State v. Young

671 S.E.2d 372, 195 N.C. App. 107, 2009 N.C. App. LEXIS 57
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 20, 2009
DocketCOA08-161
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 671 S.E.2d 372 (State v. Young) 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. Young, 671 S.E.2d 372, 195 N.C. App. 107, 2009 N.C. App. LEXIS 57 (N.C. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

GEER, Judge.

Defendant Monica Benita Young appeals from her conviction of misdemeanor breaking and entering. On appeal, defendant primarily argues that the trial court’s questioning of a witness constituted an impermissible expression of judicial opinion and warrants a new trial. Although we hold that defendant failed to preserve this issue for appellate review, we also conclude that defendant’s assertion that the questioning undermined her “claim of right” defense is unpersuasive given the evidence of the summary ejectment judgment specifically finding defendant had no claim of right to the premises.

Facts

At trial, the State’s evidence tended to show the following facts. On 4 December 2006, Jacqueline Chambers owned a mobile home (“the trailer”). The trailer sat on lot 30 at 111 Happy Drive, Roanoke Rapids, North Carolina. Chambers had rented the lot from Linda Medlin for $85.00 per month for about nine years. In February 2006, Chambers moved out of the trailer to let her daughter T’Yara Thomas and her daughter’s friend Arquize Artis live there, with the understanding that Thomas would make the monthly $85.00 lot rental payment to Medlin. Thomas, however, failed to pay the lot rent from February 2006 until March 2007.

In June or July 2006, defendant moved into Chambers’ trailer with Thomas. In August 2006, Chambers asked defendant to leave the trailer, but defendant refused. Thomas and Artis brought an eviction action, and on 27 October 2006, a judgment for summary ejectment was entered against defendant by the Halifax County District Court. On 29 October 2006, defendant was escorted from the trailer by law enforcement pursuant to the eviction order.

On 5 November 2006 — one week after defendant’s eviction from Chambers’ trailer — defendant approached Medlin and entered into a month-to-month lease for the lot on which Chambers’ trailer sat. At that time, Chambers’ monthly $85.00 lot rental payment had gone unpaid for approximately nine months. Defendant paid Medlin $85.00 for the first month’s rent, and Medlin gave her a receipt stating that the payment was for the rental of lot 30. Medlin and defendant also *109 signed a lease agreement contract with the space specifying the premises being leased left blank. At trial, Medlin offered conflicting testimony as to whether she thought she had authority to let defendant use Chambers’ trailer and whether she in fact intended to give defendant permission to use the trailer rather than just the lot.

On 4 December 2006, police, officers contacted Chambers to report that they had found defendant at the trailer, accompanied by a locksmith whom defendant had hired to change the locks. Chambers went to the scene and found defendant inside the trailer. At that time, Chambers took out a warrant against defendant for misdemeanor breaking and entering, and defendant was arrested.

On 12 January 2007, defendant was found guilty in Halifax County District Court of misdemeanor breaking and entering and was sentenced to 30 days incarceration with 30 days credit for time served. Defendant gave notice of appeal to superior court. Following trial in superior court, the jury found defendant guilty of misdemeanor breaking and entering. The trial court sentenced her to 40 days incarceration with 40 days credit for time served. Defendant timely appealed to this Court. Defendant appeared pro se in both district court and superior court.

Discussion

Defendant contends that the trial court violated her right to a fair trial conducted by an impartial judge when the trial court posed two questions to witness Linda Medlin. These questions, defendant argues, impermissibly expressed the trial court’s opinion that defendant obtained a claim of right to Chamber’s trailer under false pretenses and indicated to the jury that it should find defendant guilty.

The trial court’s questioning of Medlin followed both direct and cross-examination of Medlin by the State and defendant. During the State’s direct examination, Medlin testified: “All I remember was telling [defendant] — She said [Chambers] wasn’t there. Nobody was staying in the trailer so I thought I had okay for her, you know, to stay.” Asked to clarify where, precisely, she thought it was okay for defendant to stay, Medlin replied, “Well, to rent the lot, I guess so.” Medlin then testified that although she remembered talking with defendant about the trailer, she could not remember what she said.

On defendant’s cross-examination, Medlin testified that she had told defendant she could stay in Chambers’ trailer and merely pay lot rent. Then, however, on the State’s re-direct examination, Medlin tes *110 tified that she did not remember what, if anything, she said to defendant “about whether or not she could go into the trailer on Lot 30 and stay there.”

At this point, the trial court interrupted to ask Medlin the following questions:

The Court: On the day that you talked — Let me take you back to the day that you talked to Ms. Young about that contract that you all say you entered into and that she paid you $85. Did she tell you that nine days prior to that a judge had -ordered her off that property?
A. No, sir.
The Court: Did she tell you that at some time prior to that, the sheriff had been there and had asked her to leave and she had left off that property?
A. No, sir.

When the trial court convened the next day, defendant moved to strike the trial court’s questions and Medlin’s responses. The trial court granted the motion and agreed to issue a curative instruction to the jury. The trial court asked defendant if that would be satisfactory, and defendant answered “yes.” The trial court also asked defendant whether she wished to make any other motions, and defendant replied, “Not at this time.” When the jury entered the courtroom, the trial court gave the following instruction:

Before we resume with out [sic] testimony, the defense has made a motion to strike a portion of the testimony from yesterday or the evidence from yesterday and I’m granting that motion.
At this time, I’m going to instruct you to disregard and strike from the evidence any questions that I may have asked of a witness ánd any response that the witness may have given in response to that question and you’re not to consider that in the evidence in this case or during your deliberations.

Rule 10(b)(1) of the North Carolina Rules of Appellate Procedure states: “In order to preserve a question for appellate review, a party must have presented to the trial court a timely request, objection or motion, stating the specific grounds for the ruling the party desired the court to make if the specific grounds were not apparent from the context.” Here, when defendant objected to the trial court’s question *111 ing of Medlin, she received precisely the relief that she sought: her motion to strike was granted, and the trial court issued an immediate curative instruction that defendant agreed was satisfactory. Defendant’s argument on appeal that this instruction was not sufficient to cure any error was not properly preserved for review.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
671 S.E.2d 372, 195 N.C. App. 107, 2009 N.C. App. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-young-ncctapp-2009.