State v. Wilkins ( 2022 )


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  •                    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
    2022-NCCOA-911
    No. COA22-339
    Filed 29 December 2022
    Caswell County, Nos. 18 CRS 59–60, 50074; 19 CRS 163
    STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
    v.
    JAMEY LAMONT WILKINS
    Appeal by defendant from judgment entered 29 July 2021 by Judge Edwin G.
    Wilson, Jr., in Caswell County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 1
    November 2022.
    Attorney General Joshua H. Stein, by Special Deputy Attorney General Keith
    Clayton, for the State.
    Appellate Defender Glenn Gerding, by Assistant Appellate Defender Wyatt
    Orsbon, for defendant.
    DIETZ, Judge.
    ¶1         When the competency of a criminal defendant is questioned, there are two
    sources of rights that can apply: statutory protections and constitutional ones. Our
    Supreme Court—repeatedly over many decades—has held that the statutory
    protections can be waived if not timely asserted by the defendant’s counsel. The
    constitutional protections, by contrast, cannot be waived by failure to assert them.
    ¶2         In this appeal, Defendant Jamey Lamont Wilkins concedes that he is not
    STATE V. WILKINS
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    Opinion of the Court
    raising a constitutional competency issue, and that he did not preserve his statutory
    competency issue in the trial court. So he asks this Court to reshape decades of settled
    law from our Supreme Court distinguishing statutory issues (waivable) and
    constitutional ones (nonwaivable) by creating a new subcategory of statutory
    competency cases that are treated the same way that our Supreme Court treats the
    constitutional ones.
    ¶3         That is not an appropriate task for this Court. We are an error-correcting court,
    not a law-making one. If, as Wilkins argues, the long line of cases concerning waiver
    of statutory competency should be subject to a new, court-created exception, that
    change must come from our Supreme Court.
    Facts and Procedural History
    ¶4         In 2018, Defendant Jamey Lamont Wilkins was riding in the front passenger
    seat of an SUV when police pulled the vehicle over on suspicion of having thrown
    contraband into a nearby prison yard. Wilkins remained silent while officers searched
    the SUV. The search revealed two footballs on the floorboard behind Wilkins’s seat
    that had been cut open, filled with drugs and other contraband, and duct-taped
    closed. Police also found a large sum of cash within the center console. Law
    enforcement arrested both Wilkins and the driver of the SUV.
    ¶5         The State charged Wilkins with multiple drug possession offenses, several
    counts of attempting to provide contraband to an inmate, and attaining habitual felon
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    status. Two days later, Wilkins’s counsel filed a motion requesting a competency
    hearing. At the competency hearing, Wilkins’s counsel informed the trial court that,
    in addition to counsel’s own concerns regarding his client’s competency, jail staff
    reported that Wilkins was “exhibiting some odd behaviors” and had recommended an
    evaluation. The trial court entered an order finding that Wilkins’s “capacity to
    proceed is in question.” The order required the State to transport Wilkins to a mental
    health facility for a forensic evaluation.
    ¶6         That never happened. Wilkins was not transported to the mental health
    facility and he never received any competency evaluation. Instead, Wilkins was jailed
    for a brief period and then released on bail.
    ¶7         Several years later, in 2021, Wilkins’s case went to trial. By this point, Wilkins
    had hired new counsel. His new counsel never asserted that the trial court’s order
    requiring a competency evaluation had not been followed, and never asserted that
    Wilkins required a competency evaluation or hearing.
    ¶8         During the trial, the State elicited testimony from three witnesses concerning
    Wilkins’s silence during the stop and search. Wilkins did not object to this testimony.
    ¶9         The jury acquitted Wilkins of attempting to provide contraband to an inmate
    but convicted him of the drug possession charges. Wilkins then pleaded guilty to
    attaining habitual felon status. The trial court consolidated the convictions into one
    judgment and sentenced Wilkins to a term of 51 to 74 months in prison. Wilkins
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    timely appealed.
    Analysis
    I.      Failure to conduct competency hearing
    ¶ 10           Wilkins first argues that the trial court erred because it ordered a competency
    evaluation but then proceeded to trial several years later without one. Although
    Wilkins never objected to the lack of a competency evaluation and hearing, he
    contends that “once a trial court finds a defendant’s capacity to proceed is in question,
    the right to a competency determination cannot be waived.”
    ¶ 11           Wilkins’s argument is not an accurate statement of the law as it exists today.
    There are two potential sources of a criminal defendant’s right to a competency
    hearing: constitutional and statutory. The constitutional right, which stems from the
    Due Process Clause, provides that when “a trial court possesses information
    regarding a defendant that creates sufficient doubt of his competence to stand trial
    to require further inquiry on the question,” the trial court must conduct a competency
    hearing. State v. Sides, 
    376 N.C. 449
    , 458, 
    852 S.E.2d 170
    , 176 (2020). This
    constitutional right cannot be waived by the defendant because the “trial court has a
    constitutional duty to institute, sua sponte, a competency hearing if there is
    substantial evidence before the court” that meets the due process criteria. Id.; see also
    State v. Badgett, 
    361 N.C. 234
    , 259, 
    644 S.E.2d 206
    , 221 (2007). Importantly, Wilkins
    did not assert an argument under this due process standard in his appellate briefing
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    and conceded at oral argument that he is not raising this due process claim.
    ¶ 12         Criminal defendants also can have a statutory right to a competency hearing
    that arises from Section 15A-1002 of our General Statutes. That provision states that
    when the competency of a defendant is questioned, the trial court “shall hold a
    hearing” to determine capacity to proceed:
    (a) The question of the capacity of the defendant to proceed
    may be raised at any time on motion by the prosecutor, the
    defendant, the defense counsel, or the court. . . .
    (b) (1) When the capacity of the defendant to proceed is
    questioned, the court shall hold a hearing to determine the
    defendant’s capacity to proceed. If an examination is
    ordered . . . the hearing shall be held after the examination.
    ...
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-1002(a)–(b)(1) (emphasis added).
    ¶ 13         Ordinarily, this sort of compulsory statutory language might be considered a
    “statutory mandate” and fall within a long line of cases holding that compliance with
    the statute cannot be waived by failure to timely assert it to the trial court. See In re
    E.D., 
    372 N.C. 111
    , 121–22, 
    827 S.E.2d 450
    , 457 (2019) (collecting cases).
    ¶ 14         But beginning nearly half a century ago, our Supreme Court held that Section
    15A-1002 was subject to ordinary preservation requirements and, thus, defendants
    must timely raise noncompliance with the statute or the issue is waived on appeal.
    State v. Young, 
    291 N.C. 562
    , 566, 
    231 S.E.2d 577
    , 580 (1977). Since Young, our
    Supreme Court repeatedly has held that “the statutory right to a competency hearing
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    Opinion of the Court
    is waived by the failure to assert that right at trial” and if a defendant proceeds to
    trial without raising Section 15A-1002 with the trial court, the defendant’s “statutory
    right to a competency hearing was therefore waived by the failure to assert that right
    at trial.” Badgett, 
    361 N.C. at 259
    , 
    644 S.E.2d at 221
    ; see also State v. King, 
    353 N.C. 457
    , 466, 
    466 S.E.2d 575
    , 584–85 (2001).
    ¶ 15         Wilkins argues that we should find his statutory competency argument
    preserved for appellate review by further subdividing the Supreme Court’s precedent
    in Young, King, Badgett, and Sides. Wilkins contends that the Young, King, and
    Badgett cases should be interpreted to apply only when the trial court did not order
    an evaluation or otherwise inquire into the defendant’s competency. But, if the trial
    court makes that inquiry—for example, by ordering an evaluation as occurred in this
    case—then Young, King, and Badgett no longer apply and the defendant’s counsel
    need not raise the issue at trial in order to preserve it.
    ¶ 16         The flaw in this argument is that the Supreme Court in Young, King, Badgett,
    and the rest of this line of cases never made the sort of distinction that Wilkins asserts
    here. Instead, these cases focus solely on one factor: that the defendant proceeded to
    trial and entry of judgment without asserting the right to the hearing. There is no
    basis in any of these cases to draw factual distinctions that would permit some
    statutory competency issues to be waivable but not others. In these cases, the
    Supreme Court’s holding was straightforward and categorical: the constitutional
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    issue is not waivable; the statutory one is. See, e.g., King, 
    353 N.C. at 466
    , 466 S.E.2d
    at 584–85; Badgett, 
    361 N.C. at 259
    , 
    644 S.E.2d at 221
    ; Sides, 376 N.C. at 458, 852
    S.E.2d at 176. If this case presents a need for a new subcategory of statutory cases
    that are not waivable, like the corresponding constitutional ones, that change must
    come from our Supreme Court.
    ¶ 17         Having set out the applicable law, we hold that Wilkins’s statutory competency
    argument is not preserved for appellate review. In 2018, shortly after Wilkins’s
    arrest, his counsel questioned his competency and the trial court ordered that Wilkins
    be transported to a mental health facility for evaluation. That evaluation never took
    place and instead Wilkins was released on bail. Three years later, in 2021, Wilkins’s
    case was called for trial and Wilkins appeared with new counsel. He proceeded to
    trial without raising any competency issues or requesting that the court conduct the
    evaluation and review it previously had ordered.
    ¶ 18         Under Young, King, Badgett and their progeny, the failure to assert the
    statutory right to a competency hearing at trial, before entry of the judgment, waived
    the statutory issue on appellate review. And, because Wilkins did not assert a
    constitutional competency argument on appeal and conceded at oral argument that
    the constitutional standard is not at issue in this appeal, that nonwaivable issue is
    not applicable in this appeal. Accordingly, under controlling precedent from our
    Supreme Court, Wilkins’s competency argument is not preserved for appellate
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    review.
    ¶ 19         Our dissenting colleague finds it “ironic” that, as an error-correcting court, we
    are unwilling to correct the error that the dissent sees in this case. But what occurred
    here is commonplace. There are countless examples of cases where an error occurred
    in the trial court but it was not a reversible error—that is, the type of error this Court
    can correct. This often happens because the error is not prejudicial, but it also
    happens for the reason presented in this case—because the error was not preserved
    for appellate review.
    ¶ 20         Indeed, this case highlights precisely why we have preservation requirements.
    If Wilkins’s counsel believed the competency evaluation was necessary (although due
    process did not require one), there was ample opportunity to raise the issue and have
    the trial court act on it. By saving this argument for appeal, Wilkins was able to await
    the jury’s verdict and then, after the verdict was unsatisfactory, seek a second bite at
    the apple by arguing for a new trial. All the while, the issue producing that new trial
    easily could have been brought to the trial court’s attention and corrected in the first
    go round. See State v. Black, 
    260 N.C. App. 706
    , 
    817 S.E.2d 506
    , 
    2018 WL 3734703
    ,
    at *2 (2018) (unpublished). The dissent may not care about encouraging this sort of
    gamesmanship, but the Supreme Court does. State v. Bursell, 
    372 N.C. 196
    , 199, 
    827 S.E.2d 302
    , 305 (2019).
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    II.      Evidence concerning Wilkins’s silence
    ¶ 21            Wilkins next argues that the trial court committed plain error by admitting
    testimony from several law enforcement officers concerning Wilkins’s silence during
    the traffic stop and search of the vehicle.
    ¶ 22            Wilkins concedes that he did not object to this testimony at trial and requests
    that this Court review for plain error. The plain error test consists of three factors.
    First, the defendant must show that “a fundamental error occurred at trial.” State v.
    Lawrence, 
    365 N.C. 506
    , 518, 
    723 S.E.2d 326
    , 334 (2012). Second, the defendant must
    show that the error had a probable impact on the outcome—that is, “that, absent the
    error, the jury probably would have returned a different verdict.” 
    Id. at 519
    , 
    723 S.E.2d at 335
    . Finally, because plain error “is to be applied cautiously and only in the
    exceptional case,” the defendant must show that the error is the type that seriously
    affects “the fairness, integrity or public reputation of judicial proceedings.” 
    Id. at 518
    ,
    
    723 S.E.2d at 334
    .
    ¶ 23            As an initial matter, it is not clear that this issue is reviewable on appeal, even
    for plain error. Our Supreme Court has long held that “[c]onstitutional issues not
    raised and passed upon at trial will not be considered for the first time on appeal, not
    even for plain error.” State v. Buchanan, 
    253 N.C. App. 783
    , 789, 
    801 S.E.2d 366
    , 370
    (2017). Although Rule 10 of the Rules of Appellate Procedure does not preclude plain
    error review of constitutional issues, the Supreme Court has not overturned this
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    precedent. Wilkins concedes that this testimony would be admissible but for his Fifth
    Amendment argument—in other words, he acknowledges that this argument is solely
    a constitutional one. Thus, is it an issue that is fully waived if not timely asserted in
    the trial court.
    ¶ 24          In any event, even if subject to plain error review, Wilkins has not shown that,
    but for the references to his silence, the jury probably would have reached a different
    result. Lawrence, 
    365 N.C. at 518
    , 
    723 S.E.2d at 334
    . Nor has he shown that these
    purported errors were so fundamental, given the weight of the State’s evidence at
    trial, that they call into question the integrity of our justice system. 
    Id.
     We therefore
    find no error, and certainly no plain error, in the trial court’s judgment.
    Conclusion
    ¶ 25          For the reasons explained above, we find no error in the trial court’s judgment.
    NO ERROR.
    Judge DILLON concurs.
    Judge INMAN dissents with separate opinion.
    No. COA22-339 – State v. Wilkins
    INMAN, Judge, dissenting.
    ¶ 26         I fully agree with the majority that “[w]e are an error-correcting court, not a
    law-making one.” And there does not appear to be any serious disagreement over
    whether error occurred here: the State ignored a lawful order compelling it to submit
    Defendant for a competency evaluation, and the trial court ignored a statutory
    mandate directing it to conduct a competency hearing. Where the majority and I
    differ, ironically enough, is whether we may perform our error-correcting function in
    this case to set right the mistakes made below, just as this Court has done in other
    cases with analogous facts. Because in my view we may provide such redress in this
    case without running afoul of Supreme Court precedent, I respectfully dissent from
    the majority’s determination that Defendant is not entitled to relief here.
    I.   ANALYSIS
    ¶ 27         The statute at issue, N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-1002(a)-(b)(1) (2021), contains a
    statutory mandate compelling the trial court to conduct a hearing on defendant’s
    competency once judicially questioned. See State v. Myrick, 
    277 N.C. App. 112
    , 2021-
    NCCOA-146, ¶ 13 (“By failing to make a determination of Defendant’s capacity
    (which had been questioned) and failing to make findings of fact to support that
    determination, the trial court acted contrary to [Section 15A-1002’s] statutory
    mandate.”).   As a general rule, such violations are automatically preserved for
    appellate review without objection. See In re E.D., 
    372 N.C. 111
    , 121-22, 
    827 S.E.2d 450
    , 457 (2019) (collecting cases). And in at least two cases, this Court has remedied
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    INMAN, J., dissenting
    such a violation notwithstanding a defendant’s failure to object at trial. Myrick, ¶ 13;
    State v. Tarrance, 
    275 N.C. App. 981
    , 
    2020 WL 7973946
     (2020) (unpublished).1
    ¶ 28          The majority rightly notes that, in another line of decisions beginning with
    State v. Young, 
    291 N.C. 562
    , 
    231 S.E.2d 577
     (1977), our Supreme Court has created
    a specific exception to this general rule of preservation in the context of statutory
    competency hearings.        But, based on a close reading of those cases and the
    distinguishing facts of this case, I disagree with the majority that Young and its
    progeny require us to hold that Defendant—unlike the defendants in Myrick and
    Tarrance—cannot obtain relief from the trial court’s error below.
    1. Young and Waiver of the Statutory Mandate
    ¶ 29          In Young, a trial court found the defendant’s competency to be in question,
    involuntarily committed the defendant, and ordered a psychiatric evaluation. 
    291 N.C. at 566
    , 
    231 S.E.2d at 580
    . Following the evaluation, a psychiatrist opined that
    the defendant was competent to stand trial.            
    Id. at 566-67
    , 
    231 S.E.2d at 580
    .
    However, the trial court never convened a hearing to judicially determine the
    defendant’s competency, and the case proceeded to judgment. 
    Id. at 568
    , 
    231 S.E.2d at 581
    . The Supreme Court declined to entertain the defendant’s argument on appeal
    1  Tarrance lacks precedential value as an unpublished decision, but I find it
    instructive given it is the only decision from a North Carolina appellate court addressing this
    issue on procedural facts identical to this case.
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    INMAN, J., dissenting
    that the failure to hold a competency hearing constituted error based on the facts
    including that the defendant’s psychiatric evaluation showed him to be competent:
    In the case before us we find no indication that the failure
    to hold a hearing under [Section 15A-1002] was considered
    or passed upon by the trial judge. Neither defendant nor
    defense counsel, although present at trial, questioned the
    correctness of the diagnostic finding that defendant was
    competent to stand trial, understood the charges and was
    able to cooperate with his attorney; and neither objected to
    the failure to hold the hearing. When arraigned, defendant
    entered a plea of not guilty. The defense of insanity was not
    raised. On these facts we hold that defendant’s statutory
    right, under [Section 15A-1002], to a hearing subsequent to
    his commitment, was waived by his failure to assert that
    right. His conduct was inconsistent with a purpose to
    insist upon a hearing to determine his capacity to proceed.
    
    Id. at 567-68
    , 
    231 S.E.2d at 580-81
     (emphasis added).
    ¶ 30         Our appellate courts have since applied Young to hold a defendant waives his
    statutory rights to a competency hearing under two general fact patterns: (1) when,
    as in Young, the ordered psychiatric examination reveals the defendant to be
    competent, and the case proceeds to conviction and sentencing without objection or
    any indication from the defendant that he may lack competency; or (2) when there is
    no indication of record suggesting incompetency and the question of defendant’s
    competency is never raised in the trial court. See State v. Dollar, 
    292 N.C. 344
    , 350-
    51, 
    233 S.E.2d 521
    , 525 (1977) (holding a defendant’s statutory right to a competency
    hearing was waived under Young and “under the circumstances of this case” because
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    INMAN, J., dissenting
    “[t]he report of the psychiatric examination is admissible in evidence at such [a]
    hearing” and “[t]he record in the present case shows that the report of the examining
    psychiatrist was to the effect that the defendant did have the requisite mental
    capacity to plead to the indictment and to stand trial”); State v. King, 
    353 N.C. 457
    ,
    466, 
    546 S.E.2d 575
    , 584-85 (2001) (holding a defendant waived application of Section
    15A-1002 because “neither defendant nor defense counsel questioned defendant’s
    capacity to proceed”); State v. Badgett, 
    361 N.C. 234
    , 259, 
    644 S.E.2d 206
    , 221 (2007)
    (same).
    ¶ 31         In sum, the above decisions held the statutory right to a competency hearing
    had been waived when all the circumstances showed the defendants to be competent,
    either through uncontradicted evidence in the form of a psychiatric evaluation or
    through a failure to raise the question at all. The majority has not identified, and I
    cannot find, any case holding that a defendant waives his right to a mandated
    competency hearing under facts similar to this case, i.e., when: (1) the issue of a
    defendant’s competency is raised; (2) a trial court judicially determines the
    defendant’s competency to be in question and orders the State submit him to an
    evaluation; (3) the State ignores the order and no evaluation is conducted; and (4) the
    case proceeds to judgment without any further action to determine the defendant’s
    competency.
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    INMAN, J., dissenting
    2. Cases Remedying Statutory Violation Absent a Defendant’s Motion for
    Competency Hearing
    ¶ 32         Defendant has directed us to two decisions by this Court holding that the trial
    court erred when a defendant’s competency was judicially questioned but never
    determined notwithstanding the defendant’s failure to request such a ruling before
    judgment.    In Myrick, the defendant filed a motion requesting a competency
    evaluation, which the trial court granted. Myrick, ¶ 2. The defendant was evaluated,
    and the examining physician opined that he was “incapable to proceed due to
    untreated psychosis.” Id. ¶ 3. The defendant was then involuntarily committed at
    the request of the State, and the trial court found the defendant not guilty by reason
    of insanity without ever entering an order determining whether the defendant was
    competent to stand trial. Id. ¶ 4. We vacated the trial court’s order, holding that
    “[b]y failing to make a determination of [the d]efendant’s capacity (which had been
    questioned) and failing to make findings of fact to support that determination, the
    trial court acted contrary to [Section 15A-1002’s] statutory mandate.” Id. ¶ 13.
    ¶ 33         We reached a similar result in Tarrance, which is procedurally identical to the
    present case.   There, the defendant requested and was ordered to undergo a
    competency evaluation.     
    2020 WL 7973946
     at *1.        The evaluation was never
    conducted, and the trial court never held a hearing to determine whether the
    defendant was competent. 
    Id.
     Nonetheless, the trial court proceeded with trial and
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    INMAN, J., dissenting
    the defendant was convicted and sentenced. 
    Id.
     On appeal, we held that the matter
    required a remand for a retroactive competency determination because “[t]he plain
    language of [Section 15A-1002’s] statutory provisions compels the conclusion that
    once [a trial judge] found that [the d]efendant’s capacity to proceed was ‘in question,’
    a competency hearing was statutorily required.” Id. at *2.
    ¶ 34          Tarrance is an unpublished decision and therefore not binding. But in my view
    it is persuasive.
    3. Reconciling Young, Myrick, and Tarrance
    ¶ 35          At first blush, Myrick and Tarrance appear inconsistent with Young and its
    progeny; neither of the defendants in those cases raised the lack of a final competency
    hearing at trial, and yet this Court remedied the statutory violation that Young had
    held, more than thirty years earlier, was waived. But a critical factual distinction
    resolves this conflict: the Young cases all involved defendants who never had their
    competency questioned at all or who underwent examinations showing them to be
    competent, while Myrick and Tarrance involved defendants whose competency
    remained an open question prior to and at the time of trial.
    ¶ 36          I draw this distinction largely from the text of Young and Dollar. In Young,
    our Supreme Court concluded the defendant waived a challenge to the denial of a
    competency hearing because “[n]either defendant nor defense counsel, although
    present at trial, questioned the correctness of the diagnostic finding that defendant
    STATE V. WILKINS
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    INMAN, J., dissenting
    was competent to stand trial, understood the charges and was able to cooperate with
    his attorney[.]” 
    291 N.C. at 568
    , 
    231 S.E.2d at 580-81
    . The Supreme Court in Dollar
    relied on this same fact to conclude that the defendant was not entitled to relief:
    The record in the present case shows that the report of the
    examining psychiatrist was to the effect that the defendant
    did have the requisite mental capacity to plead to the
    indictment and to stand trial. Nothing in the record
    indicates that before going to trial the defendant requested
    a hearing or otherwise indicated any adherence to his
    contention of lack of mental capacity. He offered no
    evidence on the question.
    
    292 N.C. at 350-51
    , 
    233 S.E.2d at 525
    . Later decisions have followed Young and
    Dollar only under similar circumstances, i.e., when a subsequent evaluation and all
    other evidence showed the defendant to be competent,2 or when the defendant’s
    competency was never questioned in the first place. See, e.g., State v. Hoover, 
    174 N.C. App. 596
    , 601, 
    621 S.E.2d 303
    , 306 (2005) (holding a defendant waived his
    statutory right to a competency hearing after the trial court summarily adopted,
    without objection, the conclusion of competency reached by a forensic examiner);
    State v. Ashe, 
    230 N.C. App. 38
    , 40, 
    748 S.E.2d 610
    , 613 (2013) (“Here, no one
    2 The significance of this fact in holding waiver occurred neatly correlates with our
    caselaw holding that a trial court need not enter a formal written competency order when all
    the evidence demonstrates the defendant is competent. See, e.g., State v. Gates, 
    65 N.C. App. 277
    , 283, 
    309 S.E.2d 498
    , 502 (1983) (“Although the better practice is for the trial court to
    make findings and conclusions when ruling on a motion under [Section] 15A-1002(b), it is not
    error for the trial court to fail to do so where the evidence would have compelled the ruling
    made.”).
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    INMAN, J., dissenting
    requested a hearing on his capacity to stand trial. Thus, defendant waived his
    statutory right to such a hearing.”).
    ¶ 37         These substantial factual distinctions lead me to respectfully disagree with the
    majority’s assertion that Young and decisions following it “focus solely on one factor:
    that the defendant proceeded to trial and entry of judgment without asserting the
    right to the hearing.” If the failure to assert the statutory right to a competency
    hearing were truly the sole factor necessary to establish waiver when competency has
    been judicially questioned, our Supreme Court would not have specifically noted the
    expert evaluations in Young and Dollar in explaining their holdings. See Young, 
    291 N.C. at 568
    , 
    231 S.E.2d at 580-81
     (expressly including the fact that counsel did not
    “question[] the correctness of the diagnostic finding that defendant was competent to
    stand trial” as one of the “facts” on which its holding of waiver was based); Dollar,
    
    292 N.C. at 350-51
    , 
    233 S.E.2d at
    525 (citing Young and holding waiver of the right
    to a statutory competency hearing was shown “under the circumstances of this case,”
    including an expert opinion that the defendant was competent). That this particular
    fact did not appear in the statutory waiver analyses conducted in the other cases cited
    by the majority such as King and Badgett is unsurprising, because the records in
    those cases contain no indication—such as a motion and subsequent order judicially
    questioning competency—that the defendants’ competency were in question. King,
    
    353 N.C. at 466
    , 
    546 S.E.2d at 584-85
     (2001) (“[N]either defendant nor defense
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    INMAN, J., dissenting
    counsel questioned defendant’s capacity to proceed”); Badgett, 
    361 N.C. at 259
    , 
    644 S.E.2d at 221
     (“Nothing in the instant record indicates that the prosecutors, defense
    counsel, defendant, or the court raised the question of defendant’s capacity to proceed
    at any point during the proceedings, nor was there any motion made detailing the
    specific conduct supporting such an allegation.”).
    ¶ 38         I am, of course, mindful of and agree with the majority’s statement that “we
    are an error-correcting court, not a law-making one.” But my disagreement with the
    majority’s holding is not based on any policy preference and would vindicate the
    straightforward statutory command of our General Assembly—unquestionably a law-
    making body—that the trial court must conduct a hearing once a defendant’s
    competency is judicially questioned. I am cautious to give our Supreme Court’s
    decisions broader application than intended by their text, particularly when doing so
    raises a potential conflict with decisions of this Court. After all, the Supreme Court’s
    decision in In re Civil Penalty, 
    324 N.C. 373
    , 
    379 S.E.2d 30
     (1989), reversed a decision
    of this Court because it construed a seemingly bright-line rule found in Supreme
    Court precedent too broadly and, in doing so, effectively overruled a prior decision of
    this Court that addressed the same legal issue under different facts. 
    324 N.C. at 378, 384
    , 
    379 S.E.2d at 33, 36-37
    .
    ¶ 39         I also depart from the majority because our Supreme Court has most recently
    erred on the side of vindicating a defendant’s right to a competency determination—
    STATE V. WILKINS
    2022-NCCOA-911
    INMAN, J., dissenting
    albeit on constitutional rather than statutory grounds—when the evidence as to
    competency is inconclusive. In State v. Sides, 
    376 N.C. 449
    , 
    852 S.E.2d 170
     (2020), a
    defendant was unable to attend her trial due to a suicide attempt and involuntary
    commitment. 376 N.C. at 451, 852 S.E.2d at 170. The trial court, without conducting
    a competency hearing, ruled that the defendant’s absence was voluntary and
    proceeded with trial without her present.        Id. at 455, 852 S.E.2d at 175.      The
    defendant was convicted and argued on appeal that her statutory and constitutional
    rights to a competency determination were violated. Id. at 455-56, 852 S.E.2d at 175.
    This Court held that both rights, in addition to the defendant’s right to be present at
    her trial, were waived. Id. The defendant then appealed that decision to our Supreme
    Court.
    ¶ 40            Though the Supreme Court declined to address whether the defendant had
    waived her statutory right to a competency hearing under Section 15A-1002, id. at
    457-58, 852 S.E.2d at 177, it did conclude that we erred in holding she had waived
    her constitutional right to be present at trial without a competency determination, as
    doing so “ ‘put the cart before the horse[,]’ ” id. at 456-57, 852 S.E.2d at 176. This was
    because “a defendant cannot be deemed to have voluntarily waived her constitutional
    right to be present at her own trial unless she was mentally competent to make such
    a decision in the first place.     Logically, competency is a necessary predicate to
    voluntariness.” Id. at 459, 852 S.E.2d at 177 (emphasis added). The Supreme Court
    STATE V. WILKINS
    2022-NCCOA-911
    INMAN, J., dissenting
    held the defendant was entitled to a new trial because the trial court erred in failing
    to conduct a sua sponte competency hearing prior to concluding the defendant had
    waived her right to be present for trial, as there was substantial evidence of
    incompetency sufficient to trigger that constitutionally required procedure. Id. at
    466, 852 S.E.2d at 182. Sides therefore suggests that, in cases like this one, a
    defendant cannot be said to have waived a right to a competency determination when
    the question of the defendant’s competency is raised by the record. Cf. Medina v.
    California, 
    505 U.S. 437
    , 450, 
    120 L. Ed. 2d 353
    , 366 (1992) (“[I]t is impossible to say
    whether a defendant whose competence is in doubt has made a knowing and
    intelligent waiver of his right to a competency hearing.”); Pate v. Robinson, 
    383 U.S. 375
    , 384, 
    15 L. Ed. 2d 815
    , 821 (1966) (“The State insists that Robinson deliberately
    waived the defense of his competence to stand trial by failing to demand a sanity
    hearing as provided by Illinois law. But it is contradictory to argue that a defendant
    may be incompetent, and yet knowingly or intelligently ‘waive’ his right to have the
    court determine his capacity to stand trial.”).
    ¶ 41         In sum, this case is factually distinct from those in which the Supreme Court
    and this Court have held the defendant waived the statutory right to a competency
    hearing; in each of those cases, the competency of the defendant was never judicially
    questioned at all or the unequivocal evidence showed the defendant to be competent.
    The importance of this distinction is reinforced by Sides, which recognized that
    STATE V. WILKINS
    2022-NCCOA-911
    INMAN, J., dissenting
    competency is a necessary predicate to voluntary waiver. I disagree with the majority
    that Young, Dollar, and related decisions compel a waiver in cases like the one before
    us, where a defendant’s competency is judicially questioned but an ordered evaluation
    disclosing his competency is never completed due to the fault of the State. Instead,
    following the more analogous decisions of Myrick and Tarrance, I would hold that the
    trial court’s failure to conduct the statutorily mandated competency determination
    hearing may be raised and remedied on appeal notwithstanding Defendant’s failure
    to renew the issue at trial.
    4. Defendant Is Entitled to a New Trial
    ¶ 42         A defendant who was erroneously denied a competency hearing may receive
    one of two remedies on appeal, depending on the circumstances: a retroactive
    competency hearing or a new trial. Sides, 376 N.C. at 466, 852 S.E.2d at 182. “Where
    a retrospective hearing would require the trial court to assess the defendant’s
    competency ‘as of more than a year ago,’ the Supreme Court has suggested that such
    a hearing is not an appropriate remedy.” Id. In this case, Defendant’s competency
    was brought into question over three years ago, his trial concluded more than one
    year ago, and the State makes no argument in favor of a retroactive competency
    hearing. Consistent with Sides and absent any countervailing rationale from the
    State, I would hold that a retroactive competency evaluation is not feasible, vacate
    Defendant’s convictions, and remand for a new trial.
    STATE V. WILKINS
    2022-NCCOA-911
    INMAN, J., dissenting
    II.      CONCLUSION
    ¶ 43            Defendant’s competency in this case was judicially questioned by a trial judge.
    The State—not Defendant—was required by the trial court’s order to submit
    Defendant to a competency evaluation, and the trial court—not Defendant—bore the
    express statutory duty to conduct a hearing following that evaluation. The State did
    not comply with the trial court’s order, and the trial court never held the statutorily
    required hearing because no evaluation had occurred.               Under these facts,
    meaningfully distinct from those in Young, Dollar, and other decisions finding a
    waiver of the statutory right to a competency hearing, I would hold that Defendant
    may seek and receive redress for the trial court’s failure to comply with the statutory
    mandate found in Section 15A-1002.             And, given the particular circumstances
    presented here, Defendant is entitled to a new trial rather than a retroactive
    competency hearing. Because I do not believe that such a result runs counter to the
    duties of this Court or conflicts with binding precedent, I respectfully dissent from
    the majority’s holding that Defendant waived his right to correction of the error
    below.