Defendant appeals from a judgment imposing a sentence of life imprisonment upon his conviction of second degree murder. The procedural and evidentiary history of the case is as follows:
On 12 August 1991, defendant, a Virginia resident, was indicted for first degree murder in connection with the death of Brenda Dozier whose body washed onto the beach of Nags Head, North Carolina on 4 July 1991. Defendant entered a plea of not guilty and moved to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction. At defendant’s first trial in Dare County Superior Court, аn issue was submitted to the jury of whether North Carolina had jurisdiction, as well as the issue of defendant’s guilt or innocence of the offense. On 28 April 1993, the jury returned a special verdict finding that North Carolina had jurisdiction; however, the jury was unable to agree upon the issue of defendant’s guilt or innocence. The trial court accepted the jury’s special verdict finding jurisdiction and declared a mistrial as to the issue of defendant’s guilt or innocence.
Defendant subsequently filed a new motion to dismiss the indictment for lack of jurisdiction and a motion to set aside the special verdict finding jurisdiction. The trial court ruled that the special verdict had determined the issue of jurisdiction and denied the motions. The case was tried a second time in the Dare County Superior Court at the 14 February 1994 criminal session.
At the second trial, the State’s evidence tended to show that the victim’s head and hands had been amputated from her body. Dr. Lawrence Stanley Harris, a forensic pathologist, determined that the amputation had occurred after death and had been performed with one heavy blade and one smaller, sharper blade. Because of the amputation, the cause of death could not be determined. Dr. Harris testified that the body could have been placed in the ocean as early as 1 July or possibly as late as 3 July.
*303 Defendant and the victim had lived together in an apartment prior to her disappearance. They had a stormy relationship, often engaging in arguments and physical fights. Witnesses testified that defendаnt had become particularly upset with the victim after she had an abortion.
Around 11:00 p.m. on 1 July 1991, defendant, the victim and her brother, Chris Jackson, left a bar near Norfolk, Va. in defendant’s truck. After taking Jackson to his house, defendant and the victim headed to their apartment. Defendant told police that he and the victim had an argument on the way, and he stopped the truck. Defendant claimed that he last saw the victim when she got out and walked away from the truck.
Defendant told police that he went on to thе apartment and waited. When the victim did not come home, he called Jackson but was told she did not go to his home. Defendant said that when he left for work at 6:00 a.m. the victim still had not arrived at the apartment, but when he returned around 3:30 p.m. he saw clothes she had worn the night before so he knew she had returned. However, defendant said he did not see or talk to the victim again.
Defendant worked the next few days and resided at his parents’ home during this time. Lorraine Rudacil, a friend of defendant, and Charles Dabney, a cо-worker of defendant, both testified that defendant had told them he planned to take the victim on a fishing trip to the North Carolina coast during the 4 July holiday.
Defendant was known to keep his truck in immaculate condition, but on 5 July 1991, the day after the victim’s body was discovered, defendant drove his truck to an area south of Richmond, Virginia, set fire to the truck, and then hitchhiked back to Virginia Beach. Witnesses including Rudacil, Dabney, John McNeese, another friend of defendant, William Horton, defendant’s supervisor, and Douglas Campbеll, another co-worker of defendant, testified that defendant told them the victim had bled in the truck from an accidental head wound suffered after an argument between the couple. Rudacil and Horton testified that defendant told them the accident happened the night that the victim disappeared. Campbell testified that defendant said the accident happened a couple of weeks earlier.
Defendant appeared nervous and agitated at work on the days after Ms. Dozier’s disappearance but before her body was found. Dabney testified about statements defendant had made earlier that he *304 wished the victim were dead. Campbell testified that on 1 July defendant had stated that if he and Ms. Dozier did not get away from each other he was going to “put chains on her and carry her out in one of the tributaries and chain her to the bottom of the ocean.” Defendant later asked Campbell not to say anything about his threats to kill Ms. Dozier. Robert Hart, another of defendant’s friеnds, testified that on 4 July, the night the victim’s identity became public knowledge, he was outside a club talking with defendant next to defendant’s truck. Hart stated that he noticed a gasoline odor coming from the cab of the truck, and when he mentioned it defendant indicated he was in some trouble and that “if he were pulled over he would take out whoever pulled him over — -with him.” He testified that defendant told him that “something had gone south and that he had to off two people.” Hart also stated that a couple of days latеr defendant told him “basically that he didn’t want to see anything happen to me so I should not say anything about what I was told.”
Defendant’s motion to dismiss the charge of first degree murder at the close of the State’s evidence was denied. Defendant offered evidence tending to show he spent the night of 1 July 1991 at the home of his parents, and that he and Ms. Dozier were not seen together thereafter. The clothes Ms. Dozier wore on the night of her disappearance were later found in the laundry at her apаrtment. Defendant offered alibi evidence for most of the time between the victim’s disappearance and the discovery of her body. No evidence of foul play was discovered in the burned truck; there was no direct evidence that defendant entered North. Carolina during the time in question; and defendant made no mention of Ms. Dozier in his statements that “something had gone south” and that he had “had to off two people,” nor did he indicate when or where the events he was referring to had occurred.
At the close of all the evidence, defendant renewed his motion to dismiss the charge of first degree murder. The motion was denied. The jury convicted defendant of second degree murder.
In his appellant’s brief, defendant has presented arguments in support of the questions raised by twenty-three of the twenty-seven assignments of error contained in the record on appeal. The remaining four assignments of error are deemed abandoned. N.C. App. R. 28(a), 28(b)(5). We have carefully reviewed his arguments and find no prejudicial error in his trial.
*305 By his first two assignments of error, defendant contends the trial court erred by denying his motions made prior to his second trial, (1) to dismiss the indictment for lack of jurisdiction and (2) to set aside the special verdict returned by the jury at the first trial finding that North Carolina had jurisdiction. Defendant does not argue in this Court that the evidence at his first trial was insufficient to support the jury’s special verdict as to jurisdiction. Rather, he argues that the special verdict was not binding at his second trial so that the State should have been required to prove, beyond a reasonable doubt, the existence of jurisdiction to the same jury deciding his guilt or innocence at his second trial. We reject his argument.
Where a criminal defendant challenges the theory upon which the State claims jurisdiction to try him, the question is a legal question for the court; however, where the defendant challenges the facts upon which jurisdiction is claimed, the question is one for the jury.
State v. Darroch,
The question before us, then, is whether the trial court’s acceptance of the jury’s special verdict finding that North Carolina has jurisdiction at defendant’s first trial, prior to declaring a mistrial by reason of the jury’s inability to agree upon the issue of guilt or innocence, prеcludes defendant from relitigating jurisdiction at his second trial. The question is apparently one of first impression. We believe, however, that it is resolved by application of the settled principles of res judicata and collateral estoppel.
“Res judicata
deals with the effect of a former judgment in favor of a party upon a subsequent attempt by the other party to relitigate the same cause of action.”
King v. Grindstaff,
In the present case, all the requirements for precluding relitigation of the jurisdiction issue have been met: (1) the parties are the same; (2) the issue as to jurisdiction is the same; (3) the issue was raised and actually litigated in the prior action; (4) jurisdiction was material and relevant to the disposition of the prior action; and (5) the determination as to jurisdiction was necessary and essential to the resulting judgment.
See King,
By his next argument, defendant contends the trial court erred in denying his motion to continue the trial. Defendant contends that he prepared for trial based on the assumption that Dr. Harris, the State’s medical examiner, would testify as he had at the first trial, that in his opinion Ms. Dozier’s death had occurred within thirty-six hours of the time when her body was found on the morning of 4 July 1991, though he could not be conclusive about the time of death. Defendant contends that he first became aware that Dr. Harris would testify Ms. Dozier’s death could have occurred in the early morning hours of 2 *307 July less than three days before the second trial. Accordingly, defendant contends his alibi evidence was affected because he was forced to account for his whereabouts for an additional twelvе hours. Moreover, he argues that he needed additional time to retain his own expert forensic pathologist.
“A motion for continuance is ordinarily addressed to the sound discretion of the trial court, and its ruling thereon is not subject to review absent an abuse of discretion.”
State v. Baldwin,
In a related assignment of error, defendant contends the trial court erred in denying his motion
in limine
to preclude Dr. Harris from giving testimony with respect to the time, manner or cause of Ms. Dozier’s death, or the time when her body was placed in the ocean. He contends these matters were outside the witness’ area of expertise. “[E]xpert testimony is properly admissible when such testimony can assist the jury in drawing certain inferences from the facts because the expert is better qualified.”
State v. Wise,
Defendant also assigns error to the admission into evidence of photographs of the victim’s body. Defendant argues that the photographs were not relеvant and were highly prejudicial since the medical examiner was unable to determine the cause of death. “Photographs of a homicide victim may be introduced even if they are
*308
gory, gruesome, horrible or revolting, so long as they are used for illustrative purposes and so long as their excessive or repetitious use is not aimed solely at arousing the passions of the jury.”
State v. Hennis,
In three separate assignments of error defendant argues the trial court erred by denying his motion for a mistrial due to a news article that appeared during the trial which reported that defendant had rejected a plea bargain, and by denying his alternative requests that the jury be polled to determine whether any juror had been exposed to this article or two other articles that were published during the course of the trial. We disagree.
The presiding judge is vested with broad discretion in matters relating to the conduct of the trial.
State v. Rhodes,
No abuse of discretion attended the trial court’s rulings with respect to defendant’s motions here. The trial court properly admonished the jury throughout the trial to avoid exposure to media accounts of the trial, and there is no hint either in the record or in defendant’s argument that the court’s instructions were not followed. Thus, neither prejudice nor abuse of discretion has been shown.
See State v. McLaughlin,
*309 Defendant assigns error to the denial of an additional motion for a mistrial which he made after William Horton, defendant’s supervisor, testified that defendant had told him he had a record. Defendant further claims that the court erred in not individually polling the jury as to whether they heard Hortоn’s statement. We disagree.
At trial, Horton made the following statement: “He [defendant] told me that because he had a record — Horton’s testimony was interrupted and the jury was instructed: “Members of the jury, with regard to the last statement made by this witness, I instruct you to disregard it if you did hear it.”
“The law assumes that jurors will follow [a court’s] instructions and act in a rational fashion.”
State v. Walker,
Defendant next contends the trial court erred in overruling his objection to testimony by Sergeant Tice of the Norfolk Police Department concerning statements allegedly made by defendant during a telephone conversation with Sergeant Tice. For a court to allow a witness in a criminal case to testify to the content of a telephone conversation, the identity of the person with whom the witness was speaking must be established.
See State v. Richards,
Defendant next assigns error to the denial of his motion in limine to exclude testimony by Coast Guard Petty Officer Torquato as to prevailing ocean currents from 1 July 1991 to 4 July 1991. Defendant contends the evidence was relevant only to the question of jurisdiction, аnd that the trial court had, by its earlier rulings, precluded defendant from relitigating that issue. Thus, he argues, the evidence was not relevant to any issue before the jury and should have been excluded. We disagree.
Evidence is relevant and admissible if it has “any tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of consequence to the determination of the action more probable or less probable than it would be without the evidence.” N.C.R. Evid. 401, 402. We hold Petty Officer Torquato’s testimony as to ocean currents was relevant to show a connection between defendant and the crime in that an inference could be drawn therefrom that the body had drifted from an area with which defendant was familiar, where he and Brenda Dozier had previously camped and fished, and where he had stated an intention to take Ms. Dozier over the 4th of July holiday.
Alternatively, defendant claims the State, by offering Petty Officer Torquato’s testimony, “opened the door” to his relitigating the issue of jurisdiction, and that the trial court erred by rеfusing to allow him “to present his own evidence concerning the location and movement of the body.” As noted above, the evidence was admissible, not as to jurisdiction, but as evidence tending to show defendant’s connection with the crime. Moreover, there is no indication in the record that defendant made any offer of evidence as to “the location and movement of the body” or that the trial court excluded such evidence. The exclusion of evidence will not be held for error in thе absence of a showing of an offer thereof. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 8C-1, Rule 103(a).
State v. Barton,
Defendant next assigns error to the denial of his motion to strike certain testimony by Douglas Campbell, a co-worker of defendant. Campbell testified that after seeing a news report that an unidentified body bearing a rose tattoo had washed onto the beach at Nags Head, Campbell had said to his girlfriend, “Mike, he killed his girlfriend.” Campbell also testified that he told his employer that he did *311 not want to work with defendant because he thought defendant had killed Brenda Dozier. Defendant argues that the witness had no foundation for the first statement, and that neither of the statements are relevant.
A lay witness may testify as to opinions or inferences drawn if those opinions or inferences are “(a) rationally based on the perception of the witness and (b) helpful to a clear understanding of his testimony or the determination of a fact in issue.” N.C.R. Evid. 701. Our Supreme Court has held that “out-of-court statements offered to explain the conduct of a witness
are
relevant and admissible.”
State v. Roper,
Defendant next contends the trial court erred in denying his motion in limine to preclude Robert Hart’s testimony that defendant had told him that “if he were pulled over, that he would take out whoever pulled him over — with him” and that “something had gone south and that he had to off two peoрle.” Defendant argues the statements were not relevant and were offered solely to prove that defendant was a person of bad character.
“[E]vidence is relevant if it has any logical tendency, however slight, to prove a fact in issue in the case.”
State v. Prevette,
317 N.C.
*312
148, 162,
By his twenty-fourth and twenty-sixth assignments of error, defendant contends the trial court erred by refusing to dismiss the charge of first degree murder at the close of the State’s evidence and at the close of all the evidence. Only the ruling made at the close of all the evidence is subject to review.
State v. Hough,
We have examined carefully the remaining assignments of error brought forward in defendant’s brief and conclude that they are without merit and may be overruled without discussion.
Defendant received a fair trial, free from prejudicial error.
No error.
