Appellate Court Opinions
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19,740 Appellate Court Opinions
Meza v. BCR Janitorial Servs., Inc.
Workers' Compensation; Dismissal; Failure to Prosecute
Nichols v. Univ. of N. Carolina at Chapel Hill
Failure to exhaust administrative remedies, subject matter jurisdiction, grievance process, Office of Administrative Hearings
State v. Alexander
Mistrial; Admission of evidence.
State v. Bonham
Robbery with a dangerous weapon; prior acts of robbery, Rule 404(b); cross-examination
State v. Boulware
Felony assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill; lesser included jury instruction; breaking and entering
State v. Graham
Failure to report a new address as a sex offender; N.C. Gen. Stat. Section 14-208.11(a)(2).
State v. Griffin
Guilty plea; restitution order; competent evidence to support
State v. Lindsey
Motion to Suppress
State v. Lineberger
Prior record level conclusion of law reviewable de novo; clerical error; conviction from same court session.
State v. Lockett
Motion to Dismiss
State v. Mettler
Larceny after breaking or entering; acting in concert instruction; intent to permanently deprive victim of property; motion to dismiss; Rule 2; Single taking rule; continuous transaction resulting in one larceny
State v. Morris
Defendant's appeal following guilty plea; Denial of motion to suppress; N.C.R. App. P. 21; Anders brief.
State v. Peterson
Robbery with a dangerous weapon; N.C. Gen. Stat. Section 14-87; Anders brief.
State v. Rios
Unsupported argument for post conviction DNA testing; Anders and pro-se briefs
State v. Rolland
Appellate jurisdiction; DWI appeal; superior court jurisdiction; contents of the record on appeal.
State v. Sayre
Motion for post-conviction DNA testing; N.C. Gen. Stat. Section 15A-269; Anders brief
State v. Sellers
Defendant's appeal following guilty plea; N.C.R. App. P. 21; Anders brief.
State v. Simmons
sufficiency of indictment
State v. Smith
Larceny from a merchant; sufficiency of the indictment; taking without owner's consent and with intent to permanently deprive.
State v. Stephens
indictment - fatal variance - no abuse of discretion