State v. Person

BRITT, Judge.

Defendant assigns as error the failure of the court to grant his timely made motion for nonsuit. The evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to the State, tended to show: On 24 January 1973 Mrs. Alta Skinner left her apartment at 2836 Chapel Hill Road, Durham, at 7:30 p.m. and returned at about 10:00 or 10:30 p.m. She owned a 25-inch Zenith color television set that cost approximately $625. The TV' was in her apartment when she left, but when she returned it was gone and the sliding glass doors leading to the patio were open. The State’s main witness, Danny Bell, was an accomplice in the alleged crime. He testified that on that evening he, the defendant, and Will Brown were looking for a TV to steal; that they noticed that no lights were on in Mrs. Skinner’s apartment; that Brown remained in the car as a lookout and he and defendant went to the front door of the apartment; that he knocked and when no one answered, he opened the door.with a plastic card; that he and defendant entered the apartment, took the TV, carried it through the sliding glass doors which they did not close, and carried it on to the car; that they unscrewed the legs of the TV and placed it in the car; that they then carried the set to Delatha Self who paid each of them approximately $50.

We hold that the evidence was sufficient to survive the motion for nonsuit.

Defendant assigns as error additional instructions given to the jury after the jury had deliberated for more than 2 hours. The record reveals:

“The Court: Members of the jury, I don’t want any member of the jury to surrender any conscientious opinion that any member of the jury has about this matter, but you know the reason we select a jury and let the 12 jurors discuss the case is so that each member of the jury can express his or her opinion and also consider the opinion of the fellow jurors. It is very rare that all twelve would have the same *329opinion to begin with. We want the benefit of your combined judgment, and it may be that you have an idea that you want your fellow members to consider. Maybe some of the others have ideas that you ought to consider. In the final analysis, members of the jury, we are seeking to determine the truth of the matter, and so far as I know you members of the jury have all the information or all of the evidence available in the case.
“If we should have a failure of agreement now, it would mean that the case would have to be tried over again, which would mean added expense, and in its final analysis, some twelve members of the jury are going to have to decide this case, and inasmuch as you members of the jury have all the evidence any other twelve would have, I Am Hoping That You Can Determine It. (Emphasis added.)
“As I stated at the outset, I do not ask and would not permit a single one of you members of the jury to participate in a verdict that did not reflect your conscientious opinion. I don’t ask or want you to do that. I do want you to consider the views of each of the members of the jury. I might say there is not any reason to hurry in this • case. You can take as much time as you desire in the deliberation and discussion of this case.
“The Court wants to emphasize the fact that it is the duty of jurors to do whatever they can to reason the matter over together as reasonable men and women and to reconcile the difference, if such is possible, without the surrender of conscientious convictions- and to reach a verdict if you can. I will let you at this time retire to the jury room and resume your deliberations in this case.”

Defendant contends that the instruction, “ . . . I am hoping that you can determine it,” constituted an expression of opinion by the trial judge in violation of G.S. 1-180. The assignment has no merit.

The North Carolina Supreme Court has spoken on this point. In State v. Accor, 281 N.C. 287, 290, 292, 188 S.E. 2d 332, 336 (1972), the court upheld additional instructions which contained the following: “ . . . someone ultimately is going to have to decide this case in Gaston County and I hope it will be you.” We hold that the additional instructions challenged here did'not coerce the jury into returning a verdict of guilty.

*330We have considered the other assignment of error argued by defendant and find that it too is without merit.

No error.

Judges Campbell and Vaughn concur.