State v. Spencer

572 S.E.2d 815, 154 N.C. App. 666, 2002 N.C. App. LEXIS 1521
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 17, 2002
DocketCOA01-1607
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 572 S.E.2d 815 (State v. Spencer) 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. Spencer, 572 S.E.2d 815, 154 N.C. App. 666, 2002 N.C. App. LEXIS 1521 (N.C. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

THOMAS, Judge.

Defendant, Allen Spencer, was convicted of assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill inflicting serious injury (AWDWIKISI) was sentenced to 116 to 149 months in prison.

He appeals, assigning as error the trial court’s: (1) failure to instruct the jury on voluntary intoxication; (2) finding as an aggravating factor that the offense was committed while defendant was on pretrial release; and (3) failure to dismiss the indictment for AWDWIKISI where it did not allege an element of the offense. For the reasons discussed herein, we hold the trial court did not err.

The State’s evidence tends to show the following: Sharon Roberts had lived with defendant for the last eight of the thirteen years she had known him. Her ten-year-old daughter referred to defendant as “Daddy” although he is not her biological father. During the year 2000, however, Roberts talked with defendant numerous times about ending their relationship. During these discussions, defendant said they would “be together forever,” and he would kill her if she were to leave. In July 2000, defendant bit the area around Roberts’s eye and choked her.

Sometime around November 2000, Roberts asked defendant to leave her home. He did so for several weeks, going to Fairfield, North Carolina. A few days after defendant’s return to Greensboro, North Carolina, he went to Roberts’s home and said he wanted to speak with her in her bedroom. When Roberts complied, defendant locked the door. He asked her “to make love to him for the last time.” Roberts refused. Defendant then put a knife to her throat and said he was going to kill her. Roberts pleaded with him to spare her. Defendant then put the knife to his own throat and said that he was going to kill himself. Roberts eventually persuaded defendant to accompany her to the local mental health center for treatment.

Defendant was hospitalized for several days. Upon his release, Roberts agreed to help him find a place to live, and arranged for him to stay with her sister, Alice “Annette” Roberts (Annette).

On the night of 11 January 2001, Roberts was at Annette’s home “drinking and getting high.” While there, she had consensual sex with *668 defendant. The next day, 12 January 2001, Roberts saw defendant several times at Annette’s. During the evening, Roberts and Annette went out for a couple of hours to visit some friends, returning around nine or ten o’clock with about twenty dollars worth of crack cocaine. They smoked some, with defendant smoking the majority of it. He also consumed three or four beers. Sometime earlier that day, Roberts joked in front of defendant about possibly being pregnant.

Upon receiving a phone call from a male friend, Roberts decided to leave Annette’s home with her daughter. Defendant appeared agitated and insisted on walking Roberts to her car. Once there, defendant asked whether Roberts was seeing another man. She reminded defendant that her daughter was in the car, said they could talk later, and attempted to drive away. Defendant, however, was sitting on the door frame and said, “If I had a gun, I’d kill you.” Defendant then struck her. Roberts later testified that she initially thought defendant hit her on the neck, but upon seeing blood, realized he had stabbed her. Defendant stabbed Roberts in the face, neck, and chest. As she tried to block the knife, her hand was also cut.

Annette ran to the car and jumped on defendant, who she heard say, “I’m going to kill you.” Jack Jordan, Annette’s boyfriend, pulled Roberts from inside the car. Defendant then said to Roberts, “I guess it’s over now. That’s what you get for not telling me who you’re [sleeping] with.”

Later that night, Deputy James Cuddeback of the Guilford County Sheriff’s Department interrogated defendant. After waiving his Miranda rights, defendant admitted he stabbed Roberts. Defendant appeared shaken and intermittently cried.

Defendant’s evidence tends to show the following: Dr. Gary Hoover, a forensic psychologist, tested and evaluated defendant. The Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory test indicated defendant was mildly depressed and somewhat irritable. The Milan Clinical Multiaxial Inventory showed defendant had “rather severe anxiety problems that were set in the context of a dependent personality.” Hoover, meanwhile, said he believes defendant is extremely dependent, and “tends to become anxious and fragmented in his thinking when placed in stressful, anxiety-producing situations.” According to Hoover, when defendant finally understood his relationship with Roberts had ended, “he lost control, he blew up.” In Hoover’s opinion, the stabbing was an impulsive act, or “an act without thinking,” rather than a thoughtful one.

*669 The jury returned a guilty verdict. The trial court found as an aggravating factor that defendant committed the offense while on pretrial release for a charge of assault on a female. It found as a mitigating factor that defendant acknowledged wrongdoing at an early stage of the proceedings. After the aggravating factor was found to outweigh the mitigating factor, defendant was sentenced to 116 to 149 months in prison.

By his first assignment of error, defendant contends the trial court committed plain error in failing to instruct the jury on voluntary intoxication as a defense to ÁWDWIKISI. We disagree.

As defendant raises this argument for the first time on appeal, he correctly assigns plain error as the standard of review. See N.C. R. App. P. 10(c)(4). Plain error is “ ‘fundamental error, something so basic, so prejudicial, so lacking in its elements that justice cannot have been done’. . . or it can be fairly said ‘the instructional mistake had a probable impact on the jury’s finding that the defendant was guilty.’ ” State v. Odom, 307 N.C. 655, 660, 300 S.E.2d 375, 378 (1983) (emphasis in original) (quoting U.S. v. McCaskill, 676 F.2d 995, 1002 (4th Cir.), cert. denied, 459 U.S. 1018, 74 L. Ed. 2d 513 (1982)).

“Voluntary intoxication is not a legal excuse for a criminal act; however, it may be sufficient in degree to prevent and therefore disprove the existence of a specific intent such as an intent to kill.” State v. Gerald, 304 N.C. 511, 521, 284 S.E.2d 312, 318 (1981). To require an instruction on voluntary intoxication, there must be evidence that “defendant’s mind and reason were so completely intoxicated and overthrown that he could not form a specific intent to kill.” Id. at 511, 284 S.E.2d at 318-19. In resolving the question of whether defendant is entitled to an instruction on voluntary intoxication, we examine the evidence in the light most favorable to defendant. State v. Boyd, 343 N.C. 699, 713, 473 S.E.2d 327, 334 (1996), cert. denied, 519 U.S. 1096, 136 L. Ed. 2d 722 (1997).

The evidence here shows defendant consumed crack cocaine and beer on 12 January 2001. It is unclear precisely how much he consumed.

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State v. Torres
615 S.E.2d 36 (Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 2005)

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Bluebook (online)
572 S.E.2d 815, 154 N.C. App. 666, 2002 N.C. App. LEXIS 1521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-spencer-ncctapp-2002.