Lead Opinion
Defendant was tried at the 19 January 1999 session of Mecklenburg County Superior Court on one count of assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill inflicting serious injury, in violation
Defendant first contends that the trial court should not have submitted the assault and robbery charges to the jury because his intoxication negated the specific intent elements required for each charge. In essence, defendant is arguing that he was so intoxicated that, as a matter of law, he could not have formed the specific intent to commit either assault or robbery. Such an argument is without merit.
Voluntary intoxication in and of itself is not a legal defense. State v. Gerald,
“Intoxication, though voluntary, is to be considered by the jury in a prosеcution for murder in the first degree, in which a premeditated design to effect death is essential, with reference to its effect upon the ability of the accused at the time to form and*508 entertain such a design, not because, per se, it either excuses or mitigates the crime, but because, in connection with other facts, an absence of malice or premeditation may appear. ... No inference of the absence of [the requisite specific intent] arises from intoxication, as a matter of law. ”
State v. Murphy,
Thus, whether defendant was so intoxicated as to prevent his forming the .specific intent to rob and assault Ms. Dover was a question of fact, to be determined by the jury. Here, the jury concluded that defendant still was able to form the requisite specific intent, and we cannot disturb that finding on appeal.
Next, defendant contests the trial court’s failure to dismiss the charge of common law robbery due to an insufficiency of evidence to establish each element of the offense. Common law robbеry requires proof of four elements: (1) felonious, non-consensual taking of (2) money or other personal property (3) from the person or presence of another (4) by means of force. State v. Hedgecoe,
The requisite force for robbеry may be either actual or constructive. State v. Sawyer,
Nearly a century and a half ago, our Supreme Court articulated the amount of violence required to constitute аctual force. In a case in which that court overturned the conviction of a slave without
Here, the victim testified as follows:
A: [Defendant] came up tо me. I was sitting on the seat in the back. He came and he said to me, I heard you had a new boyfriend. And I said, yes, I’m engaged.
Q: And then what happened next, after you told him that you were engaged?
A: He snatched my pocketbook.
Q: Where were you holding your pocketbook?
A: On my — on this side, right here (indicating). I had it on my shoulder.
Q: You mean you had the straps on your shoulder?
A: Um-hmm.
Q: And then what happened next?
A: He grabbed it, and I told the bus driver to call the police. And he did, but by that time he had got off the bus. The bus stopped on Mills Road, so I got off and ran after him, cause he had my pocketbook.
(Tr. at 19-20). As Ms. Dover’s testimony indicates, the only force used by defendant was that sufficient to remove her purse from her shoulder. Defendаnt never attempted to overpower her or otherwise restrain her. Rather, this was no more than a typical purse-snatching incident, which courts in other jurisdictions routinely havе held to be larceny, not robbery. See generally 4 Charles E. Torcia, Wharton’s Criminal Law § 465, at 44 (15th ed. 1996) (“The taking of property from the person of another by surprise, as by sudden snatching, does not constitute robbery. Thus, the sudden snatching of a purse or other
We conclude there was insufficient evidence of constructive force as well. Constructive force exists if the defendant, by words or gesture, has placed the victim in suсh fear as is likely to create an apprehension of danger and thereby induce her to part with her property for the sake of her person. Sawyer,
Here, defendant made no threatening remarks or gestures to Ms. Dover on the bus. According to her testimony, the only words uttеred by defendant concerned her being engaged. Although Ms. Dover also testified defendant had told her over the phone the night before, “I’ll get you,” this threat was sufficiently removed in time to eliminate any apprehension or fear. None was cited or shown. Furthermore, this “threat” was never made in the context of defendant trying to take her property. Thus, it wаs not uttered to induce Ms. Dover to part with her purse.
In sum, we uphold defendant’s conviction as to the assault charge. But because the requisite element of force was not present, we vacate defendants’s conviction of robbery and remand for entry of a judgment of guilty and re-sentencing as to the lesser-included offense of larceny from the person. See generally State v. Jolly,
No error in part; vacated and remanded in part.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in part and dissenting in part.
I concur in the majority opinion which finds no error in the defendant’s conviction on the assault charge.
I respectfully dissent to the majоrity opinion which vacates the defendant’s conviction on the charge of common law robbery. I disagree with the general rule asserted that a typical purse snatсhing incident is larceny and not common law robbery. Here, the victim was seated on a bus and was holding her purse which had a strap over her shoulder. Even though the defendant and the victim knew each other, the victim, in her statement, stated that defendant said, “I’ll fix you” as he grabbed her purse and pulled it from her hands.
In State v. Sawyer,
