Court Opinion

ID: 8903694
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-27 01:31:11.766525+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:08:01.567658
License: Public Domain

HILL, Judge.
 Defendant has brought forth thirteen assignments of error. In reviewing defendant’s conviction, we must first address defend*638ant’s argument that the trial court erred when it denied defendant’s motions to dismiss the case. We find there was sufficient evidence of felonious larceny for the case to be submitted to the jury and that defendant’s motions to dismiss as of nonsuit were correctly denied.
The evidence taken in the light most favorable to the State tends to show that defendant went to the home of his sister and her husband on 5 June 1979 at approximately 10:30 p.m. Defendant asked his sister if he could speak with her husband, John York Jr. Defendantthen went into the living room where York was watching television, told him that a man was having trouble with a tractor the man had purchased for resale and asked if the man could park the tractor at York’s home overnight. York gave his permission; and in response to defendant’s further question, stated that his landlord would not care if the tractor was parked at York’s home overnight.
Defendant left the house. Subsequently, the tractor was driven in. Neither defendant’s sister nor her husband saw defendant drive the tractor or saw the man defendant referred to, although defendant’s sister did see defendant leave in his Toyota truck. The State’s evidence further shows that a tractor was stolen from the premises of Kinlaw International sometime after Sunday afternoon, 3 June, and that the tractor parked at the York home on 5 June was the same tractor that was stolen from Kinlaw.
The State relies, in this case upon the doctrine of recent possession. The doctrine is well established and provides that a “defendant’s possession of stolen goods soon after the theft is a circumstance tending to show the defendant is guilty of the larceny.” State v. Eppley, 282 N.C. 249, 253, 192 S.E. 2d 441 (1972).
The doctrine does not apply automatically, however. “It applies only when the possession is of a kind which manifests that the stolen goods came to the possessor by his own act or with his undoubted concurrence.” State v. Foster, 268 N.C. 480, 486, 151 S.E. 2d 62 (1966). Furthermore, the inference of guilt is one of fact, not of law. State v. Ford, 175 N.C. 797, 801, 95 S.E. 154 (1918).
We find a three part analysis to be helpful in reaching our conclusion that the judge did not err in submitting the case to the jury. The threshold issue is whether defendant ever possessed the tractor. We find that he did.
Defendant was in such physical proximity to the tractor that *639he had the power to control it to the exclusion of others and had the intent to control the tractor. See Eppley, supra, at p. 254. Although the evidence does not show who drove the tractor up to the York house, defendant testified that he told the stranger where to park the tractor close to the barn. Taken in the light most favorable to the State, the evidence shows that defendant meant for the tractor to be parked at the York home and was physically close enough to the tractor to direct its placement.
Before we can infer that the possessor, defendant, wrongfully took the tractor, we must answer a second question. Does the possession show a taking or privity in taking on the part of the possessor? State v. Smith, 24 N.C. 402, 408. Also see Foster, supra, at p. 486. Stated differently, does the fact that defendant was in possession, late in the evening, of a recently stolen tractor manifest that the tractor came into his possession by his own act or with his undoubted concurrence? Ford, supra, at p. 800. We believe so.
It is important to realize at this step in our analysis that we are not asking whether defendant’s possession conclusively points to a guilty taking. Rather, we are asking if the tractor came into defendant’s possession by his own action or by the action of one under his direction.
Smith, supra, is illustrative of this step in the analysis. In Smith, p. 408, tobacco had been stolen from a warehouse and placed in defendant’s warehouse. The Court held that before the doctrine of recent possession could be applied and the inference made that defendant had participated in the theft, it would have to be shown that the tobacco could not have been placed in defendant’s warehouse “without his agency or privity.” In the instant case, it is clear from the evidence that defendant came into possession of the tractor by his own action.
The third step in our analysis is the inference itself. When it is shown that defendant came into possession of recently stolen property, through his own action, the jury may infer a guilty taking. The trial court’s denial of defendant’s motion to dismiss was proper.
We have carefully examined each of defendant’s remaining assignments of error and find one to be meritorious. Defendant correctly argues that the trial court violated his due process rights when it denied his counsel’s motion, made prior to cross-examina*640tion of State’s witness John York Jr., that counsel be allowed to examine any witnesses’ statements that had been reduced to writing, and failed to make an in camera inspection of the writing.
Mr. York is defendant’s brother-in-law. York testified much as we have already stated the State’s evidence to be. York further testified that the morning after the tractor was parked at his home he went to work around 6:00 a.m. York returned home at 4:00 p.m. and backed the tractor away from his shed so he could get some tools and do some gardening. York testified that he moved the tractor by just “touching the two wires in the front together.”
York left the tractor where he had parked it and went to work the next day, 7 June. Upon his return, York’s wife informed him that carloads of people had stopped to examine the tractor that day. York then looked at the tractor, along with his landlord Baxter Varner, and asked Varner to call Kinlaw International. Varner called, and it was at this point that Maxwell Kinlaw, owner of Kinlaw International, first learned that his tractor was missing.
When the prosecution concluded its direct examination of York, defense counsel moved to examine any witnesses’ statements that had been reduced to writing. The trial judge denied the motion, and defendant objected. The denial violated defendant’s due process rights.
Our Supreme Court points out in State v. Hardy, 293 N.C. 105, 127, 235 S.E. 2d 828 (1977), that the United States Supreme Court has held “the prosecutor is constitutionally required to disclose ... at trial evidence that is favorable and material to the defense.” See United States v. Agurs, 427 U.S. 97, 49 L. Ed. 2d 342, 96 S.Ct. 2392 (1976). Due process is concerned that the suppressed evidence might affect the outcome at trial. Hardy at p. 127.
The issue then becomes: Who is to decide what evidence is favorable and material to the defense? The federal government has answered the question by providing that a defendant is automatically entitled to inspect, immediately prior to cross-examination, any prior statement of a material State’s witness. See Jencks v. United States, 353 U.S. 657, 1 L. Ed. 2d 1103, 77 S. Ct. 1007 (1957); See also 18 U.S.C. § 3500.
The North Carolina Supreme Court has mandated a different procedure. The Court held in Hardy, at p. 128, that when a specific *641request is made at trial for disclosure of evidence in the State’s possession, the judge must “at a minimum, order an in camera inspection and make appropriate findings of fact.... [I]f the judge, after the . . . examination, rules against the defendant . . . , the judge should order the sealed statement placed in the record for appellate review.” (Emphasis added.)
The procedure outlined by our Supreme Court is imminently logical. It insures defendant that no material, exculpatory pretrial statement will be suppressed. The procedure also provides the appellate branch with the text of the statement so that upon review we may effectively determine whether the defendant’s substantive due process rights have been protected.
The trial court failed to follow the Hardy procedure when it denied defendant’s motion and failed to make the in camera inspection prior to cross-examination.
Defendant’s procedural due process rights were violated.
For the reason set out above, defendant must be granted a
New trial.
Judge Arnold concurs.
Judge Hedrick dissents.