he was doing so, he heard a bang or pop as Varner turned the ignition key. As he turned, he saw a gun pointed at him. The gun fired and Leitch [471]*471was hit in the face with a bullet. Leitch heard Varner yell, “Stop. Quit, Stephen, quit.” After a few seconds, Leitch heard Varner plead, “Help.

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Bluebook (online)
418 S.E.2d 197, 331 N.C. 462, 1992 N.C. LEXIS 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-holder-nc-1992.