State v. Osorio

Citation675 S.E.2d 144, 196 N.C. App. 458, 2009 N.C. App. LEXIS 424
Date Filed2009-04-21
DocketCOA08-1199
Cited174 times
StatusPublished

Syllabus

<bold>1. Jury — deadlock — trial court required continuation of deliberations</bold> <block_quote> The trial court did not abuse its discretion or commit plain error in a trafficking in cocaine case by failing to <italic>ex mero motu</italic> declare a mistrial and requiring the jurors to continue their deliberations after the jury announced it was deadlocked because a review of the totality of circumstances revealed that the trial court's instructions merely served as a catalyst for further deliberations, and defendant failed to point to any statement, act, or omission by the trial court which could be interpreted as coercive; and although defendant noted that the jury deliberated nine hours without a mistrial being declared, the amount of time that the jury deliberated in this case was not so long as to be coercive in nature.</block_quote><page_number>Page 459</page_number> <bold>2. Drugs — acting in concert — instruction — sufficiency of evidence</bold> <block_quote> A de novo review revealed that the trial court did not err in a trafficking in cocaine case by instructing on the theory of acting in concert because there was sufficient evidence that another person, Hernandez, was involved, including that: (1) Hernandez opened the door to admit a detective to the residence prior to the drug deal; and (2) defendant stated that he either handed the bricks of cocaine to the detective himself with Hernandez present, or Hernandez handed the cocaine to the detective and defendant subsequently shook the detective's hand.</block_quote> <bold>3. Jury — failure to individually poll jurors — substitution of defense</bold> <bold>counsel during jury deliberations</bold> <block_quote> The trial court did not commit reversible or plain error in a trafficking in cocaine case by failing to individually poll the jurors and by allowing the substitution of counsel during the jury deliberations because: (1) neither the polling of the jury nor the substitution of counsel issue is subject to plain error analysis when defendant did not argue that the trial court's instructions to the jury were erroneous; (2) defendant waived any error by failing to object to the trial court's polling of the jury by show of hands and did not request individual polling as required by N.C. R. App. P. 10; and (3) there was no indication the trial court abused its discretion, nor that defendant suffered any prejudice, by the substitution of the public defender as defense counsel during jury deliberations when the assistant public defender was ill.</block_quote> <bold>4. Appeal and Error — preservation of issues — failure to assign error</bold> <block_quote> Although defendant contends his substitute counsel was ineffective for failing to request that the jury be polled following the return of the verdicts in accordance with N.C.G.S. § <cross_reference>15A-1238</cross_reference>, this issue was not properly preserved because defendant failed to assign as error any ineffective assistance of counsel.</block_quote>

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Case ID: 1326248