State v. Lawson

314 S.E.2d 493, 310 N.C. 632, 1984 N.C. LEXIS 1699
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedApril 30, 1984
Docket142A81
StatusPublished
Cited by164 cases

This text of 314 S.E.2d 493 (State v. Lawson) 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. Lawson, 314 S.E.2d 493, 310 N.C. 632, 1984 N.C. LEXIS 1699 (N.C. 1984).

Opinion

EXUM, Justice.

In this appeal defendant contends the trial court erred by failing to exclude certain evidence and by improperly expressing its opinion to the jury. He also asks us to declare North Carolina’s death penalty statute unconstitutional. We find no merit in any assignment and leave undisturbed the judgments entered by the trial court.

I.

In December 1980, Burén Shinn resided in a house on Old Salisbury Road approximately three miles from Concord. Buren’s son Wayne lived in a house located about 100 yards away. Burén and Wayne worked together in a family electrical business.

After driving to his father’s home on 4 December 1980, Wayne heard the burglar alarm at his own home. Wayne and Burén jumped into a truck and rushed over to Wayne’s house, where they observed a dirty brown Ford parked in the driveway. Wayne got out of the truck and ran towards the patio at the side of his house. Burén then saw Wayne throw up his hands and heard a gun fire.

Burén ran to the truck, got in and began backing the truck in an effort to get away. Defendant ran toward him, waving a pistol. This sight diverted Buren’s attention and he backed the truck into a ditch. Defendant approached the truck and ordered Burén to get out and move towards Wayne’s house. Burén did so, pleading with defendant not to hurt him.

Before Burén reached the house, he heard another gunshot and felt a sharp blow to his head. He fell to the ground and lost consciousness. Sometime later he “came to,” finding himself lying in a large pool of blood. Fearing that defendant might still be in the vicinity, he lay silently. Some twenty or thirty minutes later, he heard someone walk toward him and he felt a hand reach into his pocket and take his wallet.

*635 Burén remained motionless for another twenty minutes. Hearing no more footsteps, he partly raised himself up. Seeing no one, he crawled away from the patio toward the road, hoping to stop a passing car. When no one stopped, he struggled to his feet and walked toward his home. As he entered his home, another son, Jerry, saw him and telephoned for help. After Jerry was told what had happened, he left to see about Wayne.

Law enforcement officers arrived at Wayne’s house and found him lying in a pool of blood in the basement near the patio. Wayne and Burén were taken to a hospital where Wayne was pronounced dead as the result of a bullet wound to his head. Buren’s injuries were not severe, as the bullet which struck him did not penetrate his skull. He recovered after a short stay in the hospital.

The police found Wayne’s house ransacked. They found several jewelry items and a camera in a pillowcase, apparently dropped by the intruder. Marks on the kitchen door indicated the house had been forcibly entered.

Phyllis Soden, who had known defendant for several years, returned to her home from work at about 4 a.m. on 4 December 1980. Shortly after 9 a.m. defendant went to her home and stated that he needed her to take him some place immediately. Leaving his dirty brown Ford in her driveway, the two departed in her automobile. Defendant directed her to drive on the Old Salisbury Road. As they neared the Shinn home he told her to stop, let him out, drive a short distance farther, turn around, and return to pick him up. She followed defendant’s directions. When she returned, he ran to the car carrying a crowbar.

After they returned to Ms. Soden’s home, defendant explained that he had broken into a house and had left the crowbar there. He wanted to retrieve the bar because it might have his fingerprints on it. A little while later, defendant showed her a wallet and removed the money from it. Thereafter, he told her: He had broken into a house after hearing that the residents had gold and jewelry. He found some items and stuffed them into a pillowcase. As he was preparing to leave, a man entered the patio door. He pointed his gun at the man who put up his hands. He ordered the man to turn around and shot him in the back of his head. After the man fell, he ran out of the house. When he left *636 the house, he saw another man approaching the patio. The other man turned, ran and entered a truck. He ordered the man out of the truck; and, although the man begged defendant not to shoot, defendant forced him to walk toward the patio and shot him in the back of his head. He was confident both of the other men were dead because he shot them at close range. He killed them to eliminate witnesses because he did not want to go back to prison.

Defendant offered no evidence at the guilt-determination phase of the trial.

The jury convicted defendant of assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill inflicting serious injury upon Burén Shinn and felonious breaking of the home of Wayne Shinn. It also convicted him of the first degree murder of Wayne Shinn.

The following transpired at the sentencing phase of the murder case. Outside the presence of the jury defendant was examined under oath by his counsel. During this examination defendant testified that his counsel had fully advised him regarding the nature of the sentencing phase of the proceeding. Defendant also acknowledged that on 6 June 1981 he signed an affidavit in which he acknowledged that he told his attorney, Mr. Johnson,

on at least five separate occasions . . . that should I be found guilty, then in the second trial dealing with punishment, I wished to have my attorney seek and request the death penalty. I do not wish to spend the rest of my life in jail. I had rather have the death penalty than a life term. I understand my right to a second trial at which the jury will consider both mitigating and aggravating circumstances. I have, nevertheless, for some months before the trial told my attorney I do not want a life sentence, but a death sentence and I want him to take such legal steps as may be necessary to see that the sentence is carried out.

The trial judge then advised defendant that notwithstanding his desire to be sentenced to death, the jury must make that decision and that the court by law was required to submit whatever aggravating and mitigating circumstances were supported by the evidence. The trial judge said, “Even though you may ask the jury to recommend the death sentence in this case, the jury is not *637 bound by it and the jury may . . . still see fit to recommend life imprisonment.”

The jury was then brought back into the courtroom. Defendant testified before the jury that his criminal record consisted of “two cases of breaking and entering some years ago in Stanly County.” He had assisted the state “involving some criminal matters in Stanly County some years ago.” The following colloquy then occurred:

Q. At this time would you tell the jury what your request is regarding their decision?
A. I’d like the death penalty.
Q. Would you care to tell us why you want the death penalty?
A. To be locked up in prison for something I did not do, is truly cruel and inhuman. I didn’t do it. I don’t care what anybody says. I’m innocent. That to be put in prison for life that’s not right. You think I done it, gas me.

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Bluebook (online)
314 S.E.2d 493, 310 N.C. 632, 1984 N.C. LEXIS 1699, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lawson-nc-1984.