Court Opinion

ID: 8903377
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-27 01:27:42.945235+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:08:00.596433
License: Public Domain

HILL, Judge.
Defendant brings forward five assignments of error, but we consider one question to be dispositive.
The defendant contends the trial judge committed prejudicial error by failing to instruct the jury on the elements of the crime of safecracking and attempted safecracking as was the law on 13 December 1976.
G.S. 14-89.1 on the date of the crime provided:
Any person who shall by the use of explosives, drills or tools unlawfully force open or attempt to force open or ‘pick’ the combination of a safe or vault used for storing money or other valuables shall, upon conviction thereof, receive a sentence .... (Emphasis added.)
The statute was amended by the legislature in 1977, and the words “used for money or other valuables” were omitted. The trial judge based his instruction on this law. The State contends that this Court should take judicial notice that a vault, a safe, or a depository box are, through common usage and understanding, the customary receptacles in which money and valuables are kept.
The law on 13 December 1976 included an element additional to the law that was the basis of the trial judge’s instruction. In State v. Hill, 272 N.C. 439, 443, 158 S.E. 2d 329 (1968), Justice Lake in writing an opinion as to the law of safecracking at that time stated, “the General Assembly has seen fit to provide for the imposition of a sentence of imprisonment up to life upon con*641viction of the offense there described. It has made an element of that offense the fact that the safe forced open be one ‘used for storing money or other valuables.’ ”
The judge erred to the prejudice of the defendant. He should have included in his charge all of the elements of the crime as it was defined in 1976. Because a new trial must be granted in this case, we do not consider the other questions.
For the reasons set out above, the defendant must be granted a
New trial.
Judges Martin (Robert M.) and Webb concur.