I. Penn’s Assignments of Error
Defendant Penn first assigns error to the trial court’s admission into evidence of a privileged confidential communication between him and his wife in violation of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 8-57(c). He argues this violation was reversible error. We agree. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 8-57(c) provides that in criminal cases, “[n]o husband or wife shall be compellable in any event to disclose any confidential communication made by one to the other during their marriage.” The North Carolina Supreme Court has held that “spouses shall be incompetent to testify against one another in a criminal proceeding ... if the substance of the testimony concerns a ‘confidential communication’ between the marriage partners made during the duration of their marriage.”
State v. Freeman,
To fall within the purview of this privilege, the communication must have been made confidentially between wife and husband during the marriage.
Freeman,
In the case sub judice, when the State called Penn’s wife as a witness, Penn immediately objected and asserted his privilege. Over his objection, Debra Penn testified that on 11 January she was at home when Penn, Holmes and Hooper arrived. After a few minutes, Penn instructed the two other men to go outside the house because he wanted to talk to his wife about something. After the two men left and she and Penn were alone, her husband reached into a kitchen cabinet and took out a gun. Penn then told her that he was going to shoot and kill Hooper because Hooper had messed up some of his money. He wrapped the gun in a sweater and left.
In contrast, in
Freeman
the potential witness spouse stipulated that had she been allowed to testify she would have stated that the defendant, her husband, drove into a public parking lot where she was sitting in another car with her brother. The husband left his car and approached the car with the wife and brother inside. The husband asked if either of them wished to speak with him and then immediately discharged the shotgun, killing the brother. At trial the defendant husband objected to the wife’s testimony concerning the events that transpired in the parking lot on the grounds that his comments and actions were confidential communications. Nevertheless, the court held that the witness spouse’s testimony was competent and admissible. “Such actions in a public place and in the presence of a third person could not have been a communication made in the confidence of the marital relationship or one which was induced by affection and loyalty in the marriage.”
Freeman,
In the case before us, Penn asked the third parties to leave before he spoke to his wife in their home. Penn’s communications
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were made to his spouse during the duration of their marriage and they were made in confidence. Debra testified that Penn trusted her when he made the communications. No evidence was offered that anyone overheard the communications. All the circumstances here show that Penn’s statements were induced by the confidence of his marital relationship and thus were protected.
See Hicks v. Hicks,
Generally, the privilege of a confidential communication extends only to utterances and not to acts. 8 Wigmore, Evidence § 2337 (McNaughton rev. 1961). Nevertheless, an action may be protected if it is intended to be a communication and is the type of act induced by the marital relationship. 97 C.J.S. Witnesses § 269 (1957). In this case, Penn told Holmes and Hooper to leave before he took the gun out of the cabinet. Penn could have asked his wife to leave the room or secured the gun at another time if he had not wished her to see his actions. The facts here lead us to conclude that Penn acted in front of his wife out of a feeling of trust induced by their marriage relationship. We hold that Penn had the right to assert the privilege against Debra and prohibit her from testifying both about his statements to her and about his actions in procuring the firearm.
In an order allowing the wife’s testimony, the trial court stated that it allowed Debra to testify because Penn’s conversation with his wife was “an expression of his intent to commit a criminal act.” The court also justified the testimony by categorizing the conversation as corroboration. However, there is no support in the law for either of these positions. It is well settled that if the requirements of a confidential communication exist, the privilege is not removed where the communication shows the intention of one spouse to commit a criminal offense. Specifically, “[t]he rule excludes testimony by a wife of threats of her husband, made to her alone, that he would kill a third person . . . .” 97 C.J.S. Witnesses § 269 (1957). Neither is the privilege removed by the fact that the same or similar communications were made to third persons on other occasions. 97 C.J.S. Witnesses § 272 (1957);
Koon v. State,
10 Fla. L. Week 49,
Finally, evidence rendered incompetent by N.C. Gen. Stat. § 8-57 is excludable and failure to do so is reversible error.
See
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Freeman,
As will be made clear below, it is not necessary to address Penn’s other assignment of error.
II. Holmes’ Assignments of Error
Co-defendant Holmes first assigns error to the trial court’s admission of several out-of-court statements made by Penn that tended to incriminate and implicate him. The statements that Holmes contends were erroneously admitted include Penn’s statement to his wife that he was going to shoot and kill Hooper and several other statements Penn made to the police after the shooting tending to show that he was trying to cover up the crime.
As to the first statement, Holmes made no objection to this testimony at trial, and we will not consider an objection to the admission of evidence that is made for the first time on appeal. Concerning the other statements he objects to, we are unpersuaded by Holmes’ argument here because these statements do not refer to him. While Holmes concedes that the statements primarily implicate Penn, he contends they indirectly implicate him because he was tried under the theory of “acting in concert.” We disagree. We fail to see any prejudice toward Holmes in admitting these statements. This is an attempt by defendant to stretch the principle underlying the Bruton rule much farther than is plausible. See infra. This assignment of error is dismissed.
Holmes’ next three assignments of error center around the testimony and cross-examination of the witness Elijah Moses. On the night of 11 January 1988, Penn dropped Holmes off at Moses’ drink house. Holmes made certain statements of what had transpired that night, which Moses later reiterated to the police. The essence of the statements was that Holmes had told Moses that Penn fired the first two shots and that he (Holmes) fired the third shot because he did not want Hooper to suffer. Under the
Bruton
rule, the court ruled admissible only the portion of the statement in which Holmes said that he fired the third shot because he did not want Hooper to suffer.
See Bruton v. United States,
The rule requires the exclusion of extrajudicial statements of a defendant which tend to incriminate another defendant unless the portions incriminating the nondeclarant defendant can be deleted “without prejudice either to the State or the declarant.”
State v. Fox,
State v. Giles
involved a situation where the trial court complied with
Bruton
and N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-927(c)(1) in that defendant’s statement was sanitized by deleting all references to a co-defendant before the statement was admitted into evidence against the declarant defendant.
Giles,
The trial court below allowed Moses to testify that Holmes told him that he (Holmes) shot Danny Boy once so the victim would not suffer. Previous to Moses’ testimony, evidence had been presented by a pathologist that the victim had been shot three times. Other testimony in the trial clearly alleged that defendant Penn had fired some if not all the shots. As in Giles, we fail to see how the deletions here materially changed the nature of defendant Holmes’ statement. This assignment of error is overruled.
In a related argument, Holmes contends that the trial court erroneously permitted the prosecutor to ask Moses a leading question concerning Holmes’ admission. The prosecutor asked Moses, “Did Holmes tell you that he shot Hooper one time and he shot him because he did not want him to suffer?” Moses replied, “Yeah.” The use of leading questions on direct examination is a matter entirely within the discretion of the trial judge, and such a ruling is not reviewable on appeal absent a showing of abuse of discretion.
State v. Riddick,
In another related assignment of error, Holmes contends that the court went too far in protecting Penn when it precluded Holmes from cross-examining Moses about what Holmes contends he actually said to Moses. On cross-examination of Moses, Holmes’ attorney sought to elicit testimony that Holmes had actually told Moses that he (Holmes) had witnessed a murder and had asked Moses for money to buy drugs because he was so shook up by what he had seen. The court sustained an objection to the following question asked of Moses: “He (Holmes) asked you (Moses) for that money so he could buy drugs because he was so shook up about what he had seen. Is that not true?” The objection made was sustained as to what Holmes had seen. Defendant Holmes’ attorney then asked, “Well, didn’t he ask you to borrow money so he could do some drugs because he was shook up?” The objection to this question was overruled. Holmes contends the court’s action unduly restricted his ability to confront witnesses against him as guaranteed by the sixth amendment of the United States Constitution. He claims the restrictions compelled him to take the stand to accomplish what he had been forbidden to do on cross-examination.
The longstanding rule in this jurisdiction is that the scope of cross-examination is largely within the discretion of the trial judge, whose rulings thereon will not be held in error absent a showing that the verdict was improperly influenced by the limited scope of cross-examination.
State v. Woods,
Holmes next contends that the court below erred by denying his motion to dismiss because the State failed to present substantial evidence with respect to each essential element of the crime charged. In a criminal action, the evidence is considered in the light most favorable to the State. Discrepancies and contradictions therein are disregarded and the State is entitled to every inference of fact which may be reasonably deduced therefrom.
State v. Witherspoon,
After the presentation of the evidence, the court instructed the jury that as to defendant Holmes it should return a verdict of guilty if it found that Holmes either acting alone had intentionally and with malice killed the victim, or if Holmes acting “in concert” with defendant Penn had killed the victim. Then as part of its instruction on the theory of acting in concert, the court gave the following instruction: “If two or more persons act together with a common purpose to commit second degree murder, each of them is held responsible for the acts of others done in the commission of second degree murder.” We find ample evidence in the record to support defendant’s conviction for second degree murder under either theory submitted to the jury. By his own admission, defendant Holmes was at the scene of the shooting and two people testified that Holmes admitted shooting the victim. This assignment of error is overruled.
Next defendant Holmes contends that the trial court erred by refusing his request for a special instruction regarding the issues of causation on the theory of acting in concert. In requesting this special instruction, defendant’s counsel cited a case to the trial
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judge that involved the theory of accessory before the fact. Defendant’s argument here is misplaced. The case cited is not applicable in this situation. We noted above the court’s instruction to the jury concerning the theory of acting in concert. This instruction was correct.
See State v. Ferrell and State v. Workman,
We have examined defendant Holmes’ other assignments of error and found them to be without merit. They are overruled.
In summary, we order a new trial for defendant Penn, but find no error in the trial of defendant Holmes.
