How to access the above link?
Return to nccourts.org
Return to the Opinions Page
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
v
.
Durham County
No. 95CRS24168
TODD CHARLES BOGGESS
Glover & Petersen, P.A., by James R. Glover, for defendant.
Attorney General Roy Cooper, by Assistant Attorney General
William B. Crumpler, for the State.
WYNN, Judge.
This is a second appeal for Defendant arising from the facts
in this matter, which are set forth in State v. Boggess, 358 N.C.
676, 600 S.E.2d 453 (2004) (Boggess I)
.
The first appeal arose from his capital trial in January 1997
wherein a jury found him guilty of first-degree murder on the basis
of premeditation and deliberation; felony murder, with kidnapping
and robbery with a dangerous weapon serving as underlying felonies;
and murder by torture. In conformance with the jury's
recommendation, the trial court imposed a sentence of death as to
the murder, and sentenced Defendant to a term of 60 to 92 months'
imprisonment for the conviction of robbery with a dangerous weapon. Upon review, our Supreme Court in Boggess I awarded Defendant
a new trial based upon errors found in the jury selection process
and a jury instruction pertaining to the meaning of a life
sentence. Id.
This second appeal arises from his retrial wherein he was
convicted of first-degree murder, solely on the theory of felony
murder with kidnapping as the underlying felony; robbery with a
dangerous weapon; and first-degree kidnapping. The trial court
sentenced Defendant to a term of life imprisonment without parole.
In this appeal, Defendant challenges only his first-degree murder
conviction.
As stated in our Supreme Court's opinion in Boggess I, the
State's evidence tended to show that Defendant and his girlfriend,
Melanie Gray, were at Wrightsville Beach when they approached Danny
Pence, who was interested in selling his Ford Mustang. The three
rode for a test drive that resulted in the couple driving Mr. Pence
to Durham.
In Durham, the couple drove Mr. Pence to a wooded area and,
with his hands tied, led him to a partially constructed house with
the chimney and fireplace exposed. Defendant told Mr. Pence to get
into the fireplace, and unsuccessfully attempted to tie him.
Thereafter, Defendant hit Mr. Pence on the head several times with
a piece of floorboard and a brick, and covered Mr. Pence with
pieces of sheet metal. The couple was later observed driving Mr.
Pence's Mustang and pawning some items from the car. Mr. Pence's
body was found in a wooded area by a group of teenage boys.
At his second trial, Defendant's main theory of defense was
that he was in a dissociative state when he committed the killing
in Durham. Defendant offered the expert opinion of forensic
psychiatrist George Corvin, who testified that Defendant was in a
dissociative trance during the events that occurred in the woods
off Terry Road in Durham. Dr. Corvin equated automatism or
unconsciousness with dissociation, describing the latter as
follows:
Dissociation as a symptom is basically the
separation of normally connected mental
processes, such as emotions, cognition,
thinking, and also behavioral controls from
full conscious awareness. . . .
It is a temporary, can be sudden, alteration
in your level of consciousness, if you will.
It can last anywhere from moments to minutes
to hours and, in rare situations, people can
have conditions where they literally lose
complete memory of what and where they've been
for days even.
During this period of time, during
periods of Dissociation, an individual can
engage in acts that they don't really have
voluntary conscious control over or even full
awareness of what they are doing.
Following the evidence, Defendant requested instructions on
the defenses of automatism/unconsciousness, but the trial court
gave the instructions only as to first-degree murder by
premeditation and deliberation and by torture, ruling that the
defenses did not apply to felony murder. The trial court also
refused to give an instruction, which Defendant requested, stating
that a person found not guilty by reason of unconsciousness is
subject to involuntary commitment in a mental health facility.
In this appeal, Defendant argues that the trial court erred byrefusing to instruct that the unconsciousness defense applied to
the felony murder charges, and failing to instruct that he could be
involuntarily committed if found not guilty by reason of
unconsciousness. We disagree.
A trial court must give an instruction, at least in substance,
that is a correct statement of the law and supported by substantial
evidence. State v. Napier, 149 N.C. App. 462, 463-64, 560 S.E.2d
867, 868-69 (2002) (citation omitted).
The automatism defense has
been defined as:
the state of a person who, though capable of
action, is not conscious of what he is doing.
It is to be equated with unconsciousness,
involuntary action [and] implies that there
must be some attendant disturbance of
conscious awareness. Undoubtedly automatic
states exist and medically they may be defined
as conditions in which the patient may perform
simple or complex actions in a more or less
skilled or uncoordinated fashion without
having full awareness of what he is doing.
State v. Fields, 324 N.C. 204, 208, 376 S.E.2d 740, 742 (1989)
(citations omitted). The practical effect of automatism is that
the absence of consciousness not only precludes the existence of
any specific mental state, but also excludes the possibility of a
voluntary act without which there can be no criminal liability.
Id. (citations omitted).
Here, Defendant argues that he was entitled to an instruction
that the automatism defense applied to the felony-murder charges
because Dr. Corvin's testimony established that he was in a
dissociative state at the time of the killing, thus precluding the
necessary voluntary act. However, the felony-murder rule holdsthat a killing committed during the perpetration of a kidnapping is
first-degree murder. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14-17 (2007). All that is
required to support convictions for a felony offense and related
felony murder 'is that the elements of the underlying offense and
the murder occur in a time frame that can be perceived as a single
transaction.' State v. Trull, 349 N.C. 428, 449, 509 S.E.2d 178,
192 (1998) (citations omitted). Thus, the underlying offense
provides the voluntary act under the felony murder rule if the
elements of the underlying offense and the murder occur in a time
frame that can be perceived as a single transaction.
Id.
(citations and quotation marks omitted).
Dr. Corvin expressed the following opinion regarding when, in
the entire sequence of events, Defendant became dissociative:
Q: I want to try to clarify one thing. You're
saying while you can't precisely say when
[Defendant] went into a dissociative state, it
was somewhere in the woods off Terry Road. Is
that fair to say?
A: Yes, sir. Certainly, the way that I've
come to that opinion is that by the time they
came to the foundation or the rock walls, all
of the triggers were in place and all of the
stresses were at least well developed. Then
the statement, of course, that he made early
in those sequence of events all suggest that,
by that time and during that period, he was
dissociative.
Q: But prior to that, he was not in a
dissociative state. I mean well prior to it.
I'm not trying to trip you up with minutes--
A: I understand. There's certainly not clear
indication that, say, for example, that while
they were driving or while they were still at
Wrightsville that he was in a dissociative
state. It doesn't rule it out, but I have no
reason to conclude that.
Thus, neither Dr. Corvin's testimony nor any other evidence inthe record supports the theory that Defendant was in a dissociative
state at Wrightsville Beach or any other point before reaching
Durham. In other words, the automatism defense would not have been
at play when Defendant committed the kidnapping. Because all
events leading to the killing constitute a single transaction, no
additional voluntary act was required to complete the felony
murder. Therefore, the evidence did not support an instruction on
the automatism defense as applied to felony murder, and we reject
that argument.
Because we hold that Defendant was not entitled to an
instruction on the defense of automatism, we summarily reject
Defendant's contention that the trial court erred by refusing to
instruct the jury that a person found not guilty based on
automatism or unconsciousness could be involuntarily committed to
a facility for the mentally ill. The record does not show
evidence to support giving such an instruction.
No error.
Judges ROBERT C. HUNTER and ERVIN concur.
*** Converted from WordPerfect ***