The defendants were each tried upon proper indictments charging them with murder. The jury found both defendants guilty of murder in the first degree. At the conclusion of a capital sentencing proceeding, the jury recommended a sentence of death for the defendant Joe Cephus Johnston, Jr., and a sentence of life imprisonment for the defendant Morris Wayne Johnson. The trial court imposed the respective sentences pursuant to the jury’s recommendation.
The defendants contend that the trial court committed reversible error by denying each defendant’s motion to dismiss the charge of first-degree murder against him based on the insufficiency of the evidence. We find this contention without merit. The defendants also contend that the trial court erred by communicating with the jurors in the absence of the defendant, counsel, or a court reporter. We agree and hold that the defendants are entitled to a new trial. Because the issues presented in the defendants’ other assignments of error are not likely to arise upon retrial, we do not reach or discuss them.
*683 The State’s evidence tended to show that on 20 February 1988, Jackie Jamerson, Cindy Davis and the decedent, Ralph Bryant, decided to go to Ick’s, a nightclub in Roanoke Rapids, North Carolina. All three were from the Capron, Virginia area and had known each other a long time. They had been to Ick’s on many occasions.
At closing time, Jamerson, Davis and Bryant left Ick’s and walked toward their car. A group of men, including the defendants, began making vulgar comments to the two women as they walked to their car. The women and Bryant ignored the comments and reached the car. Charlie Johnston, brother of the defendant Joe Cephus Johnston, brushed up against Bryant as Bryant was getting into the car. Charlie Johnston then proceeded to a hill behind a fence, where the defendants were located, and challenged Bryant to come across the fence and fight. At that point, Bryant took off his boots, walked to the other side of the fence and stood there saying nothing. When no one in the defendants’ group approached him, Bryant went back to the car and began to drive away.
As Bryant and the women drove away, Cindy Davis saw a man from the defendants’ group, Mike Smith, run toward them and throw a cinderblock which struck the car. Bryant then pulled the car into the parking lot of a bank, got out of the car and began chasing Smith. Bryant caught Smith from behind, grabbed his shirt and flipped him onto the pavement. Bryant told Smith he was not going to hurt him. Bryant said he merely wanted the group of men to leave Bryant and the two women alone.
After Bryant let Smith get up, the defendants and their group walked down the hill in Bryant’s direction. Bryant left the two women and went to meet the defendants’ group in the street. The defendant Joe Cephus Johnston said something to Bryant to which Bryant responded that he could take the men on one at a time, “but just leave the women alone.” The defendant Morris Johnson swung his fist at Bryant. Bryant blocked that blow and hit Johnson. The defendant Joe Cephus Johnston then began hitting Bryant on the upper left side of his body. Both defendants then attacked Bryant at the same time. During the fight, Joe Cephus Johnston pulled a knife from his pocket and began stabbing Bryant. Morris Johnson also reached into his pocket, pulled something out, and began to strike Bryant in the back in a. “slicing motion.” During the course of the fight, Morris Johnson was stabbed in the stomach and the victim Bryant was fatally wounded.
*684 Joe Cephus Johnston and several others left the scene to take Morris Johnson to the hospital. After leaving Johnson in the hospital, Johnston left North Carolina and went to a relative’s house in Virginia. On the next day, Johnston telephoned a deputy sheriff in North Carolina and said that he was coming back to surrender to authorities. However, he was arrested in Virginia later and brought back to North Carolina for trial.
Phil Ricks, an emergency medical technician, testified that he arrived at Ick’s about three or four minutes after receiving a call for medical assistance. The victim Bryant showed no sign of life when Ricks arrived. Ricks testified that he found a boxcutter about ten or fifteen feet from Bryant’s body, which was identified at trial as belonging to Morris Johnson.
Dr. Robert Dorian, a pathologist, testified that he had done an autopsy on the body of the victim Ralph Bryant. In Dr. Dorian’s opinion, Bryant’s death resulted from multiple stab wounds. Dr. Dorian opined that Bryant had died within five to ten minutes after being stabbed, but he could not say for sure how long Bryant had remained conscious.
At the close of the State’s evidence, and again at the close of all the evidence, the defendants moved to dismiss the charges of first-degree murder to the extent those charges were based on the theory of premeditation and deliberation. The motions were denied.
In one of their assignments of error, the defendants contend that the trial court erred in denying their motions to dismiss the first-degree murder charges against them because there was no substantial evidence to support a reasonable inference of premeditation and deliberation. On a defendant’s motion for dismissal, the trial court must only determine whether there is substantial evidence of each essential element of the offense charged and of the defendant being the perpetrator of the offense.
State v. Olson,
“Murder in the first degree is the intentional and unlawful killing of a human being with malice and with premeditation and deliberation.”
State v. Hamlet,
Premeditation and deliberation are mental processes not normally susceptible to proof by direct evidence. In a majority of cases, circumstantial evidence must be relied upon to prove them. Some of the circumstances from which premeditation and deliberation may be implied are (1) the absence of provocation on the part of the deceased, (2) the statements and/or conduct of the defendant before and after the killing, (3)- any threats or declarations of the defendant before or during the occurrence giving rise to the death of the deceased, (4) ill will or previous difficulties between the parties, (5) the dealing of lethal blows after the deceased has been felled and rendered helpless, (6) evidence that the killing was done in a brutal manner, and (7) the nature and number of the victim’s wounds.
Olson,
In the present case, substantial evidence was introduced which would support findings by the jury to the effect that after the defendants and their group shouted vulgarities at the victim and his two female friends, the victim Bryant attempted to leave. One *686 of the members of the defendants’ group, Mike Smith, then hit the victim’s vehicle with a cinderblock. Bryant got out of the car and knocked Smith to the pavement, but then let him up and merely told him that he and his friends wanted to be left alone. Smith ran back to the others, and at this point the defendants’ group started after Bryant. As they approached the car, the victim stood alone to meet them and to defend himself and his friends. The two defendants then made a concerted attack on the victim. During the fight, Joe Johnston pulled out a knife and stabbed the victim. Morris Johnson used a boxcutter during the course of the fight, which was found ten to fifteen feet from the victim’s body when the paramedics arrived. After the victim was rendered helpless, Johnston continued to strike him. The two defendants then fled the scene; Johnson went to the hospital and Johnston went to Virginia.
The foregoing substantial evidence also would have supported jury findings of an absence of provocation on the part of the deceased, the dealing of lethal blows by the defendants after the deceased had been rendered helpless, and a killing accomplished in a brutal manner through the infliction of numerous mortal wounds. From such findings, it could reasonably be inferred that the defendants killed the victim with premeditation and deliberation. Therefore, the trial court did not err in denying the defendants’ motions to dismiss the charges of first-degree murder based upon premeditation and deliberation.
In another assignment of error, the defendants contend that the trial court erred inter alia by holding unrecorded private bench discussions with prospective jurors. These unrecorded discussions resulted in the trial court excusing a number of the prospective jurors. After review of the jury selection process, we conclude that the trial court committed error in this regard.
When the first group of prospective jurors was brought into the courtroom during the defendants’ capital trial, the trial court asked if any of them knew of any reasons why they were not qualified to sit or had extraordinary problems that might excuse them from service. The trial court announced that it would hear any such prospective jurors individually at the bench. The trial court then heard excuses at the bench. This procedure was repeated eight times. Numerous prospective jurors were excused after these private unrecorded bench conferences. Because these conferences *687 were not recorded, there is no indication in the record before us as to why most of these prospective jurors were excused.
The confrontation clause of Article I, Section 23 of the Constitution of North Carolina requires that a defendant be present at every stage of his capital trial.
State v. Huff,
It is well settled that the process of selecting and impaneling the jury is a stage of any capital trial at which the defendant must be present.
State v. Smith,
In the present case, the record before us does not reveal the substance of most of the trial court’s private discussions with the prospective jurors who were excused. Thus, we are unable to engage in the proper analysis to determine whether the errors were harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. Therefore, we must conclude that the State has failed to carry its burden, and we cannot say that the trial court’s errors were harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
The State points out that since Morris Johnson received a sentence of life imprisonment, he will not be tried capitally at any new trial. The State contends, therefore, that the defendant Johnson should not be considered a “capital defendant” whose presence was required at all stages of his trial. We find this contention without merit.
Capital cases are cases in which there is a possibility, but never a certainty, that the death penalty will be imposed.
State v. Lachat,
We are certain that the actions of the trial court were taken in good faith and resulted from its concern for the efficient selection and comfort of the jury. Nevertheless, we must vacate the verdicts and judgments entered against each of the defendants and remand their cases to the Superior Court, Halifax County, for a new trial.
New trial.
