State v. Phillips

CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 7, 2026
Docket25-275
StatusPublished
AuthorJudge Allegra Collins

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Bluebook
State v. Phillips, (N.C. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA

No. COA25-275

Filed 7 January 2026

Haywood County, No. 23CR232603-430

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA

v.

EARL MITCHELL PHILLIPS

Appeal by Defendant from judgments entered 10 July 2024 by Judge William

T. Stetzer in Haywood County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 15

October 2025.

Attorney General Jeff Jackson, by Assistant Attorney General Megan Shook, for the State-Appellee.

Drew Nelson for Defendant-Appellant.

COLLINS, Judge.

Defendant Earl Mitchell Phillips appeals from judgments entered upon a jury’s

verdicts of guilty of assault with a firearm on a law enforcement officer, stalking with

a court order in effect, and resisting a public officer. Defendant argues that the trial

court erred by denying his (1) motion to dismiss the stalking charge due to a fatal

flaw in the indictment and (2) request for a specific instruction on the assault charge.

Because the indictment sufficiently identifies the crime being charged, the trial court

did not err by denying Defendant’s motion to dismiss. And because the requested STATE V. PHILLIPS

Opinion of the Court

jury instruction was not supported by the evidence, the trial court did not err by

refusing to give the requested jury instruction. We find no error.

I. Background

Defendant was indicted on 6 March 2023 on the charges of assault with a

firearm on a law enforcement officer, felony stalking with a court order in effect, and

resisting a public officer. The initial indictment alleged that Defendant committed

the offenses on 11 February 2023, and the stalking charge in the indictment alleged

that Defendant

unlawfully, willfully and feloniously did . . . knowingly on more than one occasion harass Christopher Berghout and/or Jaime Berghout without legal purpose, and/or did knowingly engage in a course of conduct directed at Christopher Berghout and/or Jaime Berghout without legal purpose, as the case may be.

At the time of this offense, Defendant knew and should have known that the harassment and/or the course of conduct would cause a reasonable person to fear for that person’s safety and fear for the safety of that person’s immediate family, and/or Defendant knew and should have known that the harassment and/or course of conduct would cause a reasonable person to suffer substantial emotional distress by placing that person in fear of death, bodily injury, and/or continued harassment.

Also at the time of this offense, there was a valid court order in effect prohibiting this conduct . . . , entered . . . on December 19, 2022 in Haywood County, North Carolina, and Defendant had knowledge of this order.

Prior to trial, Defendant filed a motion to dismiss the stalking charge in the

indictment, arguing it was fatally defective. The trial court found that Defendant

-2- STATE V. PHILLIPS

had sufficient notice of the stalking charge and denied the motion. On the first day

of trial, the State moved to amend the date of the stalking charge in the indictment

from 11 February 2023 to a date range of 7-11 February 2023; the trial court granted

the motion. Defendant did not move for a bill of particulars.

The evidence presented at trial tended to show the following:

Christopher and Jaime Berghout moved to Haywood County in the fall of 2019

and met Defendant and his wife shortly after their arrival. Defendant and his wife

began stopping by the Berghouts’ home uninvited, despite the Berghouts’ eventual

request that they cease doing so. On 21 July 2020, Jaime filed a report with the

Haywood County Sheriff’s Office asking law enforcement to communicate to

Defendant to stop the unwanted contact, but it continued. Tensions between the

Berghouts and Defendant and his wife continued over the next couple of years.

Approximately two years later, in June 2022, Defendant and two other men drove

to the Berghouts’ home in Defendant’s truck and had an altercation with Christopher;

Christopher took the first “swing” at one of the men. Christopher was “beaten to a

pulp,” suffering a broken nose, swollen eyes, and bruises and cuts across his body.

Defendant and the two other men got back into Defendant’s truck; Defendant then

drove his truck into Jaime, who was standing in front of it. Jaime suffered severe

bruising on her thigh and arm from “where the vehicle struck [her].”

Defendant was arrested, and a magistrate entered a “conditions of release and

release order” the following day. As a condition of his release, Defendant was ordered

-3- STATE V. PHILLIPS

to have no contact with Jaime. Defendant and the two other men later pled guilty to

simple assault on Christopher. On 19 December 2022, a district court judge in

Haywood County entered a judgment against Defendant for simple assault. The

special conditions of his probation included a no-contact order, prohibiting Defendant

from assaulting, threatening, harassing, being in or on the premises or workplace of,

or having any contact with Christopher and Jaime Berghout. The no-contact order

further ordered Defendant

not to be within 100 yards of Berghout’s residence located at 47 Whistle Ridge Road, and stay off Whistle Ridge Road. If traveling on Dick’s Trail, do not stop, slow down, or otherwise harass Berghout if traveling on the portion of Dick’s Trail which borders Berghout’s property; Defendant is allowed to go directly to and from his well.

The no-contact order was effective for eighteen months, until 19 June 2024. A

redacted copy of the judgment including the no-contact order was admitted as State’s

Exhibit 2 and published to the jury.

On 7 and 8 February 2023, Christopher called 911 because he saw Defendant

“driving by, slowing down, [and] staring” at the Berghouts’ home. Christopher’s

recorded 911 calls were admitted as State’s Exhibits 28 and 29 and published to the

jury. Christopher also recorded one video of Defendant slowly driving by the

Berghouts’ home on 7 February 2023 and one video of Defendant sitting inside his

truck near the Berghouts’ home on 8 February 2023. Those videos were admitted as

State’s Exhibit 30 and published to the jury.

-4- STATE V. PHILLIPS

Christopher testified that Defendant had driven on Dick’s Trail on 8 February

2023 “at least half a dozen times” and that, when he approached Defendant to write

down his license plate, Defendant stopped driving and asked Christopher about his

daughter. Christopher further testified that a few days later, on 11 February 2023,

he heard gunshots in his backyard; when he shined a light outside, he saw Defendant.

Jaime called 911, and her recorded 911 call was published to the jury.

Deputy Wood and Deputy Elkins with the Haywood County Sheriff’s Office

were dispatched to the Berghouts’ home that night and arrived shortly before 9:00

p.m. Both deputies testified that it was dark and raining a little bit, and that they

were wearing their standard uniforms, which included their vests, stars, nameplates,

sheriff’s office badges, and duty belts. Deputy Elkins was also wearing a black

sheriff’s office raincoat, which had a reflective Haywood County Sheriff’s Office badge

and two shoulder insignias. The deputies drove separately, and both drove marked

patrol cars with their headlights and overhead light bars activated. When Deputy

Elkins parked his marked patrol car, his headlights and overhead light bars shined

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State v. Brown
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365 S.E.2d 579 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1988)
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State v. Creason
326 S.E.2d 24 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1985)
State v. Castaneda
674 S.E.2d 707 (Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 2009)
State v. Locklear
681 S.E.2d 293 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 2009)
State v. Shaw
370 S.E.2d 546 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1988)
State v. Coker
323 S.E.2d 343 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1984)
State v. Hageman
296 S.E.2d 433 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1982)
State v. Williams
669 S.E.2d 290 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 2008)
State v. McGee
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State v. Duncan
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State v. Phillips, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-phillips-ncctapp-2026.