State v. Robinson ( 2022 )


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  •                      IN THE SUPREME COURT OF NORTH CAROLINA
    2022-NCSC-60
    No. 533A20
    Filed 6 May 2022
    STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
    v.
    LEWIE P. ROBINSON
    Appeal pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 70A-30(2) from the decision of a divided panel
    of the Court of Appeals, 
    275 N.C. App. 330
     (2020), affirming in part a judgment
    entered 5 December 2018 by Judge Marvin P. Pope, Jr., in Superior Court, Buncombe
    County, and remanding for resentencing. Heard in the Supreme Court on 21 March
    2022.
    Joshua Stein, Attorney General, by Jessica Macari, Assistant Attorney
    General for the State.
    Dylan J.C. Buffum, for defendant.
    HUDSON, Justice.
    ¶1           In State v. Dew, this Court determined that “the State may charge a defendant
    with multiple counts of assault only when there is substantial evidence that a distinct
    interruption occurred between assaults.” 
    379 N.C. 64
    , 2021-NCSC-124, ¶ 27. Here,
    we must apply that principle to the context of a guilty plea, in which the trial court
    sentenced defendant to separate and consecutive sentences based on several assault
    charges arising from one assaultive episode. Because the facts presented at the plea
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    hearing did not establish that a distinct interruption occurred between assaults, we
    affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals that the trial court lacked a sufficient
    factual basis to accept defendant’s guilty plea. Because we see no basis for rejecting
    defendant’s guilty plea in part, however, we modify the holding of the Court of
    Appeals by vacating the entire plea arrangement and remanding to the trial court for
    further proceedings.
    I.   Factual and Procedural Background
    A.   Charges and Guilty Plea
    ¶2          In May 2018, defendant and Leslie Wilson were in a dating relationship in
    which Wilson became the victim of defendant’s domestic violence. On or around the
    evening of 27 to 28 May 2018, Wilson and defendant were at Wilson’s home together
    when defendant attacked her. Specifically, defendant grabbed Wilson around the
    neck, punched her several times in the face and chest, and strangled her while
    holding her down on a bed. When law enforcement arrived, Wilson stated that
    defendant had held her captive for three days. Wilson sustained severe injuries to her
    jaw, neck, and chest from the attack, requiring extensive medical treatment. On 4
    December 2018, defendant was formally charged with four offenses: assault on a
    female, violation of a domestic violence protective order (DVPO), assault inflicting
    serious bodily injury, and assault by strangulation.
    ¶3          On 5 December 2018, defendant’s case came on for hearing in Buncombe
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    County Superior Court. Through his appointed counsel, defendant agreed to plead
    guilty to each of the four charged offenses. Under the terms of this original plea
    agreement, the State agreed to consolidate the four offenses into one Class F Felony
    judgment, with defendant receiving a single active prison sentence of 23–37 months.
    In establishing the factual basis for defendant’s plea, the State described the facts
    surrounding the charges as follows:
    Your Honor, this occurred on May the 28th, 2018. Officers
    responded just after midnight that morning . . . to [Wilson’s
    house]. The caller was Ms. Leslie Wilson who is present
    today, Your Honor. She stated that she’d been held captive
    by the defendant for three days and there was an active
    [DVPO] in place.
    When officers arrived, Ms. Wilson was present and stated
    that. . . defendant[ ] had grabbed her around the neck and
    that while he was choking her she had a taken a box cutter
    from him. During the assault that occurred over that night,
    Your Honor, Ms. Wilson was punched a number of times
    causing a broken jaw and a dislodged breast implant. She
    also had small cuts on her hands that were consistent with
    the altercation, as well as bruising around her neck. Ms.
    Wilson describes that during the strangulation she was
    unable to breathe and felt like she was going to pass out.
    She had tenderness about her neck for a few days after.
    Additionally, she was unable to eat food properly for about
    six weeks after the assault due to the condition of her jaw,
    Your Honor.
    ¶4         After defendant’s counsel agreed with this factual presentation by the State,
    the trial court requested to hear directly from Wilson, who was present at the hearing.
    In response to the trial court asking her to describe the incident, Wilson stated as
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    follows:
    We were both drinking and he was getting ill, so I dumped
    all the beer out. Dumped out everything I could find. And
    then I locked myself in the bathroom. And he broke two
    doors trying to get to me and he kept telling me to tell him
    where I had hid the beer. I didn’t want to tell him then that
    I’d poured it out because I was so afraid. But I poured it
    out, trying to keep him from getting to this point. And then
    he got after me and I had a box cutter, which I was trying
    to defend myself at that point, and he held me down on the
    bed. I actually blacked out twice. And when he was
    strangling me and told me I needed to learn where the
    pressure points was, with his elbow on my jawbone and my
    throat. And then when I got back up I did—I had the box
    cutter but I was trying—I was scared to death. I thought
    he was going to kill me. I couldn’t even hardly talk.
    When the trial court subsequently asked Wilson whether she understood the terms
    of defendant’s plea and why the court should accept the plea, Wilson responded
    affirmatively and stated she “just want[ed] to close this chapter of [her] life and move
    on.”
    ¶5          Ultimately, addressing defendant’s counsel, the trial court stated the
    following:
    So I’m telling you this, [defense counsel], I’m rejecting the
    plea the way it is now. I will sentence [defendant] to four
    consecutive sentences for active time, if you want to
    renegotiate your plea arrangement. Otherwise, I’ll sign off
    on it, won’t take it, and you can take it in front of another
    judge and see if you can sell this bill of goods to some other
    person. I’m not going to take it.
    The court then took a brief recess to allow the parties to reconvene.
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    ¶6         Twenty-four minutes later, the parties returned with a new plea arrangement.
    Under the new plea arrangement, defendant pleaded guilty to the same four charges
    as in the original plea arrangement: one count of assault on a female, one count of
    DVPO violation, one count of assault inflicting serious bodily injury, and one count of
    assault by strangulation. However, where the original plea agreement consolidated
    the four offenses into one sentence, the new plea arrangement offered four separate
    sentences: one Class F felony judgment with an active sentence of 23–37 months; one
    Class H felony judgment with a consecutive active sentence of 15–27 months; and two
    consecutive A1 misdemeanor judgments of two 150-day suspended sentences with
    supervised probation. Notably, the trial court did not solicit further factual
    statements to support the new plea arrangement; instead, it relied solely on the
    previous statements from the prosecutor and Wilson. After defendant duly agreed to
    the plea arrangement, the trial court accepted it and entered judgment accordingly.
    B. Court of Appeals
    ¶7         On 5 August 2019, defendant filed a petition for writ of certiorari with the
    North Carolina Court of Appeals pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 15A-1444. Although
    defendant’s petition requested appellate review of four issues, the Court of Appeals,
    in its discretion, allowed defendant’s petition on only one of these issues: whether the
    trial court had a sufficient factual basis to accept the new plea arrangement and enter
    separate and consecutive judgments accordingly. Specifically, defendant argued that
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    the trial court erred when it accepted the new plea arrangement and entered
    judgment on three assault charges because the factual summary provided by the
    State and Wilson did not establish more than one assault.
    ¶8            On 15 December 2020, the Court of Appeals filed a divided opinion in which
    the majority concluded that “there was an insufficient factual basis for [d]efendant’s
    guilty plea.” Robinson, 275 N.C. App. at 331.
    ¶9            First, the majority noted that by statute, a “judge may not accept a plea of
    guilty . . . without first determining that there is a factual basis for the plea.” N.C.G.S.
    § 15A-1022(c) (2021). The court observed that such a factual basis may be provided
    by a statement of facts by the prosecutor, and that a “trial court may also ‘consider
    any information properly brought to its attention in determining whether there is a
    factual basis for a plea of guilty.’ ” Id. at 334 (quoting State v. Dickens, 
    299 N.C. 76
    ,
    79 (1980) (cleaned up)). Further, relying on its own precedent in State v. Williams,1
    the majority noted that “in order for a defendant to be charged with multiple counts
    of assault, there must be multiple assaults. This requires evidence of a distinct
    interruption in the original assault followed by a second assault.” Robinson, 275 N.C.
    App. at 335 (quoting State v. Williams, 
    201 N.C. App. 161
    , 182 (2009)).
    ¶ 10          Here, the Court of Appeals majority noted, “the State’s summary of the factual
    1The Court of Appeals opinion was published before this Court’s ruling in State v.
    Dew, 
    379 N.C. 64
    , 2021-NCSC-124. In Dew, the Court clarified the requirements for being
    charged with multiple counts of assault.
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    basis for the plea was brief” and “indicated that this was a singular assault, without
    distinct interruption, during which Wilson was strangled, beaten, and cut.” Robinson,
    275 N.C. App. at 334–35. The majority observed that “nothing in the State’s factual
    summary suggests that there was a distinct interruption that would support multiple
    assault convictions.” Id. at 335. Instead, “the prosecutor’s language shows that she
    only referenced a singular assault during her summary of the factual basis for the
    plea arrangement,” using singular language such as “the assault” or “the altercation.”
    Id. “Moreover,” the majority noted, “Wilson’s statement to the trial court at the
    hearing provided no evidence of a distinct interruption in the assault.” Id. Finally,
    the majority stated that “[t]he fact that [d]efendant held Wilson captive for three days
    does not, alone, compel the conclusion that he committed multiple assaults against
    Wilson during that period.” Id. at 336. Given this lack of substantial evidence of a
    distinct interruption in the assault, the Court of Appeals majority concluded “that
    [d]efendant has shown than the State did not provide a sufficient factual basis for the
    trial court to accept his guilty plea and enter judgments on multiple assault charges.”
    Id.
    ¶ 11         Second, because the offense of assault inflicting serious bodily injury (Class F
    felony) is classified as more severe than the offenses of assault by strangulation (Class
    H felony) and assault on a female (Class A1 misdemeanor), the Court of Appeals
    majority concluded that “[d]efendant could only be punished for the offense of assault
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    inflicting serious bodily injury, and not for the other two assault offenses as well.” Id.
    at 338. Specifically, the majority reasoned that “[b]ecause the factual basis for
    [d]efendant’s guilty plea . . . supported just one assault conviction, the trial court was
    only authorized to enter judgment and sentence [d]efendant for one assault—that
    which provided for the greatest punishment of the three assault offenses to which
    [d]efendant pleaded guilty.” Id.
    ¶ 12         Finally, relying on this Court’s ruling in State v. Fields, the Court of Appeals
    majority concluded that “the appropriate course of action is to arrest judgment on
    [d]efendant’s convictions for assault on a female. . . and assault by strangulation[,]”
    while affirming defendant’s conviction for assault inflicting serious bodily injury.
    Robinson, 275 N.C. App. at 338 (citing State v. Fields, 
    374 N.C. 629
    , 636–37 (2020)).
    The majority subsequently remanded the case to the trial court with instructions to
    arrest these two lesser judgments and to resentence defendant on the remaining
    charges. 
    Id.
    ¶ 13         Judge Berger dissented. See 
    id. at 339
     (Berger, J., dissenting). The dissent
    would have denied defendant’s petition for writ of certiorari because, it its view,
    defendant failed to make the required showing of merit or that error was probably
    committed below. Specifically, the dissent relied upon this Court’s ruling in State v.
    Rambert, 
    341 N.C. 173
     (1995), to conclude that “[d]efendant’s separate and distinct
    actions [during the assaultive episode] are not the same conduct,” and therefore that
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    the trial court did not err in sentencing defendant for separate assaults. 
    Id.
     at 339–
    40 (Berger, J., dissenting).
    ¶ 14         In Rambert, the defendant was charged and convicted of three separate counts
    of discharging a firearm into occupied property after firing three shots from a
    handgun into an occupied car. 
    341 N.C. at
    174–176. In rejecting defendant’s claim
    that this evidence supported only a single conviction, not three, this Court “noted that
    (1) the defendant employed his thought process each time he fired the weapon, (2)
    each act was distinct in time, and (3) each bullet hit the vehicle in a different place.”
    Dew, 
    379 N.C. 64
    , 2021-NCSC-124, ¶ 25 (citing Rambert, 
    341 N.C. at 177
    ).
    ¶ 15         Applying these Rambert factors to the case at bar, the dissent here reasoned
    that defendant’s actions of (1) grabbing Wilson by the neck, (2) punching Wilson in
    the face and chest, and (3) placing his forearm on Wilson’s neck constituted “at least
    three separate and distinct acts” for which the trial court could properly sentence
    defendant separately. Robinson, 275 N.C. App. at 342–43 (Berger, J., dissenting).
    Specifically, the dissent noted that defendant’s actions during the assaultive episode
    each required a different thought process, were distinct in time, and resulted in
    injuries to different body parts. Id. at 343 (Berger, J., dissenting). Accordingly, the
    dissent would have held that the factual showing made at the hearing reasonably
    supported the trial court’s decision to sentence defendant based on three separate
    assault offenses. Id. (Berger, J., dissenting).
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    C. Present Appeal
    ¶ 16         On 19 January 2021, the State filed a notice of appeal with this Court based
    on the Court of Appeals dissent. In its appeal, the State argues that the trial court
    properly determined that there was a factual basis for defendant’s guilty plea, and
    therefore that the Court of Appeals majority erred in reversing the trial court’s
    judgment and sentences.
    ¶ 17         First, the State argues that this Court has not yet identified the applicable
    standard of review, but that it has made clear that the question before the trial court
    is limited and the scope of review is narrow. The State contends that the Court of
    Appeals majority erred in reviewing the factual basis for defendant’s guilty plea de
    novo based on a “statutory interpretation” standard of review. Even if the correct
    standard of review is de novo, the State contends, “review is limited to a narrower
    question than what the Court of Appeals majority addressed . . . [because] [t]he test
    applied by the trial court is merely whether there is some substantive material
    independent of the plea itself which tends to show guilt. Because the trial court’s
    determination below was “distinctly fact-bound[,]” the State contends, appellate
    courts must consider it “with respect for [the] trial court[’s] discretion.”
    ¶ 18         Second, the State argues that the facts presented to the trial court during
    defendant’s hearing adequately support defendant’s guilty plea to three distinct
    assaults. The State notes that under N.C.G.S. § 15A-1022(c), a trial court “may not
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    accept a plea of guilty . . . without first determining that there is a factual basis for
    the plea.” The State notes that this determination requires that “some substantive
    material independent of the guilty plea itself appear of record which tends to show
    that defendant is, in fact, guilty.” State v. Sinclair, 
    301 N.C. 193
    , 199 (1980).
    ¶ 19         Here, the State argues, the facts presented at the hearing by the prosecutor
    and Wilson adequately support the trial court’s sentencing under each distinct charge
    of assault. As reasoned by the Court of Appeals dissent, the State contends that
    defendant’s actions constitute three distinct assaults: (1) grabbing Wilson’s neck
    (assault on a female); (2) punching Wilson in the face and chest (assault inflicting
    serious bodily injury); and (3) pushing his forearm against Wilson’s neck (assault by
    strangulation). The State argues that these facts “easily clear [Sinclair’s] threshold
    of ‘some substantive material independent of the plea itself . . . which tends to show’
    that the defendant committed the crimes charged against him.” As such, the State
    argues that the Court of Appeals majority erred in ruling otherwise.
    ¶ 20         Third, the State argues that the Court of Appeals majority followed the wrong
    analytical framework when it determined that only one assault had occurred.
    Specifically, the State asserts that the majority gave improper weight to the “distinct
    interruption” standard instead of following this Court’s precedent from State v.
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    Rambert, 
    341 N.C. 173
    , (1995).2 Under Rambert, the State contends that the relevant
    factors in determining whether a defendant committed one or multiple criminal acts
    include: (1) whether each action required defendant to employ a separate thought
    process; (2) whether each act was distinct in time; and (3) whether each act resulted
    in a different outcome. Under this analysis, the State argues, no “distinct
    interruption” is required between assaults because defendant attacked Wilson in “at
    least three different ways,” rendering the three assault charges and sentences proper.
    ¶ 21          Finally, at oral arguments, which took place after this Court’s ruling in Dew,
    the State argued that even under Dew’s distinct interruption requirement, sufficient
    facts were summarized during the hearing to support the defendant’s separate
    sentences. For instance, counsel for the State proffered that Wilson pouring the beer
    down the sink, locking herself in the bathroom, blacking out twice, or defendant
    “getting ill” could each reasonably constitute a distinct interruption in the assaultive
    episode. Further, the State emphasized that Wilson told law enforcement that
    defendant had held her captive in the home for three days, and that over this
    extended period of time “there had to have been ebbs and flows in the momentum of
    the attack—there had to be lapses of time to calm down, to eat, to go to the bathroom.”
    2 The briefs from both the State and defendant here were filed before the publication
    of this Court’s ruling in State v. Dew, 
    379 N.C. 64
    , 2021-NCSC-124. Dew was published
    between the filing of the briefs and oral arguments.
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    As such, the State argued, the trial court had a sufficient factual foundation for
    defendant’s three separate judgments and sentences.
    ¶ 22           In response, defendant argues that the Court of Appeals majority did not err.
    Regarding the proper standard of review, defendant asserts that the trial court’s
    ruling on the sufficiency of a factual basis is subject to de novo appellate review
    because “whether the record shows that there was a sufficient factual basis for the
    plea is a quintessential question of law[.]” Because the only question following a
    guilty plea is whether the uncontested facts support each of the elements of each of
    the charged offenses, defendant argues that “[t]his is no different than appellate
    review of a motion to dismiss after the close of evidence[,]” which is conducted de
    novo.
    ¶ 23           Next, defendant argues that the Court of Appeals ruling was correct on the
    merits because the facts presented to the trial court did not support entry of judgment
    on three distinct assaults. Rather, defendant argues that the factual basis provided
    by the State would have supported any one of the assault charges, but not all three.
    Defendant particularly notes that the prosecutor’s description of the assault
    repeatedly referred to “the assault” as a singular event, not multiple or distinct
    attacks, and that Wilson’s description of the attack corroborated this singularity. As
    such, defendant contends, “nothing in the State’s recitation would support an
    inference that three separate assaults occurred[.]”
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    ¶ 24         In alignment with the majority opinion below, defendant argues that to
    support multiple assault convictions stemming from a single transaction, evidence
    must establish a distinct interruption in the transaction followed by a separate and
    distinct assault. “While the Rambert Court determined each distinct act of
    discharging a gun constituted a separate unit of prosecution and supported a separate
    conviction[,]” defendant asserts, “nothing in Rambert suggested assault is defined the
    same way.”
    ¶ 25         Finally, at oral arguments, defense counsel argued that Dew’s distinct
    interruption requirement is controlling and dispositive in this case because the
    factual summary provided by the State and Wilson at the hearing described the
    assault as one continuous episode, without any distinct interruptions. Although
    Wilson reported that defendant had held her captive for three days, defense counsel
    noted that the hearing statements and the record only described one distinct
    assaultive episode, not an ongoing attack over the course of three days. Accordingly,
    defendant contends, the Court of Appeals majority correctly determined that the trial
    court lacked a sufficient factual basis to sentence defendant on three separate assault
    convictions.
    II.     Analysis
    ¶ 26         Now, we must determine whether the trial court had a sufficient factual basis
    to sentence defendant to three separate and consecutive assault sentences. Under the
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    distinct interruption requirement established by Dew, 
    379 N.C. 64
    , 2021-NCSC-124,
    we hold that it did not, and therefore partially affirm the ruling of the Court of
    Appeals majority. 2021-NCSC-124. However, because defendant’s guilty plea must
    be accepted or rejected as a whole, rather than piecemeal, we modify the holding of
    the Court of Appeals by vacating the entire plea arrangement and remanding to the
    trial court for further proceedings.
    A. Standard of Review
    ¶ 27            First, we must address the appropriate standard of review. Below, the Court
    of Appeals majority determined that “[d]efendant raises an issue of statutory
    construction[,]” and thus applied de novo review. Robinson, 275 N.C. App. at 333. On
    appeal, the State contends that in light of the trial court’s limited test in these
    circumstances, appellate review should be narrow and deferential. Defendant,
    contrastingly, asserts that “[w]hether the record shows that there was a sufficient
    factual basis for the plea is a quintessential question of law, which is properly subject
    to de novo review.”
    ¶ 28            As an initial matter, we disagree with the reasoning of the Court of Appeals
    majority that “[d]efendant raises an issue of statutory construction.” The core dispute
    between the parties here does not revolve around competing interpretations of a
    statute, but around competing applications of certain legal requirements to these
    facts.
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    ¶ 29          Nevertheless, we agree with the ultimate determination of the Court of
    Appeals majority and with defendant that this appeal is properly reviewed de novo.
    Under N.C.G.S. § 15A-1022(c), a “judge may not accept a plea of guilty . . . without
    first determining that there is a factual basis for the plea.” In State v. Agnew, this
    Court observed that this statutory condition “requires an independent judicial
    determination that a sufficient factual basis exists before a trial court accepts a guilty
    plea.” 
    361 N.C. 333
    , 333–34 (2007) (emphasis added).3 At its core, such an
    “independent judicial determination” requires the trial court to exercise judgment
    and apply legal principles by considering whether the stipulated facts fulfill the
    various elements of the offense or offenses to which the defendant is pleading guilty.
    Although a defendant who pleads guilty can and does stipulate to the factual
    summary presented by the State, this stipulation cannot and does not relieve the trial
    court of its subsequent duty to conduct an “independent judicial determination that
    a sufficient factual basis exists” to support the legal requirements of the charged
    offenses. 
    Id.
     Accordingly, we hold that a trial court’s determination as to whether a
    sufficient factual basis exists to support a defendant’s guilty plea is a conclusion of
    law reviewable de novo on appeal. Cf. Plott v. Plott, 
    313 N.C. 63
    , 73 (1985) (noting
    3 Although this Court in Agnew did not formally state that it was reviewing the trial
    court’s determination de novo, it functionally engaged in de novo review by considering anew
    the factual information before the trial court when the defendant’s guilty plea was accepted.
    See Agnew, 361 N.C. at 337 (considering the facts and record presented to the trial court
    before its guilty plea determination).
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    that a trial court’s determination is “properly denominated a conclusion of law [when]
    it states the legal basis upon which [a] defendant’s liability may be predicated under
    the applicable statute(s)”); Woodard v. Mordecai, 
    234 N.C. 463
    , 472 (1951) (observing
    that conclusions of law are “reached by . . . an application of fixed rules of law”).
    B. “Distinct Interruption” Analysis
    ¶ 30         Second, we must consider whether the trial court erred in determining that it
    had a sufficient factual basis to sentence defendant to three separate and consecutive
    assault sentences. As noted by both parties during oral arguments, this
    determination is governed by this Court’s recent ruling in State v. Dew. 
    379 N.C. 64
    ,
    2021-NCSC-124.
    ¶ 31         Before Dew, different Court of Appeals decisions applied somewhat differing
    methods of analysis to determine whether the facts of one assaultive episode
    supported multiple assault charges. While these cases were unified in requiring “a
    distinct interruption in the original assault followed by a second assault” in order to
    support multiple assault charges, State v. Brooks, 
    138 N.C. App. 185
    , 189 (2000), they
    were divided as to what factors illustrated such a “distinct interruption.” In some
    cases, the Court of Appeals generally looked for evidence of a clear and significant
    break or demarcation within the assaultive episode. See, e.g., Robinson, 275 N.C. App.
    at 335–36 (finding “no evidence of a distinct interruption in the assault”); State v.
    McPhaul, 
    256 N.C. App. 303
    , 317–18 (2017) (same). In others, the Court of Appeals
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    more specifically applied this Court’s analysis in State v. Rambert to consider whether
    the defendant’s actions employed different thought processes, were distinct in time,
    and caused different injuries. See, e.g., State v. Dew, 
    270 N.C. App. 458
    , 462–63
    (applying the three Rambert factors to determine whether there was a distinct
    interruption between assaults); State v. Littlejohn, 
    158 N.C. App. 628
    , 636 (2003)
    (same). The use of these differing analytical frameworks created tension between
    various Court of Appeals opinions considering the issue. See, e.g., Robinson, 275 N.C.
    App. at 340 (Berger, J., dissenting) (opining that the majority opinion “ignores
    binding precedent and fails to conduct an analysis under State v. Rambert”); compare
    State v. Dew, 
    270 N.C. App. 458
    , 462–63 (applying Rambert factors) with Robinson,
    275 N.C. App. at 335–36 (not applying Rambert factors).
    ¶ 32         In Dew, this Court resolved this tension in favor of the more general “distinct
    interruption” approach. 
    379 N.C. 64
    , 2021-NCSC-124. Because “[m]ultiple contacts
    can still be considered a single assault[ ] even though each punch or kick would
    require a different thought process, would not occur simultaneously, and would land
    in different places on the victim’s body[,]” this Court “conclude[d] that the Rambert
    factors are not the ideal analogy for an assault analysis.” Accordingly, we “decline[d]
    to extend Rambert to assault cases generally.” Id. at ¶ 26. Instead, this Court
    provided examples—though not an exclusive list—of what can qualify as a distinct
    interruption: “an intervening event, a lapse of time in which a reasonable person may
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    calm down, an interruption in the momentum of the attack, a change in location, or
    some other clear break delineating the end of one assault and the beginning of
    another.” Id. at ¶ 27. Likewise, the Court clarified “what does not constitute a distinct
    interruption.” For instance,
    the fact that a victim has multiple, distinct injuries alone
    is not sufficient evidence of a distinct interruption such
    that a defendant can be charged with multiple counts of
    assault. The magnitude of the harm done to the victim can
    be taken into account during sentencing but does not
    automatically permit the State to stack charges against a
    defendant without evidence of a distinct interruption.
    Id. at ¶ 28. Further, a defendant’s “different methods of attack standing alone are
    insufficient evidence of a distinct interruption.” Id. at ¶ 35.
    ¶ 33         Here, the parties agreed at oral argument that Dew’s “distinct interruption”
    analysis governed this case but argued for different results. The State argued that
    any number of events noted in the factual summaries provided by the prosecutor and
    Wilson at the hearing could indicate a distinct interruption in the attack, including
    Wilson pouring out the beer, Wilson locking herself in the bathroom, Wilson blacking
    out, or defendant “getting ill.” Further, the State emphasized that Wilson reported
    that defendant held her captive in the home for three days, and that over this
    extended period of time “there had to have been ebbs and flows in the momentum of
    the attack” constituting a distinct interruption. Contrastingly, defense counsel
    asserted that the factual summary provided by the State and Wilson at the hearing
    STATE V. ROBINSON
    2022-NCSC-60
    Opinion of the Court
    clearly and repeatedly described the assault as one continuous episode, without any
    evidence of distinct interruptions.
    ¶ 34         We agree with the Court of Appeals majority and defendant that the facts
    provided at the hearing fail to establish evidence of a distinct interruption in the
    assault to support multiple assault convictions and sentences. Neither the
    prosecutor’s factual summary nor Wilson’s statement note “an intervening event, a
    lapse of time in which a reasonable person may calm down, an interruption in the
    momentum of the attack, a change in location, or some other clear break delineating
    the end of one assault and the beginning of another.” Id. at ¶ 27. Instead, the factual
    statements as given describe a confined and continuous attack in which defendant
    choked and punched Wilson in rapid succession and without pause or interruption.
    ¶ 35         We acknowledge that one can imagine a distinct interruption being described
    here with additional facts. For instance, if the facts indicated that the attack began
    in the bathroom but then moved to the bedroom, such a change in location may
    constitute a distinct interruption. Likewise, if there was evidence presented of
    multiple different attacks occurring over the course of Wilson’s three-day captivity,
    such a lapse of time and interruption in momentum could clearly constitute a distinct
    interruption. However, like the trial court, this Court must consider the factual
    summary not as it could have been, but as it was presented. As it was presented, the
    factual summary provided by the State and Wilson at the hearing describe no such
    STATE V. ROBINSON
    2022-NCSC-60
    Opinion of the Court
    discernible sequence of events indicating a distinct interruption in the assault.
    ¶ 36         Without evidence of a distinct interruption in the assault, the trial court did
    not have a sufficient factual basis upon which to sentence defendant to separate and
    consecutive assault sentences. Accordingly, we affirm the ruling of the Court of
    Appeals majority that the trial court erred when it accepted the plea and entered
    judgment on the three different assault charges. Robinson, 275 N.C. App. at 333–34.
    C. Remedy
    ¶ 37         Finally, we must consider an appropriate remedy. Below, the Court of Appeals
    majority relied on this Court’s ruling in State v. Fields to determine that “the
    appropriate course of action is to arrest judgment on [d]efendant’s convictions for
    assault on a female . . . and assault by strangulation[,]” and thus remanded the case
    to the trial court to resentence defendant only on the remaining two charges (assault
    inflicting serious bodily injury and violation of a DVPO). Robinson, 275 N.C. App. at
    338 (citing Fields, 374 N.C. at 636–37).
    ¶ 38         We cannot agree. Although this Court in Fields held that “the Court of Appeals
    should have arrested the trial court’s judgment for [a lesser included offense] rather
    than vacating the judgment[,]” 374 N.C. at 637, a key procedural difference between
    the cases renders that remedy improper here: whereas the defendant in Fields was
    convicted via jury trial, defendant here was convicted via guilty plea. Id. at 631.
    Because a guilty plea, like a contract, is the result of nuanced negotiations between
    STATE V. ROBINSON
    2022-NCSC-60
    Opinion of the Court
    a defendant and the State, it is not the role of an appellate court to accept certain
    portions of the plea deal while rejecting others. See State v. Collins, 
    300 N.C. 142
    , 149
    (1980) (viewing a guilty plea “in light of the analogous law of contracts” in which “the
    consideration given for the prosecutor’s promise . . . is defendant’s actual performance
    by [pleading guilty]”). Rather, defendant’s plea arrangement constitutes a finished
    product which must be accepted or rejected in its entirety, not piecemeal. See
    N.C.G.S. § 15A-1023 (describing a judge’s authority to either accept or reject a plea
    arrangement). Accordingly, we modify the ruling of the Court of Appeals on this issue
    by arresting each of the trial court’s judgments and remanding to the trial court for
    any further proceedings.
    III.    Conclusion
    ¶ 39         According to our decision in Dew, “the State may charge a defendant with
    multiple counts of assault only when there is substantial evidence that a distinct
    interruption occurred between assaults.” 
    379 N.C. 64
    , 2021-NCSC-124, ¶ 27. Because
    the facts presented at defendant’s plea hearing did not establish that a distinct
    interruption occurred between assaults, we affirm the ruling of the Court of Appeals
    that the trial court lacked a sufficient factual basis to accept defendant’s guilty plea.
    However, because defendant’s guilty plea must be accepted or rejected as a whole, we
    modify the holding of the Court of Appeals by vacating the entire plea arrangement
    STATE V. ROBINSON
    2022-NCSC-60
    Opinion of the Court
    and remanding to that court for further remand to the trial court for further
    proceedings.
    MODIFIED AND AFFIRMED.
    Justice BERGER did not participate in the consideration or decision of this
    case.
    Chief Justice NEWBY dissenting.
    ¶ 40         This case requires us to determine whether the trial court properly determined
    that there was a factual basis for defendant’s guilty plea. A guilty plea must be
    substantiated in fact by some substantive material independent of the plea itself
    which tends to show that the defendant is guilty. Moreover, for sentences to be
    entered against a defendant for multiple assaults arising from closely connected
    conduct, the evidence must show a distinct interruption occurred between the
    assaults. Here the prosecutor’s factual summary and the testimony of the victim
    tended to show that there was a distinct interruption between each assault.
    Accordingly, there was a factual basis for defendant’s plea to each assault and the
    trial court properly entered each judgment and sentence against defendant. I
    respectfully dissent.
    ¶ 41         A defendant’s appeal following a guilty plea is limited by statute. State v.
    Ledbetter, 
    371 N.C. 192
    , 195, 
    814 S.E.2d 39
    , 42 (2018). N.C.G.S. § 15A-1444(e)
    provides that a “defendant is not entitled to appellate review as a matter of right
    when he has entered a plea of guilty . . . to a criminal charge in the superior court,
    but he may petition the appellate division for review by writ of certiorari.” N.C.G.S.
    § 15A-1444(e) (2021). “Certiorari is a discretionary writ, to be issued only for good
    and sufficient cause shown.” State v. Grundler, 
    251 N.C. 177
    , 189, 
    111 S.E.2d 1
    , 9
    (1959) (emphasis omitted). The Court of Appeals may issue a writ of certiorari when
    STATE V. ROBINSON
    2022-NCSC-60
    Newby, C.J., dissenting
    the petition “show[s] ‘merit or that error was probably committed below.’ ” State v.
    Ricks, 
    378 N.C. 737
    , 2021-NCSC-116, ¶ 6 (quoting Grundler, 
    251 N.C. at 189
    , 
    111 S.E.2d at 9
    ). This Court “review[s] the Court of Appeals’ decision to allow a petition
    for writ of certiorari . . . for an abuse of discretion.” Ricks, ¶ 5.
    ¶ 42          “[A] plea arrangement or bargain is ‘[a] negotiated agreement between a
    prosecutor and a criminal defendant whereby the defendant pleads guilty to a lesser
    offense or to one of multiple charges in exchange for some concession by the
    prosecutor . . . .’ ” State v. Alexander, 
    359 N.C. 824
    , 830, 
    616 S.E.2d 914
    , 919 (2005)
    (second alteration in original) (quoting Plea Bargain, Black’s Law Dictionary (7th ed.
    1999)). Because “[a] plea of guilty . . . involves the waiver of various fundamental
    rights,” State v. Sinclair, 
    301 N.C. 193
    , 197, 
    270 S.E.2d 418
    , 421 (1980), the General
    Assembly has enacted legislation to protect criminal defendants, see State v. Agnew,
    
    361 N.C. 333
    , 335, 
    643 S.E.2d 581
    , 583 (2007) (“[O]ur legislature has enacted laws to
    ensure guilty pleas are informed and voluntary.”).
    ¶ 43          One such protection is that “guilty pleas must be substantiated in fact as
    prescribed by [N.C.G.S. § 15A-1022(c)].” Id. N.C.G.S. § 15A-1022(c) provides that
    [t]he judge may not accept a plea of guilty or no contest
    without first determining that there is a factual basis for
    the plea. This determination may be based upon
    information including but not limited to:
    (1) A statement of the facts by the prosecutor.
    (2) A written statement of the defendant.
    STATE V. ROBINSON
    2022-NCSC-60
    Newby, C.J., dissenting
    (3) An examination of the presentence report.
    (4) Sworn testimony, which may include reliable
    hearsay.
    (5) A statement of facts by the defense counsel.
    N.C.G.S. § 15A-1022(c) (2021). Moreover,
    [t]he five sources listed in the statute are not
    exclusive, and therefore ‘[t]he trial judge may consider any
    information properly brought to his attention.’ State v.
    Dickens, 
    299 N.C. 76
    , 79, 
    261 S.E.2d 183
    , 185–86 (1980).
    Nonetheless, such information ‘must appear in the record,
    so that an appellate court can determine whether the plea
    has been properly accepted.’ Sinclair, 
    301 N.C. at 198
    , 
    270 S.E.2d at 421
    . Further, in enumerating these five sources,
    the statute ‘contemplate[s] that some substantive material
    independent of the plea itself appear of record which tends
    to show that defendant is, in fact, guilty.’ 
    Id. at 199
    , 
    270 S.E.2d at
    421–22.
    Agnew, 
    361 N.C. at 336
    , 
    643 S.E.2d at 583
     (second and third alterations in original).
    ¶ 44         Here defendant was charged with, inter alia, misdemeanor assault on a female,
    see N.C.G.S. § 14-33(c)(2) (2021); felony assault inflicting serious bodily injury, see
    N.C.G.S. § 14-32.4(a) (2021); and felony assault by strangulation, see N.C.G.S.
    § 14-32.4(b) (2021). Our case law defines “assault” as “an overt act or an attempt, or
    the unequivocal appearance of an attempt, with force and violence, to do some
    immediate physical injury to the person of another, which show of force . . . must be
    sufficient to put a person of reasonable firmness in fear of immediate bodily harm.”
    State v. Dew, 
    379 N.C. 64
    , 2021-NCSC-124, ¶ 23 (quoting State v. Roberts, 
    270 N.C. 655
    , 658, 
    155 S.E.2d 303
    , 305 (1967)). Moreover, for defendant to be sentenced for
    STATE V. ROBINSON
    2022-NCSC-60
    Newby, C.J., dissenting
    multiple assaults, it must appear that “a distinct interruption occurred between
    assaults.” Id. ¶ 27.
    ¶ 45         Here there was significant substantive material independent from the plea
    itself that tended to show a distinct interruption occurred between the assaults. First,
    the prosecutor offered a factual summary at the plea hearing:
    Your Honor, this occurred on May the 28th, 2018.
    Officers responded just after midnight that morning, Your
    Honor, to 37 Amirite Drive, A-m-i-r-i-t-e, Drive in Candler,
    North Carolina. The caller was Ms. Leslie Wilson who is
    present today, Your Honor. She stated that she’d been held
    captive by the defendant for three days and there was an
    active [domestic violence protective order] in place.
    When officers arrived, Ms. Wilson was present and
    stated that Lewie Robinson, the defendant, had grabbed
    her around the neck and that while he was choking her she
    had taken a box cutter from him. During the assault that
    occurred over that night, Your Honor, Ms. Wilson was
    punched a number of times causing a broken jaw and a
    dislodged breast implant. She also had small cuts on her
    hands that were consistent with the altercation, as well as
    bruising around her neck. Ms. Wilson describes that during
    the strangulation she was unable to breathe and felt like
    she was going to pass out. She had tenderness about her
    neck for a few days after. Additionally, she was unable to
    eat food properly for about six weeks after the assault due
    to the condition of her jaw, Your Honor. Thankfully, thanks
    to health insurance, she was not out-of-pocket any money
    for restitution which is why we’re not seeking restitution
    in this case.
    Then, when the trial court asked defendant’s attorney if she “agree[d] with the factual
    presentation,” defendant’s attorney responded, “Yes.”
    STATE V. ROBINSON
    2022-NCSC-60
    Newby, C.J., dissenting
    ¶ 46         At the trial court’s request, Ms. Wilson testified regarding the events
    underlying the assault charges:
    We were both drinking and he was getting ill, so I
    dumped all the beer out. Dumped out everything I could
    find. And then I locked myself in the bathroom. And he
    broke two doors trying to get to me and he kept telling me
    to tell him where I had hid the beer. I didn’t want to tell
    him then that I’d poured it out because I was so afraid. But
    I poured it out, trying to keep him from getting to this
    point. And when he got after me and I had a box cutter,
    which I was trying to defend myself at that point, and he
    held me down on the bed. I actually blacked out twice. And
    then he was strangling me and told me I needed to learn
    where the pressure points was, with his elbow on my
    jawbone and my throat. And then when I got back up I
    did—I had the box cutter but I was trying—I was scared to
    death. I thought he was going to kill me. I couldn’t even
    hardly talk.
    ¶ 47         This evidence tends to show that distinct interruptions occurred between the
    assaults. One assault began when defendant “broke two doors trying to get to” the
    bathroom, where Ms. Wilson had locked herself in, and then “grabbed [Ms. Wilson]
    around the neck and . . . was choking her” before she took a box cutter from him. At
    some point, defendant “got after [Ms. Wilson]” and chased her from the bathroom to
    the bedroom. This change in location constituted a distinct interruption. After this
    interruption, defendant “held [Ms. Wilson] down on the bed.” Defendant “strang[led]
    [Ms. Wilson] and told [her that she] needed to learn where the pressure points w[ere],
    with his elbow on [Ms. Wilson’s] jawbone and [her] throat.” Defendant thus caused
    Ms. Wilson to black out, creating another distinct interruption. When she awoke, Ms.
    STATE V. ROBINSON
    2022-NCSC-60
    Newby, C.J., dissenting
    Wilson still “had the box cutter” and tried to defend herself, but defendant
    nonetheless committed another assault by “punch[ing] [Ms. Wilson] a number of
    times causing a broken jaw and a dislodged breast implant.” Thus, the substantive
    material independent of the plea tends to show that a distinct interruption occurred
    between the assaults. Accordingly, the trial court did not lack authority to sentence
    defendant for each assault.
    ¶ 48         In holding otherwise, the majority errs by wrongly applying a de novo standard
    of review to the trial court’s determination that a factual basis existed for defendant’s
    plea. In so doing, the majority expands the role of the trial court beyond that
    envisioned by the statute, into one similar to the role performed when reviewing a
    motion to dismiss. After a defendant moves to dismiss the charges during a trial, the
    trial court must determine “whether there is substantial evidence (1) of each essential
    element of the offense charged, or of a lesser offense included therein, and (2) of
    defendant’s being the perpetrator of such offense.” State v. Scott, 
    356 N.C. 591
    , 595,
    
    573 S.E.2d 866
    , 868 (2002) (quoting State v. Powell, 
    299 N.C. 95
    , 98, 
    261 S.E.2d 114
    ,
    117 (1980)). Similarly, the majority states that in determining whether a factual basis
    exists for a guilty plea, the trial court must “consider[ ] whether the stipulated facts
    fulfill the various elements of the offense or offenses to which the defendant is
    pleading guilty.” When, however, “a defendant pleads guilty, no trial occurs,” State v.
    Alexander, 2022-NCSC-26, ¶ 66 (Newby, C.J., concurring in the result), and there is
    STATE V. ROBINSON
    2022-NCSC-60
    Newby, C.J., dissenting
    no motion to dismiss; therefore, the substantial evidence standard does not apply.
    ¶ 49          Moreover, “[i]n a jury trial the judge instructs jurors on the law, and the jury
    finds the facts and applies the law.” State v. Arrington, 
    371 N.C. 518
    , 521, 
    819 S.E.2d 329
    , 331 (2018). When a defendant pleads guilty, however, he admits his conduct
    constitutes the offense and waives the right to have a jury make that determination.
    See Sinclair, 
    301 N.C. at 197
    , 
    270 S.E.2d at 421
     (“A plea of guilty . . . involves the
    waiver of . . . the right to trial by jury.”). Specifically, in a “transcript of plea,” which
    the trial court may properly consider under N.C.G.S. § 15A-1022(c)(2), the defendant
    and his attorney represent to the trial court that a factual basis exists for the guilty
    plea. See Dickens, 
    299 N.C. at 79
    , 261 S.E.2d at 186 (“ ‘[A] written statement of the
    defendant’ ordinarily consists of defendant’s written answers to the questions
    contained in a document entitled ‘Transcript of Plea.’ ” (quoting N.C.G.S.
    § 15A-1022(c)). Accordingly, given the defendant’s representations and the nature of
    a plea hearing, the parties do not fully develop the factual record before the trial
    court. Thus, when accepting a guilty plea, the trial court’s role is properly limited to
    determining whether the plea is “substantiated in fact,” Agnew, 
    361 N.C. at 335
    , 
    643 S.E.2d at 583
    , by “some substantive material independent of the plea itself . . . which
    tends to show that defendant is, in fact, guilty,” id. at 336, 
    643 S.E.2d at 583
    .
    Therefore, “[i]f the evidence considered in the light most favorable to the State”
    supports the guilty plea, then the trial court may accept the plea. Sinclair, 301 N.C.
    STATE V. ROBINSON
    2022-NCSC-60
    Newby, C.J., dissenting
    at 197, 
    270 S.E.2d at 421
    .
    ¶ 50          Using a de novo review of this limited factual record, however, the majority
    then holds that “the facts provided at the hearing fail to establish evidence of a
    distinct interruption in the assault.” One need not “imagine,” as the majority does,
    that a distinct interruption “such [as] a change in location” occurred in this case.
    Rather, the evidence demonstrates exactly the hypothetical situation posited by the
    majority—one assault occurred in the bathroom, and then defendant chased Ms.
    Wilson into the bedroom and assaulted her again. Moreover, after defendant
    strangled Ms. Wilson, causing her to black out, the “lapse of time and interruption in
    momentum” imagined by the majority occurred until Ms. Wilson awoke. Defendant
    then assaulted Ms. Wilson a third time. Thus, the evidence tends to show two distinct
    interruptions occurred.1
    ¶ 51          The trial court did not err by determining that a sufficient factual basis existed
    for defendant’s guilty plea. The Court of Appeals therefore abused its discretion by
    allowing defendant’s petition for writ of certiorari. The decision of the Court of
    Appeals should be reversed and the trial court’s entry of judgment and sentences
    against defendant should be affirmed. I respectfully dissent.
    Justice BARRINGER joins in this dissenting opinion.
    1Further, it should be noted that at the time the trial court accepted the plea, it did
    not have the benefit of this Court’s decision in State v. Dew, 
    379 N.C. 64
    , 2021-NCSC-124,
    ¶ 27.