Defendant’s assignments of error challenge the admissibility of certain testimony offered by a ballistics expert on behalf of the state and the sufficiency of the trial court’s instructions to the jury. For errors in the jury instructions, we reverse and grant a new trial.
The state’s evidence tended to show that on 29 March 1979, the deceased, Joe Eddy White, was at the home of his parents watching television with his mother. White’s mother testified that around 9:30 p.m. she observed the lights of a vehicle pulling into the driveway and heard a horn blow. Joe Eddy went outside to investigate. A few moments later, the mother heard a shot and ran outside to see Joe Eddy walk back towards the house and then fall down on his knees. He said, “Mother, Jerry Ward has shot me” and then collapsed. Joe Eddy died on the way to the hospital. An autopsy revealed the cause of death to be internal hemorrhage secondary to a .22 caliber gunshot wound.
Law enforcement officers took defendant into custody around 11:00 p.m. at the home of his sister. They then took him to the Law Enforcement Center in Whiteville. During the trip he was upset and crying and repeatedly made such statements as, “I didn’t mean to kill him. I just wanted to get him in the truck and take him down the road and beat the hell out of him.”
The pathologist who examined the body of the deceased testified that the fatal wound penetrated several inches below the left armpit on the left side, slightly to the rear of midline. The bullet’s projectory was upwards. The bullet lodged beneath the sternum three to four inches higher than the point at which it entered the body. Defendant testified, however, that Joe Eddy had been facing him at all times up to and during the instant when defendant fired out the window. The bullet removed from Joe Eddy’s body was too deformed for a positive determination that it was in fact fired from defendant’s gun.
Defendant’s first assignment of error relates to the trial court’s admission of certain testimony by state’s witness Robert Cerwin, a ballistics and firearms expert, concerning State’s Exhibit No. 5, the bullet removed from the deceased’s body. Cerwin was allowed to testify on direct examination as follows:
“Q. Do you have an opinion satisfactory to yourself as to whether or not State’s Exhibit No. 5 could have been fired from [defendant’s pistol]?
Mr. HOOKS: Objection.
COURT: Overruled.
A. Yes, sir. It could have been fired. This type of bullet can be discharged from this type of firearm due to the family that it is. In other words, it is a .22 caliber bullet. And in [defendant’s pistol] the bullet can be chambered or discharged with a .22 caliber cartridge which holds a .22 caliber bullet.”
Upon cross-examination Mr. Cerwin stated that “State’s Exhibit No. 5 is too deformed for comparison. By that I mean I could not make a comparison between that and any other bullet fired from [defendant’s pistol]. It could have been fired from any weapon in the same family of weapons.”
Defendant contends that the expert’s answer that the fatal bullet “could have” been fired from defendant’s gun amounted to no more than mere speculation and therefore was inadmissible under the rule in
Lockwood v. McCaskill,
Defendant next argues that the trial court erred (a) in omitting a substantial feature of defendant’s case in the recapitulation of the evidence to the jury and- (b) in failing to instruct the jury in the final mandate that if they were not satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt as to each essential element of the charge of second degree murder, then it would be their duty to return a verdict of not guilty of that charge. These contentions have merit.
The record reveals that portions of defendant’s testimony, elicited on direct and cross-examination, described his 29 March confrontation with the deceased as follows:
“When I stopped my truck was about four or five feet in front of the back end of the porch. ... In just a minute Joe Eddy came out of the house. . . . He was then at the left front of my truck. I was. sitting in the truck. ... He came out of the house by the right side of my truck. He came in front of my truck and came around there and stepped out to the front of it. He did not ever come up beside my truck. . . . When he raised his hand it was pointing toward me. At that time he was about 15 or 18 feet from me and was kind of northeast from me. He was over at the left front fender of my pickup. ... I did not think that he had a pistol. ... It didn’t hit my mind until he jerked his hand. ... He pointed his hand straight at me. . . .At that time I thought he had a pistol in his hand because of his actions. ... I fell to my right to get out of the way of a possible bullet and I reached for the pistol. I did not mean to point a pistol at Joe Eddy and kill him. I just shot out the window like that so I could get gone, so he wouldn’t come on there to the truck. ... I pulled the pistol up in one motion and fired it out the window. ... I shot straight out my truck. I didn’t shoot in the direction of Joe Eddy White. I did not. I did not shoot in the direction of Joe Eddy White because I did not want to hit nobody. I just wanted to get out of the yard and get gone. I am not testifying that I ever pointed the pistol at Joe Eddy White. I did not see Joe Eddy White at the time I fired the pistol. ... At the time I fired the gun Joe Eddy was about 15 feet from where I pointed the gun. ... I sure didn’t want to kill him or anybody else. At the time he came by my truck he had his right hand under his left armpit. ... I figured he had been hit with a rifle bullet because I heard a rifle shot.” (Emphasis supplied.)
In his recapitulation of the evidence, Judge Clark failed to mention to the jury that evidence offered by the defendant tended to show that defendant did not fire the pistol in the direction of the deceased. This was a material omission.
General Statute 15A-1232 (substantively the same as former G.S. 1-180) requires the trial judge to instruct the jury in such a way as to “declare and explain the law arising on the evidence.” Although the judge’s charge need not, and indeed should not, encompass every fragment of evidence offered by the state and defendant, it is required to “segregate the
material
facts of the case, array the facts on both sides, and apply the pertinent principles of law to
In the instant case, defendant’s testimony was to the effect that he fired his pistol
away from
Joe Eddy White, pointing the
gun 15 feet from where the deceased was standing. This testimony was competent evidence which, if believed by the jury, would tend to establish
either
that the bullet from defendant’s gun was not the one which struck and killed Joe Eddy White,
or
that even if defendant’s gun fired the fatal bullet, the killing was not the result of an intentional assault. If the bullet fired from defendant’s gun did not in fact strike the deceased, defendant would not be guilty of any homicide. If, on the other hand, defendant did fire the fatal shot, but did not do so intending to shoot at, near, or in the direction of the deceased, he would be guilty at most of involuntary manslaughter. In the first instance, defendant’s evidence negates the essential element of causation. In the second, his testimony negates a finding of an intentional assault, an essential element of murder and voluntary manslaughter.
See State v. Ray,
This error was compounded by a further omission in the trial court’s mandate with reference to second degree murder. That portion of the judge’s charge read:
“I therefore instruct you that if you find from the evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, that on or about March 29, 1979, Jerry Norman Ward intentionally and with malice and without justification or excuse shot Joe Eddy White with a .22 caliber pistol, that being a deadly weapon, thereby proximately causing Joe Eddy White’s death, it would be your duty to return a verdict of guilty of second degree murder.
Judge Clark failed to complete this portion of the mandate with an instruction to the effect that if the jury did not find or had a reasonable doubt as to one or more of these facts, then it would be their duty to acquit the defendant of second degree murder. This omission was likewise error.
State v. Overman,
We stress that our opinion today is not to be construed as imposing any new duty or burden upon the trial court beyond that traditionally required by the mandatory provisions of G.S. 15A-1232. Certainly the trial judge is not required to frame his instructions with any greater particularity than is necessary to enable the jury to understand and apply the law to the evidence bearing upon the elements of the crime charged.
State v. Spratt,
New trial.
