State v. Schalow ( 2020 )


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  •               IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
    No. COA19-215
    Filed: 7 January 2020
    Henderson County, Nos. 16-CRS-901-07, 18-CRS-133-38
    STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA,
    v.
    LEONARD SCHALOW, Defendant.
    Appeal by Defendant from order entered 7 August 2018 by Judge W. Robert
    Bell in Henderson County Superior Court.        Heard in the Court of Appeals 17
    September 2019.
    Attorney General Joshua H. Stein, by Assistant Attorney General Joseph L.
    Hyde, for the State-Appellee.
    Appellate Defender Glenn Gerding, by Assistant Appellate Defender Daniel
    Shatz, for Defendant-Appellant.
    COLLINS, Judge.
    Defendant Leonard Schalow appeals from the trial court’s 7 August 2018 order
    denying his motion to dismiss the charges against him. Defendant contends that the
    trial court erred by denying his motion to dismiss because: (1) the State violated his
    rights under the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment to the United
    States Constitution and Article I, Section 19 of the North Carolina Constitution by
    bringing the charges against him; (2) the State violated his rights under the Due
    Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and
    STATE V. SCHALOW
    Opinion of the Court
    Article I, Section 19 of the North Carolina Constitution by vindictively prosecuting
    the charges against him; and (3) the State impermissibly failed to join the charges in
    his earlier prosecution as required by N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-926. Because we conclude
    that Defendant is entitled to a presumption of prosecutorial vindictiveness that the
    State has failed to overcome and that the charges brought against him should have
    been dismissed pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-926, we reverse and remand.
    I.        Background
    In late February 2014, warrants issued for Defendant’s arrest for the alleged
    commission of various acts of violence against his wife, Erin Schalow. These warrants
    found probable cause to arrest Defendant for (1) assault on a female (
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14-33
    (C)(2)), (2) assault inflicting serious injury with a minor present (
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14-33
    (D)), (3) assault with a deadly weapon (
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14-33
    (C)(1)),
    (4) assault by strangulation (
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14-32.4
    (B)), and (5) assault inflicting
    serious bodily injury (
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14-32.4
    ).
    Defendant was indicted on 10 March 2014 under file number 14 CRS 50887 for
    “ATTEMPT [sic] FIRST DEGREE MURDER” for “unlawfully, willfully and
    feloniously . . . attempt[ing] to murder and kill Erin Henry Schalow” (the “First
    Prosecution”). The State subsequently dismissed the other charges pending against
    Defendant.
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    STATE V. SCHALOW
    Opinion of the Court
    Following the empanelment of a jury and the presentation of evidence on the
    “ATTEMPT [sic] FIRST DEGREE MURDER” charge, the trial court noted that the
    indictment failed to allege malice aforethought, a required element of attempted first-
    degree murder under the short-form indictment statute, 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15-144
    .
    Over Defendant’s objection that the indictment sufficiently alleged attempted
    voluntary manslaughter under 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15-144
     and that jeopardy had
    attached once the jury was empaneled, the trial court declared a mistrial and
    dismissed the indictment as fatally defective.
    On 18 May 2015, Defendant was re-indicted under file number 15 CRS 50922,
    again for “ATTEMPT [sic] FIRST DEGREE MURDER[,]” this time for “unlawfully,
    willfully and feloniously . . . with malice aforethought attempt[ing] to murder and kill
    Erin Henry Schalow by torture” (the “Second Prosecution”). Defendant moved to
    dismiss on 22 May 2015 arguing, inter alia, that because jeopardy had attached in
    the First Prosecution on the dismissed indictment for attempted voluntary
    manslaughter, the Double Jeopardy Clause prohibited the State from prosecuting
    him for the greater offense of attempted first-degree murder. Following a hearing,
    the trial court denied Defendant’s motion.         Defendant was subsequently tried,
    convicted, and sentenced to 157 to 201 months’ imprisonment.
    Defendant appealed to this Court. In State v. Schalow, 
    251 N.C. App. 334
    , 354,
    
    795 S.E.2d 567
    , 580 (2016) (“Schalow I”), disc. review improvidently allowed, 370 N.C.
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    STATE V. SCHALOW
    Opinion of the Court
    525, 
    809 S.E.2d 579
     (2018), we held that Defendant’s indictment, prosecution, trial,
    and conviction in the Second Prosecution violated Defendant’s double-jeopardy
    rights, and accordingly vacated the conviction and underlying indictment.
    On 4 January 2017, the State obtained additional indictments against
    Defendant for 14 counts of felony child abuse (
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14-318.4
    (a5)). The
    following day, the State petitioned our Supreme Court to review Schalow I. On
    9 January 2017, Henderson County District Attorney Greg Newman was quoted in
    the press saying: “If . . . the Supreme Court refuses to take up the case, then I have a
    plan in place to address that circumstance and will take additional action to see that
    [Defendant] is held accountable for his actions. . . . I will do everything that I can to
    see that [Defendant] remains in custody for as long as possible.”
    On 6 March 2018, after our Supreme Court determined discretionary review
    had been improvidently allowed in Schalow I, Newman was quoted on Facebook as
    saying that “things do not always go our way, so I will make my adjustments and
    prosecute [Defendant] again” and that “[Defendant] will not get out of custody, but
    will instead be sent back to the Henderson County jail where new felony charges
    await him. My goal is to have [Defendant] receive a comparable sentence to the one
    originally imposed” in the Second Prosecution. On 19 March 2018, Defendant was
    indicted for three counts of assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill inflicting
    serious injury (
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14-32
    (a)) (“ADWIKISI”), two counts of assault
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    STATE V. SCHALOW
    Opinion of the Court
    inflicting serious bodily injury (
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14-32.4
    (a)) (“AISBI”), and one count
    of assault by strangulation (
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14-32.4
    (b)) (“ABS”). Like the charges
    at issue in the First and Second Prosecutions, the new child abuse and assault
    charges are all based upon various acts of violence that Defendant allegedly
    committed against his wife in 2014.
    On 19 July 2018, Defendant moved to dismiss the new charges on grounds of,
    inter alia, double jeopardy, vindictive prosecution, and statutory joinder. Following
    a hearing, the trial court denied Defendant’s motion. Defendant filed a petition for a
    writ of certiorari seeking immediate review of the order denying his motion to
    dismiss, which we allowed.
    II.    Discussion
    Defendant contends that the trial court erred by denying his motion to dismiss
    because (1) the State violated his double-jeopardy rights by bringing the new charges;
    (2) the State violated his due-process rights by vindictively prosecuting the new
    charges against him; and (3) the State impermissibly failed to join the new charges
    as required by N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-926.
    A. Vindictive Prosecution
    In North Carolina v. Pearce, 
    395 U.S. 711
     (1969), limited by Alabama v. Smith,
    
    490 U.S. 794
     (1989), the United States Supreme Court reviewed the constitutionality
    of a sentence given upon reconviction to a criminal defendant after the defendant had
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    STATE V. SCHALOW
    Opinion of the Court
    successfully appealed from his initial conviction. An issue in Pearce was whether,
    because he was subjected upon reconviction to a greater punishment than that
    imposed following the first trial, the defendant’s due-process rights under the
    Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution had been violated. Pearce,
    
    395 U.S. at 723-26
    .    The Court said that an “imposition of a penalty upon the
    defendant for having successfully pursued a statutory right of appeal or collateral
    remedy would be . . . a violation of due process of law.” 
    Id. at 724
    . Noting that
    “vindictiveness against a defendant for having successfully attacked his first
    conviction must play no part in the sentence he receives after a new trial,” the Court
    held that an increased sentence could not be imposed following retrial unless the
    sentencing judge made findings in the record providing objective justification for the
    increased punishment “so that the constitutional legitimacy of the increased sentence
    may be fully reviewed on appeal.” 
    Id. at 725-26
    .
    The Court later extended Pearce’s holding that defendants must be freed from
    apprehension of retaliation by sentencing judges to retaliation by prosecutors:
    A person convicted of an offense is entitled to pursue his
    statutory right to a trial de novo, without apprehension
    that the State will retaliate by substituting a more serious
    charge for the original one, thus subjecting him to a
    significantly increased potential period of incarceration.
    Due process of law requires that such a potential for
    vindictiveness must not enter into North Carolina’s two-
    tiered appellate process.
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    STATE V. SCHALOW
    Opinion of the Court
    Blackledge v. Perry, 
    417 U.S. 21
    , 28 (1974) (internal citation omitted). The Blackledge
    Court clarified that a defendant need not show that the prosecutor actually acted in
    bad faith; instead, where the reviewing court determines that “a realistic likelihood
    of ‘vindictiveness’” exists, a presumption of vindictiveness may be applied. 
    Id.
     at 27-
    29.
    This Court has articulated the test for prosecutorial vindictiveness under
    Pearce and its progeny as follows:
    in cases involving allegations of prosecutorial
    vindictiveness, a defendant is constitutionally entitled to
    relief from judgment if he can show through objective
    evidence that either:
    (1) his prosecution was actually motivated by a
    desire to punish him for doing what the law clearly
    permits him to do, or
    (2) the circumstances surrounding his prosecution
    are such that a vindictive motive may be presumed
    and the State has failed to provide affirmative
    evidence to overcome the presumption.
    State v. Wagner, 
    148 N.C. App. 658
    , 661, 
    560 S.E.2d 174
    , 176 (emphasis omitted),
    rev’d in part on other grounds, 
    356 N.C. 599
    , 
    572 S.E.2d 777
     (2002). Thus, if a
    defendant shows that his prosecution was motivated by actual vindictiveness or that
    the presumption of vindictiveness applies and is not overcome by the State, the
    charges against the defendant and any resulting convictions must be set aside. See
    Blackledge, 
    417 U.S. at 28-29
    . We review Defendant’s allegations of prosecutorial
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    STATE V. SCHALOW
    Opinion of the Court
    vindictiveness, like any alleged violation of constitutional rights, under a de novo
    standard. See State v. Graham, 
    200 N.C. App. 204
    , 214, 
    683 S.E.2d 437
    , 444 (2009).
    This is the third time that District Attorney Newman has attempted to try
    Defendant for crimes based upon the same alleged conduct. Each time, Defendant
    has been charged with offenses carrying “significantly increased potential period[s]
    of incarceration,” Blackledge, 
    417 U.S. at 28
    , relative to the charges he faced before:
       In the First Prosecution, Defendant was indicted for a single
    count of attempted voluntary manslaughter, a Class E felony,
    without alleged aggravating factors, which corresponds to a
    maximum presumptive-range sentence (at Prior Record Level
    I) of 42 months’ imprisonment.
       In the Second Prosecution, Defendant was indicted for a single
    count of attempted first-degree murder, a Class B2 felony,
    without alleged aggravating factors, which corresponds to a
    maximum presumptive-range sentence (at Prior Record Level
    I) of 201 months’ imprisonment.
       In the instant case, Defendant has been indicted for the
    following offenses, corresponding to a cumulative maximum
    sentence (at Prior Record Level I) of 627 months’
    imprisonment:1
    o 14 counts of child abuse, a Class G felony, without
    alleged aggravating factors, resulting in a cumulative
    maximum presumptive-range sentence 350 months’
    imprisonment;
    o Three counts of ADWIKISI, a Class C felony, including
    alleged aggravating factors, resulting in a cumulative
    maximum aggravated-range sentence of 369 months’
    1 These calculations are based upon N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-1340.17, and the calculation of the
    cumulative maximum sentence for the new charges involves the reduction of the sentence
    contemplated by N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-1354(b)(1).
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    STATE V. SCHALOW
    Opinion of the Court
    imprisonment;
    o Two counts of AISBI, a Class F felony, including alleged
    aggravating factors, resulting in a cumulative
    aggravated-range sentence 66 months’ imprisonment;
    and
    o One count of ABS, a Class H felony, including
    aggravating factors, resulting in a maximum
    aggravated-range    sentence  of  19  months’
    imprisonment.
    Therefore, the “increased potential period of incarceration” Defendant now faces
    relative to what he potentially faced in the Second Prosecution is more than 35 years
    of incarceration in aggregate. Id. And were Defendant to be convicted of the new
    charges and sentenced to the longest prison term legally-supportable by the
    indictments—i.e., as a Prior Record Level VI, at the high end of the aggravated range,
    for all charges—Defendant would be sentenced to a maximum of 1331 months for the
    new charges, relative to a maximum sentence of 592 months for the attempted first-
    degree murder charge, a difference of more than 60 years of incarceration. See State
    v. Lucas, 
    353 N.C. 568
    , 596, 
    548 S.E.2d 712
    , 731 (2001) (“[U]nless the statute
    describing the offense explicitly sets out a maximum sentence, the statutory
    maximum sentence for a criminal offense in North Carolina is that which results
    from: (1) findings that the defendant falls into the highest criminal history category
    for the applicable class offense and that the offense was aggravated, followed by (2) a
    decision by the sentencing court to impose the highest possible corresponding
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    STATE V. SCHALOW
    Opinion of the Court
    minimum sentence from the ranges presented in the chart found in [N.C. Gen. Stat.]
    § 15A-1340.17(c).”), overruled on other grounds by State v. Allen, 
    359 N.C. 425
    , 
    615 S.E.2d 256
     (2005).
    Blackledge and Wagner stand for the proposition that where a defendant is
    indicted on charges carrying a “significantly increased potential period of
    incarceration” after the defendant “do[es] what the law clearly permits him to do”—
    here, appealing from the judgment in the Second Prosecution—a reviewing court may
    apply a presumption of vindictiveness. Blackledge, 
    417 U.S. at 28
    ; Wagner, 
    148 N.C. App. at 661
    , 
    560 S.E.2d at 176
    . Such a presumption is particularly appropriate here,
    where the same prosecutor issued all of the relevant indictments, giving the
    prosecutor a “personal stake in the outcome” of defendant’s prosecution writ large
    that raises the prospect that the prosecutor was motivated by “self-vindication” in
    seeking the new indictments. Cf. Wagner, 
    148 N.C. App. at 663
    , 
    560 S.E.2d at 177
    (distinguishing Pearce and Blackledge and declining to apply a presumption of
    prosecutorial vindictiveness, in part, because the prosecutor in Wagner had not
    previously prosecuted the defendant).       Therefore, based upon the decades of
    additional incarceration Defendant potentially faces from the indictments in the
    instant case relative to what he faced from the indictment in the Second
    Prosecution—upon which Defendant was tried and convicted, and from which
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    STATE V. SCHALOW
    Opinion of the Court
    Defendant successfully exercised his statutory right to appeal—we conclude that
    Defendant is entitled to a presumption of prosecutorial vindictiveness.
    The State relies extensively upon this Court’s decision in State v. Rodgers, 
    68 N.C. App. 358
    , 
    315 S.E.2d 492
     (1984), to support its argument that a presumption of
    vindictiveness is not warranted where the State seeks merely to remedy “pleading
    defects[.]” For several reasons, Rogers does not help the State. First, the relevant
    change in the charging decision here—from a single attempted first-degree murder
    charge to 20 child-abuse and assault charges—did not merely amount to the
    clarification of “pleading defects[.]” And second, we declined to apply a presumption
    of vindictiveness in Rogers, in part, because the defendant showed “neither an
    increase in the number of charges brought against him nor an increase in his
    potential punishment under the superseding indictment.” 
    Id. at 379
    , 
    315 S.E.2d at 507
    . Here, where the State has brought 19 more charges and dramatically increased
    the potential punishment Defendant faces, Rogers is clearly distinguishable.
    We therefore turn to the question of whether the State has provided
    affirmative evidence in rebuttal which overcomes the presumption, as contemplated
    by Wagner, 
    148 N.C. App. at 661
    , 
    560 S.E.2d at 176
    . The State has failed to provide
    such evidence. In fact, the only affirmative evidence in the record concerning the
    rationale for the prosecutor’s charging decisions makes clear that the charging
    decisions were (1) expressly conditioned upon the outcome of the State’s appeal from
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    STATE V. SCHALOW
    Opinion of the Court
    Schalow I and (2) influenced by the prosecutor’s stated determination to “do
    everything that [he] can to see that [Defendant] remains in custody for as long as
    possible.” While the State argues, citing State v. Van Trussell, 
    170 N.C. App. 33
    , 
    612 S.E.2d 195
     (2005), that “seeking to ensure that the defendant suffers some
    consequences for his criminal conduct is a sufficient—not vindictive—justification for
    praying judgment when a separate conviction is set aside on appeal[,]” there is
    nothing in the record indicating that this case involves a Prayer for Judgment
    Continued such as was at issue in Van Trussell, and the State’s argument is therefore
    misguided.
    Even assuming arguendo that the record evidence described above fails to
    show actual vindictiveness on behalf of the prosecutor—which we need not decide
    because we hold that Defendant has shown entitlement to a presumption of
    vindictiveness—and instead demonstrates an intent to punish Defendant for
    suspected criminal activity, to hold such evidence can be sufficient to overcome a
    presumption of vindictiveness would effectively eviscerate the presumption
    altogether, and thereby render Pearce and its progeny nugatory. See United States
    v. Goodwin, 
    457 U.S. 368
    , 372-73 (1982) (“The imposition of punishment is the very
    purpose of virtually all criminal proceedings. The presence of a punitive motivation,
    therefore, does not provide an adequate basis for distinguishing governmental action
    that is fully justified as a legitimate response to perceived criminal conduct from
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    STATE V. SCHALOW
    Opinion of the Court
    governmental action that is an impermissible response to noncriminal, protected
    activity” such as appealing from a conviction). This we of course cannot do. State v.
    McDowell, 
    310 N.C. 61
    , 74, 
    310 S.E.2d 301
    , 310 (1984) (when interpreting federal
    constitutional rights, “a state court should exercise and apply its own independent
    judgment, treating, of course, decisions of the United States Supreme Court as
    binding”). We therefore reject the State’s argument.
    Because we conclude that Defendant is entitled to a presumption of
    prosecutorial vindictiveness and that the State has failed to overcome the
    presumption, dismissal of the new charges is required.
    B. Statutory Joinder
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-926 (“Section 926”) provides as follows, in relevant part:
    (a) Joinder of Offenses. – Two or more offenses may be
    joined in one pleading or for trial when the offenses,
    whether felonies or misdemeanors or both, are based on the
    same act or transaction or on a series of acts or transactions
    connected together or constituting parts of a single scheme
    or plan. . . .
    ....
    (c) Failure to Join Related Offenses.
    ....
    (2) A defendant who has been tried for one offense
    may thereafter move to dismiss a charge of a
    joinable offense. The motion to dismiss must be
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    STATE V. SCHALOW
    Opinion of the Court
    made prior to the second trial,2 and must be granted
    unless
    a. A motion for joinder of these offenses was
    previously denied, or
    b. The court finds that the right of joinder has
    been waived, or
    c. The court finds that because the prosecutor
    did not have sufficient evidence to warrant
    trying this offense at the time of the first trial,
    or because of some other reason, the ends of
    justice would be defeated if the motion were
    granted.
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15A-926(a), (c)(2) (2018).
    In State v. Furr, 
    292 N.C. 711
    , 
    235 S.E.2d 193
    , cert. denied, 
    434 U.S. 924
     (1977),
    our Supreme Court entertained a challenge to indictments that the defendant argued
    should have been dismissed as joinable offenses under Section 926. Noting that the
    indictments at issue had not been returned before the prior trial purportedly
    requiring dismissal had begun, the Furr Court held that the indictments could not
    have been joined with the offense previously tried. 
    Id. at 724
    , 
    235 S.E.2d at 201
    .
    Because it found “nothing whatever in the record to indicate that the state held the
    [challenged] charges in reserve pending the outcome of the [previous] trial[,]” the
    2 Where, as here, a second trial has already taken place, and the anticipated trial on the
    offenses at issue will therefore be the defendant’s third or subsequent trial, the motion to dismiss
    contemplated by Section 926(c)(2) must be made prior to the anticipated trial that has yet to take
    place.
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    STATE V. SCHALOW
    Opinion of the Court
    Furr Court held Section 926 was not applicable in that case, and overruled the
    defendant’s argument. 
    Id.
    Several years later, in State v. Warren, 
    313 N.C. 254
    , 
    328 S.E.2d 256
     (1985),
    the Court elaborated upon the language above, and set forth what we will call the
    “Warren exception”:
    If a defendant shows that the prosecution withheld
    indictment on additional charges solely in order to
    circumvent the statutory joinder requirements, the
    defendant is entitled under [N.C. Gen. Stat. §] 15A-
    926(c)(2) to a dismissal of the additional charges. The
    defendant must bear the burden of persuasion in such
    cases. . . .
    If a defendant can show, for example, that during the first
    trial the prosecutor was aware of substantial evidence that
    the defendant had committed the crimes for which he was
    later indicted, this would be some evidence that the delay
    in bringing the later indictment was for the purpose of
    circumventing the statute. A showing that the State’s
    evidence at the second trial would be the same as the
    evidence presented at the first would also tend to show that
    the prosecutor delayed indictment on the additional crimes
    for such purpose. A finding of either or both circumstances
    would support but not compel a determination by the trial
    court that the prosecutor withheld the additional
    indictment in order to circumvent the statute.
    Id. at 260, 
    328 S.E.2d at 261
     (emphasis omitted). The Warren Court added that
    “[w]hen reviewing the trial court’s denial of the defendant’s motion to dismiss . . . we
    may only consider the evidence before the trial court when it made its ruling at the
    conclusion of the pretrial hearing.” 
    Id.
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    Opinion of the Court
    Defendant argues that he showed both of the circumstances that the Warren
    Court said “would support but not compel a determination by the trial court that the
    prosecutor withheld the additional indictment[s] in order to circumvent” Section 926,
    
    id.,
     and that the trial court accordingly erred by denying his motion to dismiss. In
    support of his argument, Defendant points to (1) the charges the State previously
    dismissed in the case and (2) certain concessions the State made at the hearing on
    Defendant’s motion to dismiss regarding the evidence to be presented to prove the
    new charges.
    As mentioned above, Defendant was charged by arrest warrant in early 2014—
    before the State obtained the initial indictment in the First Prosecution for
    “ATTEMPT [sic] FIRST DEGREE MURDER”—with (1) assault on a female,
    (2) assault inflicting serious injury with a minor present, (3) assault with a deadly
    weapon, (4) assault by strangulation, and (5) assault inflicting serious bodily injury.
    These arrest warrants indicate that a magistrate found probable cause to arrest
    Defendant for those offenses based upon the same conduct for which Defendant is
    currently charged.
    First, the new indictments charging Defendant with ADWIKISI are based
    upon the grand jury’s finding that Defendant attacked his wife with a crutch and a
    knife, and two of the dismissed warrants charged Defendant with assault with a
    deadly weapon based upon probable cause that Defendant attacked his wife with a
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    STATE V. SCHALOW
    Opinion of the Court
    crutch and a knife. Second, the new indictments charging Defendant with AISBI are
    based upon the grand jury’s finding that Defendant hit his wife in the face, struck
    her in the mouth, ripped her ear, kicked her in her body, and caused her a ruptured
    spleen, broken ribs, broken facial bones, and severe bruising on her body, and two of
    the dismissed warrants charged Defendant with assault on a female and AISBI based
    upon probable cause that Defendant hit and punched his wife in the face, struck her
    in the mouth, ripped her ear, kicked her in her body, and caused her a ruptured
    spleen, broken ribs, broken facial bones, and severe bruising to her body. Third, the
    new indictments charging Defendant with ABS are based upon the grand jury’s
    finding that Defendant used his hands to squeeze his wife’s throat, and one of the
    dismissed warrants charged Defendant with ABS for forcibly placing his hands
    around his wife’s neck and squeezing.               Finally, the new indictments charging
    Defendant with child abuse are based upon the grand jury’s finding that Defendant
    committed unspecified “grossly negligent acts in the omission of caring for [his son],
    show[ing] a reckless disregard for human life and . . . result[ing] in serious mental
    injury to” his son, and two of the dismissed warrants charged Defendant with assault
    on a female and assault inflicting serious injury with a minor present for attacking
    his wife in the presence of his son.3
    3 While the child-abuse indictments do not specifically allege what the “grossly negligent acts”
    were, because (1) the child-abuse indictments are based upon purported mental injury to Defendant’s
    son, (2) the dismissed warrants charged Defendant with committing a number of assaults on his wife
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    Opinion of the Court
    The prosecutor’s dismissal of the arrest warrants prior to the trial in the
    Second Prosecution indicates that the prosecutor was at least constructively aware of
    evidence sufficient to convince a magistrate that there was probable cause to believe
    that Defendant had engaged in the conduct described therein before the prosecutor
    took that case to trial. And the State told the trial court that there had been no
    additional steps taken to develop evidence in the case since the trial in the Second
    Prosecution ended in 2015:
    THE COURT: 2015. All right. Since that time has there
    been any additional investigation, interviews of witnesses
    or anything done in the case, Mr. Mundy or Mr. Newman?
    MR. NEWMAN: There has not been, Your Honor. The only
    thing new is the addition of Dr. Mumpower that we would
    add at trial in terms of information.
    These considerations convince us that Defendant has shown the first Warren
    circumstance, i.e., that “during the first trial the prosecutor was aware of substantial
    evidence that the defendant had committed the crimes for which he was later
    indicted[.]” Warren, 
    313 N.C. at 260
    , 
    328 S.E.2d at 261
     (emphasis omitted).
    in the presence of his son, (3) Defendant’s previous prosecution for attempted first-degree murder was
    based upon alleged attacks by Defendant on his wife, and (4) as described below, the prosecutor
    represented at the hearing on Defendant’s motion to dismiss that there would be no new non-opinion
    evidence introduced regarding the child-abuse charges that the State had not previously introduced
    in support of its attempted first-degree murder prosecution, we conclude that the State’s theory of
    mental injury to Defendant’s son must be based upon the child’s purported presence at the time of the
    alleged attacks upon Defendant’s wife, which the dismissed warrants described.
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    Opinion of the Court
    Furthermore, the State represented at the hearing on Defendant’s motion to
    dismiss that the State would seek to introduce no new non-opinion evidence to prove
    the new charges that had not been introduced in support of its attempted first-degree
    murder prosecution:
    [The] defense has everything that we have. And this goes
    back to the, you know, time, I guess, in 2014 and ‘15,
    thereabouts. And so they have all of the reports. That’s
    what we are going to us[e] again. Of course, the same
    witnesses. They have examined all of these witnesses.
    They have seen the documents. The[y] have disks of
    interviews. There -- I mean, there’s a trial transcript. I
    think they have that. There are [Department of Social
    Services] documents that were not used at the first trial. I
    don’t think we would use those now, but give some insight
    to our case here. . . .
    So everything that we would present on any of these cases
    the defense has had and has had [sic] for quite sometime
    [sic]. But we -- I understand -- but they have the discovery
    in the case. And we -- I don’t think they are going to see or
    hear anything particularly new from us.
    Indeed, as mentioned above, the State told the trial court that “[t]he only thing new
    is the addition of Dr. Mumpower that we would add at trial in terms of information.”
    The State told the trial court that Mumpower is a psychologist who “examined
    nothing with respect to the case” and did not prepare an expert report, but that the
    State wished to put Mumpower on the stand to testify regarding a hypothetical, i.e.,
    to “give him some facts and ask him to — see if he has an opinion on that basis.”
    Pursuant to the State’s concession that it only seeks to add unspecified hypothetical
    - 19 -
    STATE V. SCHALOW
    Opinion of the Court
    testimony from a witness who knows nothing about the case, we conclude that
    Defendant has also shown the second Warren circumstance, i.e., “that the State’s
    evidence at the second trial would be the same as the evidence presented at the
    first[.]”4 Warren, 
    313 N.C. at 260
    , 
    328 S.E.2d at 261
    .
    That Defendant has shown both Warren circumstances does not end the
    inquiry, however. In Warren, our Supreme Court specifically said that “[a] finding of
    either or both circumstances would support but not compel a determination by the
    trial court that the prosecutor withheld the additional indictment in order to
    circumvent the statute.” 
    Id.
     (emphasis added). Defendant directs us to no case in
    which our courts have applied Warren to overturn a denial of a motion to dismiss,
    and we are aware of no such case.
    In Warren itself, our Supreme Court found that the trial court was not
    compelled to determine that the prosecutor withheld the indictments there at issue
    to circumvent Section 926 because, inter alia, the State at the hearing on the
    defendant’s motion to dismiss forecast new, “much stronger evidence” of the
    defendant’s guilt on the new charges than was previously available at the time of the
    4   A holding that Warren’s second circumstance is not shown where the State forecasts
    unspecified hypothetical opinion testimony from a witness who knows nothing about the case would
    effectively render that part of Warren meaningless, and we cannot make such a holding. See Andrews
    v. Haygood, 
    188 N.C. App. 244
    , 248, 
    655 S.E.2d 440
    , 443 (2008) (“[T]his Court has no authority to
    overrule decisions of our Supreme Court and we have the responsibility to follow those decisions until
    otherwise ordered by our Supreme Court.” (quotation marks, ellipsis, brackets, and citation omitted)).
    - 20 -
    STATE V. SCHALOW
    Opinion of the Court
    first trial. 
    Id. at 263
    , 
    328 S.E.2d at 263
    . Warren is therefore distinguishable from
    this case, where the State has said that no new evidence will be presented besides
    certain unspecified expert-opinion testimony. And in the lone case we have found
    that appears to have applied Warren in the context of a Section 926 challenge, this
    Court rejected the defendant’s Section 926 argument without analyzing either
    Warren circumstance, and did not provide any other analysis applicable here. State
    v. Tew, 
    149 N.C. App. 456
    , 459-60, 
    561 S.E.2d 327
    , 330-31 (2002).
    We are thus left with no precedent regarding what, beyond the two Warren
    circumstances, a defendant needs to show in order to implicate the Warren exception.
    Accordingly, in our view, because (1) Defendant has shown that both Warren
    circumstances are present, (2) the State has had multiple previous opportunities to
    join the offenses on which it now seeks to try Defendant, and (3) the State has neither
    argued that it was somehow unable to try the offenses at an earlier time nor proffered
    any explanation for why the offenses were not tried along with the earlier charge, we
    hold that the Warren exception should apply.
    We therefore conclude that Defendant has made a showing that should have
    compelled a determination by the trial court that the prosecutor withheld the
    indictments here at issue in order to circumvent Section 926, and that Defendant is
    entitled to dismissal of the new charges under Section 926(c)(2), as well.
    - 21 -
    STATE V. SCHALOW
    Opinion of the Court
    C. Double Jeopardy
    Because we conclude that Defendant’s motion to dismiss should have been
    granted on both vindictive-prosecution and statutory-joinder grounds, we do not
    address Defendant’s double-jeopardy arguments.
    III.   Conclusion
    Because we conclude that Defendant is entitled to a presumption of
    prosecutorial vindictiveness which the State has failed to overcome and that the
    charges brought against him should have been joined pursuant to Section 926(c)(2),
    we reverse the 7 August 2018 order and remand to the trial court with instructions
    to dismiss the charges against Defendant.
    REVERSED AND REMANDED.
    Judges BRYANT and YOUNG concur.
    - 22 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 19-215

Filed Date: 1/7/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 7/29/2024