State v. Huffman
This text of 625 S.E.2d 202 (State v. Huffman) 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.
Opinion
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
v.
JAMES BRADLEY HUFFMAN
North Carolina Court of Appeals
Forsyth County No. 03 CRS 050017.
Attorney General Roy Cooper, by Special Deputy Attorney General Susan K. Nichols, for the State.
Grace, Holton, Tisdale & Clifton, P.A., by Christopher R. Clifton and Michelle B. Clifton, for defendant appellant.
McCULLOUGH, Judge.
Defendant appeals his convictions, following a jury trial, for second-degree arson, burning of personal property, and assault on a firefighter. Finding no error, we affirm the judgments of the trial court.
The State's evidence showed the following: In the early morning of 1 January 2003, a fire destroyed a house owned by Connie Kuhn at 5205 Pine Hall Road in Walkertown, North Carolina. Kuhn purchased and started living in the house in 1991, and began dating defendant in 1993. Defendant moved into the house with Kuhn in late 1997 or early 1998, prior to the birth of their son, Bradley, in 1998. During the course of their relationship, she and defendant "had problems and [Kuhn] would move out and then move back in. Move out and move back in." Kuhn made the mortgage payments on the house and paid for all of the utilities.
In October of 2002, Kuhn ended her relationship with defendant after a heated confrontation in which he threw things at her and threatened her. Fearing for her life, Kuhn fled to her mother's residence, taking with her only a few personal effects that fit into a backpack. She and Bradley stayed with her mother, while defendant continued to live in her house. Kuhn retained a key to the house, which contained all of her and Bradley's furniture, bedding, and personal effects and most of their clothes. She took Bradley to the house to visit defendant "an hour here and an hour there." Kuhn also came back to the house on at least one occasion to obtain additional clothing for her and Bradley while defendant was at work. Kuhn received her mail at work but never submitted a change of address notice to the post office. Kuhn continued to pay the mortgage and utilities on the house, believing, "[t]hat was still my residence. I was planning on going back there." Prior to the fire, she had last visited the house in early December.
When asked if she and defendant discussed "how long [she] would allow him to remain in the residence[,]" Kuhn testified as follows:
He told me that he was going to move out. I never told him when he had to leave but he told me he was going to move out. . . . Move into his grandfather's house and then he told me he was going to move to Mississippi where his parents live.
In mid-December of 2002, Kuhn asked defendant "when he was leaving[,]" and he replied that he was moving to Mississippi. "Several days" before the fire, defendant and Kuhn again discussed when he would move out of her house and remove the furniture and other items belonging to him. Defendant told Kuhn on this occasion "that it would be easier just to torch the place than to separate the stuff or move it."
On the afternoon of 31 December 2002, defendant paid an unannounced visit to Kuhn's workplace and asked her for a hug. When she refused, he told her that she had changed and was "a cold person[.]" Defendant later made a series of "angry" telephone calls to Kuhn while she was attending a New Year's Eve party at her uncle's house. During one call, defendant said "that he moved his stuff to his grandfather's and that he would be leaving either the next day or two days later." In other calls, defendant accused Kuhn of having an affair. Several times, defendant told her "that he would end up with a new or better house before [she] would." Defendant called Kuhn a final time just after midnight on 1 January 2003, and said things that she interpreted to be "threats."
Kuhn left the party at approximately 1:15 a.m. on 1 January 2003. As she was driving to a friend's house in Kernersville, she received a phone call from a neighbor on Pine Hall Road, who told her that her house was on fire. When Kuhn arrived at the burning house, defendant was standing in a neighbor's yard. Kuhn described their ensuing exchange as follows: I asked him what happened to the house and . . . he said that I shouldn't be concerned as to what happened to the house. I should be concerned that no one got hurt. I told him that I was glad that no one got hurt but what happened to the house.
He said, again, you should just be glad that no one got hurt and I said I am happy no one got hurt but what happened to the house. His voice got really, you know, a lot sterner and he said to me you're not hearing me. You should be glad that no one got hurt. The next time you won't be so lucky.
As Kuhn walked away from defendant, he cursed at her and said that "he was going to get [her] and he would kill [her]." Defendant then called Kuhn from a cellular telephone in a fire truck and said, "All I wanted was a hug."
Forsyth County Assistant Fire Marshal Marty Whicker responded to the fire at 5205 Pine Hall Road at 2:36 a.m. on 1 January 2003. As he was speaking to Kuhn, defendant called her from the fire truck. Whicker walked over to the truck, opened the door and asked defendant if he had used the department's phone. Defendant responded, "[I]t is none of your damn business what I do." Defendant cursed Whicker and told him "I am not going to cooperate with you. I am not going to tell you a damn thing." Unable to get defendant out of the truck, Whicker sought assistance from Forsyth County Sheriff's Deputy Rick B. Rumley. Defendant was taken into custody after he pushed and shoved Rumley and challenged him to a fight. As Rumley was placing him in handcuffs, defendant turned around and kneed or kicked Whicker in the upper thigh. Defendant then screamed at Whicker, "I will find out who you are, and I willkill you and your family[.]" Kuhn later identified defendant to Whicker as her boyfriend and said "that they had had some relationship problems and that she had moved out a few months prior to the fire and given [defendant] some time to get his affairs in order and she was planning on moving back into the house."
During his investigation of the fire scene, Whicker found "unusual burn patterns on the floor, some low level burning" in the den area of the house's ground floor level. A carpet sample taken from the area was found to contain gasoline residue. Whicker also found a red plastic can containing gasoline outside of the residence next to the garage. Assisted by an accelerant-detecting canine, State Bureau of Investigation Special Agent and Certified Fire Investigator Patrick Whatley examined the remains of the house with Whicker and concluded that the fire was "incendiary or set in nature" and was caused by gasoline being "placed or poured in the lower level . . . of the structure and then set by human hand." Defendant first claims the trial court erred in denying his motion to dismiss the charge of second-degree arson, absent substantial evidence that the house at 5205 Pine Hall Road was the "dwelling of another" at the time of the fire. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14-58 (2005). Inasmuch as the evidence showed Kuhn had not lived in the house since October of 2002, defendant argues that she was not an inhabitant of the house for purposes of the arson statute. See State v. Britt, 132 N.C. App. 173, 178, 510 S.E.2d 683, 687 ("[I]t is an essential element of the crime of arson that the burned house be inhabited."), disc. review denied, 350 N.C. 838,538 S.E.2d 571 (1999).
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
625 S.E.2d 202, 175 N.C. App. 795, 2006 N.C. App. LEXIS 316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-huffman-ncctapp-2006.