Defendant appeals convictions of first degree burglary, felonious larceny, and voluntary manslaughter. He contends the trial court erred by (1) denying his motion to dismiss the charges of voluntary manslaughter and first degree burglary; and (2) denying his request that the lesser offenses of second degree burglary and involuntary manslaughter be submitted to the jury. Upon careful consideration of defendant’s arguments, we detеrmine his assignments of error cannot be sustained.
The State’s evidence at trial tended to show that in the early morning hours of 4 July 1990, Kay Yokley (Yokley), whose husband was away on business, heard her kitchen door being kicked in. She observed two men moving through her house, walking from room to room. However, she was able to pick up her eighteen month old child and escape through the kitchen without being seеn by the men. While leaving, she grabbed a cordless telephone and subsequently called her mother, Margaret Wall (Mrs. Wall), telling her someone had broken into the house and to call the police. Because the call was disconnected, Mrs. Wall apparently did not hear the latter portion of the conversation requesting that the police be notified. Yokley then went to а neighboring house and telephoned the authorities as well.
Yokley’s parents, upon hearing someone was breaking into their daughter’s home, immediately drove to her residence. Mr. Wall (Wall) brought a .22 caliber semi-automatic rifle with him. Upon arriving, the Walls noticed a truck in the driveway and parked directly behind it. Mrs. Wall entered the house and screamed for her daughter upon confronting two men, identified by her as defendant and his co-defendant David Bumgarner (Bumgarner), working at disconnecting components of an entertainment center. The two then ran from the dwelling while Mrs. Wall looked for her daughter and granddaughter.
Mrs. Wall then heard her husband yell, “stop, stop. If you don’t, I’m going to shoot,” followed by one gunshot and then a “whole bunch” of gunshots. When she next saw
Lieutenant C.T. Chadwick, Jr. arrived at the Yokley home in response to a radio dispatch. He testified he found some broken glass, a rifle, and a number of spent .22 caliber shell casings at the scene. Upon searching the area, he observed a truck parked in some neighboring woods with broken glass on the passenger’s side and four distinct bullet holes in the driver’s side door. In the interior of the truck were personal items, as well as a pillow stained with blood. Entering a nearby residence later determined to belong to Bumgarner, Chadwick and other officers located defendant and Bumgarner, who had minor bullet wounds to his face and shoulder. Officers subsequently unearthed a Colt .22 caliber pistol buried in the backyard of the house.
Dr. Wayne Meredith testified as to Wall’s injuries which included three gunshot wounds: one superficial wound to the scalp, a wound to the arm, and a serious wound to the chest which damaged many internal organs including Wall’s lung, stomach, colon, spleen, pancreas, and kidney. Treatment included removal of portions of his colon and large intestine and removal of his entire spleen, as well as approximately one-third of his pancreas. The process involved several operations and Wall remained in the hospital in excess of one year.
In August 1992 and against medical advice, Wall determined to undergo сolostomy removal surgery. He acknowledged the risk involved to his physicians, but stated he would rather be dead than continue to endure his condition as it was. Wall did not survive the operation and died 1 September 1992.
Donald Jason, an expert in the field of pathology, testified as follows:
Q: And in your opinion, sir, what was the cause of death of Bobby Lee Wall?
A: Cause of death was Adult Respiratory Distress Syndrome— that’s that injury to the lung that I mentioned — -which was due to the operation for reconnection of his large intestine. And that was caused by the fact — by the injuries in his abdomen, particularly the injury to the large intestine, and that was caused by the bullet wound which had gone through the abdomen.
Q: All of these complications were the result of that bullet wound that went through his chest and into his abdomen?
A: That’s right. It all began with the bullet wound.
Defendant offered the following testimony on his own behalf: During the afternoon of 3 July 1990, defendant went to visit Bumgarner at the latter’s residence, but Bumgarner was not home. Defendant decided to wait for Bumgarner, and while doing so, consumed “a couple beers.” When Bumgarner returned, he and defendant decided to take a ride and visit some friends.
Defendant admitted taking valium during the course of the evening. He remembered leaving a friend’s house with Bumgarner driving the truck, and further claimed the next thing he remembered was being awakened by Bumgarner and being told to get out of the truck. They then walked through the back door of a home defendant assumed bélonged to Bumgarner. Defendant could not recount exactly what happened in the house before seeing Mrs. Wall, but he realized upon seeing her that they were not аt Bumgarner’s residence.
Upon retreating from the house, defendant saw a man standing at the corner of the garage pointing a rifle. Defendant put his hands in the air, continued towards the track, and told the man he just wanted to leave. As defendant shut the truck door after getting in, the man began shooting at the driver’s side where defendant was seated. Because a vehicle was parked behind thе truck, defendant pulled up
and back several times in order to turn and drive across the
Bumgarner testified he stopped at Yokley’s home to see if his dog would fight with her dog. He further stated he followed defendant into the house and that both immediately ran to the truck when they encountered Mrs. Wall. Further, he indicated it was defendant who asked for the pistol and fired from the truck.
In rebuttal, the State offered Bumgarner’s statement to Deputy J.L. Mecum that he and defendant entered the Yokley residence for the purpose of stealing some VCR and radio equiрment as well as a camcorder.
I.
Defendant first contends the trial court erred by denying his motion to dismiss the charges of voluntary manslaughter and first degree burglary. We disagree.
In ruling upon a motion to dismiss, the trial court must view the evidence in the light most favorable to the State, which is entitled to every reasonable inference to be drawn therefrom.
State v. Bates,
A.
We first consider the charge of voluntary manslaughter. Defendant argues his actions were not the cause of Wall’s death and that the State failed to prove he did not act in self-defense.
1.
Proximate cause is an element of manslaughter,
State v. Sherrill,
Despite testimony from the pathologist that Wall died as a result of complications from the bullet wound to his chest and abdomen, defendant insists the cause of death was Wall’s decision against medical advice to undergo colostomy reversal surgery. However, “[t]hе act complained of does not have to be the sole proximate cause of death, nor the last act in sequence of time. ... It is enough if defendant's] unlawful acts join and concur with other causes in producing the result.”
State v. Cummings,
In
State v. Jones,
In
State v. Penley,
Finally, in
State v. Garda-Lorenzo,
Based on the foregoing authorities and viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the State, we conclude there was substantial evidence tending to show Wall’s gunshot wound directly contributed to his death. The issue of proximate cause was thus properly submitted by the trial court to the jury.
Defendant parenthetically interjects the alternative argument that, at a minimum, the jury should have been instructed it “must find from the evidence and beyond a reasonable doubt that Mr. Wall’s death resulted proximately from the gunshot wounds inflicted by the Defendant.” This contention is completely without merit.
In charging the jury, the court stated as follows:
Now, I charge for you to find the defendant guilty of voluntary manslaughter, the State must prove three things beyond a reasonable doubt:
Second, that the defendant’s act was a proximate cause of the victim’s death. A proximate cause is a real cause, a case without which the victim’s death would not have occurred. The defendant’s act need not have been the last cause or the nearest cause. It is sufficient if it concurred with some other cause acting at the same time which in combination with it proximately caused the death to the victim.
And third, that the defendant did not act in self-defense or, though acting in self-defense, was the aggressor or, though acting in self-defense, used excessive force.
Thus, the court instructed the jury precisely as defendant suggests was necessary, i.e., that it was required to find beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant’s act of inflicting a
2.
Defendant further argues his motion to dismiss the charge of voluntary manslaughter was erroneously denied because “[t]he State failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the [defendant did not act in self[-]defense.” We do not agree.
It is established that the State in a homicide prosecution bears the burden of proving the defendant did not act in self-defense when that issue is raised by the evidence.
State v. Hamilton,
Defendant herein, relying solely upon his version of the incident, argues the fatal shоt occurred in self-defense only after he and Bumgarner fled the premises and were fired upon by Wall. He further insists all the evidence shows Wall acted unreasonably in using deadly force to prevent the escape of defendant and his cohort.
In response, the State points to testimony by Mrs. Wall and to physical evidence which contradicts defendant’s version of the shooting enсounter. Specifically, the State notes the statement by Mrs. Wall that she heard a single shot fired followed by a “whole bunch” of gunshots, and that she heard her husband yell for the two men to stop or he would shoot. The State contends this evidence tends to show Wall fired a warning shot “in an effort to detain [defendant and his companion] and to prevent any aggressive actions on their part,” and that his shots into the truck were in response to being fired upon by the occupants.
Further, the State observes Wall was only eight to ten feet from the truck on the driver’s side, and that defendant was required to move the vehicle back and forth in order to exit the driveway around the Wall automobile. The State argues this evidence “tends to indicate [Wall] reasonably feared for his safety from being hit by the escaping vehicle as it pulled up and back.”
Suffice it to state the evidence of self-defense at best was in conflict. Accordingly, the circumstances permitted conflicting inferences which were for the jury to reconcile.
State v. Ataei-Kachuei,
Defendant also argues Wall was prohibited from detaining defendant legally in that there was no evidence a felony had been committed in Wall’s presence or that defendant and Bumgarner posed a significant threat of death or physical injury to others.
Concerning defendant’s argument as to Wall’s actions, we note N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-404 (1988) provides that a private сitizen may use reasonable means to detain another person who the citizen has probable cause to believe has committed in his presence either a felony, a breach of the peace, a crime involving physical injury to another person, or a crime involving theft or destruction of property.
In the foregoing regard, the evidence at trial indicated that the Walls, at the time of their arrival at the Yokley residence, knew only that their daughter had telephoned at approximately 2:15 a.m. to report someone was breaking into her home and that the call was then cut off. They observed a strange vehicle in the driveway and two individuals were interrupted in the process of removing certain components of an entertainmеnt center in the home. The two ran from the dwelling. The jury could thus reasonably conclude Wall had cause to believe the felony of burglary was being committed in his presence.
In sum, having determined the State presented substantial evidence as to the element of proximate cause and from which the jury could infer defendant did not act in self-defense, we hold the trial court did not err in denying dеfendant’s motion to dismiss on the charge of voluntary manslaughter.
B.
Concerning the charge of first degree burglary, defendant asserts the State failed to meet its burden of proving the Yokley residence was occupied at the time defendant entered and that his motion to dismiss the charge should have been allowed. This argument lacks merit.
First degree burglary is the breaking and entering of the presently occupied dwelling house of another, in the nighttime, with the intent to commit a felony therein. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14-51 (1993). The question of whether or not the dwelling is actually occupied at the time of entry is for the jury.
State v. Simons,
The uncontradicted evidence in the case sub judice reveals Yokley was asleep in her home at about 1:30 in the early morning of 4 July 1990. She was awakened by sounds of the kitchen door being kicked in. Going to the door of her bedroom, she saw a man enter her daughter’s bedroom while another came into the house through the kitchen. Defendant himself acknowledged he and Bumgarner arrived at the residence together and entered the house through the back door. Once Yokley had an opportunity to escape from the house, she picked up a portable phone from the kitchen and contacted her mother to reрort the intruders.
In view of the uncontroverted evidence that the Yokley dwelling was indeed occupied at the time defendant entered, it was not error for the trial court to deny his motion to dismiss the charge of first degree burglary.
II.
A.
Defendant next insists no evidence corroborated.Yokley’s testimony that she was in her residence at the time defendant entered it. Therefore, he continúes, the court erred by denying his request to submit the lesser offense of second degree burglary to the jury. This assertion is without merit.
Where
all
of the evidence presented shows the dwelling was occupied at the time of the breaking and entering, the court is not authorized to instruct the jury it may return a verdict of burglary in the second degree.
State v. Tippett,
B.
Finally, defendant argues the court erred by denying his request that the lesser offense of involuntаry manslaughter be submitted to the jury. However, defendant fails to cite any authority in support of this proposition. Accordingly, pursuant to N.C.R. App. P. 28(b)(5) (1994), we deem this assignment of error abandoned. Further, even assuming defendant’s argument on this point had been raised properly, our examination
No error.
