Defendant contends the court erred in denying him the opportunity to cross-examine the complainant regarding her prior sexual conduct with her former boyfriend on the night of thе alleged rape and sexual offense. Evidence adduced at an in camera hearing pursuant to G.S. 8-58.6 established that earlier in the evening of the alleged offenses the victim had drivеn her former boyfriend, whom she had dated for four years, from a night spot to his home, and that she had engaged in sexual intercourse with him while there. The court ruled, following the hearing, thаt the complainant’s consensual intercourse earlier that night was not relevant for any purpose other than to attack her credibility. It thus excluded the evidence pursuant to G.S. 8-58.6(c).
Defendant cites
State v. Fortney,
The main thrust of defendant’s argument is that the evidence was admissible under the exception to the rape shield statute which allows evidence of the sexual behavior of the complainant if it
[i]s evidence of a pattern of sexual behavior so distinctive and so closely resembling the defendant’s version of the alleged encounter with the complainant as to tend to prove that such complainant consented to the act or acts charged or behaved in such a manner as to lead the defendant reasonably to believe that the complainant consented.
G.S. 8-58.6(b)(3). This Court found evidence of such a pattern, and held that it should have been admitted, in
State v. Shoffner,
Here, by contrast, there was no such evidence of prior sexually aggressive conduct on the pаrt of the complainant, and defendant offered no evidence of prior sexual advances which the complainant made to him. The evidence showed only thаt earlier in the evening defendant and the complainant had danced together two or three times at a public bar; that “she was laughing and cuttin’ up with him, jokin’ and that “[s]he . . . just talked to him a lot.”
Defendant suggests that the facts that earlier in the evening the complainant had driven her former boyfriend home, and had engaged in consensual intercourse with him, indicаte that her sexual encounter with defendant, when she drove him home or to some other location several hours later, also was consensual. Un-controverted evidence established, however, that defendant was unaware of the prior sexual encounter between the complainant and her former boyfriend. He thus could not have inferred consent therefrom. Further, as a Florida court noted in interpreting a statute similar to G.S. 8-58.6(b)(3), “one episode of sexual intercourse . . . before the assault hardly establishes a ‘pattern of conduct or behavior’ on the part of the victim; and the evidence of having slept with her boyfriend on one occasion bears no relаtion to the issue of whether the victim consented.”
Hodges v. State,
We hold that evidence of the complainant’s prior consensual intercourse with her formеr boyfriend earlier in the evening of defendant’s alleged offenses did not qualify for admission under the closely resembling pattern exception of G.S. 8-58.6(b)(3). It was evidence of a singlе episode, Hodges, supra, of which defendant had no knowledge, in a situation at least closely akin to “dating-type circumstances,” Smith, supra. As such, cross-examination regarding it properly was excluded under G.S. 8-58.6(c) as “irrelevant to any issue in the prosecution.” G.S. 8-58.6(b).
Defendant contends the court erred in excising from the complainant’s written statement to a deputy shеriff regarding the events of the evening in question the sentence, “Charles Sutton [the former boyfriend] and I had intercourse when I took him home.” For the reasons set forth above, we hоld that the court properly withheld this evidence from the jury also.
Defendant contends the court erred in denying his request that it instruct the jury as follows:
I further charge you that consent is a defense to the crime of rape. If you should find that the complainant consented to the act or acts as charged or that the complainant behaved in suсh a manner as to lead the Defendant to reasonably believe that the complainant consented to the acts as charged then it would be your duty to find the Defendant not guilty of the charges herein.
“[T]he . . . court is not required to give a requested instruction in the exact language of the request. However, when the request is correct in law and supported by the evidence in the case, [it] must give the instruction in substance.”
State v. Monk,
*619 The court here instructed that before the jury could find defendant guilty, the State had to prove beyond а reasonable doubt, inter alia, “[t]hat [the complainant] did not consent [,] [i]t was against her will.” It further instructed that “[cjonsent ... induced by fear is not consent at law.” We hold these instructions clearly sufficient to convey the substance of defendant’s request for a charge that consent is a defense to the crime of rape.
The remainder of the requested instruсtion draws upon language of the closely resembling pattern exception of G.S. 8-58.6(b)(3). That provision establishes a standard for determining admissibility of evidence. It was not intended to, and does not, provide a legal definition of consent by the complainant with regard to sexual acts at issue in rape or sexual offense trials. The court thus proрerly declined to give this portion of the requested instruction.
Defendant finally contends the court erred, following its instruction that “[ejvidence of flight may be considered ... in determining whеther the combined circumstances amount to an admission or show a consciousness of guilt,” in refusing his request that it further instruct that: “Likewise, you may also consider the cessation оf flight and return in determining whether the combined circumstances amount to an admission or show a consciousness of guilt.”
A requested instruction is properly declined unless it is “correct in law and supported by the evidence in the case.” Monk, supra. Defendant cites no authority, and we are aware of none, establishing the legal accuracy of his assertion that cessation of flight may be viewed as conduct influenced by an innocent conscience. Assuming such, arguendo, the evidence did not support the requested instruction. It showed that uрon being informed that the complainant “[w]as going to get [him] for rape,” defendant hitchhiked from Canton to Asheville, where he remained until the following day. He then “decided that [hе]’d just come back home and . . . face up to it.” Upon his return he was advised that a warrant awaited him and that he should call a certain number. Instead of doing so, he went to bеd and remained there until the sheriff came to arrest him. His conduct thus was more indicative of mere inertia than of actual cessation of flight. We hold that the court was not required to give the requested instruction.
*620 No error.
