IN THE SUPREME COURT OF NORTH CAROLINA
No. 142PA17
Filed 7 December 2018
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
v.
TERANCE GERMAINE MALACHI
On discretionary review pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 7A-31 of a unanimous decision
of the Court of Appeals, ___ N.C. App. ___, 799 S.E.2d 645 (2017), finding prejudicial
error in a judgment entered on 28 January 2016 by Judge Yvonne Mims Evans in
Superior Court, Mecklenburg County, vacating defendant’s convictions, and granting
defendant a new trial. Heard in the Supreme Court on 29 August 2018.
Joshua H. Stein, Attorney General, by John R. Green, Jr., Special Deputy
Attorney General, for the State-appellant.
Glenn Gerding, Appellate Defender, by Aaron Thomas Johnson, Assistant
Appellate Defender, for defendant-appellee.
ERVIN, Justice.
The issue before the Court in this case is whether the Court of Appeals erred
by vacating the judgment entered by the trial court based upon defendant’s
convictions for possession of a firearm by a felon and having attained habitual felon
status on the grounds that the trial court had erroneously instructed the jury that it
could convict defendant based upon a constructive possession theory that lacked
sufficient evidentiary support. After careful consideration of the record in light of the
applicable law, we reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals and remand this case
STATE V. MALACHI
Opinion of the Court
to that court for consideration of defendant’s remaining challenges to the trial court’s
judgment.
Shortly after midnight on 14 August 2014, the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police
Department received an anonymous call from a person who stated that he had just
seen an African-American male wearing a red shirt and black pants insert a handgun
into his pants while in the parking lot of Walker’s Express, a convenience store that
was located at 3416 Freedom Drive. Upon arriving at Walker’s Express
approximately three minutes later, Officers Ethan Clark and Jason Van Aken of the
Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department saw approximately six to eight people
standing in the parking lot, including a man later identified as defendant, who was
the only person present who matched the description provided by the caller.
As Officer Clark pulled his patrol vehicle into the parking lot, defendant looked
directly at the officer, “squared to [Officer Clark], and then immediately looked away
towards the ground, blading his body.”1 Upon making this observation, Officer Clark
and Officer Van Aken grabbed defendant’s arms and walked him out of the group
with which he had been standing. During that process, defendant “kept moving and
tugging” and “was very squirmy.” As the officers frisked and handcuffed defendant,
Officer Van Aken removed a revolver from the waistband on the right side of
1 According to Officer Clark, the occurrence of “blading” suggests that the person in
question is attempting to conceal the fact that he or she has a weapon on his or her person
by adopting a stance that is perpendicular to the person or persons making the observation.
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Opinion of the Court
defendant’s pants. Officer Kevin Hawkins arrived as Officer Van Aken was in the
process of taking the firearm into his custody. After Officer Van Aken seized the
firearm, defendant pointed to another individual in the parking lot and stated that
this individual had given him the firearm “and told him to hold on to it.”
On 16 November 2015, the Mecklenburg County Grand Jury returned bills of
indictment charging defendant with possession of a firearm by a felon and carrying a
concealed weapon. Previously, on 2 February 2015, defendant was indicted for
having attained habitual felon status. The charges against defendant came on for
trial before the trial court and a jury at the 19 January 2016 criminal session of the
Superior Court, Mecklenburg County. During the trial, defendant stipulated that he
had been convicted of a felony prior to 14 August 2014. At the jury instruction
conference, the State requested the trial court to instruct the jury in accordance with
N.C. Pattern Jury Instruction Crim. No. “104.41, actual possession.” Defendant
objected to the State’s request on the grounds that,
when it gives the definition of possession it refers to actual
or constructive. The [S]tate’s evidence was that it was
actual possession; there was no constructive possession. . . .
It’s not in terms of if it was near him or on him; there are
witnesses stating it was on him, so therefore I would
contend you should deny that instruction.
In overruling defendant’s objection, the trial court told the prosecutor that “I think
[the State] may have a good argument for actual, but nothing for constructive. And
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Opinion of the Court
if the jury believes the witnesses, they’re going to believe actual possession, right?”
As a result, the trial court instructed the jury that:
Possession of an article may be either actual or
constructive. A person has actual possession of an article
if he has it on his person and is aware of its presence, or
has both the power and intent to control its disposition or
use. A person has constructive possession of an article if
the person does not have it on his person but is aware of its
presence and both the power and intent to control its
disposition or use. A person’s awareness of an article and
a person’s power and intent to control its disposition or use
may be shown by direct evidence, or it may be inferred by
the circumstances.
....
The [d]efendant has been charged with possessing a
firearm after having been convicted of a felony. For you to
find the [d]efendant guilty of this offense, the State must
prove two things beyond a reasonable doubt.
First, that prior to August 14th, 2014, the
[d]efendant was convicted of a felony that was committed
in violation of the law of the State of North Carolina; and
second, that thereafter the [d]efendant possessed a
firearm. If you find from the evidence beyond a reasonable
doubt that the [d]efendant was convicted of a felony i[n]
Superior Court and that the [d]efendant thereafter
possessed a firearm, it would be your duty to return a
verdict of guilty. If you do not so find or have a reasonable
doubt as to one or more of these things, it would be your
duty to return a verdict of not guilty.
As it deliberated, the jury requested “a legal definition of possession of a
firearm [and] a definition of a concealed weapon.” Before responding to the jury’s
inquiry, the trial court addressed the parties, stating that “I will re-read the definition
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of possession of firearm by a felon, and in that definition I’ll include actual and
constructive possession; and I will re-read the concealed weapon instruction.”
Defendant unsuccessfully renewed his objection to the trial court’s proposed
possession instruction “based on due process grounds, on the possession instruction.”
On 21 January 2016, the jury returned a verdict convicting defendant of
possession of a firearm by a felon and acquitting him of carrying a concealed weapon.
Seven days later, defendant entered a plea of guilty to attaining habitual felon status.
Based upon the jury’s verdict and defendant’s guilty plea, the trial court entered a
judgment sentencing defendant to a term of 100 to 132 months imprisonment.
Defendant noted an appeal to the Court of Appeals from the trial court’s judgment.
In seeking relief from the trial court’s judgment before the Court of Appeals,
defendant argued, among other things, that the trial court had erred by instructing
the jury that it could find him guilty of possession of a firearm by a felon on the basis
of a constructive possession theory. State v. Malachi, ___ N.C. App. ___, ___, 799
S.E.2d 645, 647 (2017).2 In awarding defendant a new trial on the basis of this
contention, the Court of Appeals began by determining that “the State’s evidence
2 Defendant also argued that the trial court had erred by denying his motion to
suppress the firearm seized from his person. As a result of its decision to grant defendant a
new trial on the basis of the trial court’s decision to allow the jury to convict defendant on the
basis of the doctrine of constructive possession, the Court of Appeals did not reach defendant’s
search-related claim.
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supported an instruction only for actual possession and that the trial court
erroneously instructed the jury on constructive possession.”3 Id. at ___, 799 S.E.2d
at 649. After noting that “a trial judge should not give instructions to the jury which
are not supported by the evidence produced at the trial,” id. at ___, 799 S.E.2d at 648
(quoting State v. Cameron, 284 N.C. 165, 171, 200 S.E.2d 186, 191 (1973), cert. denied,
418 U.S. 905, 94 S. Ct. 3195, 41 L. Ed. 2d 1153 (1974)), and that “[o]ur courts [ ] have
consistently held that a trial court’s inclusion of a jury instruction unsupported by
the evidence presented at trial is an error requiring a new trial,” id. at ___, 799 S.E.2d
at 648, first citing State v. Lynch, 327 N.C. 210, 219, 393 S.E.2d 811, 816 (1990); and
then citing in the following order State v. Pakulski, 319 N.C. App. 562, 574, 356 S.E.2d
319, 326 (1987); State v. Johnson, 183 N.C. App. 576, 584-85, 646 S.E.2d 123, 128
(2007); State v. Hughes, 114 N.C. App. 742, 746, 443 S.E.2d 76, 79, disc. rev. denied,
337 N.C. 697, 448 S.E.2d 546 (1994); and State v. O’Rourke, 114 N.C. App. 435, 442,
442 S.E.2d 137, 140 (1994)), the Court of Appeals acknowledged that, in State v. Boyd,
366 N.C. 548, 742 S.E.2d 798 (2013), this Court had reversed a Court of Appeals
decision on the basis of a dissenting opinion stating that “errors [arising from trial
3 Although the State argued “that the evidence was sufficient to support constructive
possession because during the time after officers removed the revolver from [d]efendant, he
theoretically could have broken free from the officers and taken hold of the revolver,” id. at
___, 799 S.E.2d at 649, the Court of Appeals determined that, even though “[d]efendant
certainly was aware of the presence of the revolver taken from him by police, no evidence was
presented that he had the power to control its disposition or use by the officers who had
secured it,” id. at ___, 799 S.E.2d at 650. The State has not attempted to bring this argument
forward for our consideration.
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Opinion of the Court
court instructions allowing the jury to potentially convict a criminal defendant on the
basis of a legal theory lacking sufficient evidentiary support that were] not objected
to at trial are not plain error per se,” with “the burden [being instead] on the
defendant to show that [such] an erroneous . . . jury instruction had a probable impact
on the jury’s verdict,” id. at ___, 799 S.E.2d at 649 (citing Boyd, 222 N.C. App. 160,
173, 730 S.E.2d 193, 201) (2012) (Stroud, J., dissenting)). The Court of Appeals
interpreted our decision in Boyd to be limited to “plain error review” rather than
eliminating “the long established presumption that the jury relied on an erroneous
disjunctive instruction not supported by the evidence when given over an objection
by the defendant’s trial counsel.” Id. at ___, 799 S.E.2d at 649. As a result, since
Boyd “does not address erroneous disjunctive jury instructions given over the
objection of a defendant’s trial counsel” and since the jury’s verdict in this case did
not specify the theory upon which that body based its decision to convict defendant,
the Court of Appeals determined that defendant was entitled to a new trial based
upon the trial court’s erroneous decision to allow the jury to convict defendant on the
basis of constructive possession. Id. at ___, 799 S.E.2d at 649. In addition, the Court
of Appeals determined that defendant should receive a new trial “[e]ven if Boyd were
interpreted to eliminate the presumption of prejudice by jury instructions
unsupported by the evidence and objected to at trial” given that “there is a reasonable
possibility that the jury would have reached a different result had the trial court not
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provided instruction about the theory of constructive possession.” Id. at ___, 799
S.E.2d at 650.
On 23 May 2017, the State filed a petition seeking discretionary review of the
Court of Appeals’ decision in this case. In seeking further review by this Court, the
State asserted that the trial court did not err by instructing the jury concerning the
doctrine of constructive possession because “ ‘actual possession’ is simply a subset of
the broader concept” of constructive possession. In addition, the State argued that
the Court of Appeals had misapplied Boyd and failed to conduct an appropriate
prejudice analysis. According to the State, Boyd established that, regardless of
whether a contemporaneous objection had been lodged at trial, “where an instruction
is given on alternative theories of an offense despite one of the theories being
unsupported, the erroneous instruction is to be analyzed for prejudice.” The State
contends that, although “plain error” analysis was appropriate in Boyd given the
defendant’s failure to object to the challenged instruction at trial, “[i]n this case,
where there was an objection, the prejudice analysis would properly take the form of
regular prejudicial error review.” As a result, the State requested this Court to grant
further review of the Court of Appeals’ decision and to determine that there was no
reasonable possibility that the jury convicted defendant on constructive possession
grounds in light of the state of the evidence.
Defendant sought to dissuade the Court from granting discretionary review to
consider “three separate legal questions, each of which has been settled for decades.”
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Opinion of the Court
As an initial matter, defendant argued that this Court had long distinguished
between actual and constructive possession. Secondly, defendant argued that “it is
erroneous to instruct the jury on a theory unsupported by evidence.” Thirdly,
defendant urged this Court to reject the State’s assertion that errors resulting from
jury instructions allowing the jury to consider defendant’s guilt on the basis of a legal
theory that lacks sufficient evidentiary support should be subjected to a prejudice
analysis in lieu of “the per se error rule followed by this Court for at least three
decades.” Finally, defendant asserted that the Court of Appeals had, in fact,
conducted a prejudice analysis and determined that there was “a reasonable
possibility that the jury would have reached a different result had the trial court not
provided instruction about the theory of constructive possession.” (Quoting Malachi,
___ N.C. App. at ___, 799 S.E.2d at 647). As a result, defendant urged this Court to
refrain from granting further review in this case. We allowed the State’s
discretionary review petition on 1 November 2017.
In seeking to persuade us to overturn the Court of Appeals’ decision, the State
begins by asserting that the Court of Appeals erred by finding that the trial court had
erroneously instructed the jury concerning the doctrine of constructive possession.
According to the State, actual and constructive possession, instead of being mutually
exclusive, “are definitions that partake of each other,” with “what we think of as
‘actual possession’ [being] simply a subset of the broader concept [of constructive
possession.]” The State asserts that, “[o]riginally, possession meant physical
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custody,” with “constructive possession” constituting a “legal fiction” “employed to
cover those scenarios where possession ‘in the real sense of the word’ was not
present.” (Quoting 3 Wayne R. LaFave, Substantive Criminal Law § 19.1(a)(2) (2d
ed. 2003).) Over time, however, the State contends that this Court has “used
constructive possession to broaden the scope of possessory crimes in general.” (First
citing State v. Myers, 190 N.C. 239, 243, 129 S.E. 600, 601 (1925); then citing State v.
Baxter, 285 N.C. 735, 738, 208 S.E.2d 696, 698 (1974).) “At some point, possession
itself adopted the more general definition—the power and intent to control,” (citing
State v. Harvey, 281 N.C. 1, 12, 187 S.E.2d 706, 713 (1972)), so that “actual
possession” “became one form or subset of possession,” (citing State v. Perry, 316 N.C.
87, 96, 340 S.E.2d 450, 456 (1986)), with constructive possession becoming
“possession’s paradigm.”
According to the State, the approach adopted by the Court of Appeals’ decision
in this case conflicts with its recognition in State v. Barkley, 233 N.C. App. 787, 759
S.E.2d 713, 2014 WL 1792716 (2014) (unpublished), that, “[r]ather than presenting
an alternative theory of the offense, as defendant claims, the instructions as given
simply provided the jury with an accurate legal definition of possession, which
includes both actual and constructive possession.” (Citing Barkley, 2014 WL
1792716, at *4.) Similarly, the State contends that this Court has “recognized the
overlap” between the two concepts by acknowledging that “actual and constructive
possession ‘often so shade into one another that it is difficult to say where one ends
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and the other begins.’ ” (Quoting State v. McNeil, 359 N.C. 800, 808, 617 S.E.2d 271,
276 (2005).) As a result, the State concludes, “given this Court’s recognition that the
boundary between actual and constructive possession is indefinite and that evidence
of the one can constitute evidence of the other, the instructions given in this case were
not erroneous at all.”
Secondly, the State argues that, even if actual and constructive possession
constitute “distinct theories” rather than “definitional components,” the Court of
Appeals misapplied Boyd by concluding that any error that the trial court might have
committed was prejudicial. (Citing Boyd, 366 N.C. at 210, 739 S.E.2d at 838.)
According to the State, this Court’s decision in Boyd established that an error arising
from the delivery of an instruction concerning a theory of guilt devoid of sufficient
evidentiary support does not require an award of appellate relief unless the error in
question was prejudicial regardless of whether a contemporaneous objection was
lodged against the challenged instruction at trial. After acknowledging that Boyd
arose in a plain error, rather than a preserved error, context, the State asserts that
the only difference between these two situations stemmed from the nature of the
required prejudice analysis, with the relevant inquiry, in a case in which a
contemporaneous objection had been lodged at trial, being “whether, but for the
instruction on the unsupported theory, there was a reasonable possibility of a
different verdict.” (Citing N.C.G.S. § 15A-1443(a) (2015).)
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According to the State, this Court had held, prior to Pakulski, that the
erroneous submission of an alternative theory of guilt that was not supported by
evidence was not always prejudicial. (Citing State v. Moore, 315 N.C. 738, 749, 340
S.E.2d 401, 408 (1986) (stating that “[i]t is generally prejudicial error for the trial
judge to permit a jury to convict upon a theory not supported by the evidence”).)
Although our decision in Pakulski relied upon State v. Belton, 318 N.C. 141, 165, 347
S.E.2d 755, 770 (1986), overruled on other grounds by State v. Gaines, 345 N.C. 647,
677, 483 S.E.2d 483, 414 (1997), cert. denied, 522 U.S. 900, 118 S. Ct. 248, 139 L. Ed.
2d 177 (1997), the State asserts that the holding in Pakulski “that submission of an
alternative theory to the jury unsupported by evidence resulted in per se prejudice
even if overwhelming evidence supported the other theory submitted to the jury”
differed “significantly” “from Belton’s holding that submission of an alternative
theory to the jury supported by evidence but legally invalid resulted in per se
prejudice.”
In addition, the State contends that the United States Supreme Court has
clarified that the decisions upon which this Court relied in Belton “do not apply to
instructions on an alternative theory of guilt unsupported by evidence” and only
apply “to instructions on an alternative theory of guilt supported by evidence but
otherwise legally unavailable.” In spite of its acknowledgment that the United States
Supreme Court’s decision in Griffin v. United States does not control the resolution
of the state law issue before us in this case, the State cites Griffin for the proposition
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that “a defendant is not entitled to a new trial when a jury returns a general verdict
of guilty that could have been premised on a theory for which insufficient evidence
was presented so long as another theory of guilt was supported by sufficient
evidence.” (Citing Griffin v. United States, 502 U.S. 46, 59, 112 S. Ct. 466, 474, 116
L. Ed. 2d 371, 383-84 (1991).) As a result, the State urges us to hold, in reliance upon
the logic of Griffin, that when a trial court instructs on an alternative theory of guilt
that lacks sufficient evidentiary support, defendant is not entitled to an award of
appellate relief in the absence of a showing of prejudice.
Finally, the State argues that the Court of Appeals erred by holding, in the
alternative, that the trial court’s decision to allow the jury to convict defendant of
possession of a firearm by a felon on the basis of a constructive possession theory that
lacked sufficient evidentiary support prejudiced defendant. According to the State,
the record contains “overwhelming and uncontroverted evidence that defendant was
a felon and that he possessed a firearm—it was removed from his person and he
acknowledged to police that he had been holding it,” making it exceedingly doubtful
that the jury relied upon a theory of constructive possession, rather than actual
possession, in deciding to convict defendant.
Defendant, on the other hand, asserts that this Court should affirm the Court
of Appeals’ decision. In defendant’s view, the State’s contention that this Court has
“erased” the distinction between actual and constructive possession is meritless. As
an initial matter, defendant notes that the State had failed to assert that “this Court,
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over time, has effectively dissolved this distinction” between actual and constructive
possession before either the trial court or the Court of Appeals. (Citing N.C. R. App.
P. 10(a), (c); id at R. 28(a).) Instead, defendant states that the State argued before
both the trial court and the Court of Appeals that “both theories of possession were
supported by sufficient evidence to submit them to the jury,” requested the trial court
to instruct the jury concerning both of these possible theories of guilt, and drew a
distinction between actual and constructive possession throughout its brief before the
Court of Appeals. In addition, defendant argues that, to the extent that the “trial
court erred by failing to instruct the jury in accordance with the [S]tate’s new
understanding of possession, that error was invited by the [S]tate,” given that the
State requested, “over repeated objection, that the trial court instruct the jury on both
actual and constructive possession.” (First citing Bell v. Harrison, 179 N.C. 190, 198,
102 S.E. 200, 204 (1920); then citing Frugard v. Pritchard, 338 N.C. 508, 512, 450
S.E.2d 744, 746 (1994); and then citing State v. McPhail, 329 N.C. 636, 643, 406
S.E.2d 591, 596 (1991)). As a result, for all of these reasons, defendant contends that
the State has waived the right to argue before this Court that actual and constructive
possession do not represent different theories of guilt.
Secondly, defendant argues that the State’s attempt to describe actual
possession as a subset of constructive possession “runs counter to a century of
precedent from this Court,” ranging from our decision last year in State v. Jones, 369
N.C. 631, 634, 800 S.E.2d 54, 57 (2017) (holding that “this Court has stated that ‘[a]
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person is in constructive possession of a thing when, while not having actual
possession, he has the intent and capability to maintain control and dominion over
that thing’ ”) (quoting State v. Beaver, 317 N.C. 643, 648, 346 S.E.2d 476, 480 (1986)),
to our 1913 decision in State v. Lee, 164 N.C. 533, 535-36, 80 S.E. 405, 405-06 (1913)
(interpreting a statute prohibiting the possession of intoxicating liquors for sale as
encompassing both “actual and constructive possession”). As a result, defendant
contends that the State’s argument that the trial court did not err by instructing the
jury concerning the doctrine of constructive possession ignores “[a] century of
precedent [which] confirms that actual and constructive possession are mutually
exclusive because constructive possession, by definition, can only occur where actual
possession does not.”
In addition, defendant contends that, even if the State’s defense of the trial
court’s constructive possession instruction is correct, the trial court’s decision to
deliver a constructive possession instruction to the jury was still erroneous.
According to defendant, it is “well established that ‘a trial judge should not give
instructions to the jury which are not supported by the evidence produced at the
trial.’ ” (Quoting Cameron, 284 N.C. at 171, 200 S.E.2d at 191.) Defendant argues
that the evidence, when taken in the light most favorable to the State, merely
suggested that defendant had actual possession of the firearm that was discovered on
his person. As a result, defendant claims that the trial court erred by instructing the
jury that it could convict defendant on the basis of a constructive possession theory.
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Similarly, defendant contends that the Court of Appeals correctly held that the
trial court’s decision to deliver the erroneous constructive possession instruction was
“presumptively reversible.” According to defendant, a series of decisions by this Court
clearly demonstrates “the command of stare decisis” that a trial court’s decision to
instruct the jury on a theory of guilt unsupported by the evidence requires appellate
relief unless the reviewing court can conclusively determine from the record that the
jury did not rely upon the unsupported decision in deciding to convict the defendant.
(First citing State v. Petersilie, 334 N.C. 169, 193, 432 S.E.2d 832, 846 (1993); then
citing, in the following order, Lynch, 327 N.C. at 219, 393 S.E.2d at 816; Pakulski,
319 N.C. at 574, 356 S.E.2d at 326; Moore, 315 N.C. at 749, 340 S.E.2d at 408; State
v. Dammons, 293 N.C. 263, 272, 237 S.E.2d 834, 840 (1977); State v. Lee, 287 N.C.
536, 541, 215 S.E.2d 146, 149 (1975); State v. Duncan, 264 N.C. 123, 127, 141 S.E.2d
23, 26-27 (1965); State v. Knight, 248 N.C. 384, 389-90, 103 S.E.2d 452, 455-56
(1958).). In defendant’s view, neither this Court’s decision in Boyd, nor Pakulski’s
citation to Belton justify a departure from the rule “that it is reversible error for the
trial court to instruct the jury on a theory unsupported by the evidence.” Defendant
asserts that Pakulski was “neither the genesis nor the last statement of the [per se
reversible error] rule, but one of a decades-long series of cases from this Court
applying it.” For that reason, defendant argues that any attempt to distinguish
between the “legally-unsupported” jury instruction in Belton and the “factually-
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unsupported” jury instruction in Pakulski represents a misreading of this Court’s
precedent.
In a similar vein, defendant rejects the State’s assertion that our recent
decision in Boyd applies to more than “unpreserved instructional and evidentiary
error” subject to a plain error standard of review. (Citing Boyd, 366 N.C. at 210, 739
S.E.2d at 838.) In view of the fact that defendant repeatedly objected to the delivery
of a constructive possession instruction at trial, defendant asserts that his challenge
to the trial court’s constructive possession instruction is simply not subject to plain
error review, rendering Boyd irrelevant to the proper resolution of this case. As a
result, defendant argues that the delivery of an erroneous instruction concerning a
theory of guilt that lacks sufficient evidentiary support is not subject to prejudicial
error analysis and necessarily requires an award of appellate relief.
Defendant contends the “traditional rule,” which he describes as presuming
prejudice in instances in which a trial court instructs the jury concerning a theory of
guilt lacking sufficient evidentiary support, “accords with the purposes and
incentives governing preservation” by “urg[ing] both parties to speak up at trial
where errors can be corrected.” In the aftermath of Boyd, defendant claims that “[t]he
presumption that the jury convicted based on the unsupported legal theory” only
applies when the defendant objected to the delivery of the unsupported instruction
and “there is a general verdict, rather than a special verdict specifying the theory
underlying the conviction.” As a result, defendant argues that the “traditional rule”
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properly gives the State the incentive to request that the trial court instruct the jury
to render a special, rather than a general, verdict, thereby assuring that the jury
reached its decision on the basis of a correct understanding of the applicable law.
Finally, even if this Court decides that the erroneous delivery of an instruction
allowing the jury to convict a defendant on the basis of a theory that lacks sufficient
record support is subject to prejudicial error analysis, defendant argues that the
Court of Appeals correctly determined that “there is a reasonable possibility that
there would have been a different outcome had the trial court instructed the jury
correctly.” According to defendant, the Court of Appeals correctly held that the trial
court’s decision to deliver a constructive possession instruction created a risk that the
jury would be confused about the meaning of “possession,” with the existence of such
confusion being evidenced by the jury’s request for a further instruction concerning
possession during the deliberation process. In addition, defendant suggests that the
jury could have had doubts about the credibility of the State’s evidence given its
decision to acquit defendant of carrying a concealed weapon and the existence of
evidence tending to show that Officer Van Aken had an altercation with defendant
that resulted in defendant’s hospitalization and the termination of Officer Van Aken’s
employment, that Officers Clark and Hawkins did not prepare their written
statements on the day of the incident underlying the charges that were lodged against
defendant or mention the altercation between Officer Van Aken and defendant in
their statements, that Officer Hawkins remained in contact with Officer Van Aken
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after the latter’s employment was terminated, and that no audio or video recordings
of the discovery of the firearm on defendant’s person had been made. As a result,
defendant urges us to uphold the Court of Appeals’ decision to award him a new trial.
“It is well established that possession may be actual or constructive.” State v.
Bradshaw, 366 N.C. 90, 93, 728 S.E.2d 345, 348 (2012) (citing State v. Perry, 316 N.C.
87, 96, 340 S.E.2d 450, 456 (1986)). “Actual possession requires that a party have
physical or personal custody of the item.” State v. Alston, 131 N.C. App. 514, 519, 508
S.E.2d 315, 318 (1998) (citation omitted). “[A] person is in constructive possession of
a thing when, while not having actual possession, he has the intent and capability to
maintain control and dominion over that thing.” Jones, 369 N.C. at 634, 800 S.E.2d
at 57 (quoting State v. Beaver, 317 N.C. 643, 648, 346 S.E.2d 476, 480 (1986)).
According to well-established North Carolina law, “it is error for the trial judge to
charge on matters which materially affect the issues when they are not supported by
the evidence.” State v. Jennings, 276 N.C. 157, 161, 171 S.E.2d 447, 449 (1970) (First
citing State v. Knight, 248 N.C. 384, 389-90, 103 S.E.2d 452 455-56 (1958); then citing
State v. McCoy, 236 N.C. 121, 124, 71 S.E.2d 921, 923 (1952)).
Assuming, without in any way deciding, that the State has neither waived the
right to assert that actual possession is a subset of constructive possession nor invited
any error that the trial court might have made by treating actual and constructive
possession as separate concepts in its jury instructions, this Court has, as defendant
notes, long recognized a distinction between actual and constructive possession.
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STATE V. MALACHI
Opinion of the Court
Simply put, the prior decisions of this Court treat constructive possession as an
alternative means of showing the possession of an item necessary for guilt of certain
offenses that becomes available in the event that the State is unable to establish that
the defendant actually possessed an item. Although a person in actual possession of
an object might well have “the intent and capability to maintain control and dominion
over” that object, the essence of the two types of possession revolves around the extent
to which the person in question either did or did not physically have the object in his
or her possession, with there being no need for a showing of “the intent and capability
to maintain control and dominion over that object” in the event that the defendant
physically possessed the relevant item. As a result, we hold that the Court of Appeals
correctly determined that the trial court erred by allowing the jury to potentially
convict defendant of possession of a firearm by a felon on the basis of a constructive
possession theory.
In awarding defendant a new trial, the Court of Appeals held, first, that the
trial court’s error was not subject to prejudicial error review and, then, that, even if
prejudicial error review were appropriate, the trial court’s erroneous constructive
possession instruction prejudiced defendant. In urging us to uphold the validity of
the first of these two decisions, defendant argues that an erroneous instruction
concerning a legal theory that lacks sufficient evidentiary support is “presumptively
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STATE V. MALACHI
Opinion of the Court
erroneous”4 and requires automatic reversal, with this assertion resting upon
defendant’s interpretation of a series of decisions by this Court. In other words,
defendant argues that the extent to which a prejudice inquiry should be conducted in
cases involving errors such as the one at issue here has already been resolved, so that
the Court of Appeals’ decision must be upheld on stare decisis grounds.
Admittedly, the decisions upon which defendant relies in attempting to
establish that this Court has adopted an automatic reversal rule consistently grant
appellate relief in the event that a trial judge allows the jury to convict a defendant
on the basis of a legal theory that lacks sufficient evidentiary support without
4 In his brief, defendant appears to use the terms “presumptively erroneous” and “per
se erroneous” as if they were synonymous. As this Court has previously noted,
“[p]resumption is a term which is often loosely used.” Henderson Couty v. Osteen, 297 N.C.
113, 117, 254 S.E.2d 160, 163 (1979). As a general proposition, evidentiary presumptions are
either “permissive,” “conclusive,” or “mandatory,” with a permissive presumption involving
a situation in which, once “the basic fact underlying the presumption has been established,”
“the presumed fact may or may not be found,” Dobson v. Harris, 352 N.C. 77, 82 n.3, 530
S.E.2d 829, 835 n.3 (2000); a mandatory presumption, which may or may not be rebuttable,
involving a situation in which, “[once] the basic fact has been established, the presumed . . .
fact must be found unless sufficient evidence of its nonexistence is forthcoming,” id. at 82 n.3,
530 S.E.2d at 835 n.3 (alterations in original) (quoting Kenneth S. Broun, Brandis & Broun
on North Carolina Evidence § 44, at 148 (5th ed. 1998)); and a conclusive presumption being
another term for an irrebutable mandatory presumption, State v. Reynolds, 307 N.C. 184,
189, 297 S.E.2d 532, 535 (1982) (stating that “[a] conclusive presumption provides that upon
proof of the basic fact, the presumed fact must be found and cannot be overcome by rebutting
evidence” (quoting John M. Schmolesky, County Court of Ulster County v. Allen and
Sandstrom v. Montana: The Supreme Court Lends an Ear but Turns Its Face, 33 Rutgers L.
Rev. 261, 265 (1981))). As we understand defendant’s argument, the presumption arising
from the delivery of an instruction authorizing the jury to convict the defendant on the basis
of a legal theory lacking sufficient evidentiary support to which the defendant made a
contemporaneous objection is a conclusive one—if such an event occurs, a new trial must be
awarded without any further inquiry.
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STATE V. MALACHI
Opinion of the Court
explicitly engaging in any sort of prejudice inquiry. On the other hand, none of the
decisions upon which defendant relies explicitly holds that a prejudice inquiry would
be inappropriate in such instances,5 and a number of them contain language that
suggest that such a prejudice analysis should be conducted. Moore, 315 N.C. at 749,
340 S.E.2d at 408 (stating that “[i]t is generally prejudicial error for the trial judge to
permit a jury to convict upon a theory not supported by the evidence”); Dammons,
293 N.C. at 272, 237 S.E.2d at 840 (stating that “[i]t is error, generally prejudicial,
for the trial judge to permit a jury to convict upon some abstract theory not supported
by the evidence”); Lee, 287 N.C. at 541, 215 S.E.2d at 149 (stating that “where the
trial court in a criminal case permits the jury to return a verdict of guilty upon a legal
theory or a state of facts not supported by the evidence it is prejudicial error entitling
5 This Court did discuss the harmless error issue in Pakulski, in which the State
sought a finding of non-prejudice on the grounds that “the jury could have based its verdict
solely on the robbery felony.” Pakulski, 319 N.C. at 574, 356 S.E.2d at 326. After noting that
“the verdict form does not reflect the theory upon which the jury based its finding of guilty of
felony murder” and that “we cannot discern from the record upon which theory the jury
relied,” this Court declined to “assume that the jury based its verdict on the theory for which
it received a proper instruction.” Id. at 574, 356 S.E.2d at 326. However, given that the
State’s evidence tying defendant to the homicide for which he was convicted consisted of little,
if anything, more than accomplice testimony and given that the defendant presented both
alibi evidence and other testimony challenging the accomplice’s credibility, id. at 566-67, 356
S.E.2d at 322-23, the evidence of defendant’s guilt was clearly subject to serious dispute.
Similarly, in Lynch, the record contained evidence which a juror might have mistakenly
believed to support the lying in wait theory that the Court ultimately determined to lack
adequate evidentiary support, while the State’s evidence of defendant’s guilt on the basis of
malice, premeditation, and deliberation was essentially circumstantial in nature. Lynch, 327
N.C. at 214-15, 393 S.E.2d at 813-14. As a result, neither of these decisions explicitly rejects
the use of harmless error analysis in similar circumstance, while the outcomes in both cases
are consistent with what seems to us to be an appropriately conducted harmless error
analysis.
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STATE V. MALACHI
Opinion of the Court
the defendant to a new trial”); Knight, 248 N.C. at 389-90, 103 S.E.2d at 455-56
(stating that the trial court’s instructions, which “permitted the jury to rest its verdict
on a theory not supported by the evidence,” “was calculated to prejudice, and may
have prejudiced, the defendant”).6 As a result, given that our existing jurisprudence
does not conclusively establish that existing North Carolina law encompasses an
automatic reversal rule of the type contended for by defendant, we must determine
whether we should adopt such a rule.7
As this Court has said on numerous occasions, litigants are not entitled to
receive “perfect” trials; instead, they are entitled to receive “a fair trial, free of
prejudicial error.” State v. Ligon, 332 N.C. 224, 243, 420 S.E.2d 136, 147 (1992). “In
order to obtain a new trial it is incumbent on a defendant to not only show error but
also to show that the error was so prejudicial that without the error it is likely that a
different result would have been reached.” State v. Loren, 302 N.C. 607, 613, 276
S.E.2d 365, 369 (1981); see also State v. Alston, 307 N.C. 321, 339, 298 S.E.2d 631,
6 Similar language, which could be construed as dicta, appears in State v. Dick, 370
N.C. 305, 308, 807 S.E.2d 545, 547 (2017), which cites Lynch, 327 N.C. at 219, 393 S.E.2d at
816, for the proposition that “insufficient evidence regarding one theory submitted to the
jury, when prejudicial, was reversible error requiring [a] new trial.”
7 The State has argued, in reliance upon Griffin and Belton, that an automatic reversal
rule arising from an instruction allowing the jury to convict a criminal defendant on an
invalid legal theory would only be appropriate in the event that the legal theory in question
was unavailable to the State as a matter of law rather than because that theory lacked
sufficient evidentiary support. We do not find this argument persuasive given this Court’s
repeated decisions to grant appellate relief in cases in which the trial court allowed the jury
to convict the defendant based upon a legal theory that lacked sufficient record support.
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STATE V. MALACHI
Opinion of the Court
644 (1983) (stating that “[t]he defendant is not entitled to a new trial based on trial
errors unless such errors were material and prejudicial”); State v. Galloway, 304 N.C.
485, 496, 284 S.E.2d 509, 516 (1981) (stating that “[i]t has long been the rule in this
jurisdiction that not every erroneous ruling on the admissibility of evidence will
result in a new trial being ordered,” with the burden being “on the appellant not only
to show error but also to show that there is a reasonable possibility ‘that, had the
error in question not been committed, a different result would have been reached at
the trial.’ ”) (quoting N.C.G.S. § 15A–1443 (1978)). “The harmless-error doctrine
recognizes the principle that the central purpose of a criminal trial is to decide the
factual question of the defendant’s guilt or innocence” and “promotes public respect
for the criminal process by focusing on the underlying fairness of the trial rather than
on the virtually inevitable presence of immaterial error.” Rose v. Clark, 478 U.S. 570,
577, 106 S. Ct. 3101, 3105, 92 L. Ed. 2d 460, 470 (1986) (quoting Delaware v. Van
Arsdall, 475 U.S. 673, 681, 106 S. Ct. 1431, 1436, 89 L. Ed. 2d 674, 684-85 (1986)
(first citing, United States v. Nobles, 422 U.S. 225, 230, 95 S. Ct. 2160, 2166, 45 L.
Ed. 2d 141, 148 (1975); then citing R. Traynor, The Riddle of Harmless Error 50
(1970))).8 As a result, a showing of prejudice is generally required before appellate
relief is granted in this jurisdiction.
8 Although we agree with defendant that our recent decision in Boyd, which was made
in a plain error context, does not control the outcome of this case given that defendant
properly preserved his challenge to the trial court’s erroneous constructive possession
instruction for purposes of appellate review, it does tend to call into question any contention
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STATE V. MALACHI
Opinion of the Court
An automatic reversal rule has, however, been deemed appropriate in some
circumstances. As the United States Supreme Court has stated in discussing the
concept of structural error, “ ‘while there are some errors to which [harmless-error
analysis] does not apply, they are the exception and not the rule,’ ” with “harmless-
error analysis [being applicable] to instructional errors so long as the error at issue
does not categorically ‘ “vitiat[e] all the jury’s findings” ’ ” and with “[a]n instructional
error arising in the context of multiple theories of guilt no more vitiat[ing] all the
jury’s findings than does omission or misstatement of an element of the offense when
only one theory is submitted.” Hedgepeth v. Pulido, 555 U.S. 57, 61, 129 S. Ct. 530,
532, 172 L. Ed. 2d 388, 391-92 (2008) (per curiam) (first alteration in original) (first
quoting Clark, 478 U.S. at 578, 106 S. Ct. at 3106, 92 L. Ed. 2d at 471; and then
quoting Neder v. United States, 527 U.S. 1, 11, 119 S. Ct. 1827, 1834, 144 L. Ed. 2d
35, 48 (1999) (third alternation in original) (quoting Sullivan v. Louisiana, 508 U.S.
275, 281, 113 S. Ct. 2078, 2082, 124 L. Ed. 2d 182, 190-91 (1993)).9 Similarly, this
that harmless error concepts are completely irrelevant to errors such as the one at issue in
this case and to suggest that our usual approach to harmless error analysis, under which
unpreserved errors are reviewed under a plain error standard of review while errors that
were the subject of a contemporaneous objection at trial are reviewed for harmlessness under
the standards enunciated in either N.C.G.S. § 15A-1443(a) or N.C.G.S. § 15A-1443(b), applies
in cases like this one.
9 We do not, of course, wish to be understood as treating the United States Supreme
Court’s structural error jurisprudence as controlling with respect to the issue of when, under
North Carolina’s law, harmless error analysis is and is not appropriate. Instead, as is
discussed more fully in the text of this opinion, “North Carolina courts also apply a form of
structural error known as error per se,” under which “error per se is automatically deemed
prejudicial and thus reversible without a showing of prejudice.” State v. Lawrence, 365 N.C.
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STATE V. MALACHI
Opinion of the Court
Court has treated some errors as being sufficiently serious as to merit an award of
appellate relief without the necessity for a showing of prejudice. State v. Hucks, 323
N.C. 574, 581, 374 S.E.2d 240, 245 (1988) (holding that a failure to appoint two
counsel to represent a defendant in a capital trial constitutes prejudicial error per
se); State v. Mitchell, 321 N.C. 650, 659, 365 S.E.2d 554, 559 (1988) (holding that a
trial court’s “refusal to permit both [of the defendant’s trial] counsel to address the
jury during the defendant’s final arguments constitute[d] prejudicial error per se in
both the guilt-innocence and sentencing phases” of the defendant’s capital trial); State
v. Bindyke, 288 N.C. 608, 627, 220 S.E.2d 521, 533 (1975) (holding that the presence
of an alternate juror in the jury room during deliberations constitutes prejudicial
error per se). However, this Court has generally refrained from finding prejudicial
error per se even in the face of serious evidentiary and instructional errors. For
example, this Court has deemed errors such as the admission of “other bad acts
evidence” in violation of N.C.G.S. § 8C-1, Rule 404(b), see State v. McKoy, 317 N.C.
519, 529, 347 S.E.2d 374, 380 (1986) (holding that the admission of evidence tending
to show other criminal conduct on the part of one of the defendants involved in a
506, 514, 723 S.E.2d 326, 331-32 (2012) (first citing N.C.G.S. § 15A–1443(a) (2009); then
citing State v. Parker, 350 N.C. 411, 421, 426, 516 S.E.2d 106, 114, 117 (1999), cert. denied,
528 U.S. 1084, 120 S. Ct. 808, 145 L. Ed. 2d 681 (2000); and then citing State v. Brown, 325
N.C. 427, 428, 383 S.E.2d 910, 910 (1989) (per curiam)). As a result of the fact that “federal
structural error and state error per se have developed independently,” Lawrence, 365 N.C. at
514, 723 S.E.2d at 332, the same error might or might not be deemed structural by the federal
courts and error per se by the North Carolina courts.
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STATE V. MALACHI
Opinion of the Court
multi-defendant trial in violation of N.C.G.S. § 8C-1, Rule 404(b) constituted
harmless error with respect to both that defendant and a codefendant), a violation of
a defendant’s constitutional right to be informed of his rights under Miranda v.
Arizona, 384 U.S. 436, 86 S. Ct. 1602, 16 L. Ed. 2d 694 (1966), see State v. Hicks, 333
N.C. 467, 481, 428 S.E.2d 167, 175 (1993) (holding that, in light of “the extremely
incriminating evidence properly admitted at trial,” “the admission of the defendant’s
first confession in violation of the Miranda exclusionary rule was harmless beyond a
reasonable doubt”), abrogated on other grounds by State v. Buchanan, 353 N.C. 332,
340, 543 S.E.2d 823, 828 (2001)), a violation of the defendant’s right to confront the
witnesses for the prosecution, see State v. Ortiz-Zape, 367 N.C. 1, 13-14, 743 S.E.2d
156, 164-65 (2013) (holding, in the alternative, that any violation of the defendant’s
confrontation rights resulting from the admission of expert witness opinion testimony
that analyzed data from lab tests performed by another chemist was harmless beyond
a reasonable doubt), cert. denied, 572 U.S. 1134, 134 S. Ct. 2660, 189 L. Ed. 2d 208
(2014)), and the omission of an element of the crime charged from the trial court’s
substantive instructions to the jury, see State v. Bunch, 363 N.C. 841, 845, 689 S.E.2d
866, 869 (2010) (holding “that the trial court’s omission of elements of a crime in its
recitation of jury instructions is reviewed under the harmless error test”), to be
subject to harmless error analysis. The instructional error under consideration in
this case more closely resembles the types of errors in which a showing of prejudice
is required before an award of appellate relief is deemed appropriate than the
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STATE V. MALACHI
Opinion of the Court
fundamental, difficult to evaluate, errors that this Court has deemed to constitute
prejudicial error per se, and defendant has failed to demonstrate why the
instructional error at issue in this case should be treated differently than similar
instructional errors. As a result, like the United States Supreme Court, we are not
persuaded that the error at issue in this case is so potentially serious as to justify
adopting an automatic reversal rule, which essentially treats errors like the one at
issue in this case as prejudicial error per se.
The only argument advanced in defendant’s brief in support of the adoption of
an automatic reversal rule other than the assertion that this Court’s prior decisions
require such a decision is a contention that such an automatic reversal rule, as
modified in Boyd, “recognizes the nature of the error and the simple steps that can be
taken to address any resulting harm.” In essence, defendant argues that, under the
automatic reversal rule as modified by Boyd, “[t]he presumption that the jury
convicted on the unsupported legal theory [ ] applies only where there is a general
verdict rather than a special verdict specifying the theory underlying the conviction.”
In defendant’s view, “[i]f, despite an objection, the [S]tate insists on an unsupported
theory,” it “can request a special verdict specifying the theory on which the jury
convicted,” with this “minimal step” “cost[ing] the [S]tate virtually nothing.”
According to defendant, it is only fair to place the burden of requesting the use of a
special verdict upon the State, since it “is the party requesting the unsupported jury
instruction” “over objection” and should “bear the responsibility of curing the
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STATE V. MALACHI
Opinion of the Court
problems the unsupported instruction would cause” and since placing the burden on
defendant to request a special instruction may result in a decision that defendant
“has abandoned her original objection” or “joined in requesting the instruction.” As
a result, defendant contends that “[a] rule presuming prejudice where the defendant
has objected to the unsupported instruction [ ] puts the incentives in all of the right
places,” with defendant being given an incentive to object in order to either preclude
the delivery of the unsupported instruction or permit “[t]he resulting error [to] be
corrected on appellate review” and with the State being given “an incentive to request
a special verdict form to cure the problem it created.”
We are not persuaded by defendant’s incentive-based argument. As an initial
matter, defendant’s argument rests upon the apparent assumption that the only way
in which the delivery of an instruction allowing defendant’s conviction on the basis of
an unsupported legal theory could ever be deemed harmless is in the event that the
reviewing court is provided with an ironclad guarantee that the jury did not rely upon
the unsupported legal theory in deciding to convict defendant. Needless to say,
insistence upon such a guarantee would not be consistent with this Court’s usual
approach to the resolution of harmless error-related issues, which the relevant
statutory language indicates must rest upon an assessment of the likelihood that the
outcome at trial would have been different had an error not occurred. In addition,
defendant’s argument overlooks the fact that errors like the one at issue here do not
necessarily occur at the behest of the State. On the contrary, the trial court may elect
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STATE V. MALACHI
Opinion of the Court
to deliver an instruction like the one at issue here on its own motion or even over the
State’s objection. Moreover, the trial court might reject a request by the State for the
submission of a special verdict form to the jury. Even so, defendant’s approach
suggests that an automatic reversal would be appropriate in each of those instances.
Finally, defendant fails to take into account the fact that, as long as a defendant
lodges a contemporaneous objection to the delivery of an instruction like the one at
issue here, the defendant’s claim will be reviewed utilizing the more easily satisfied
“reasonable possibility” standard set out in N.C.G.S. § 15A-1443(a) instead of the
more stringent “reasonable probability” standard enunciated for use in “plain error”
situations in Lawrence, 365 N.C. at 518, 723 S.E.2d at 334 (stating that, in order to
establish plain error, “a defendant must establish prejudice—that, after examination
of the entire record, the error ‘had a probable impact on the jury’s finding that the
defendant was guilty’ ” (first quoting State v. Odom, 307 N.C. 655, 660, 300 S.E.2d
375, 378 (1983); then citing State v. Walker, 316 N.C. 33, 39, 340 S.E.2d 80, 83
(1986))). On the other hand, in the event that the State failed to seek to obtain the
submission of a special verdict form or failed to persuade the trial court to submit
one, it would have passed up a chance to potentially eliminate any need for the
reviewing court to undertake a “reasonable possibility” analysis. Defendant’s implicit
argument to the contrary notwithstanding, the approach to the harmless error issue
that we deem to be appropriate in this case does, in fact, provide the State with an
incentive to ask that the jury be required to return a special verdict. As a result, for
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STATE V. MALACHI
Opinion of the Court
all of these reasons, we hold that defendant’s challenge to the delivery of the trial
court’s unsupported constructive possession instruction is subject to traditional
harmless error analysis.
As a general proposition, a defendant seeking to obtain appellate relief on the
basis of an error to which he or she lodged an appropriate contemporaneous objection
at trial must establish that “there is a reasonable possibility that, had the error in
question not been committed, a different result would have been reached at the trial
out of which the appeal arises.” N.C.G.S. § 15A-1443(a) (2017).10 However, the
history of this Court’s decisions in cases involving the submission of similar erroneous
instructions and our consistent insistence that jury verdicts concerning a defendant’s
guilt or innocence have an adequate evidentiary foundation persuade us that
instructional errors like the one at issue in this case are exceedingly serious and merit
close scrutiny to ensure that there is no “reasonable possibility” that the jury
convicted the defendant on the basis of such an unsupported legal theory. However,
in the event that the State presents exceedingly strong evidence of defendant’s guilt
10 Defendant suggests that the Court should treat the trial court’s decision to allow
the jury to convict defendant on the basis of a constructive possession theory as a
constitutional violation subject to harmless review pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 15A-1443(b)
(requiring the State to show that the alleged error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt).
In view of the fact that the Court of Appeals did not find that the trial court’s error was
constitutional in nature and the fact that defendant did not petition this Court to allow
consideration of such a constitutional issue, we decline to adopt defendant’s alternative
argument concerning the manner in which the required harmless error analysis should be
conducted.
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STATE V. MALACHI
Opinion of the Court
on the basis of a theory that has sufficient support and the State’s evidence is neither
in dispute nor subject to serious credibility-related questions, it is unlikely that a
reasonable jury would elect to convict the defendant on the basis of an unsupported
legal theory.11
According to the undisputed evidence elicited at trial, investigating officers
went to a convenience store parking lot after receiving a report that an individual
possessed a firearm and discovered such a weapon while searching an individual who
matched the description of the person in question and who turned out to be defendant.
In the event that the jury found this undisputed evidence to be credible beyond a
reasonable doubt, it would have been required, under the trial court’s instruction, to
convict defendant of possession of a firearm by a felon on the basis of an actual
possession theory. As a result, the ultimate issue before this Court is whether there
is a reasonable possibility that the jury would have sufficiently questioned the
credibility of the investigating officers’ testimony to return a verdict of acquittal.
11 According to defendant, the State waived the right to argue that the trial court’s
error was harmless on the grounds that the State had failed to advance such an argument in
its discretionary review petition. Admittedly, the question to be presented stated in the
State’s petition refers to the Court of Appeals’ “fail[ure] to conduct a prejudice analysis.”
However, the State’s petition contained an argument heading asserting that the Court of
Appeals had “fail[ed]to conduct a prejudice analysis in accord with” Boyd and Griffin and an
argument that there was no “reasonable possibility” that the jury would have convicted
defendant on the basis of a constructive possession theory “since the evidence was
uncontroverted that defendant possessed the firearm” given that “it was removed from his
person and he acknowledged to police that he was holding it.” As a result, we conclude that
the issue of whether the delivery of the constructive possession instruction constituted
prejudicial error is properly before us.
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STATE V. MALACHI
Opinion of the Court
Defendant claims that the jury could have questioned the credibility of the
investigating officers’ testimony for a number of reasons, including the injuries that
Officer Van Aken inflicted upon defendant during a post-arrest altercation, the fact
that Officer Van Aken’s employment was terminated and that he was charged with
assaulting defendant based upon this post-arrest altercation, the fact that the
statements provided by various officers were not written immediately after
defendant’s arrest, and the fact that the officers’ interactions with defendant were
not recorded and that the other officers remained in contact with Officer Van Aken
after his termination. Almost all of the reasons that defendant has advanced in
support of his contention that the testimony of the investigating officers is subject to
serious question rest upon events that occurred after defendant was placed under
arrest for possessing a firearm. For that reason, defendant’s implicit suggestion that
investigating officers attempted to “frame” defendant in order to protect Officer Van
Aken seems to us to rest upon a logical inconsistency. Moreover, while defendant’s
arguments predicated upon the officers’ failure to record their interaction with
defendant and the delay in the drafting of their reports cannot be dismissed upon the
basis of similar logic, they do not strike us as particularly compelling. Finally, the
Court of Appeals’ emphasis upon the fact that the jury asked for further instructions
concerning the possession issue and the fact that the jury acquitted defendant of
carrying a concealed weapon does not tend to show prejudice, at least in our opinion,
given the absence of any explanation for why the jury might have sought clarification
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STATE V. MALACHI
Opinion of the Court
about the meaning of possession and the fact that guilt of carrying a concealed
weapon, unlike the charge of possession of a firearm by a felon, requires proof of
intentional concealment. State v. Gilbert, 87 N.C. 527, 528 (1882) (stating that “[t]o
conceal a weapon[ ] means something more than the mere act of having it where it
may not be seen” and “implies an assent of the mind, and a purpose to so carry it, that
it may not be seen”). As a result, defendant has not satisfied us that there is a
reasonable possibility that, in the absence of the erroneous constructive possession
instruction, the jury would have acquitted defendant.
Thus, for all of these reasons, we hold that the Court of Appeals erred by
holding that challenges to jury instructions allowing juries to convict criminal
defendants on the basis of legal theories that lack evidentiary support are not subject
to harmless error analysis and by holding that, even if such a harmlessness analysis
were appropriate, there was a reasonable possibility that the outcome at defendant’s
trial would have been different had the trial court refrained from allowing the jury to
convict defendant on the basis of a constructive possession theory. As a result, the
Court of Appeals’ decision in this case is reversed and this case is remanded to the
Court of Appeals for consideration of defendant’s remaining challenges to the trial
court’s judgment.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
-34-
Justice MORGAN dissenting.
While I agree with my learned colleagues in the majority that the Court of
Appeals correctly determined that the trial court erred by allowing the jury to
potentially convict defendant of the offense of possession of a firearm by a felon on
the basis of a constructive possession theory, I nonetheless disagree with their
conclusion that the lower appellate court erred in its determination that there was a
reasonable possibility that the outcome of defendant’s trial would have been different
if the trial court had refrained from allowing the jury to potentially convict defendant
on the basis of a theory of constructive possession. Based on my position, I am
inclined to affirm the Court of Appeals’ decision to vacate the trial court’s judgment
and grant defendant a new trial.
My departure from the majority in this case stems from the liberties that I
believe the majority improperly takes to discount the reasonable possibility that, had
the error of the submission of the constructive possession of firearm by defendant not
been submitted to the jury as a theory for his guilt, a different result would have been
reached at the trial out of which this appeal arises. The majority expressly utilizes
“close scrutiny to ensure that there is no ‘reasonable possibility’ that the jury
convicted the defendant on the basis of such an unsupported legal theory”—namely,
constructive possession—while introducing a new evaluative standard that “in the
event that the State presents exceedingly strong evidence of defendant’s guilt on the
STATE V. MALACHI
Morgan, J., dissenting
basis of a theory that has sufficient support and the State’s evidence is neither in
dispute nor subject to serious credibility-related questions”—here, actual
possession—“it is unlikely that a reasonable jury would elect to convict the defendant
on the basis of an unsupported legal theory.” (Emphasis added.) As I assess this
newly minted doctrine by the majority cobbled together from selected principles
enunciated in our decisions of Bradshaw, Jones, Ligon, Loren, Alston, and Galloway,
coupled with the majority’s willingness to couch the trial jury’s ability to “potentially
convict defendant of the offense of possession of a firearm by a felon on the basis of a
constructive possession theory” as insufficient wrongful exposure to warrant a new
trial for defendant, my recognition of the fundamental concepts of trial evidence, the
application of the appropriate law to the evidence, and the respective roles of the
judicial forum and the jury leads me in a different direction from my fellow jurists in
this case.
“Every criminal conviction involves facts (i.e., what actually occurred) and the
application of the law to the facts . . . . In a jury trial the judge instructs jurors on
the law, and the jury finds the facts and applies the law.” State v. Arrington, ___ N.C.
___, ___, 819 S.E.2d 329, 331 (2018). Courts must not “invade the province of the
jury, which is to assess the credibility of the witnesses and determine the facts from
the evidence adduced.” State v. Rhodes, 290 N.C. 16, 24, 224 S.E.2d 631, 636 (1976)
(first citing State v. Canipe, 240 N.C. 60, 81 S.E.2d 173 (1954); and then citing 7
Strong’s North Carolina Index 2d Trial § 18 (1968)); see also State v. Ward, 364 N.C.
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STATE V. MALACHI
Morgan, J., dissenting
133, 153, 694 S.E.2d 738, 750 (2010) (Newby, J., dissenting) (observing that “it is the
role of the jury to make any final determination regarding the weight to be afforded
to the evidence” (quoting Crocker v. Roethling, 363 N.C. 140, 150, 675 S.E.2d 625, 632
(2009) (Martin, J., concurring)). By opining upon the reasonableness of the jury’s two
potential theories underlying a verdict of guilty, when there is no evidence to support
one theory and sufficient evidence to support the other theory, the majority is
engaging in an exercise that invades the established province of the jury. I do not
consider it to be within a judicial forum’s proper purview to sift through the evidence
and to speculate as to which theory, between or among multiple ones, a jury
considered to be persuasive to reach its verdict, yet the majority has effectively done
so here.
In a similar vein, the majority states that “the ultimate issue before this Court
is whether there is a reasonable possibility that the jury would have sufficiently
questioned the credibility of the investigating officers’ testimony to return a verdict
of acquittal.” “[A]ssess[ing] the credibility of the witnesses” is a matter for the jury.
Rhodes, 290 N.C. at 24, 224 S.E.2d at 636. While the majority acknowledges that
“defendant suggests that the jury could have had doubts about the credibility of the
State’s evidence” regarding the investigating law enforcement officers, nonetheless,
the members of the majority assess the manner in which the trial jury could have
determined issues of credibility with respect to the submitted theories of defendant’s
culpability and conclude that it “seems to us to rest upon a logical inconsistency.”
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STATE V. MALACHI
Morgan, J., dissenting
Just as this Court in the case at bar should refrain from conducting a review of the
potential effect of erroneous jury instructions upon a jury’s verdict of guilty by
invading the province of the jury as to which submitted legal theory may have
prompted its finding of guilty, this Court should also take care to refrain from
conducting such a review by invading the province of the jury by conducting its own
examination of witness credibility issues.
For the reasons stated, I would affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals in
this case.
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