State v. Mumma
State v. Mumma
Opinion of the Court
**227The issues before us in this case concern whether the Court of Appeals erred by determining that the trial court did not commit prejudicial error by allowing the jury, without the consent of the parties, to review certain photographs that had been admitted into evidence in the jury room and did not commit plain error by instructing the jury concerning the effect of a determination that defendant Willoughby Henerey Mumma was the "aggressor" upon defendant's right to act in self-defense. After carefully considering the record in light of the applicable law, we hold that defendant was not prejudiced by the trial court's decision to allow the jury to review the photographs in the jury room without his consent and that the trial court's decision to include an "aggressor" instruction in its discussion of the law of self-defense did not constitute plain error. As a result, we modify and affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals.
I. Factual Background
A. Substantive Facts
On 9 November 2011, defendant lived with his wife, Amy Chapman, and her fifteen-year-old son, Christopher Robinson. At approximately 5:30 p.m. on that date, when Mr. Robinson came home after visiting his girlfriend following school, he discovered that defendant and his mother were consuming Clonopin and drinking alcohol. Between 8:00 and 8:30 p.m., Ms. Chapman got a ride to the store, where she purchased more alcohol.
From 8:11 until 8:21 p.m., defendant had a text message exchange with his friend, Dewayne Bradley, during which defendant stated that:
Defendant: Im goin 2 kil her.
Mr. Bradley: Please dont.
Defendant: Im goin 2 I cant take.
Mr. Bradley: Man just walk down the road.
Defendant: Do u have ne lime?
Mr. Bradley: Noooooo just chill.
Defendant: No Im over it I cant take no more I luv u bro.
**228Mr. Bradley: Please lessen to me.
Defendant: Im sorry I have 2.
*290Mr. Bradley: Man, Ill come and get 2morr my word.
Defendant: Line wil get rid of the body.
Subsequently, Ms. Chapman purchased additional pills from an acquaintance who came to the residence in which she, defendant, and Mr. Robinson resided.
At approximately 9:45 p.m., Mr. Robinson awoke; heard an argument between defendant and Ms. Chapman; entered their bedroom, in which the couple was sitting adjacent to each other on the bed; urged them to stop arguing; and then went back to bed himself. Defendant claimed that, later on the same evening, Ms. Chapman, who had taken a shower while he was still sitting on the bed, emerged from the bathroom with a knife and attacked him with it. After gaining control of the knife, defendant stabbed Ms. Chapman to death.
The next morning, defendant sent several text messages to Mr. Bradley in which he requested Mr. Bradley to drive Mr. Robinson to school. After Mr. Bradley and his wife, who was driving the couple's vehicle, arrived, Mr. Bradley entered the house. At that time, defendant showed Mr. Bradley the body of Ms. Chapman, which was lying on the floor of a closet in the bedroom that the two of them had shared. Upon seeing Ms. Chapman's body, Mr. Bradley quickly left the residence, reentered his vehicle, and told his wife and Mr. Robinson to lock the doors to prevent defendant from accessing the vehicle. After his wife had driven away from the residence, Mr. Bradley informed Mr. Robinson that his mother was dead and called for emergency assistance. Defendant, who had entered the woods behind the residence, was taken into custody at approximately 5:18 p.m.
B. Procedural History
1. Trial Court Proceedings
On 22 November 2011, the Swain County grand jury returned a bill of indictment charging defendant with first-degree murder. The charge against defendant came on for trial before Judge Marvin P. Pope, Jr., and a jury at the 23 May 2016 criminal session of the Superior Court, Swain County. At least one hundred and seventy-nine photographs were admitted into evidence during the trial, all but one of them without any objection from defendant. At the conclusion of the trial, the trial court, without any objection from defendant, instructed the jury **229concerning the issue of self-defense. On a number of occasions during its self-defense instruction, the trial court stated that defendant would not be excused of murder or manslaughter on self-defense grounds if he "was the aggressor with the intent to kill or inflict serious bodily harm upon the deceased."
While the jury deliberated, it sent a note to the trial court in which it requested "Evidence - ALL PHOTOS PLEASE." After noting that "it's in the Court's discretion," defendant's trial counsel objected to allowing the jury to review the photographs in the jury room and stated his preference "for [the jurors] to rely on the testimony and recollection." The trial court responded that, "In my discretion, I'm going to allow them to have all the photographs that have been introduced into evidence" and then had the photographs delivered to the jury room.
After it had deliberated for approximately two hours, the jury sent the trial court a note indicating that it was divided eleven to one and was unable to reach a verdict. In response to the jury's note, and at defendant's request, the trial court instructed the jury in accordance with the United States Supreme Court's decision in Allen v. United States ,
2. Appellate Proceedings
In seeking relief from the trial court's judgment before the Court of Appeals, defendant contended that the trial court had "violated a statutory mandate or committed plain error by giving erroneous jury instructions on self-defense" and "erred by sending inflammatory photographs of the decedent's body to the jury deliberation room."
*291State v. Mumma , --- N.C. App. ----, ----,
In addition, the Court of Appeals held, in reliance upon this Court's decision in State v. Cunningham ,
**231Judge Arrowood filed a dissenting opinion in which he stated that he would have held that "defendant has met his burden of establishing there is a reasonable possibility that," had the photographs of Ms. Chapman's body not been sent to the jury room without defendant's consent, a different result would have been reached at trial.
consider[ed] the circumstances of this case in their entirety, including: the large number of photographs (179), the fact that many of the photographs were graphic, the fact that only the photographic evidence was taken to the jury room, the fact that the improper photographs were in the jury room for almost the entire deliberation, and, particularly noteworthy, the facts that *292the jury was deadlocked ... and that the court provided instructions and verdict sheets to the jury with various options to find defendant guilty[.]
After defendant's appellate counsel was unable to obtain written authorization from defendant to file a timely notice of appeal from the Court of Appeals' decision based upon Judge Arrowood's dissent or a timely petition seeking discretionary review of the Court of Appeals' decision, defendant filed a petition seeking the issuance of a writ of certiorari by this Court authorizing review of the Court of Appeals' opinion on 26 May 2018. In seeking further review before this Court, defendant contended that the record provided ample justification for a finding that the trial court's decision to allow the photographs that had been admitted into evidence to be reviewed in the jury room over defendant's objection constituted prejudicial error and that the Court of Appeals' decision to the contrary would have ordinarily been reviewable on the basis of Judge Arrowood's dissent and, in addition, argued that the Court of Appeals' decision to affirm the trial court's instructions to the jury with respect to the "aggressor" issue conflicted with prior decisions of this Court and involved significant legal principles. The State, on the other hand, argued that the Court should deny defendant's certiorari petition on the grounds that defendant had failed to adequately document his explanation for failing to note an appeal from or seek discretionary review of the Court of Appeals' decision in a timely manner, that the Court of Appeals had correctly held that the trial court's decision to allow the jury to review the photographs that had been admitted **232into evidence at trial in the jury room during its deliberations did not prejudice defendant's chances for a more favorable outcome at trial, and that the trial court did not err, much less commit plain error, in instructing the jury concerning the "aggressor" doctrine. The Court allowed defendant's certiorari petition on 7 June 2018.
II. Legal Analysis
A. Allowing Review of the Exhibits in the Jury Room
In seeking to persuade us to reverse the Court of Appeals' decision, defendant begins by contending that the Court of Appeals erred in determining that the trial court's decision to allow the members of the jury to review the photographs that had been admitted at trial in the jury room during its deliberations over defendant's objection did not constitute prejudicial error. Arguing in reliance upon State v. Poe ,
N.C.G.S. § 15A-1233(b) provides, in pertinent part, that, "[u]pon request by the jury and with consent of all parties, the judge may in his discretion permit the jury to take to the jury room exhibits and writings which have been received in evidence." N.C.G.S. § 15A-1233(b) (2017). This Court has held that permitting juries to take evidence to the jury room without the consent of the parties constitutes error. Cunningham ,
We begin our analysis by noting that the extent, if any, to which any of the photographs in question were erroneously admitted into evidence in violation of N.C.G.S. § 8C-1, Rule 403 is irrelevant to the proper resolution of the prejudice issue. All but one *294of the photographs upon which defendant's claim relies were admitted into evidence and published to the jury without objection. In view of the fact that all of the photographs that the trial court allowed the jury to review in the jury room without defendant's consent were admitted into evidence and the fact that defendant has not challenged the trial court's decision to admit any of these photographs into evidence on appeal, we are necessarily required to assume that these photographs were properly admitted into evidence and to focus our prejudice analysis solely upon whether there is any reasonable possibility that the outcome of defendant's trial would have been different if, rather than erroneously allowing jurors to see these photographs in the jury room, the trial court had either refused to allow the jury to review these photographs at all, forcing the jury to rely upon their review of these photographs earlier in the trial, or allowed the jury to examine the photographs in open court. In other words, the relevant issue for prejudice purposes is not the impact of the photographs themselves upon the jury's deliberations; instead the relevant issue is whether it is reasonably possible that the fact that the jury had an opportunity to review the photographs in the jury room, separate and apart from any inherent impact that those photographs may have had, adversely affected defendant's chances for a more favorable outcome at trial. **235As defendant correctly notes, the central issue before the jury at trial was whether defendant did or did not act in self-defense when he killed Ms. Chapman. In arguing that the trial court's erroneous decision to allow the jury to review the photographs that had been admitted into evidence in the jury room without his consent prejudiced him, defendant argues that the lengthy period of time that the jury was allowed to have photographs of the injuries that were inflicted upon Ms. Chapman's body and photographs of the relatively minor injuries that were inflicted upon him in its possession in the jury room could easily have led the jury to reject his self-defense claim when another jury that did not have access to these photographs in the jury room would have accepted it. We do not find this argument persuasive.
Aside from the fact that the jury had already seen the crime scene and autopsy photographs of Ms. Chapman and the photographs depicting defendant after he had been taken into custody during defendant's trial, the undisputed evidence tends to show that defendant inflicted severe injuries upon Ms. Chapman while sustaining only minor injuries himself. For example, Detective Daniel Iadonisi of the Cherokee Indian Police Department testified that Ms. Chapman had "wounds ... on her face, her neck area, both sides of her neck ... on the top of her head and ... on her back," while Sam Davis, M.D., a pathologist who autopsied Ms. Chapman's body, told the jury that Ms. Chapman "appeared to have sustained fatal sharp instrument wounds of the neck and face," including "two separate ... lacerations of the skin ... from the neck across the shoulder blade" that were "likely to have been delivered from the back"; a hematoma on the top of her head caused by "a forceful injury delivered to the body"; "a 3.3 centimeter stab wound to the right lateral neck" and a "stab wound of [the] left anterior neck," either of which would, "if not treated within minutes," have caused her to bleed to death; and a "potentially fatal" "stab injury of the right eye with perforation of the globe." As a result, the record contained extensive evidence describing the nature and severity of Ms. Chapman's injuries separate and apart from the photographs that the jury was allowed to reexamine in the jury room.
On the other hand, Detective Sean Birchfield of the Cherokee Indian Police Department, who took the photographs of defendant that were admitted into evidence, testified that he saw some scratches on defendant's arms and legs and "a small cut" on the palm of defendant's hand close to his pinky finger on the day after Ms. Chapman was killed. Similarly, Mr. Bradley testified that, when he saw defendant on the morning following the killing, defendant had "a few cuts" and "a couple scratches" on his hands. Finally, defendant answered in the negative **236when asked on cross-examination, "You didn't need any medical treatment?" and "You didn't need stitches?" Simply put, it is difficult for us to see how any comparison of the photographs *295depicting the injuries that Ms. Chapman and defendant sustained that the jury made in the jury room would have added much to the impact of the extensive evidence that the jury heard and saw concerning that subject in the courtroom.
In addition to the relative severity of the injuries that Ms. Chapman and defendant sustained, the record contains extensive additional evidence tending to undercut defendant's claim of self-defense. In addition to opining that the wounds to Ms. Chapman's back had been inflicted from the rear, Dr. Davis testified that the injuries to Ms. Chapman's hands were not "consistent with fighting" and were instead consistent "with being struck." According to Dr. Davis, the wounds to Ms. Chapman's hands were "defensive wounds" that had a "textbook appearance of being struck in a defensive posture," injuries that led Dr. Davis to "conclude that she was not striking, but rather being struck." In addition, Agent Van Williams of the State Bureau of Investigation testified that defendant sent a series of text messages to Mr. Bradley during the final hours before the killing in which defendant stated that "Im goin 2 kil her," that "Im goin 2 I cant take," that "Im over it I cant take no more," that obtaining lime would help him dispose of the body, that he wanted to obtain that substance from Mr. Bradley, and, when Mr. Bradley pleaded with him not to kill Ms. Chapman, defendant responded, "Im sorry I have 2." Finally, defendant testified that, "[f]rom initial contact with the knife," which he claimed to have grabbed to prevent Ms. Chapman from stabbing him in the face, "I never let go of it," and that, despite the fact that Ms. Chapman was still holding the handle of the knife when he grabbed it, "when we fell before we both hit the ground, I had possession of the whole thing." In view of the fact that the only evidence tending to show that defendant acted in self-defense was his own testimony, which the jury had an ample basis for disbelieving, and the "strong evidence against the defendant," we conclude that "letting the jury have [the photographs] in the jury room could not have affected the outcome of the trial." Cunningham ,
Admittedly, the jury was allowed to view numerous photographs in the jury room. However, only forty-one of the one hundred and seventy-nine photographs that were admitted into evidence depicted Ms. Chapman's body in any way, and the jury had already had an opportunity to examine these photographs in the courtroom. In addition, while the jury did inform the trial court during its deliberations that it was unable **237to reach a unanimous verdict, the trial court had already allowed the jury to review the photographs that had been admitted into evidence in the jury room when the jury conveyed this message to the trial court. Moreover, the fact that the record contains evidence tending to show that Ms. Chapman engaged in violent conduct on other occasions provides limited support for defendant's claim of self-defense in light of the extensive evidence, viewed in its entirety, outlined earlier in this opinion. Finally, defendant's contention to the contrary notwithstanding, his reliance upon self-defense in his effort to obtain an acquittal does not change the overall nature of the prejudice-related inquiry that we are required to make with respect to this issue, which, under our decisional law, necessarily focuses upon a determination of the reasonableness of the possibility that the jury would have found that defendant acted in self-defense in light of all of the relevant evidence rather than upon the nature of defendant's defense. As a result, given the strength of the evidence tending to show that defendant did not act in self-defense, the relative complexity of the trial court's instructions to the jury, the jury's decision to convict defendant of a lesser included offense, and the fact that the photographs about which defendant complains had already been delivered to the jury room when the jury claimed to be unable to reach a unanimous verdict, we hold that it is not reasonably possible that the jury would have returned a verdict more favorable to defendant had the trial court not allowed the jury to review the photographs that had been admitted into evidence and that its members had already seen during the course of defendant's trial in the jury room during the jury's deliberations and affirm the Court of Appeals' determination to the same effect. *296B. "Aggressor" Instruction
Secondly, defendant contends that the Court of Appeals erred by unanimously determining that the trial court did not err "by instructing the jury that self-defense was not available to [defendant] if he was the aggressor." According to defendant, "no evidence was introduced showing that he was the aggressor," with an aggressor for self-defense purposes being one who "aggressively and willingly enter[s] into the fight without legal excuse or provocation," quoting State v. Norris ,
At trial, defendant testified that he was sitting on the bed when Ms. Chapman, who outweighed him by thirty to forty pounds, rushed at him with a knife, pulled him back down to the floor after they had fallen, and, **238as defendant attempted to rise, bit and punched him in an effort to recover the knife that defendant had taken from her. Defendant claimed that he stabbed Ms. Chapman to death because he "had to end that fight [given that s]he was trying to get the knife back." Based upon this testimony, defendant claims that Ms, Chapman was the aggressor for purposes of the confrontation that led to her death and that the Court of Appeals erred by upholding the trial court's decision to include an "aggressor" instruction in describing the law of self-defense on the grounds that the evidence that defendant took the knife from Ms. Chapman and the text messages that defendant sent to Mr. Bradley "provid[ed] sufficient evidence from which a jury could find that defendant was the aggressor," quoting Mumma , --- N.C. App. at ----,
In defendant's view, the Court of Appeals "conducted the wrong analysis" in upholding the trial court's decision to give an "aggressor" instruction given that a person who is not the initial aggressor can only attain aggressor status if the initial aggressor has abandoned the fight and communicated that fact to his or her opponent, citing State v. Wynn ,
The State, on the other hand, contends that "[t]he Court of Appeals properly reviewed for plain error the trial court's jury instruction on the aggressor doctrine where defendant did not object to the instruction and the trial evidence more than supported it." In the State's view, "[a]bsent the aggressor instruction, there is not a reasonable probability that the jury would have found that defendant acted in self-defense" given additional factors that had to be considered in determining whether defendant acted in self-defense and the strength of the State's evidence that defendant did not kill Ms. Chapman to protect himself from death or great bodily injury. In light of defendant's testimony that he had control of the knife from virtually the instant that Ms. Chapman initially attempted **239to stab him, Dr. Davis's testimony that certain of Ms. Chapman's wounds were defensive in nature and that certain other wounds that she had sustained had been inflicted upon her from the rear, the evidence concerning the disparity in the severity of the wounds that Ms. Chapman and defendant sustained, and the text messages that defendant sent to Mr. Bradley, the State contends that "[d]efendant has failed to establish error, much less plain error," in challenging the trial court's decision to deliver an "aggressor" instruction when describing the law applicable to defendant's claim to have acted in self-defense. *297A trial court's jury instructions should be "a correct statement of the law and ... supported by the evidence." State v. Conner ,
The defendant would be excused of first degree murder and second degree murder on the ground of self-defense if, first, the defendant believed that it was necessary to kill the victim in order to save the defendant from death or great bodily harm.
And second, the circumstances, as they appeared to the defendant at the time, were sufficient to create such a belief in the mind of the person of ordinary firmness.
In determining the reasonableness of the defendant's belief, you should consider the circumstances as you find them to have existed from the evidence, including the size, age, and strength of the defendant, as compared to the victim, the fierceness of the assault, if any, upon the defendant; whether the victim had a weapon in the **240victim's possession, and the reputation, if any, of the victim for danger and violence.
The defendant would not be guilty of any murder or manslaughter if the defendant acted in self-defense, and if the defendant was not the aggressor in provoking the fight and did not use excessive force under the circumstances.
One enters a fight voluntarily if one uses toward one's opponent abusive language, which, considering all of the circumstances, is calculated and intended to provoke a fight.
If the defendant voluntarily and without provocation entered the fight, the defendant would be considered the aggressor, unless the defendant thereafter attempted to abandon the fight and gave notice to the deceased that the defendant was doing so. In other words, a person who uses a defensive force is justified if the person withdraws in good faith from physical contact with the person who was provoked and indicates clearly that he desires to withdraw and terminate the use of force, but the person who was provoked continues or resumes the use of force.
A person is also justified in using defensive force when the force used by the person who was provoked is so serious that the person using defensive force reasonably believes that he was in imminent danger of death or serious bodily harm.
The person using defensive force had no reasonable means to retreat, and the use of force likely to cause death or serious bodily harm was the only way to escape the danger.
The defendant is not entitled to the benefit of self-defense if the defendant was the aggressor with the intent to kill or inflict serious bodily harm upon the deceased.
Although defendant has contended on appeal that the record evidence did not support the trial court's decision to instruct the jury concerning the effect of a determination that defendant was the "aggressor" at the time that he killed Ms. Chapman, he did not object to the delivery of an "aggressor" instruction at trial, thereby waiving his right to challenge the delivery of the "aggressor" instruction on appeal. N.C. R. App. P. 10(a)(2) (providing that "[a] party may not make any portion of the jury charge **241or omission therefrom the basis of an issue presented on appeal unless the party objects thereto before the jury retires to consider its verdict, stating distinctly that to which objection is made *298and the grounds of the objection"). On the other hand, Rule of Appellate Procedure 10(a)(4) provides that "[i]n criminal cases, an issue that was not preserved by objection noted at trial and that is not deemed preserved by rule of law ... 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." See Lawrence ,
As this Court recently stated in State v. Juarez ,
III. Conclusion
Thus, for the reasons stated above, we hold that the trial court's erroneous decision to allow the jury to review the photographs that had already been admitted into evidence *299in the jury room without defendant's consent did not constitute prejudicial error and that the trial court did not commit plain error by including a discussion of the "aggressor" doctrine in its instructions to the jury concerning defendant's claim to have killed his wife in the exercise of his right of self-defense. As a result, the Court of Appeals' decision finding no prejudicial error in the proceedings leading to the entry of the trial court's judgment is, as modified in this opinion, affirmed.
MODIFIED AND AFFIRMED.
Justice DAVIS did not participate in the consideration or decision of this case.
The Court of Appeals also held that the trial court did not err by failing to intervene ex mero motu during the State's closing argument; however, this issue has not been brought forward for our consideration. Mumma , --- N.C. App. at ----,
Although we have not addressed defendant's challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence to support the delivery of an "aggressor" instruction on the merits, we do observe that, while defendant is correct in noting that the trial court should view the evidence in the light most favorable to the defendant in determining whether a defendant is entitled to the delivery of an instruction concerning an affirmative defense, Holloman ,
Although defendant argued before the Court of Appeals that his challenge to the trial court's decision to deliver an "aggressor" instruction was properly preserved for purposes of appellate review on the basis of the principle enunciated in State v. Ashe ,
Arguing in reliance upon decisions such as Virginia Electric & Power Co. v. Tillett ,
Concurring in Part
**243I agree with the majority that Mr. Mumma cannot meet the high burden of showing that the jury in this case probably would have either remained deadlocked or acquitted him of murder if the aggressor instruction had not been given, a burden he must meet because he did not object to the instruction at trial. State v. Lawrence ,
Nonetheless, I cannot agree that the trial court's error in sending 179 photographs, including forty-one pictures of Ms. Chapman's dead body, to the jury room over defendant's objection, and therefore in violation of N.C.G.S. § 15A-1233(b), was harmless under the lower standard applicable to this error, namely that "there is a reasonable possibility that, had the error in question not been committed, a different result would have been reached." N.C.G.S. § 15A-1443(a) (2017). Here, when the only question at issue was whether defendant acted in self-defense, it is entirely possible that the jury would have remained deadlocked or reached a different verdict if jurors had been required to view the photographs in the presence of all the parties in the courtroom, rather than in the privacy of the jury room.
The majority's approach to evaluating the reasonable possibility of a different result is to stand in the shoes of the jury and, "after carefully reviewing the record," come to a conclusion about what verdict the jury hypothetically would have reached if they had not been able to take the 179 photographs into the jury room for the duration of their deliberations. The majority, however, fails to take into account all the evidence in the record, which includes testimony that Ms. Chapman had a history of bipolar disorder and had previously stabbed Mr. Mumma in the arm. On another occasion Ms. Chapman threatened Mr. Mumma with a knife. Chapman was known to be quick to anger for no apparent reason. On the night in question, not only had she consumed a considerable amount of Klonopin and alcohol, but she also was "raising hell" because Mr. Mumma wanted to leave, accused him of pursuing another woman, **244and pushed and slapped him. Ms. Chapman's son's first thought upon seeing some blood in the bedroom was that his mother had injured Mr. Mumma. Given that the only issue for the jury to decide was whether Mr. Mumma acted in self-defense, it is entirely possible that without prolonged exposure to forty-one pictures of Ms. Chapman's corpse, the jury would have remained deadlocked or reached a different verdict.
Also relevant to this question is the fact that the prosecutor in closing argument specifically directed the jury to take the photographs to the jury room with them and urged them to study the pictures showing Ms. Chapman's injuries:
If he stabbed her from the back -- if he stabbed her from the back, what does that say? Is he really thinking he's going to die? Is he grabbing for the knife? He wanted her dead.
Take that photo back. I hope you do. Take it with the other photos. You can request any exhibit you want. But ask for *300the photo with the two dots on it. And I would love to put it up here, but in respect to the family, I don't think they need to see their daughter, and sister, and mother like that. That's why I've got these boards up here.
Take it back there. You're the jury. You get to decide. Not me, not Mr. Mumma, not Mr. Earwood. Look at it, and then look at those two wounds from the lacerations. And if you say yeah, it shouldn't take long.
Grossly excessive force. Stab wound to the left throat, stab wound to the right neck, stab wound to the right neck, stab wound to the right eye. Defensive wounds, both right and left hands. Top of her head had a bruising on her brain. He had to pull back her scalp and find it. Up here. That's what the red dots are on top.
This excerpt strongly suggests the photographs were key to the jury's deliberations and that if the court had followed the law, the jury may have been less influenced by the graphic and disturbing photographs and instead would have, in giving due consideration to all of the evidence in the case, concluded that it had a reasonable doubt as to Mr. Mumma's culpability for murder.
In other cases in which it is uncertain what happened in the jury room or impossible to guess what "might have been," prejudice to the defendant is assumed. Here all we know is that the jury asked to be able **245to take all the photographs into the jury room. Whether jurors spent most of the three hours examining the pictures in detail, or looked at one or two and then placed them away on a shelf, is unknown. Perhaps jurors were simply complying with the prosecutor's request, or perhaps they used the pictures of Ms. Chapman's injuries to convince the holdout juror to join the other eleven to convict. If jurors had been required to view the photographs in the courtroom, as defendant had the right to insist, the jury's use of the photographs might have been very different. But the point is, we simply cannot know.
This Court has found per se reversible error in situations in which it is not possible to assess from the record whether the error was prejudicial. See, e.g. , State v. Hucks ,
There is further support for the proposition that it is impossible for a defendant to meet this standard. Even though state law provides that evidence can only go to the jury room if the parties consent, this Court has never found a violation of that statute to constitute prejudicial error. See State v. Locklear ,
**246(concluding that the defendant failed to establish prejudicial error in his conviction for first-degree murder based on the trial court's allowing the jury to take evidence into the jury room over his objection, including "photographs *301from the scene of the crime and the autopsy, a copy of defendant's confession, [a witness's] first statement to the police, and a diagram of the crime scene"); State v. Huffstetler ,
The majority's analysis begins with the assumption that all 179 photographs were properly admitted into evidence, and therefore, the extent to which any of them may have been erroneously admitted in violation of Rule 403 of the North Carolina Rules of Evidence, because they were more prejudicial than probative, is irrelevant to whether defendant was prejudiced by the jury taking them back to the jury room without his consent. This determination misses the point of defendant's argument concerning a Rule 403 analysis. That it may be error under Rule 403 to admit gruesome, distressing, and redundant photographs of a victim demonstrates that the law recognizes the sensational and emotional effect that such photographs can have. State v. Hennis ,
**247If the General Assembly's decision to require the parties' consent before allowing evidence in a trial to go to the jury room, thus abrogating the common law rule that juries hear the evidence in the courtroom, is to have any legal effect, this Court must enforce it. See Gooding v. Pope ,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- STATE of North Carolina v. Willoughby Henerey MUMMA
- Cited By
- 19 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Appeal from conviction for second-degree murder whether the trial court committed prejudicial error by sending numerous pictures of the decedent's body into the jury room plain error review of the trial court's jury instructions concerning the aggressor doctrine in relation to defendant's claim of self-defense.