53 N.C. App. 130 | N.C. Ct. App. | 1981
Defendant asserts that the failure of the trial court to charge in its final mandate that the jury could find her not guilty by reason of self-defense was reversible error. She relies on State v. Dooley, 285 N.C. 158, 203 S.E. 2d 815 (1974); State v. Hunt, 28 N.C. App. 486, 221 S.E. 2d 720 (1976); and State v. Girley, 27 N.C. App. 388, 219 S.E. 2d 301 (1975), disc. rev. denied, 289 N.C. 141, 220 S.E. 2d 799 (1976).
The State asserts that the court’s instructions as to self-defense, when viewed as a whole, would have allowed a verdict of not guilty by reason of self-defense. However, the State concedes that it cannot distinguish the case sub judice from Dooley, Hunt and Girley. The charge must include not guilty by reason of self-defense as a possible verdict in the final mandate where the defense is raised by the evidence, as it was in defendant’s trial. State v. Dooley, supra; State v. Hunt, supra; and State v. Girley, supra.
Error is also assigned by defendant to the trial court’s failure to declare a mistrial as a result of at least four jurors’ admission that they read a newspaper article about defendant’s trial. After charging the jury the court recessed until the following morning at which time the jury would begin deliberations. During this overnight recess a newspaper article, attached as an exhibit to this appeal, was read by some of the jurors.
The newspaper reported a statement the trial judge made out of the presence of the jury in denying defendant’s motion to dismiss for insufficiency of the evidence. In response to defendant’s motion the trial judge replied “too many shots .... Motion denied.” It was this response which was accurately quoted by the newspaper and read by the jurors.
Moreover, the maladroitness of uttering and reporting the “too many shots” statement was compounded to defendant’s further prejudice when the trial judge attempted to cure the prejudice caused by the newspaper. Defendant asserts that the judge’s analogy of the trial to a baseball game “with the score seventeen to nothing, but our side ain’t been up yet,” although not so intended by the court, amounted to a comment on the weight of the evidence. We cannot disagree with defendant that the judge’s comment might have added credibility to the State’s case in the eyes of the jury.
Defendant is entitled to a
New trial.