State v. Pierce ( 2022 )


Menu:
  •                     IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
    2022-NCCOA-631
    No. COA21-628
    Filed 20 September 2022
    Randolph County, No. 18-CRS-054459
    STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
    v.
    JACKIE ALAN PIERCE, Defendant.
    Appeal by Defendant from judgment entered 22 April 2021 by Judge James P.
    Hill, Jr., in Randolph County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 9 August
    2022.
    Attorney General Joshua H. Stein, by Assistant Attorney General Kayla D.
    Britt, for the State.
    Hynson Law, PLLC, by Warren D. Hynson, for Defendant-Appellant.
    INMAN, Judge.
    ¶1           Jackie Alan Pierce (“Defendant”) appeals from a judgment entered after a jury
    found him guilty of attempting to cause serious harm to a law enforcement agency
    animal under 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14-163.1
    (b) (2021). On appeal, Defendant contends
    that the trial court erred in declining to instruct the jury on a lesser-included offense
    and plainly erred in failing to instruct the jury on self-defense and willfulness. After
    careful review, we hold that Defendant has failed to demonstrate error.
    STATE V. PIERCE
    2022-NCCOA-631
    Opinion of the Court
    I.   FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    ¶2         The record below discloses the following:
    ¶3         On 8 September 2018, the Archdale Police Department (“APD”) received a call
    from the Randolph County Sheriff’s Office requesting assistance with a person armed
    with a knife and handgun who was threatening self-harm. APD routinely responded
    to such requests for assistance. Upon arrival at the scene, several APD officers were
    met in the front yard by Defendant’s brother, who informed them that Defendant was
    drunk, armed with a knife, and had locked himself inside his bedroom. Responding
    officers knew Defendant from prior domestic disturbance calls from his family.
    ¶4         The APD officers entered the home and tried talking to Defendant through his
    bedroom door, as they had previously resolved a similar situation with Defendant
    peacefully.   Defendant refused to come out and told the officers that “law
    enforcement[] would have to kill him if [they] entered.” Defendant also threatened to
    hurt the officers if they tried to stop him.      Defendant continued to grow more
    aggressive in his statements to law enforcement despite their attempts to negotiate
    a peaceful resolution.
    ¶5         With their efforts at de-escalation falling short, the officers alerted Defendant
    that they would be sending in a police dog, Storm, to subdue him if he did not
    cooperate. Police had Storm bark to let Defendant know that he would be utilized if
    STATE V. PIERCE
    2022-NCCOA-631
    Opinion of the Court
    Defendant did not comply. Defendant refused and “said . . . that he would kill law
    enforcement or [they] would have to kill him, that he would kill the dog.”
    ¶6         Storm’s handler kicked in Defendant’s bedroom door.           Inside the room,
    Defendant held a knife in one hand and a makeshift spear—crafted from a knife
    attached to a level—in the other. Defendant thrust the spear toward Storm at least
    five times, and Storm’s handler believed the action to be a threat to the dog’s safety.
    Defendant then lowered the level to try and cut himself with the knife held in his
    other hand, and Storm’s handler instructed the dog to bite Defendant. Defendant
    dropped the spear as Storm’s handler released the dog. Defendant then raised the
    arm holding the knife in what the handler perceived as a potentially “threatening
    gesture.” Storm bit Defendant in the elbow of that arm, causing him to drop the knife.
    Storm then released Defendant, and APD officers took Defendant into custody.
    ¶7         On 7 October 2019, a grand jury indicted Defendant for willfully attempting to
    cause serious harm to a law enforcement agency animal. At trial, the APD officers
    who responded to the call testified consistent with the above recitation of the facts.
    Defendant rested his case without presenting further evidence.         At the charge
    conference, Defendant’s counsel requested an instruction on the lesser-included
    offense of attempting to cause harm to a law enforcement agency animal; the trial
    court denied that request. Following instruction and deliberation, the jury found
    Defendant guilty of the charged offense on 21 April 2021. The trial court sentenced
    STATE V. PIERCE
    2022-NCCOA-631
    Opinion of the Court
    Defendant to 6 to 17 months imprisonment, suspended upon 36 months supervised
    probation. Defendant gave notice of appeal in open court.
    II.     ANALYSIS
    ¶8           Defendant offers three principal arguments, that the trial court: (1) erred in
    rejecting his special instruction on the lesser-included offense of attempting to harm
    a law enforcement agency animal; (2) plainly erred in failing to instruct the jury on
    self-defense; and (3) plainly erred in omitting willfulness in the jury instruction on
    the elements of the crime charged. We disagree.
    A. Standards of Review
    ¶9           Preserved challenges to jury instructions are reviewed de novo.          State v.
    Richardson, 
    270 N.C. App. 149
    , 152, 
    838 S.E.2d 470
    , 473 (2020). In determining
    whether the requested instruction is warranted, we view the evidence in the light
    most favorable to the defendant. State v. Debiase, 
    211 N.C. App. 497
    , 504, 
    711 S.E.2d 436
    , 441 (2011). To prevail on appeal, the defendant must show that there is a
    “reasonable possibility” that the jury would have reached a different result had the
    requested instruction been given. State v. Brewington, 
    343 N.C. 448
    , 454, 
    471 S.E.2d 398
    , 402 (1996).
    ¶ 10         We review unpreserved challenges to jury instructions under the plain error
    standard when such error is adequately asserted in a defendant’s brief. State v. Foye,
    
    220 N.C. App. 37
    , 44, 
    725 S.E.2d 73
    , 79 (2012); see also N.C. R. App. P. 10(a)(4) (2022)
    STATE V. PIERCE
    2022-NCCOA-631
    Opinion of the Court
    (“In criminal cases, an issue that was not preserved by objection noted at trial and
    that is not deemed preserved by rule or law without any such action nevertheless
    may be made the basis of an issue presented on appeal when the judicial action
    questioned is specifically and distinctly contended to amount to plain error.”). “Under
    the plain error rule, defendant must convince this Court not only that there was error,
    but that absent the error, the jury probably would have reached a different result.”
    State v. Jordan, 
    333 N.C. 431
    , 440, 
    426 S.E.2d 692
    , 697 (1993).
    B. The Requested Lesser-Included Instruction
    ¶ 11         Defendant requested, and the trial court refused, a jury instruction on the
    lesser-included offense of attempting to harm a law enforcement agency animal under
    
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14-163.1
    (c) (2021).
    ¶ 12         The State concedes, and we agree, that attempting to cause harm to a law
    enforcement animal under Subsection 14-163.1(c) is a lesser-included offense of
    attempting to cause serious harm to a law enforcement animal under Subsection 14-
    163.1(b), as the latter “contains all of the essential elements of the [former].” State v.
    Smith, 
    267 N.C. App. 364
    , 369, 
    832 S.E.2d 921
    , 925 (2019).
    ¶ 13         The trial court errs in denying this requested instruction if, in the light most
    favorable to Defendant, “there is the presence, or absence, of any evidence in the
    record which might convince a rational trier of fact to convict the defendant of a less
    grievous offense.” State v. Thomas, 
    325 N.C. 583
    , 594, 
    386 S.E.2d 555
    , 561 (1989)
    STATE V. PIERCE
    2022-NCCOA-631
    Opinion of the Court
    (citation and quotation marks omitted). But “‘[w]hen the State’s evidence is positive
    as to each and every element of the crime charged and there is no conflicting evidence
    relating to any element of the charged crime,’ an instruction on lesser included
    offenses is not required.” State v. Northington, 
    230 N.C. App. 575
    , 578, 
    749 S.E.2d 925
    , 927 (2013) (quoting State v. Harvey, 
    281 N.C. 1
    , 13-14, 
    187 S.E.2d 706
    , 714
    (1972)).
    ¶ 14         The sole distinction between the felony of attempting to cause serious harm to
    a law enforcement agency animal under Subsection 14-163.1(b) and misdemeanor
    attempting to cause harm to a law enforcement agency animal under Subsection 14-
    163.1(c) is the gravity of harm involved. The statute differentiates these offenses by
    defining serious harm as any harm that:
    a. Creates a substantial risk of death.
    b. Causes maiming or causes            substantial   loss   or
    impairment of bodily function.
    c. Causes acute pain of a duration that results in
    substantial suffering.
    d. Requires retraining of the law enforcement agency
    animal or assistance animal.
    e. Requires retirement of the law enforcement agency
    animal or assistance animal from performing duties.
    
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14-163.1
    (a)(4) (2021).
    STATE V. PIERCE
    2022-NCCOA-631
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶ 15         Defendant argues that, because the evidence shows he wielded the makeshift
    spear in a defensive attempt to “keep the dog at bay” and not in a more aggressive
    posture, there was evidence from which a jury could find that he acted without
    attempting to cause serious harm within the above statutory definition. We are not
    persuaded by this argument.
    ¶ 16         That the evidence shows Defendant took a more defensive stance in his
    confrontation with Storm does not negate the other uncontested evidence showing
    Defendant intended Storm deadly harm. A person may act in self-defense lethally
    just as well as non-lethally. APD officers testified, and Defendant did not rebut, that
    Defendant repeatedly expressed an intent to harm and kill police and/or Storm if they
    entered his room. When that occurred, Defendant wielded a spear fashioned from a
    level and knife toward Storm in an action that caused Storm’s handler to fear for the
    animal’s safety; indeed, that Defendant modified a knife into a more dangerous
    weapon evinces an intent to cause greater harm, even if defensively. After Defendant
    dropped the spear and Storm was released, he held the other knife in a perceptibly
    “threatening gesture.” Knives, so used with express intention to cause death, are
    deadly weapons capable of causing serious injury. See State v. Batts, 
    303 N.C. 155
    ,
    161, 
    277 S.E.2d 385
    , 389 (1981) (noting that “[a] knife can be found to be a deadly
    weapon if, under the circumstances of its use, it is an instrument which is likely to
    produce death or great bodily harm, having regard to the size and condition of the
    STATE V. PIERCE
    2022-NCCOA-631
    Opinion of the Court
    parties and the manner in which the knife is used”); State v. Walker, 
    204 N.C. App. 431
    , 444, 
    694 S.E.2d 484
    , 493 (2010) (explaining that small or ordinary items may be
    deadly weapons if “wielded with the requisite evil intent and force”).
    ¶ 17         Because Defendant’s purportedly defensive actions do not negate or conflict
    with the evidence that he intended serious harm—through verbal threats of death
    and wielding a makeshift spear and knife against Storm—we hold the trial court did
    not err in denying his requested instruction on the lesser-included offense of
    misdemeanor attempted harm to a law enforcement animal. See Northington, 230
    N.C. App. at 578, 749 S.E.2d at 927.
    C. The Self-Defense Instruction
    ¶ 18         Defendant next argues that the trial court committed plain error in failing to
    give an instruction on self-defense. Though Defendant acknowledges that a self-
    defense instruction is unavailable when the defensive actions were taken against a
    law enforcement officer “lawfully acting in the performance of his or her official
    duties,” 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14-51.3
    (b) (2021), he contends that the APD officers were
    not acting in furtherance of any official duties “[b]ecause it was not apparent what, if
    any, crime [Defendant] was committing by locking himself in his own bedroom with
    a knife at the time the police kicked in his door and commanded Storm to attack him.”
    Again, we disagree.
    ¶ 19         APD officers testified at trial that they were responding to a call for assistance
    STATE V. PIERCE
    2022-NCCOA-631
    Opinion of the Court
    from the Randolph County Sheriff’s Office in connection with an armed man who was
    locked inside his home and threatening self-harm. The officers were authorized to
    enter the house by Defendant’s family to try and prevent harm to their relative, and
    APD officers had previously responded to similar domestic incidents involving
    Defendant. The exigency of the situation was underlined by Defendant’s threats to
    kill police and Storm, and the report of potential self-harm was proved ex post facto
    by his attempts to slice his arm with a knife when confronted by the dog.
    ¶ 20          Law enforcements’ official duties extend beyond investigating crime. See State
    v. Gaines, 
    332 N.C. 461
    , 471, 
    421 S.E.2d 569
    , 574 (1992) (“[T]he official duties of law
    enforcement officers . . . include[] such duties as investigative work (including
    stakeouts), crowd or traffic control, and routine patrol by automobile.”).           Police
    routinely respond to calls for assistance from ordinary citizens to address domestic
    disturbances in a variety of contexts. See, e.g., In re I.K., 
    377 N.C. 417
    , 2021-NCSC-
    60, ¶ 32 (recounting law enforcement’s response to a domestic disturbance call in a
    child dependency case); see generally State v. Madures, 
    197 N.C. App. 682
    , 
    678 S.E.2d 361
     (2009) (describing police’s prior response to a 911 call reporting a domestic
    disturbance that gave rise to a conviction for communicating threats). Our Supreme
    Court has elsewhere cautioned us to avoid “an unduly narrow and unrealistically
    restrictive interpretation of the term ‘official duties’ as it relates in actual practice to
    law enforcement officers.” Gaines, 
    332 N.C. at 471
    , 
    421 S.E.2d at 574
     (emphasis
    STATE V. PIERCE
    2022-NCCOA-631
    Opinion of the Court
    added). Defendant does not cite, and we cannot find, any North Carolina caselaw
    where a police response to a domestic disturbance or an emergency call involving
    threats of self-harm was deemed outside law enforcements’ official duties.
    ¶ 21          Other areas of the law demonstrate that law enforcement officers are tasked
    with more than just solving crimes and that these other duties include responding to
    requests for help with exigent threats to members of the public. For example, the
    Supreme Court of the United States has recognized an “emergency aid exception” to
    the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement,1 which “does not depend on the
    officers’ subjective intent or the seriousness of any crime they are investigating when
    the emergency arises.” Michigan v. Fisher, 
    558 U.S. 45
    , 47, 
    175 L. Ed. 2d 410
    , 413
    (2009). The exception “requires only an objectively reasonable basis for believing that
    a person within the house is in need of immediate aid.” 
    Id.
     (cleaned up). Thus, police
    “responding to a report of a disturbance” and “encounter[ing] a tumultuous situation
    [at] the house” caused by an irate and outwardly violent inhabitant may enter the
    home to prevent him from “hurt[ing] himself in the course of his rage” or render him
    aid upon a reasonable belief that he “had hurt himself . . . and needed treatment that
    1 Outside of a brief reference to “constitutional considerations” in his reply brief,
    Defendant has never contested the constitutionality of any of the police actions taken in this
    case. Needless to say, a reply brief is not the place for new argument, let alone one of
    constitutional magnitude. See, e.g., Animal Prot. Soc. v. State, 
    95 N.C. App. 258
    , 269, 
    382 S.E.2d 801
    , 808 (1989) (declining to consider a newly-raised constitutional argument asserted
    in a reply brief).
    STATE V. PIERCE
    2022-NCCOA-631
    Opinion of the Court
    in his rage he was unable to provide.” Id. at 48-49, 175 L. E. 2d at 413-14.
    ¶ 22          This Court has also formally recognized the “community caretaking” functions
    of law enforcement in analyzing warrantless searches and seizures.                 State v.
    Smathers, 
    232 N.C. App. 120
    , 126, 
    753 S.E.2d 380
    , 384 (2014). The doctrine is
    premised on public policy “giv[ing] police officers the flexibility to help citizens in need
    or protect the public even if the prerequisite suspicion of criminal activity which
    would otherwise be necessary for a constitutional intrusion is nonexistent.” 
    Id.
     In
    describing this doctrine, we favorably quoted the following observation from West
    Virginia’s highest court:
    The doctrine recognizes that, in our communities, law
    enforcement personnel are expected to engage in activities
    and interact with citizens in a number of ways beyond the
    investigation of criminal conduct. Such activities include a
    general safety and welfare role for police officers in helping
    citizens who may be in peril or who may otherwise be in
    need of some form of assistance.
    
    Id.
     (quoting Ullom v. Miller, 
    705 S.E.2d 111
    , 120-23 (W.Va. 2010)). Of note, law
    enforcement officers are specially trusted with the custody of mentally ill persons
    believed to be a threat to self or others and thus subject to involuntary commitment
    examination and are explicitly authorized to assist those requiring immediate
    psychiatric hospitalization as dangerous to self. See, e.g., N.C. Gen. Stat. § 122C-
    262(a) (2021) (providing under our involuntary commitment statutes, “[a]nyone,
    including a law enforcement officer, who has knowledge of an individual who is
    STATE V. PIERCE
    2022-NCCOA-631
    Opinion of the Court
    subject to inpatient commitment [as mentally ill and dangerous] . . . and who requires
    immediate hospitalization to prevent harm to self or others, may transport the
    individual directly . . . for examination by a commitment examiner[.]” (emphasis
    added)).
    ¶ 23         In short, law enforcement’s ordinary and lawful duties are not strictly limited
    to investigating crimes, and they can include responding to a request for emergency
    assistance with an armed person threatening self-harm. Defendant’s plain error
    argument—premised entirely on the claim that “it was not apparent what, if any,
    crime [Defendant] was committing”—therefore fails.
    D. The Willfulness Instruction
    ¶ 24         In his final argument, Defendant asserts that the trial court committed plain
    error in failing to include willfulness in its instruction on the elements of the crime
    charged. Notwithstanding the fact that the trial court followed the pattern jury
    instructions—a practice explicitly encouraged by our Supreme Court, State v.
    Morgan, 
    359 N.C. 131
    , 169, 
    604 S.E.2d 886
    , 909 (2004)—we hold that Defendant
    cannot show the requisite prejudice.
    ¶ 25         The evidence unequivocally shows that Defendant acted willfully, i.e.,
    “purposely and deliberately, indicating a purpose to do it without authority—careless
    whether he has the right or not—in violation of law.” In re Adoption of Hoose, 
    243 N.C. 589
    , 594, 
    91 S.E.2d 555
    , 558 (1956) (citation and quotation marks omitted). He
    STATE V. PIERCE
    2022-NCCOA-631
    Opinion of the Court
    verbally threatened to kill Storm numerous times, and he followed up on those
    threats by waiving a makeshift spear at the dog in a dangerous manner. He then
    wielded the knife toward Storm in a perceptibly threatening way.          There is no
    indication from the record evidence that Defendant acted with any concern for the
    lawfulness of his own or the APD officers’ actions. In light of this uncontradicted
    evidence, it is not probable that the jury would have reached a different result absent
    the alleged error, and Defendant cannot show plain error. See Jordan, 
    333 N.C. at 440
    , 
    426 S.E.2d at 697
    .
    III.     CONCLUSION
    ¶ 26         For the foregoing reasons, we hold that Defendant has failed to demonstrate
    reversible error.
    NO ERROR; NO PLAIN ERROR.
    Judges TYSON and GORE concur.