Dеfendant Rashamell Q. Billinger appeals his convictions for possession of a weapon of mass death and destruction and conspiracy to commit robbery with a dangerous weapon. After careful review, we find no error with respect to defendant’s possession conviction, but conclude that the conspiracy indictment is facially dеfective, requiring vacating that conviction as well as the restitution award based on that conviction.
Facts
At trial, the State presented evidence tending to establish the following facts: Late in the afternoon on 26 June 2008, defendant, Kerry Braithwaite, Jonathan Jackson, and Jevaris McArn, along with others, met at Mr. Braithwaite’s mother’s house in Raeford, North Carolina. Thе men played basketball in the cul-de-sac and later played cards in the Braithwaites’ garage. During the card game, Mr. Jackson complained about needing money to make his car payment. Defendant also indicated that he needed money.
When the card game ended around 10:00 p.m., the four men got into Mr. Jackson’s blue Dodge Charger, with Mr. Jacksоn driving, Mr. Braithwaite in the front passenger seat, Mr. McArn in the backseat behind Mr. Braithwaite, and defendant in the back behind Mr. Jackson. On the way to get something to eat, Mr. Jackson suggested robbing a nearby Hardees restaurant and defendant agreed. As they drove by the Hardees, however, they realized that the restaurant was closed and decided to go back to the Braithwaite residence. On the way back, defendant told Mr. Jackson to “drop him off” at the Food Lion grocery store near the Braithwaites’ house, saying that “[h]e needed to find some money” and that he was going to try to rob the Food Lion or “something like that.” When Mr. Jackson pulled into an alley between the grocery store and Mi Casita’s, a Mexican restаurant, defendant got out of the car carrying a black pump action shotgun, owned by Mr. McArn. Defendant, who was wearing a black shirt, “baggy” blue pants, black Timberland boots, and a black bandana, “tucked” the shotgun into his pants so that it could not be seen and went behind the buildings.
As the men in the Charger were driving by the front of the Food Lion, they thought they heard a gunshot and saw defendant running across a field behind Mi Casita’s. Althоugh Mr. Jackson did not want to pick up defendant, Mr. McArn told the other men that defendant had his shotgun and that they needed to “go pick him up.” As they approached, defendant jumped into the backseat of the Charger with Mr. McArn’s shotgun and the men drove back to Mr. Braithwaite’s mother’s house. Shortly after returning, defendant left the Braithwaite residence with several other people.
Captain John Kivett, with the Hoke County Sheriff’s Department, responded to the reported shooting at Mi Casita’s, and, while waiting for the K9 unit to arrive, he received another dispatch about shots being fired about two blocks away. Captain Kivett and two sheriff’s deputies responded to the second dispatch, which resulted in their going to the Braithwаite residence, where they saw several people standing outside in the yard. While investigating the “shots-fired” call, Captain Kivett noticed an “unfired” shotgun shell laying in the yard. The deputies then searched the perimeter of the yard and found a black, pump action shotgun covered in a red “hoodie.” Captain Kivett also searched Mr. Braithwaite’s cаr, finding in plain view a blue-in-color single-shot shotgun in the rear floorboard.
Defendant was charged with attempted first-degree murder (08 CRS 51486), attempted robbery of Mr. Reyes-Perez with a dangerous weapon (08 CRS 51487); conspiracy to rob Mr. Reyes-Perez with a dangerous weapon (08 CRS 51487); possession of a weapon of mass death and destruction (08 CRS 51492); assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill inflicting serious injury (“AWDWIKISI”) (08 CRS 51488); three counts of discharging a firearm into occupied property (08 CRS 51489-91); and, conspiracy to rob the Hardees with a dangerous weapon (09 CRS 945). Defendant pled not guilty and the case proceeded to trial, where, at the conclusion of all the evidence, defendant moved to dismiss all the charges against him. The Stаte voluntarily dismissed two counts of discharging a weapon into occupied property and the trial court, after hearing arguments, dismissed the third count. The court, however, denied defendant’s motion to dismiss the charges of attempted murder, AWDWIKISI, attempted armed robbery, possession 'of a weapon of mass death and destruction, conspiracy tо rob Mr. Reyes-Perez, and conspiracy to rob the Hardees. The jury acquitted defendant of attempted murder, attempted armed robbery, AWDWIKISI, and conspiracy to rob the Hardees, but found defendant guilty of conspiracy to rob Mr. Reyes-Perez with a dangerous weapon and possession of a weapon of mass death and destruction. The trial court sentenced defendant to consecutive presumptive-range terms of 25 to 39 months imprisonment on the conspiracy charge and 16 to 20 months on the possession charge, suspended the sentence on the possession conviction, and imposed 36 months of supervised probation. The trial court also awarded $46,059.00 in restitution in connection with the possession charge. Defendant timely appealed to this Court.
I
Defendant argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion to dismiss the charge of possession of a weapon of mass death and destruction. In ruling on a defendant’s motion to dismiss, the trial court must determine whether the State has presented substantial
evidence (1) of each essеntial element of the offense and (2) of the defendant’s
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14-288.8 (2009) makes it “unlawful for any person to manufacture, assemble, possess, store, transport, sell, offer to sell, purchase, offеr to purchase, deliver or give to another, or acquire any weapon of mass death and destruction[,]” which, pertinent to this case, includes “any shotgun with a barrel or barrels of less than 18 inches in length or an overall length of less than 26 inches . . . .” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14-288.8(a), (c)(3). In order to obtain a conviction for possession of a weapon of mass death and destruction, the State must prove two elements beyond a reasonable doubt: (1) that the weapon is a weapon of mass death and destruction and (2) that defendant knowingly possessed the weapon.
State v. Watterson,
Possession of a firearm may be actual or constructive.
State v. Alston,
The State, in its brief, argues that the evidence that defendant owned the blue sawed-off shotgun is sufficient to establish constructive possession. Although neither defendant nоr the State cite any North Carolina appellate decision directly on point, and we have found none, it is a well-established principle of the law of possession in other jurisdictions that constructive possession may be established by evidence showing the defendant’s ownership of the contraband.
See, e.g., United States v. Armstrong,
At trial, defendant’s cousin Rickey Hailey testified that defendant owned a “blue shotgun” and that he was with defendant when he purchased it from an “Indian guy” nicknamed “R2.” Defendant’s other cousin Maurice Jones similarly testified that defendant owned a “blue” shotgun that was “[m]aybe a foot long.” Defendant’s friend Kerry Braithwaite, when asked at trial to identify the
II
In his second argument, defendant challenges the trial court’s jurisdiction to enter judgment on the conspiracy conviction, arguing that the indictment was facially invalid. “North Carolina law has long provided that ‘[t]here can be no trial, conviction, or punishment for a crime without a formal and sufficient accusation. In the absence of an accusation the court acquires no jurisdiction whatever, and if it assumes jurisdiction a trial and conviction are a nullity.’ ”
State v.
Neville,
The State’s indictment attempts to charge defendant with conspiracy to commit robbery with a dangerous weapon. “A criminal conspiracy is an agreement between two or more persons to do an unlawful act or to do a lawful act in an unlawful way or by unlawful means.”
State v. Bindyke,
Here, the indictment charging defendant with conspiracy to commit robbery with a dangerous weapon reads in pertinent part:
AND THE JURORS FOR THE STATE UPON THEIR OATH PRESENT that on or about the 26th day of June, 2008, in the county named above the defendant named above unlawfully, willfully and feloniously did with Jevaris Charan McArn, Kerry Kurtis Braithwaite, and Jonathan Wilson Jackson to commit the felony of Robbery With a Dangerous Weapon, in violation of North Carolina General Statutes Section .14-87, against Luis Alberto Reyes-Perez. This act was in violation of North Carolina Common Law and North Carolina'General Statutes 14-2.4.
As defendant points out, the State failed to include any “operative language” between the words “did” and “with” denoting a cоnspiracy or agreement. Thus, defendant maintains, because the indictment does not allege that he “agreed with or conspired with any other per? son” to commit the underlying offense, the indictment is “fatally defective” and the trial court lacked jurisdiction to enter judgment on the charge.
With respect to the sufficiency of a conspiracy indictment’s allegation of the requisite agreement between the defendant and another person, a leading national treatise explains:
The agreement to accomplish an unlawful purpose or to accomplish a lawful purpose by unlawful means must be alleged in a conspiracy indictment.
The agreement, combination, or commоn purpose must be charged in appropriate language. A distinct and direct averment of this fact is necessary. An indictment which charges an agreement or combination by inference or implication only is defective.
15A C.J.S.
Conspiracy
§ 147 (2011);
see also
16 Am. Jur. 2d
Conspiracy
§ 33 (2011)
It is undisputed that the indictment in this case fails to allege an essential element of the crime of conspiracy — the agreement to commit an unlawful act.
See State v. Looney,
The State nevertheless argues that the indictment’s caption, which identifies the charge as “Conspiracy to Commit Robbery with a Dangerous Weapon,” and the indictment’s reference to the offense being committed in violation of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14-2.4 (2009), which governs “[p]unishment for conspiracy to commit a felony,” are sufficient to provide adequate notice to defendant and the trial court of the offense with which defendant was being charged. With respect to the caption, our Supreme Court has held that “[t]he caption of an indictment ... is not a part of it and the designatiоn therein of the offense sought to be charged can neither enlarge nor diminish the offense charged in the body of the instrument.”
State v.
Bennett,
Ill
Defеndant’s final argument on appeal is that the trial court erred in ordering him to pay restitution in connection with his conviction for possessing a weapon of mass death and destruction. It is well established that “ ‘for an order of restitution to be valid, it must be related to the criminal act for which defendant was convicted, else the provision may run afoul of thе constitutional provision prohibiting imprisonment for debt.’ ”
State v. Valladares,
No error in part; vacated in part.
Notes
. This firearm, marked as State’s Exhibit 13, was identified at trial as a “blue-in-color” Iver Johnson 12 gauge single-shot shotgun, with a barrel length of 18.25 inches and an overall length of 25.5 inches.
. We note that our holding does not preclude the State from re-indicting defendant for conspiracy to commit robbery with a dangerous weapon.
State v. Ingram,
