We hold that pursuant to
State v. Hartness,
The defendant has assigned error to an evidentiary ruling by the superior court. The victim’s twenty-two-year-old half sister testified that the defendant had molested her from the time she was nine years old until she was eighteen years old, at which time she joined the Marine Corps. When this testimony was adduced the court instructed the jury as follows:
Ladies and gentlemen, this witness is tendered by the State to give testimony of commission of like crimes and this testimony is being admitted solely for the purpose of showing with respect to both of said defendants that there exists in the minds of the defendants a common plan or scheme or intent as well *785 as the unnatural lust of the defendants on the alleged commission of the crimes charged in these cases.
The defendant did not object to this instruction.
The defendant now argues that it was error to admit this testimony and that the limiting instruction, given when this testimony was introduced, was in error. The defendant argues that the purpose for admitting this testimony was to prove his character in order to show he acted in conformity therewith in violation of N.C.G.S. § 8C-1, Rule 404(b) (1988). This Court has been liberal in allowing evidence of similar sex offenses in trials on sexual crime charges.
State v. Cotton,
The defendant also argues that the court committed error in the limiting instruction given at the time this testimony was admitted. He says specifically that it was error for the court to charge that the testimony was admitted to show “that there exists in the minds of the defendants . . . the unnatural lust of the defendants in the alleged commission of the crimes charged.” The defendant argues that although the testimony may have been properly admitted, error occurred when the jury was told to consider it to determine whether there was unnatural lust in the mind of the defendant. The defendant says this instructed the jury to consider his character and determine whether he had acted in conformity therewith. The defendant did not object to this instruction and we must examine this assignment of error under the plain error rule. North Carolina Rules of Appellate Procedure, Rule 10(c)(4).
The plain error rule has been adopted in this State.
See State v. Oliver,
[T]he plain error rule ... is always to be applied cautiously and only in the exceptional case where, after reviewing the *786 entire record, it can be said the claimed error is a “fundamental error, something so basic, so prejudicial, so lacking in its elements that justice cannot have been done,” or “where [the error] is grave error which amounts to a denial of a fundamental right of the accused,” or the error has “ ‘resulted in a miscarriage of justice or in the denial to appellant of a fair trial’ ” or where the error is such as to “seriously affect the fairness, integrity or public reputation of judicial proceedings” or where it can be fairly said “the instructional mistake had a probable impact on the jury’s finding that the defendant was guilty.”
United States v. McCaskill,
The defendant argues that this instruction by the court violates the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment to the United States Constitution and the law of the land clause of the Constitution of North Carolina. He cites
Spencer v. Texas,
For the reasons stated in this opinion we reverse the Court of Appeals in its holdings on the first degree sexual offense and the offense of taking indecent liberties with a child. We affirm the Court of Appeals on all other issues.
Reversed and remanded in part. Affirmed in part.
