The sole question raised on appeal is whether Judge Freeman erred in sentencing the defendants on the charges of felonious breaking or entering and felonious larceny after Judge Fountain had arrested judgment on these charges following a jury verdict of guilty on each. At the trial before Judge Fountain, defendants were convicted of murder in the first degree on the felony murder theory. We hold that Judge Fountain arrested judgment on the breaking or entering charge because it constituted the predicate felony for the conviction of murder in the first degree resulting from the same trial. We further conclude that he arrested judgment on the larceny charge because he mistakenly believed that it, too, was an underlying felony to the murder charge. On appeal of that trial, this Court reversed the felony murder conviction and remanded for a new trial.
The facts surrounding the crime itself have little bearing on this appeal and have been set out in detail by this Court in
State v. Pakulski,
We turn now to a review of the lengthy procedural history of the case, which has considerable bearing on the appeal before us. Although a Haywood County Grand Jury returned true bills of indictment against the defendants charging them with murder in the first degree on 17 September 1978, extradition litigation in Ohio delayed trial until May of 1984.
See Pakulski v. Hickey,
Defendants were tried for a third time at the 29 October 1984 session of the Superior Court for Haywood County resulting in convictions of both defendants on the charges of murder in the first degree, larceny of a motor vehicle, felonious breaking or entering, felonious larceny, robbery with a firearm, and conspiracy to commit felonious breaking or entering and larceny. After the jury recommended life sentences for the murder, the Honorable George M. Fountain, judge presiding, imposed a life sentence, a consecutive term of ten years for larceny of a motor vehicle, and a concurrent term of ten years for conspiracy to commit breaking or entering and larceny for each defendant. Judge Fountain arrested judgment on the guilty verdicts for felonious breaking or entering and larceny as well as for armed robbery.
The trial court instructed the jury that it could find the defendants guilty of murder in the first degree if it found that Mr. Setzer had been killed by the defendants while they were in the process of committing armed robbery or in the perpetration of a breaking or entering with the intent to commit larceny. As the underlying felonies supporting the verdict of guilty of murder in the first degree, then, the convictions for armed robbery and breaking or entering necessarily merged with the conviction for murder. The constitutional prohibition against double jeopardy therefore would have prevented imposition of sentences on these predicate felonies as long as sentences had been imposed on the greater crime of felony murder.
See State v. Silhan,
Defendants appealed their convictions which were affirmed in part and reversed in part by this Court.
State v. Pakulski,
Error was found on the conviction for murder in the first degree and a new trial was granted on that charge. The new trial was granted because this Court found that the defendants had been convicted under a theory of felony murder with armed robbery and felonious breaking or entering both constituting the underlying predicate felonies. There was insufficient evidence on the record that defendants had possessed a weapon during the original break-in to support submission of felony murder to the jury using felonious breaking or entering as the underlying felony.
State v. Fields,
On remand, the retrial of the charge of murder in the first degree using armed robbery as the predicate felony ended in a mistrial when the jury was unable to reach a verdict. At that point, the state prayed judgment on the felonious breaking or entering and felonious larceny convictions. The Honorable William H. Freeman, judge presiding, entered judgment imposing consecutive ten-year sentences on these two charges.
The sole question for review on this appeal is whether it was proper under the facts of this case for Judge Freeman to have imposed sentences for the underlying felonies after Judge Fountain had arrested judgment on the guilty verdicts which had been returned on those charges. We conclude that the sentencing was proper in this case because judgment was arrested only because “these offenses formed the offenses upon which the convictions of felony murder were predicated.”
State v. Pakulski,
As long ago as 1803, William Blackstone noted in his Commentaries that “[a]rrests of judgment arise from
intrinsic
causes, appearing upon the face of the record.” 3 W. Blackstone, Commentaries *393. In our own jurisdiction, “[a] motion in arrest of judgment is generally made after verdict to prevent entry of judgment based on a defective indictment or some fatal defect on the face of the record proper.”
State v. Davis,
A motion in arrest of judgment is proper when it is apparent that no judgmentagainst the defendant could be lawfully entered because of some fatal error appearing in (1) the organization of the court, (2) the charge made against the defendant (the information, warrant or indictment), (3) the arraignment and plea, (4) the verdict, and (5) the judgment. (Citations omitted.) State v. Perry, 291 N.C. 586 , 589,231 S.E.2d 262 , 265 (1977).
State v. McGaha,
Defendants argue that the effect of arresting judgment is necessarily and uniformly to vacate the verdict and return a criminal defendant to the position he had been in prior to trial. While we agree that in certain cases an arrest of judgment does indeed have the effect of vacating the verdict, we find that in other situations an arrest of judgment serves only to withhold judgment on a valid verdict which remains intact. When judgment is arrested because of a fatal flaw which appears on the face of the record, such as a substantive error on the indictment, the verdict itself is vacated and the state must seek a new indictment if it elects to proceed again against the defendant.
State v. Benton,
Our decision is supported in a number of related situations where this Court has recognized that an arrest of judgment does not void the underlying verdict. For example, in the lead case of
State v. Hall,
Defendants argue that even if an arrest of judgment does not operate to void a verdict where judgment was arrested to avoid a double jeopardy problem, under the facts of this case it is impossible to determine the underlying reasons for Judge Fountain’s decision to arrest judgment. Hence, defendants contend that
reversal on
In the prior appeal, this Court stated, “^judgments were arrested on the offenses of armed robbery and felonious breaking or entering, as these offenses formed the offenses upon which the convictions of felony murder were predicated.”
Id.
at 562,
Although Judge Fountain had not instructed the jury that felonious larceny could support the felony murder conviction and this Court did not state in its prior decision that the larceny charge constituted a predicate felony, we find that an examination of the record on this appeal reveals that judgment on that charge was similarly arrested because Judge Fountain considered it to be support for the felony murder conviction. For both defendants, the charge of larceny of the miscellaneous items taken from Dr. Abbate’s office was included as a separate count on the same indictment as the charge of breaking or entering. Similarly, the verdict sheets returned by the jury stated that each defendant was found guilty of “felonious breaking, entering and larceny.” Thus, despite the fact that the indictment clearly charged each defendant with breaking or entering and with larceny as separate offenses, they began to be treated together semantically. Since Judge Fountain only
instructed the jury that breaking or entering and armed robbery were to be considered as predicate felonies to the murder charge, he would have been free to enter judgment and sentence on the larceny charge without implicating the double jeopardy clause. Nonetheless, he elected to arrest judgment on this charge as well. Defendants raised no question as to the validity of the convictions for the larceny charges on the first appeal when it was appropriate to do so, other than to raise two questions regarding the trial as a whole which were not upheld by this Court. Our own close examination of the record reveals no error on the face of the record which would justify an arrest of judgment. We therefore conclude that Judge Fountain arrested judgment on this charge out of the mistaken belief that he was compelled by law to do so. As was the situation in
State v. Hall,
We note that defendants argue strenuously that there might well be reasons for Judge Fountain’s decision to arrest judgment other than to avoid a double jeopardy problem. Defendants contend that the lack of argument on any errors in the convictions for breaking or entering and larceny on the prior appeal should not be taken as an indication that no such errors exist. To the contrary, defendants speculate that Judge Fountain might have determined
Defendants’ final contention is that Judge Freeman, the sentencing judge, lacked the authority to set aside the prior order of Judge Fountain arresting judgment on the verdicts of guilty of breaking or entering and larceny. Relying on
Michigan National Bank v. Hanner,
Reversed.
