State v. Van Landingham

197 S.E.2d 539, 283 N.C. 589, 1973 N.C. LEXIS 1025
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJuly 12, 1973
Docket55
StatusPublished
Cited by66 cases

This text of 197 S.E.2d 539 (State v. Van Landingham) 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. Van Landingham, 197 S.E.2d 539, 283 N.C. 589, 1973 N.C. LEXIS 1025 (N.C. 1973).

Opinion

*591 SHARP, Justice.

Defendant’s first two assignments of error are that the court erred in denying her motion for nonsuit as to the charge of first degree murder and each of the lesser degrees of homicide included in that charge. Defendant offered no evidence. The State’s evidence tended to show:

Dr. Mclnnis, a Raleigh pediatrician who raised horses, lived on her farm a short distance north of Raleigh. Her residence, directly across Six Forks Road from the Bayleaf Baptist Church, was in a grove about 100 feet from the west side of the road. Since 1965 defendant, Mrs. Van Landingham, had lived on this farm in a house just back of Dr. Mclnnis’. A driveway from Six Forks Road served both residences and continued past defendant’s house for 420 feet to a horse barn and tool shed. After passing between these two buildings the drive became a bridle path leading to and across the dam of a pond southwest of the barn. Beyond the dam it was one of a number of horse trails around the lake and in the wooded area adjacent to it.

During the summer of 1972 Dr. Mclnnis employed John Simpson (John), a 17-year-old high school boy, to work on the farm. On 10 August 1972 John observed defendant leaving the premises as he came to work at 8:30 a.m. He saw her again about.noon as she walked from her house toward the carport. About 10:30 a.m. Dr. Mclnnis came home, changed into her working clothes, and helped John in the yard until about 12:45 p.m. when she drove to a nearby store to get food for lunch. She returned about 1:00, delivered her purchases to the maid, and walked toward the horse barn.

While waiting for lunch to be prepared John went to the tool shed, procured hand tools, and repaired a broken chain on a trailer. During the performance of this task, which took about five minutes, he observed the Bolda children, Sue, aged 17; Cheryl, aged 11; and Don, aged 15, coming across the dam with a horse. After repairing the chain John returned to the house to wait for Dr. Mclnnis. She did not return and the maid persuaded him to eat his lunch while it was hot. At two o’clock the maid had gone and Dr. Mclnnis had still not come for lunch; so John went back to the barn area. He saw the three Bolda children grazing a horse while they ate their lunch on a stump between the barn and the pond. This stump was 87 feet from the barn and 120 feet from the pond. After asking *592 the children where Dr. Mclnnis was he went into the barn looking for her. The door of the tack room, which is immediately to the left of the barn entrance, was closed. This door opened to the left inside the room.

John “grabbed hold of the latch,” which slips over a U-shaped ring designed for a padlock, and “started opening the door.” Before he had moved the door two feet it was stopped from the inside. However, he observed Dr. Mclnnis sitting on a feed can facing the door. She was wearing sun glasses and had a cigarette in her hand. “She looked casually.” There were no weapons in sight. He did not see Mrs. Van Landingham, but he heard her voice from behind the door. She told him “not to come in now, to go back up to the house.” A second time she said, “Don’t come in now John. We will be up in a minute.” The door was then closed. The time was about 2:05 p.m.

The Bolda children had arrived at the Mclnnis farm about 11:15 a.m. on 10 August 1972 to ride and brush their horse and clean out its stall. They parked their car, which they had to get home by 2:30 p.m., in the churchyard across the road and walked down the drive between the two houses to the barn and the lake. About five minutes after John Simpson had left the barn after inquiring of them as to Dr. Mclnnis’ whereabouts, Cheryl went to the tack room for a brush. As she started to pull the latch back it hit the door. Mrs. Van Landingham then opened the door just enough to stick her head out and said she was busy. Cheryl said, “O. K.” and went back to the stump. Ten or fifteen minutes thereafter, at 2:20 p.m., the children left the barnyard by the same route they had come. During their stay at the farm they had heard no shots fired or any other unusual noise.

After John Simpson’s conversation with Mrs. Van Landing-ham at the tack room door he returned to the house to await Dr. Mclnnis’ return. While waiting, he fell asleep in the den. At 3:30 p.m. he was awakened by Carol Caniford (Caniford), a neighbor, and Mrs. V. Watson Pugh, Dr. Mclnnis’ sister-in-law. At no time that day had he heard any gun shots fired.

Carol Caniford, an operating room nurse who taught riding at her residence, lived in a house which she rented from defendant. This house, located on the west side of Six Forks Road, is two-tenths of a mile south of the drive leading into the Mclnnis farm. The distance from the Caniford house to the *593 Mclnnis barn is about four-tenths of a mile by way of Six Forks Road and the Mclnnis drive. It is 679 steps from the Mclnnis barn to the Caniford house by way of the path across the pond dam and through the woods and pasture — a fast six minutes’ walk. The Mclnnis barn is located straight across the field and woods to the north of the Caniford barn, which is 50-100 feet behind the Caniford house.

The land and barns which Caniford used for her horses were rented from both Dr. Mclnnis and defendant. Caniford paid low rent because she did a lot of work on the Mclnnis farm. She had keys to the gates and buildings.

On the morning of 10 August 1972 Caniford, who had been on duty all night at the hospital, got home at 7:30. During the morning she gave riding lessons until noon. Sometime thereafter defendant came to her house to deliver feed which she had purchased that morning at Caniford’s request. After the two women unloaded the feed at her barn Caniford returned to the house and went to bed between 1:30 and 2:00 p.m. A pounding on the door awakened her about 2:30 p.m. She went to the door to find defendant standing there, “terribly upset.” Defendant said a lot of things “awfully fast”; some were “sort of incoherent” and “a lot of it didn’t make any sense.” Caniford testified, “A few of the things I know, a few of the things I am not sure about.”

Defendant told Caniford that “Alice had been hurt, or Alice had been shot.” In answer to Caniford’s question whether “she was sure of how badly [Dr. Mclnnis] was hurt or if she was dead” defendant said she was not sure and that Caniford “must go down there . .. and hurry and just go right now, go.” Defendant said either, “I wanted to kill myself,” or “I want to kill myself.”

Caniford dressed and told defendant she thought she should stay at her (Caniford’s) house or go next door and remain with Mrs. John Willardson. As Caniford backed her car out of the driveway defendant was headed across the yard toward the Willardson house.

The Willardsons, who had lived next door to Caniford for two or three weeks, were also defendant’s tenants. Mr. Willard-son had passed the North Carolina State Bar examination. However, his license had not been issued to him and he had not taken his oath as an attorney. On 10 August 1972 he was *594 employed as a law clerk by one of the judges of the North Carolina Court of Appeals. On that day, between 2:45 and 3:00 p.m., defendant walked into the Willardson residence without knocking and told Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
197 S.E.2d 539, 283 N.C. 589, 1973 N.C. LEXIS 1025, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-van-landingham-nc-1973.