State v. Poe

458 S.E.2d 242, 119 N.C. App. 266, 1995 N.C. App. LEXIS 468
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedJune 20, 1995
DocketNo. COA94-867
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 458 S.E.2d 242 (State v. Poe) 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. Poe, 458 S.E.2d 242, 119 N.C. App. 266, 1995 N.C. App. LEXIS 468 (N.C. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Judge.

Defendants Elbert Randolph Poe and David Ladell Beasley were indicted for charges of assault with a deadly weapon in violation of North Carolina General Statutes § 14-32(b) (1993) and injury to personal property in violation of North Carolina General Statutes § 14-160 (1993). The cases were joined for trial.

[268]*268Evidence presented at trial showed the following: Shortly after 9:00 p.m. on 18 April 1993, Brenda Sexton and her sister, Rachel Carter, were traveling north on Eastway Drive toward Central Avenue in Charlotte, North Carolina, in a blue Ford Escort. Ms. Sexton was driving and Ms. Carter was in the passenger seat. As they neared a Starvin’ Marvin convenience store, a brick was thrown through the window of the car, shattering the windshield and damaging the hood and interior dash of the car. Ms. Carter heard a loud explosion and felt glass spray across her face. Ms. Sexton had been knocked unconscious. Ms. Carter, who was not injured, brought the car under control after it crossed three lanes of traffic.

Ms. Sexton regained consciousness at the scene. She did not know what had caused her injury, but her eye had been hit and the side of her face smashed and she could not see because of glass and blood. Ms. Sexton was taken to the hospital where she remained for two weeks; the right side of her head and face were surgically reconstructed. By the time of trial she had undergone three operations and more were necessary.

Ms. Carter testified, that just before the brick was thrown into the car, she saw two cars, a small red car and a small gray car. She could not see who was inside either vehicle. Immediately after the accident, Ms. Carter saw a brick lying in the back seat; the brick was old, had mortar edges, and was covered with mud. Ms. Carter threw the brick away the following day.

Benjamin Tyrone Carter was one of the people indicted in connection with the assault; Mr. Carter testified for the State pursuant to an arrangement with the State which would result in all charges being dismissed in exchange for his testimony. Mr. Carter testified that he knew defendants from attending Myers Park High School. According to Mr. Carter, he, defendant Poe, defendant Beasley, and Tito Truesdale spent the afternoon of 18 April 1993 together; defendant Poe had his mother’s car, a gray four-door Nissan Sentra, and he drove the others; they drove to Freedom Park around 5:00 p.m.; Mr. Carter, who suffers from vertigo, became dizzy and asked to be taken home; and when they left the park, Mr. Truesdale was in the front seat with defendant Poe, the driver, defendant Beasley was in the back seat behind defendant Poe, and Mr. Carter was in the right rear passenger seat. The men stopped at a convenience store and all of them except Mr. Carter went in and got something to eat; they then began to travel on 1-77 going toward 1-85.

[269]*269Mr. Carter testified further that as the four men traveled on 1-77, defendant Poe threw a bottle at a blue Nissan 300 ZX which had pulled up beside them; that the driver of the 300 ZX chased the men through downtown Charlotte for approximately ten minutes before defendant Poe was able to lose the 300 ZX; that at defendant Beasley’s request, defendant Poe stopped in the parking lot of a Bojangle’s beside a Jiffy Lube near Eastland Mall; that defendants got out of the car to use the bathroom; and that when they returned, defendant Beasley was carrying two rocks which had been picked up from the dumpster area. Mr. Carter continued, that defendants got back into the car and headed down Central Avenue; that defendant Beasley threw a rock at an approaching car and asked defendant Poe to pull over again; that defendant Poe stopped at a dry cleaners on Eastway Drive near a Starvin’ Marvin store; that defendants got out of the car again and this time defendant Poe picked up a bottle and defendant Beasley picked up some bricks from a nearby wall; and that defendants got back into the car and as they were driving down Eastway Drive, defendant Poe threw the bottle at a Ford Escort and defendant Beasley threw a rock at the car.

Mr. Carter further testified that he looked back and saw the car cross the center lane and enter the wrong lane of traffic; that defendant Poe turned the car around and after defendant Beasley got rid of the second rock, defendant Poe drove past the car Ms. Sexton had been driving and saw that she had been badly injured; and that he asked defendant Poe to take him home and his companions told him “not to fag out” and “go home and call the police.” Mr. Carter stated that defendant Poe did not drive Mr. Carter home but he did drive Mr. Truesdale home because Mr. Truesdale “didn’t want no part of it”; that defendant Beasley then got in the front seat with defendant Poe and the three men returned to the Starvin’ Marvin store and waited as emergency aid was rendered to the victim, Ms. Sexton; and that Mr. Carter and defendants were apprehended as they sat in the car.

Regis L. Morrison was at the scene when the incident occurred and told police that he saw the car from which the brick had come. As a result of this information, Officer George D. Dawkins, the first police officer to arrive at the scene, got into his car and drove about 200 feet to the Starvin’ Marvin store where defendants and Mr. Carter were parked. Officer Dawkins and Officer M. D. Burney, who had joined the investigation, approached the car in which defendants and Mr. Carter were seated. Officer Burney put Mr. Carter into his car and Officer Dawkins placed defendants into his car. According to Officer [270]*270Burney, Mr. Carter was scared and almost in tears. Before any questioning commenced, Mr. Carter said he wanted to make a statement. He told Officer Burney that defendant Beasley threw the brick through the window of the car Ms. Sexton was driving and that they were involved in another similar incident on Central Avenue where he threw a brick at another car. Mr. Carter was taken to the Law Enforcement Center where he gave a written statement regarding the incident. There was no indication in Mr. Carter’s written statement that defendant Poe had thrown a bottle at any car that night.

Pieces of brick and broken rock were found by police in both the Ford Escort driven by Ms. Sexton and on the floorboard in the left rear behind the driver’s seat in the gray Nissan Sentra which defendant Poe was driving.

Officer Larry F. Mackins testified that he was dispatched at 9:47 p.m. to investigate a report of damage to a vehicle near Eastway Drive and Central Avenue, less than a mile away from the scene of the incident involving the car Ms. Sexton was driving. A car driven by Robert Dale Johnson had damage to its windshield and the interior dash. Pieces of concrete rock were found inside the car. Officer Mackins, as well as Officer Burney, heard the calls to police regarding the two incidents.

Both defendants presented evidence which tended to exonerate themselves and implicate Mr. Carter. According to defendants’ evidence, Mr. Carter had been drinking and was “hyper” and was talking “junk” to people in passing cars. Both defendants testified that during one of their stops, Mr. Carter used a telephone and slammed it down. After slamming down the phone, according to defendant Beasley, Mr. Carter said, “I’m going to hit that bitch in the head”; defendant Poe testified that Mr. Carter said that he was going “to bust the bitch” with a rock because she was with another man. Defendant Beasley denied having any rocks or bricks in the car. His testimony was that while he did not know what had happened, Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
458 S.E.2d 242, 119 N.C. App. 266, 1995 N.C. App. LEXIS 468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-poe-ncctapp-1995.