State v. Tunstall

432 S.E.2d 331, 334 N.C. 320, 1993 N.C. LEXIS 347
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJuly 30, 1993
Docket323A92
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 432 S.E.2d 331 (State v. Tunstall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court 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. Tunstall, 432 S.E.2d 331, 334 N.C. 320, 1993 N.C. LEXIS 347 (N.C. 1993).

Opinion

MITCHELL, Justice.

The defendant, Charles Alonzo Tunstall, was indicted on 28 May 1991 on a charge of first-degree murder and was tried non-capitally at the 9 March 1992 Criminal Session of Superior Court, Warren County. On 12 March 1992, the jury returned a verdict finding the defendant guilty of first-degree murder, and the trial court sentenced the defendant to life imprisonment.

On 9 March 1992, prior to the commencement of the defendant’s trial, the trial court held a hearing on motions for a bill of particulars and to compel discovery which the defendant had filed on 24 September 1991. The trial court allowed the motion for a bill of particulars in part, ordering the State to provide the defendant with

(1) Exact date, time and location of the alleged murder;
(2) Whether or not the State contends there was an altercation between the deceased and defendant prior to the alleged shooting which constitutes a factual basis for the state’s theory on the manner in which the alleged murder was committed;
*323 (3) Whether or not the deceased had a weapon in his possession during such altercation, if any, or at the time of the alleged murder;
(4) Whether or not the State intends to offer evidence of other crimes committed by the defendant for the purpose of showing scienter quo animo relating to the alleged murder;
(5) A statement of the facts upon which the State intends to rely which would prove that the killing was done by premeditation or deliberation or was done in the perpetration or attempt to perpetrate a felony.

The trial court further ordered the State to supply “any statements made by the deceased threatening the defendant which would tend to shed light on the defendant’s self defense to the alleged murder for which he is being tried.” The trial court concluded that the State had provided all other discovery required by N.C.G.S. § 15A-903.

During the motions hearing on 9 March 1992, the defendant’s counsel requested a continuance, stating, “I received discovery on Thursday and Friday of last week, and it’s my position that we’re going to have to request a continuance based on that lateness of discovery and based on the rulings that we are entitled to additional information.” The defendant’s counsel further noted that the defendant had been incarcerated for safekeeping in Central Prison in Raleigh until 9 March 1992, the day of the motions hearing, and that the items of which counsel had received notice in his office the previous week were oral statements made by the defendant to two deputy sheriffs.

The prosecutor opposed the motion to continue, stating:

I would just like to state for the record that much of this information has already been provided. . . . Discovery was provided at a much earlier date than he stated. In fact, I have a letter dated in February which goes over some of the things that have already been provided to him, including some of the things that the court ordered as a part of what the State needs to provide in the written bill of particulars.

The trial court reserved judgment on the defendant’s motion to continue and stated to the prosecutor:

*324 [W]hen you file the written documents in the morning I will consider the timeliness within which [the defendant] received the information and what effect it might have on his ability to prepare a defense and whether or not it will affect his preparation.
I cannot . . . evaluate that, until I have the benefit of what information is going to be supplied to him, whether or not he will need to try to locate additional witnesses.
Maybe it would be that you will supply him no new additional information and consequently he can be ready for trial. I just have no way of knowing.

On the next day, 10 March 1992, the trial court held a hearing on the defendant’s motion to continue. The defendant testified that he was originally arrested on 21 April 1991 and incarcerated in Warren County until he made bond on 29 July 1991. Thereafter, he was arrested again on 12 August 1991 and incarcerated in Warren County. He was sent to Central Prison on 25 November 1991, where he remained until he was brought back to Warrenton on 9 March 1992. The week before the 9 March 1992 hearing, a lawyer associated with the defendant’s counsel interviewed the defendant at Central Prison for about an hour. The defendant testified that he had conferred with his counsel for only thirty minutes since returning to Warrenton.

In support of the motion to continue, the defendant’s counsel argued the following:

It would be our position that while the State provided some discovery material at an early date, that the State did not comply with the bill of particulars until ordered to do so by the Court, and provided that information to the defense counsel at about nine twenty-five this morning. . . . And in addition . . . this case was designated for trial by the State of North Carolina last week. The defendant was brought in at three-fifteen yesterday.
It’s my position that under all of the circumstances that have been presented regarding the discovery and the unavailability of this defendant, that ... we have presented good cause as to why this matter should be carried over to insure that this defendant is given full opportunity to be *325 prepared to meet the State’s evidence and present any evidence he has regarding that evidence at his trial.

After finding that the defendant was charged with murder on 21 April 1991 and that the defendant’s trial counsel was appointed on 1 May 1991 to represent him in this case, the trial court denied the defendant’s motion to continue. The trial court then proceeded with jury selection and with the trial of the defendant’s case.

At the defendant’s trial, the State presented evidence which tended to show the following. Deputy J.A. McCowan of the Warren County Sheriff’s Department testified that in the early morning hours of 21 April 1991 he responded to a call at the residence of Annie Mae Bullock in Soul City, North Carolina. When he arrived at the Bullock home, he saw the defendant, Charles Tunstall, standing at the back door. The defendant was carrying a double-barreled twenty-gauge shotgun. The defendant said, “You’re at the right place, come on in.” McCowan then went to the back door and knocked, and the defendant again told him to come in. When McCowan entered the kitchen, the defendant was standing between the kitchen and the living room. As McCowan approached him, the defendant stated, “I shot the mother f — er, he’s over there dead.” McCowan did not write this statement down and first told the prosecutor about this statement one week before the defendant’s trial. The defendant was still holding the shotgun as McCowan approached him. McCowan asked the defendant to put the gun down, and the defendant handed it to him. The defendant told McCowan that he had another gun. The defendant then took a .25-caliber automatic pistol from his pocket and handed it to McCowan.

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Bluebook (online)
432 S.E.2d 331, 334 N.C. 320, 1993 N.C. LEXIS 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-tunstall-nc-1993.