State v. Tidwell

Citation374 S.E.2d 577,323 N.C. 668
Decision Date04 January 1989
Docket NumberNo. 276A88,276A88
CourtNorth Carolina Supreme Court
PartiesSTATE of North Carolina v. James Leo TIDWELL.

Lacy H. Thornburg, Atty. Gen. by Reginald L. Watkins, Sp. Deputy Atty. Gen., Raleigh, for the State.

Malcolm Ray Hunter, Jr., Appellate Defender by M. Patricia DeVine, Asst. Appellate Defender, Raleigh, for defendant-appellant.

MEYER, Justice.

On Sunday morning, 27 September 1987, in front of at least three witnesses at a Wilmington gas station, defendant stabbed and killed his estranged wife, Mavies. Defendant was convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to life imprisonment.

The State's evidence tended to show the following: Ms. Katherine Williams testified that she had worked with defendant as a postal clerk at the United States Post Office for approximately three years. Defendant was living in the same apartment complex as Ms. Williams' husband. Ms. Williams saw defendant in the parking lot at about 8:00 a.m. on Sunday, 27 September 1987, and invited him in for coffee before he went to church. She testified that defendant was "real upset" and was shaking so badly that he spilled most of the coffee. When Ms. Williams asked defendant why he was upset, he told her that the night before he had caught his wife Mavies with another man. Defendant and his wife had been separated since June 1987. Defendant then said that he was going to kill his wife. Ms. Williams thought that defendant was having a nervous breakdown and offered to take him to the hospital, but he refused. He asked Ms. Williams whether she had a gun, saying that he wanted it to kill Mavies. When Ms. Williams refused to give defendant a gun, he left the apartment, stating that he would stab his wife and that "[w]herever he caught her, he was going to kill her." As defendant walked to his car, Ms. Williams noticed that he had a hunting knife with a black handle and a wide blade. This knife was not the murder weapon.

Travis Perry testified that he baby-sat the three Tidwell children on Saturday night, 26 September 1987. When Mavies Tidwell returned at approximately 12:30 a.m., a female friend who had a male date was with her, but Mavies herself was unaccompanied.

Ms. Dorothea Graham testified that she was working as the cashier at the Gas World on College Road in Wilmington on Sunday, 27 September 1987. At about 9:45 a.m., Mavies Tidwell, accompanied by her youngest child, drove up beside the cashier's booth. She yelled that she was being harassed by a man and that the police should be called. Within two minutes, defendant drove up behind Mrs. Tidwell's car. Shortly thereafter, Mrs. Tidwell drove around to the other side of the cashier's booth, still yelling for Ms. Graham to call the police. As defendant and his wife exchanged words, two customers approached the booth to pay for their purchases. One customer urged Ms. Graham to call the police. She did so. While making the call, she heard Mrs. Tidwell scream that defendant had a gun. Immediately, the two customers ran. Defendant got out of his car and told Ms. Graham to hang up the telephone. When she obeyed him, defendant went to his wife's car and "just started beating on her." Mrs. Tidwell fought back and screamed for help. Ms. Graham watched them for about five minutes. When she saw blood, she became hysterical, ran out of the cashier's booth, locked the door and jumped into the car of Ms. Evelyn Brown, a customer at the gas station. Ms. Graham last saw Mrs. Tidwell falling out of her car.

Ms. Graham and Ms. Brown drove away to seek help. Unsuccessful, they returned to a restaurant located across the street from the Gas World. While there, Ms. Graham saw defendant leave the gas station in a blue car. When the police arrived, Ms. Graham and Ms. Brown returned to the gas station. Mrs. Tidwell was lying on the ground beside her car.

Ms. Brown testified that she bought gas at the Gas World on the morning of 27 September 1987. She was pumping the gas into her car when Mrs. Tidwell drove in yelling for the police to be called because a man was harassing her. Defendant pulled in at the same time as Mrs. Tidwell and parked right behind her. Ms. Brown repeated Mrs. Tidwell's request to Ms. Graham and told Mrs. Tidwell to continue driving until the police arrived. Mrs. Tidwell "drove around one time," but defendant followed her. Mrs. Tidwell stopped her car and asked Ms. Brown to ask defendant what she, Mrs. Tidwell, had done to him. Ms. Brown did so. Defendant stated that Mrs. Tidwell had hit his car. Ms. Brown relayed this statement. Mrs. Tidwell suggested that they wait for the police, but defendant replied that he would not wait and that he would take care of the matter himself. He then got out of his car, went to Mrs. Tidwell's car, pulled her car door open as she attempted to roll up the window and lock the doors, and began fighting with her inside the car. Ms. Brown stepped back and saw defendant pull a knife and begin striking at Mrs. Tidwell while she was still inside the car.

Frightened by what she had seen, Ms. Brown rushed to her car, where she was joined by Ms. Graham. They drove away in an unavailing attempt to get help. From the restaurant across the street from the Gas World, Ms. Brown saw defendant kneeling over Mavies Tidwell, who was now lying on the ground beside her car. Defendant was stabbing her repeatedly. He eventually stopped and left the scene in his car. When the police and rescue personnel arrived, Ms. Brown returned to the gas station with Ms. Graham. An examination of Mrs. Tidwell's body revealed no vital signs. A knife was located about two feet from the victim's body.

Reverend David E. Duncan testified that he knew the Tidwell family and was aware that Mrs. Tidwell and defendant were separated. On the morning of 27 September 1987, between 9:00 a.m. and 9:15 a.m., defendant visited Reverend Duncan at the First Wesleyan Church. While they were talking privately, the Reverend heard the voices of Mrs. Tidwell and her children in the church parking lot. Defendant immediately left the church by a back door. He returned at approximately 10:15 a.m. Reverend Duncan heard defendant shout, "Pastor David ... I killed Mavies." Reverend Duncan approached defendant, who again told him that he had killed his wife. Defendant's clothing from the knees down was covered with blood and so were his hands. Because the congregation was gathering for Sunday morning service, Reverend Duncan helped defendant into the parking lot, where he remained with him until the police and rescue unit arrived.

Patrick Falvey, a volunteer rescue worker, testified that his rescue unit responded to a reported accident at the First Wesleyan Church on the morning of 27 September 1987. Falvey observed defendant sitting in the church parking lot with blood on his hands and pants. Falvey asked defendant if he had been in an accident and if he was hurt. Defendant replied, "No, no, no." He stated that he had just killed his wife. Falvey asked defendant if he was sure that was what had happened. Defendant replied, "I killed my wife." In response to further questions, defendant stated that he had stabbed his wife at a gas station. Falvey remained with defendant until law enforcement officers arrived.

Officer J.T. Rogers testified that he placed defendant inside a patrol car and strapped the seat belt around him. Defendant then said, "Officer, I killed my wife." He asked about his wife's condition, but Officer Rogers had no information to give him. Defendant was taken to the police department.

Dr. Charles L. Garrett, pathologist and medical examiner for the State, performed an autopsy on Mrs. Tidwell's body. He observed multiple stab wounds, eighteen in the chest and three in the abdomen, as well as several superficial wounds on the hands, considered to be defensive wounds. In Dr. Garrett's opinion, Mrs. Tidwell's death resulted from "stab wounds to her chest that lacerated her heart from which she bled to death."

Officer Roger Henderson testified that during investigation of the case, he observed the two cars which defendant and Mrs. Tidwell had been driving. He could not determine when the damage to defendant's car occurred, but he considered that the damage to the right front fender of Mrs. Tidwell's car was "old damage."

Defendant presented no evidence at trial. The case was tried as a capital case, and the trial court instructed the jury on first- and second-degree murder. The jury found defendant guilty of first-degree murder and recommended that he be sentenced to life imprisonment. 1 The trial court so sentenced defendant.

On appeal, defendant brings forward one assignment of error. He contends that the trial court erred in failing to instruct the jury on the lesser included offense of voluntary manslaughter. Defendant argues that from the evidence presented at trial, the jury could have inferred the following version of the events. Defendant "went to pieces" when he caught his wife with another man. The next day, his co-worker, Ms. Williams, thought that he was having a nervous breakdown. Distraught and angry, defendant followed his wife to get an explanation from her after she deliberately hit his car with hers. Furious, he went over to her car at the gas station and produced a knife, at first only to intimidate her. After his wife continued to hit him, he became enraged and out of control. He began to stab her again and again, deciding as he was doing it to kill her. Defendant maintains that this scenario could have been found by a rational jury on the facts of this case. He contends that notwithstanding his failure to request a jury instruction on voluntary manslaughter and the jury's verdict of first-degree murder, this possible verdict should have been submitted to the jury. We disagree.

Voluntary manslaughter is the unlawful killing of a human being without malice and without premeditation and deliberation. State v. Fleming, ...

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