State v. Lindsay

CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 5, 2024
Docket23-563
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Lindsay (State v. Lindsay) 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. Lindsay, (N.C. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA

No. COA23-563

Filed 5 March 2024

Gaston County, Nos. 21 CRS 54366, 22 CRS 2164

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA

v.

NEVIN JAY LINDSAY

Appeal by defendant from judgment entered 20 February 2023 by Judge David

A. Phillips in Superior Court, Gaston County. Heard in the Court of Appeals

7 February 2024.

Attorney General Joshua H. Stein, by Special Deputy Attorney General Amanda J. Reeder, for the State.

Sean P. Vitrano, for defendant-appellant.

ARROWOOD, Judge.

Nevin Jay Lindsay (“defendant”) appeals from judgment entered upon his

conviction for second degree forcible sexual offense, sexual battery, and assault on a

female. For the following reasons, we affirm the judgment.

I. Background

Defendant waived his right to a jury trial on 5 January 2023, and the case

came on for bench trial on 23 January 2023. The evidence offered at trial tended to

show the following facts: STATE V. LINDSAY

Opinion of the Court

In April 2021, Zara1 was an eighteen-year-old senior in high school living with

her mother and two younger brothers in an apartment. During the latter part of the

month, defendant—a close friend of Zara’s family—was staying at the apartment

while visiting from New York.

On 26 April, defendant picked Zara up from school and drove her back to the

apartment. At 7:26 p.m., while Zara’s mother was taking a nap in her room,

defendant texted Zara that he was “rolling up in the car” to smoke marijuana with

Zara. Zara responded via multiple texts, stating:

Zara: Okay

Zara: Coming give me sex2

Zara: Sec [laughing emoji]

Defendant and Zara smoked marijuana on the front porch around 8:00 p.m.3 At

8:59 p.m., defendant texted Zara, “Wow ok[,]” and then at 10:28 p.m., he texted her,

“Cum get this[.]”4

Zara’s mother left for work around 9:50 p.m. At approximately 11:00 p.m.,

while Zara was cleaning the kitchen and her brothers were watching television in

1 Zara is a pseudonym used to keep the individual’s name anonymous in the interest of privacy. 2 Zara testified that she meant to type “sec”—i.e., that she was coming to meet defendant in a second—

but the phone auto-corrected to “sex.” Zara immediately corrected the error by sending the message, “Sec.” 3 Zara testified that defendant also drank alcohol that evening but that she did not. 4 Zara testified that defendant’s 8:59 p.m. text “was in response to [her earlier] sex/sec [text,]” and his

10:28 p.m. text was in reference to the marijuana he was going outside to smoke. Zara did not go outside to smoke with him on this subsequent occasion.

2 STATE V. LINDSAY

their mother’s room, defendant went into Zara’s bedroom and laid down in her bed.

When Zara went to her bedroom around midnight, she discovered defendant sleeping

in her bed.5 Zara testified that she tried getting defendant up so he could move to the

living room, but “he was just knocked out cold[,] [s]o I just left him there.” Zara placed

blankets on her bedroom floor and went to sleep there.

Zara’s recollection of what happened next was detailed during direct testimony

at trial:

Zara: I remember me getting ready to just doze off. And I definitely felt like a discomfort feeling, so I eventually woke up. And when I woke up I didn’t see anybody on the bed, so it made me startled where I seen [defendant], like, at the bottom of me, under my blanket.

The State: I’m going to stop you there just a second, okay, Zara? When you said you felt something, I think you used the word uncomfortable ---

Zara: Yes.

The State: --- what did you feel?

Zara: I felt, like, moisture. Like I felt somebody doing something to my private area.

The State: Did you feel something inside your private area, like moving around?

Zara: No, ma’am.

The State: Okay. When you say you felt moisture in your

5 Zara testified that when defendant previously stayed with them, he normally slept on the couch in the living room, and Zara always slept in her bedroom.

3 STATE V. LINDSAY

private area, was it in your vaginal area?

The State: Was it between the labia, or the lips of your vaginal area?

Zara: Yeah.

The State: What were you wearing at the time?

Zara: Leggings.

The State: Where were your leggings at that point, when you felt that?

Zara: It was, like, under, like, my butt cheeks, like, my bottom.

The State: Did you have underwear on?

Zara: No. Just because my bottoms felt like – they fitted me like sweatpants, you know, like baggy. So, no, I didn’t.

The State: Baggy leggings?

The State: Were you – when you woke up, and you felt this on your vaginal area, were you laying on your stomach or on your side or on your back? How were you laying?

Zara: On my stomach.

The State: Where was the blanket?

Zara: At that point my blanket was, like, more on my back.

4 STATE V. LINDSAY

The State: You’ve described what you felt. Describe what you saw. Were you able to, like, look up?

Zara: Yeah, once I turned around.

The State: What do you mean, turned around, like, look behind you?

The State: What did you see?

Zara: I seen him on all fours.

The State: Who did you see on all fours?

Zara: [Defendant].

The State: What did you do?

Zara: I stood there in shock. And I asked him what he was doing.

The State: When you say you stood there, were you actually standing, or how were you positioned?

Zara: I was still laying on my back. I’m sorry, my stomach. But, you know, for me turning around, like, I was just turned (indicating).

The State: Okay. And you said to him, what are you doing?

The State: What did he say?

Zara: Oh, I’m sorry, I’m sorry, I’m sorry.

The State: What happened next?

5 STATE V. LINDSAY

Zara: I said, you better get the fuck out. I got up. I ran to the bathroom, I washed myself.

After leaving the bathroom, Zara went straight to her mother’s room and

locked the door.6 At that point, defendant had left Zara’s bedroom and was in the

living room. Zara testified that defendant then came to her mother’s door asking

Zara to come out and talk to him. According to Zara, defendant sounded scared and

was slurring his words. At 2:24 a.m., defendant texted Zara the following messages:

Defendant: You really not coming to talk to me

Defendant: Ok if you feel that way come lock the door

Defendant left the apartment shortly after sending these texts. Zara did not go back

to sleep the rest of the night.

In the morning, Zara spoke with her cousin and told her what happened

between her and defendant. Specifically, Zara’s cousin testified that Zara told her, “I

was sleeping and I just felt really moist, so when I woke up I seen [defendant’s] head

between my legs.” Zara’s cousin further testified that while Zara was on the phone

with her, Zara was “crying, bawling” and “in shock.”

Around 6:15 a.m., Zara’s mother returned home from work. At some point that

day, Zara asked to speak with her mother in Zara’s bedroom. Then, while on the

6 While in her mother’s room, Zara testified that she attempted to contact her older cousin and best

friend, but they did not respond until the following day.

6 STATE V. LINDSAY

phone with her cousin7, Zara explained to her mother what defendant did. Zara’s

mother testified that Zara told her that “she ended up waking up to [defendant]

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Lindsay, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lindsay-ncctapp-2024.