State v. Morrison

CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedAugust 4, 2020
Docket19-1150
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Morrison (State v. Morrison) 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. Morrison, (N.C. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA

No. COA19-1150

Filed: 4 August 2020

Hoke County, No. 17 CRS 51607-09, 17 CRS 575

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA

v.

ALLEN MAURICE MORRISON

Appeal by Defendant from judgment and order entered 5 June 2017 by Judge

Mary Ann Tally in Superior Court, Hoke County. Heard in the Court of Appeals 26

May 2020.

Attorney General Joshua H. Stein, by Special Deputy Attorney General Patrick S. Wooten, for the State.

Carella Legal Services, PLLC, by John F. Carella, for Defendant.

McGEE, Chief Judge.

Allen Maurice Morrison (“Defendant”) appeals from judgment entered 5 June

2019 after a jury found him guilty on one count of possession of a firearm by a felon,

three counts of assault with a deadly weapon, and seven out of eight counts of

discharging a firearm into an occupied vehicle (“DWOV”). Defendant argues the trial

court erred by: (1) admitting a lay witness’ testimony when expert testimony was

required; (2) violating his right to be free from double jeopardy under the United

States and North Carolina Constitutions by sentencing him on multiple counts of STATE V. MORRISON

Opinion of the Court

DWOV; and (3) denying his motion to dismiss six of the seven counts of DWOV for

which he was convicted. We find no error on appeal.

I. Factual and Procedural History

Gwendolyn Blue (“Ms. Blue”) was Defendant’s live-in girlfriend at his home in

Raeford, North Carolina (the “house”) on the evening of 13 January 2017. Jessica

Oldham (“Ms. Oldham,” together with Ms. Blue “the women”) was visiting the house

for the first time that evening, having just met Ms. Blue and having never met

Defendant. Both the women testified that shortly after they arrived at the house,

Ms. Blue and Defendant got into an argument and Defendant hit Ms. Blue in the face.

Later, Ms. Oldham gave Defendant $200.00 “for him to make more money with[,]”

presumably through some kind of drug transaction. However, the “money-making”

event never occurred. Defendant and Ms. Blue eventually “laid down and took a nap”

in Defendant’s bedroom. Ms. Oldham also fell asleep in the house.

When Ms. Oldham awoke at approximately 2:00 a.m. on 14 January 2017, she

went into Defendant’s bedroom to ask Defendant to return her $200.00 so she could

go home. Ms. Oldham testified that she gently woke Defendant to request the return

of her money. Ms. Blue testified that, Defendant “got angry and jumped up and

kicked [Ms. Oldham] in the stomach” so hard that she “flew through the door[,]” then

Defendant “threw some money at” Ms. Oldham. Ms. Oldham testified that Defendant

“kicked me dead in my stomach harder than I’ve ever been kicked in my life[,]”

-2- STATE V. MORRISON

sending her through the bedroom door and into the kitchen, where it took her awhile

to catch her breath. Ms. Oldham testified that she told Defendant she just wanted

her money so she could leave, and Defendant threw a rolled up wad of bills at her,

hitting her in the face. Ms. Oldham left the house, joined by Ms. Blue, who had

decided she also wanted to get away from Defendant. The women left on foot, since

neither of them had a vehicle at the house.

The women were walking toward Highway 211, not yet far from the house,

when they saw Defendant had come out onto the front porch of the house. Ms.

Oldham testified she told Ms. Blue: “‘He’s got a gun.’ [So w]e took off running. He

started shooting at us.” Both women testified they saw Defendant standing on the

porch of the house, holding a firearm and shooting it in their direction. Ms. Blue

testified that the gun she saw Defendant shooting at her was a black “assault rifle,”

which she had seen Defendant shoot before. Ms. Oldham could not describe the gun

other than suggesting it was not a handgun she had seen earlier that day in

Defendant’s Range Rover (the “Range Rover”). The women ran into nearby woods for

cover, then continued to run toward Highway 211, which was nearby. Ms. Oldham

testified that she heard “at least ten” bullets fired, hitting the trees as she “[ran] in a

zigzag through the trees.” The women reached Highway 211, screaming, waving

their arms, and sometimes standing in the lane of oncoming traffic in an attempt to

get help, but a number of vehicles drove around and past them.

-3- STATE V. MORRISON

Retired veteran Leslie A. Mortenson (“Mr. Mortenson”), a UPS contractor, was

driving west on Highway 211 at approximately 2:00 a.m. on 14 January 2017, heading

to his home in Raeford from a repair job in South Carolina.1 As Mr. Mortenson was

driving just west of central Raeford on Highway 211, he “c[a]me across two young

ladies in the highway waving frantically for [him] to stop”—these two women were

Ms. Oldham and Ms. Blue. Mr. Mortenson stopped his Ford Ranger pick-up truck

(the “truck”) in the middle of the road and rolled down his front passenger window to

talk to the women. The women told Mr. Mortenson that “someone was after them,

was trying to hurt them,” and when he asked who was “after them,” “they told [him]

the name of that person,” was “Allen Morrison”—Defendant. Mr. Mortenson testified

“at that time, I was sitting in the middle of the highway, so I pulled over onto the

shoulder. [The women] started screaming frantically at that time that [Defendant]

was . . . coming from Highway 211 behind me, [ ] then he pulled in front of me,

blocking my exit.” Ms. Oldham testified: “I could see the headlights of [Defendant’s]

Range Rover coming. So I was like, ‘I think that’s him,’ you know. And I was just in

a panic, basically.”

Mr. Mortenson testified the Range Rover “pulled diagonally in front of me, so

[Defendant’s] passenger-door area of his vehicle[ ] was [‘just a few feet’ from the] front

1 In the State’s brief, it describes Mr. Mortenson as a “retired Special Forces veteran with twenty-six years and ten months military service,” but we cannot find record evidence supporting this description of Mr. Mortenson as having been a member of “Special Forces.”

-4- STATE V. MORRISON

of my vehicle.” Mr. Mortenson lowered his front driver’s side window and stated that

Defendant’s “passenger window was down. The two [women] were standing behind

my passenger door. There was words being said back and forth[, ‘[a] lot of profanity’].”

Ms. Oldham testified she told Mr. Mortenson, about Defendant, “[h]e’s got a gun.”

Mr. Mortenson, a veteran, retrieved a .357 revolver from under his seat and “had it

in [his] hand, ready – ready to return fire if fired upon.” Ms. Oldham told Mr.

Mortenson: “‘We’re just trying to get away. [Defendant’s] shooting at us,’ you know,

just kind of in a panic.” Mr. Mortenson testified he heard Defendant say to the

women: “You better get you[r] a---s in my vehicle. This s---’s fixing to get real.”

Mr. Mortenson testified that Defendant was the only person in the Range

Rover, and that he could clearly see Defendant’s face as Defendant leaned over so

that his face was visible through the open front passenger side window. “Then there

was a rifle stuck out the passenger window of [the Range Rover], towards the

[women].” Mr. Mortenson stated: “I could tell, because I was so close to it, that it was

a smaller-caliber rifle, because I could see the tip of the barrel.” Once Mr. Mortenson

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Morrison, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-morrison-ncctapp-2020.