James William Effler (“defendant”) appeals as a matter of right from his conviction for voluntary manslaughter. On appeal, defendant argues: (1) that the trial court committed plain error when it instructed the jury that it could find defendant guilty of voluntary manslaughter if the jury found that defendant was the aggressor, where the record is void of any evidence that defendant was the aggressor; (2) that the trial court committed plain error when it failed to instruct the jury ex mero motu that defendant had no duty to retreat; and (3) that the trial court erred by denying defendant’s motion to dismiss because the State failed to present sufficient evidence that defendant was the aggressor or that defendant used excessive force. After review, we hold that the trial court’s instructions to the jury did not constitute plain error, and that sufficient evidence was presented that defendant was the aggressor and/or used excessive force. As such, we find no error.
I. Factual and Procedural Background
On 7 September 2009, defendant was tried before a jury on an indictment charging him with first-degree murder in McDowell County Superior Court. Defendant entered a plea of not guilty.
On the morning of 27 November 2007, Thomas Thompson (“Thompson”), defendant’s employer, arrived at defendant’s residence to transport defendant, Wayne Elliott, and Tim Edwards to the jobsite where they had been working. Thompson allowed defendant to drive his 1990 Ford Explorer, because defendant knew a shorter route to the jobsite. Before leaving, defendant left Brown a note informing Brown that he would need to find somewhere else to stay, or find a job to assist defendant and his mother financially.
Approximately twenty minutes after defendant left for work Brown read defendant’s note and became extremely agitated. Brown and Destini Rhodes (“Rhodes”), defendant’s girlfriend, argued briefly, leaving Rhodes upset and crying. Rhodes exited the camper and began to call defendant repeatedly in an effort to get defendant to return to the camper and address Brown. Rhodes told defendant that she was not comfortable staying in the camper with Brown. Defendant instructed Rhodes to take her belongings and a baseball bat into his mother’s home.
After speaking with Rhodes, defendant aborted his trip to the job-site and drove back to his residence. Thompson testified that defendant appeared worried and upset, and that defendant turned the car around very erratically. Defendant’s speed and erratic driving prompted Thompson to tell defendant to “ease up on the car because it was already in bad shape.” At trial, Thompson said that it took five or six minutes to get back to defendant’s camper, while Elliott testified that it took approximately thirty to forty-five minutes.
After arriving at his residence, defendant exited the vehicle and threw Brown’s tools in the yard. Elliott testified that defendant said, “here’s your g-d tools if that’s what you want” as he threw Brown’s tools. Brown then came running from behind the camper with a baseball bat. Defendant reentered the driver’s side of the vehicle. Elliott further testified that defendant placed the vehicle in reverse and “floored it,” but the Explorer only traveled six to ten feet before defendant slammed on the brakes. Multiple witnesses, including Elliott, Thompson, Rhodes, and Edward testified that they observed Brown attempting to hit the vehicle’s windshield and poke defendant through an open window with the baseball bat. After Brown approached the vehicle, he was disarmed.
Sheriff Dudley Greene of the McDowell County Sheriffs Office testified that defendant, after being advised of his Miranda rights, stated that the following occurred. Defendant and Thompson exited the vehicle. Defendant attempted to take the baseball bat away from Brown; however, defendant said that he was unsure of who ultimately took the baseball bat away. At some point after Brown relinquished the bat, defendant stated that he stabbed Brown during the fight.
Rhodes and Edwards also testified at trial that defendant and Thompson attempted and succeeded in disarming Brown after exiting the vehicle. Thompson testified that he exited the vehicle and asked Brown to give him the bat, which Brown relinquished without struggle. However, Elliott testified that as Brown attempted to poke defendant, defendant grabbed the bat and pulled it inside the vehicle.
After exiting the vehicle, defendant began a fistfight with Brown in a field next to defendant’s mother’s home. During the fistfight, defendant grabbed the bat. Edwards testified that he observed defendant strike Brown in the legs with the baseball bat.
As the fight progressed, Elliott testified that he yelled to defendant “that [Brown] had had enough.” Elliott said that he tackled defendant in an attempt to pull defendant off Brown. Edwards also testified that he observed Elliott trying to restrain defendant and heard Elliott yelling at defendant to “quit, stop it.” The fight ended with Brown lying on the ground. After the altercation ended, defendant, Edwards, Elliott, and Thompson reentered the vehicle and went to the jobsite. The bat and knife used in the fight were abandoned in close proximity to defendant’s work site; however, both objects were later retrieved by the authorities. Defendant later admitted to Sheriff Greene that he disposed of the knife.
Rhodes called law enforcement and emergency personnel to assist Brown who was injured and lying in the yard. According to Rhodes, before he left the scene, defendant told her to tell police that black men had injured Brown. Rhodes complied with defendant’s request by informing police that three black men in a Dodge Neon had assaulted Brown, but stated that she did not know why. After law enforcement officials discovered Rhodes was not being truthful, she informed them that she had fabricated the story. Sheriff Greene testified that defendant gave a statement that he tried to calm Brown down and then stabbed him in the side and in the shoulder blade area of his back. Defendant did not tell Sheriff Greene why he stabbed Brown, and did not indicate that the stabbing was done in self-defense. Moreover, at trial, Edwards testified that when he asked defendant if defendant had cut Brown with a knife, defendant told Edwards that he poked or cut Brown to get him off him.
Brown was declared dead after being transported to the hospital. Dr. Patrick Eugene Lantz performed Brown’s autopsy. During the autopsy, Dr. Lantz noted that Brown had been stabbed in the chest and in the back. Dr. Lantz testified at trial that the stab wound to the chest area “went into the heart muscle to a depth, from the skin surface down to the heart.” The immediate cause of Brown’s death was determined to be acute loss of blood.
Defendant did not put on any evidence or testify at trial. At the close of the evidence, the trial court granted defendant’s motion to dismiss the charge of first-degree murder. The case was submitted to the jury on the following possible verdicts: (1) guilty of second-degree murder; (2) guilty of voluntary manslaughter; and (3) not guilty.
On 14 September 2009, defendant was convicted of voluntary manslaughter. The court sentenced defendant to 92 to 120 months’ imprisonment. Defendant gave notice of appeal in open court.
II. Jury Instructions
Defendant’s first and second assignments of error assert that the trial court committed plain error by instructing the jury on the aggressor element and by failing to include instructions on the duty not to retreat. We disagree and conclude that the trial court did not commit plain error in so instructing the jury.
The trial court instructed jurors as follows:
The defendant would not be guilty of any murder or manslaughter if he acted in self-defense as I have just defined it to be and if he was not the aggressor in bringing on the fight and did not use excessive force under the circumstances.
If the defendant voluntarily and without provocation entered the fight, he would be considered the aggressor unless he thereafter attempted to abandon the fight and gave notice to the deceased that he was doing so.
One enters the fight voluntarily if he uses toward his opponent abusive language, which, considering all of the circumstances is calculated and intended to bring on a fight. The defendant uses excessive force if he uses more force than reasonably appeared to him to be necessary at the time of the killing.
At the charge conference the presiding judge also noted areas of interest that both the State and defense should review.
THE COURT: And then the only other area that I think that you might want to . . . review is, if you are looking at the pattern instruction . . . [i]t just says: If you find beyond a reasonable doubt that on or about the alleged date the defendant intentionally wounded the victim with a deadly weapon and that the defendant was the aggressor — and then I said — was the aggressor or used excessive force.
A. Standard of Review
Defendant’s failure to make a timely objection to the jury instructions requires this Court to review defendant’s assignments of error under the plain error rule.
See State v.
Odom,
Moreover, our Supreme Court has held that, “ ‘[i]t is the rare case in which an improper instruction will justify reversal of a criminal conviction when no objection has been made in the trial court.’ ”
Odom,
B. Defendant as Aggressor
Defendant first contends that the trial court committed plain error by instructing the jury that a defendant acting in self-defense is guilty of voluntary manslaughter if he was the aggressor in bringing on the fight, where the record contains no evidence that defendant was the aggressor.
See State v. Temples,
This State has consistently held that a killing may be entirely excused if, at the time of the killing, the following four elements are present:
(1) it appeared to defendant and he believed it to be necessary to kill the deceased in order to save himself from death or great bodily harm; and
(2) defendant’s belief was reasonable in that the circumstances as they appeared to him at the time were sufficient to create such a belief in the mind of a person of ordinary firmness; and
(3) defendant was not the aggressor in bringing on the affray, i.e., he did not aggressively and willingly enter into the fight without legal excuse or provocation; and
(4) defendant did not use excessive force, i.e., did not use more force than was necessary or reasonably appeared to him to be necessary under the circumstances to protect himself from death or great bodily harm.
State v. Norris,
The evidence presented at trial establishes that defendant was the aggressor. All relevant testimony tends to show that Brown did not initiate the altercation. Brown emerged from behind defendant’s trailer only after defendant threw Brown’s tools into the yard along with expletive-laden remarks. Furthermore, in his brief defendant concedes that the act of throwing the tools in the yard could be construed by a reasonable jury as an act of provocation.
It is undisputed that “[a] person is entitled under the law of self-defense to harm another only if he is ‘without fault in provoking, engaging in, or continuing a difficulty with another.’ ”
State v. Stone,
Sufficient evidence was presented for a reasonable jury to conclude that defendant was the aggressor and the trial court’s instruction to the jury was not in error.
Moreover, absent the alleged error it is not probable that the jury would have reached a different verdict, as there is evidence that defendant used excessive force.
See Odom,
Therefore, we hold that the trial court did not commit error, much less plain error, in instructing the jury on the aggressor requirement.
C. Duty Not to Retreat
Defendant next contends that the trial court committed plain error when it failed to instruct the jury ex mero motu that defendant had no duty to retreat. While the trial court’s failure to include the instruction on no duty to retreat was erroneous, it was not plain error.
Our Court has held that “ ‘[w]here the defendant’s or the State’s evidence when viewed in the light most favorable to the defendant discloses facts which are “legally sufficient” to constitute a defense to the charged crime, the trial court must instruct the jury on the defense.’ ”
State v.
Beal,
Defendant’s second contention is much like that of the defendant in
State v. Morgan,
The Court recognized that “[i]t has . . . been held that where supported by the evidence in a claim of self-defense, an instruction negating defendant’s duty to retreat in his home or premises must be given even in the absence of a request by defendant.”
Id.
at 643,
The pattern jury instruction on the issue of retreat reads as follows:
If the defendant was not the aggressor and the defendant was [in the defendant’s own home] [or] [on the defendant’s own premises] [at the defendant’s place of business] the defendant could stand the defendant’s ground and repel force with force regardless of the character of the assault being made upon the defendant. However, the defendant would not be excused if the defendant used excessive force..
N.C.P.I., Crim. 308.10 (2009) (footnote omitted).
The duty not to retreat in one’s own home or premises is predicated upon the absence of use of excessive force.
See State v. McCombs,
Defendant also cites
State v. Davis,
Viewing the evidence in the present case, we conclude that the jury would have reached the same verdict if the jury was instructed that defendant did not have a duty to retreat in the curtilage of his home. We therefore hold that “defendant has not carried his burden of showing ‘plain error.’ ” Hunter,
III. Motion to Dismiss
Finally, defendant contends that the trial court erred by denying defendant’s motion to dismiss because the State failed to
Challenges to the sufficiency of the evidence must be viewed in the light most favorable to the State, “giving the State the benefit of all reasonable inferences.”
State v. Fritsch,
Defendant argues that the State failed to present sufficient evidence to prove that defendant was the aggressor, or that defendant used excessive force. However, as previously determined in this opinion, there is ample evidence by which the jury could conclude that defendant was the aggressor or used excessive force. Accordingly, we conclude there was no error.
IV. Conclusion
Based on the foregoing, we conclude that defendant received a fair trial free from error.
No error.
