In regard to the discharging a firearm charge, defendant requested that the court specially instruct the jury as follows:
The defendant would be justified in discharging a firearm into an occupied motor vehicle if in doing so he:
1. had probable cause to believe that the person detained has committed a felony in his presence or was attempting to escape from the commission of a felony with the use of a deadly weapon,
or (sic) “and”
2. attempted to detain the person in a reasonable manner considering the offense involved and the circumstances of the detention.
The denial of this request is the basis for defendant’s first assignment of error.
Under G.S. 15A-1232 it is the duty of the trial court to “declare and explain the law arising on the evidence.” In determining whether an instruction requested by a defendant in a criminal case is supported by evidence, and therefore should be given, at least in substance, the evidence must be interpreted in the light most favorable to him. In making this determination the trial judge is concerned only with the sufficiency of the evidence; its credibility is for the jury to determine, not the court.
State v. Watkins,
G.S. 15A-404 in pertinent part provides:
(b) When Detention Permitted. — A private person may detain another person when he has probable cause to believe that the person detained has committed in his presence:
(1) A felony,
(2) A breach of the peace,
(3) A crime involving physical injury to another person, or
(4) A crime involving theft or destruction of property.
(c) Manner of Detention. — The detention must be in a reasonable manner considering the offense involved and the circumstances of the detention.
Thus, defendant was entitled to the requested instruction only if there was evidence that: (1) defendant had probable cause to believe that one or more of the crimes enumerated above had been committed; (2) defendant was trying to “detain” the offender until the police arrived; and (3) the manner of detention was reasonable under the circumstances.
The existence of the first requisite is plain and need not detain us. Leaving aside the misdemeanors that defendant had
Though defendant, perhaps because of his amnesia, did not testify that he was trying to detain Becker until the police came and did not intend to hit him, other evidence in support of this claim was presented, including the testimony about giving Becker a copy of the lease. That defendant yelled “stop him, catch him,” got in front of Becker’s car at first, as if to block his exit from the parking lot, and did not fire the gun then, when he was directly in front of the car with a clear shot, tends to show that defendant was trying to detain Becker. And that defendant had never fired a gun before and two of the three shots were into the air, even though the range was close, would warrant a jury in finding, it seems to us, that defendant was trying to scare Becker into not leaving the area, rather than shoot him. If a jury so found, they could properly conclude, we believe, that under the exigent circumstances that then existed, the means used by defendant in attempting to detain Becker were reasonable. It is just as clear, however, that a jury could just as properly conclude to the contrary. Since that is the case, what defendant’s purpose was and whether he acted reasonably or unreasonably are not questions of law for the court, but questions of fact for a jury. Thus, in our view, it was prejudicial error not to charge the jury as requested.
The State contends that
State v. Wall,
The second question presented is whether the involuntary manslaughter conviction can stand. Since defendant was tried for first-degree murder, it was appropriate for the court to permit the jury to consider the lesser included offenses of second degree murder and voluntary manslaughter — but under the circumstances recorded here involuntary manslaughter was not a lesser included offense of the first-degree murder that he was charged with committing.
State v. Carson,
Though the defendant’s final question — whether the trial court’s refusal to postpone the sentencing hearing from Friday afternoon to Monday morning was an abuse of discretion — need not be determined, it nevertheless concerns us. The jury returned its verdict at approximately 3 o’clock on Friday afternoon, and the court asked if any evidence would be submitted before sentencing. Since defendant and his counsel had been engaged in the trial of guilt or innocence all week, they were not prepared to present evidence on the sentencing question at that moment and requested that the hearing be deferred until Monday. The court refused, stating that on Monday he had twenty civil cases waiting on him. Though the demands on the time of trial judges are very onerous, indeed, and they have broad discretion in conducting the business of the courts, the sentencing process, especially since the Fair Sentencing Act was adopted, is nevertheless an important part of any trial that must be fairly processed, and a hearing that a defendant has no opportunity to prepare for is not the kind of hearing that the Act requires.
Case No. 82CRS34153 — reversed.
Case No. 82CRS63253 — new trial.
