burden of proof
10/26/2009 1:27:28 PM
In NC, there is a concept or small piece of castle doctrine legislation. You can shoot a person in the act of entering your residence or dwelling. This is because you do not know their intentions.Once they are in the residence, you cannot shoot or use deadly force unless there is an immediated and serious threat of death or bodily injury. It is correct, that there is no duty to retreat in your home. That sentance says nothing about shooting anyone. If they are just holding your property, there are very few circumstances where you can be in fear for your life and can justify deadly force. That scenario can change quickly though. The only thing this does is get rid of the aggravator portion of the deadly force law. No duty to retreat means you can confront them and chase them out of your house. If they then react in a way that can cause you to fear for you live, then, and only then can you use deadly force to stop the threat.As to shooting in the legs/hand/some other stupid shit: Aim for center mass.It has the highest concentration of vital organs, and the one shot stop is not common. If you shoot someone in the leg, it better be part of a string, and you missed the first shot.Some people say you can aim for the hip as well to incapacitate, but it isn't garunteed.
10/27/2009 11:40:57 AM
^thank you for clarifying- this is exactly what I have learned/been told, and I wanted make sure that it is clarified that when nutsmackr pulled out those statutes, it was very misleading and not applicable as he was trying to point outI just want everyone to know what their legal rights are, because it would suck for you to think it is ok to shoot someone in your house when they have your PS3 under their arm, and then you end up in the butthut along with all the other loss of rights that come with that[Edited on October 27, 2009 at 11:49 AM. Reason : c]
10/27/2009 11:49:09 AM
10/27/2009 1:38:54 PM
that said, if the individual is attempting to leave your residence you do not have the right to shoot them. Also, if the individual is already outside of your residence you do not have the right to use deadly force against them. Once the unlawful entry is terminated, or in the act of being terminated, you do not have the right to use deadly force. Even under the Castle Doctrine.
10/27/2009 1:53:48 PM
I bet when the resident of the residence shows up, the BG will be in the process of leaving.....If you play a stupid game, you are going to get a stupid prize. You shoot a guy who isn't threatening you, your prize is going to be jail, probation, and/or a massive civil suite.If someone can hurt themselves in the act of breaking in, sue the home owner, and win, then there should be no doubt how much trouble you will be in.[Edited on October 27, 2009 at 3:28 PM. Reason : .]
10/27/2009 3:24:27 PM
10/27/2009 3:41:59 PM
^As much as it sucks, it's true, and there are some pretty recent cases to back it up.
10/27/2009 3:51:45 PM
10/27/2009 4:01:11 PM
I thought the famous falling through the skylight burglar was actually a high school kid on top of his high school trying to adjust some floodlights or something for a game and the skylight was painted black. Also I feel like in other similar cases they don't actually win the case, but settle out of court like that kid did. It falls more into the setting a trap or being negligent. I mean you can't legally rig a shotgun to fire at anybody that opens your front door, just like you can't legally plant landmines, or dig holes and put spikes in the bottom, even if you put up no trespassing signs everywhere.Oh yeah and the one about the burglar falling through the skylight landing on a knife set or something is from Liar Liar.[Edited on October 27, 2009 at 4:08 PM. Reason : basically for a big company/government it may be cheaper to settle out of court than to fight it]
10/27/2009 4:06:36 PM
If the injury is by some specific intentional act of the homeowner, then they can be sued. If it's a "trap" then they can be sued. This is the shotgun case ^ alluded to. Look up Katko v. Briney if you want to. It's harder to sue for injuries based on negligence (like the knife case^ or the skylight case^) because the burglar needs to prove the homeowner had a duty of care to the burglar to provide a safe environment; that the homeowner breached that duty and that the burglar's injury was proximately caused by that breach of duty. Usually, a homeowner does not owe a duty of care to a person illegally entering the house; therefore even if that person is injured by the homeowner's negligence, there is no liability because there was no duty of care. But if that person is there by your permission (like a handyman for instance), does something nefarious while they're there, you may still have a duty to them.At any rate, to be safe from liability, you are permitted to defend your property, but it must be proportionately reasonable.Also, self defense is just that... it's a defense. It doesn't stop lawsuits or the police from taking your guns as evidence. But it can be used as a REASON you committed an act of violence. There are 4 elements to that kind of claim:Imminence of injury, Reasonable belief. Actual Belief and Proportionality of force. You need all four to have a successful claim.^^There are all kinds of cases where the homeowner is sued. That doesn't make it right. And yes, we do have a modified castle doctrine on the books. But that doesn't mean it always plays out that way in application. No matter what the actual text says, there is always an interpretation out there that can screw you.[Edited on October 27, 2009 at 4:47 PM. Reason : ]
10/27/2009 4:47:05 PM
There is a large difference between a man trap and someone suing because they hurt themselves coming through the window.
10/27/2009 5:02:35 PM
This is a case where it is ok to shoot someone:http://www.wsbtv.com/news/19365762/detail.htmlThis is a case where it says that no matter how you are reading that law, it is "risky" to use a gun to fend off a burglar legally:http://www.laborlawtalk.com/archive/index.php/t-14654.htmlThis link has several stories on it that show that you can act on self defense, but might be charged if the DA decides you were doing it for any other reason:http://www.claytoncramer.com/gundefenseblog/2008_10_01_archive.html
10/27/2009 6:00:46 PM
1) Gallia County isn't in North Carolina2) A detached shed is not a residence.3) Provide direct evidence from North Carolina of prosecution.
10/27/2009 7:17:29 PM
http://www.ncwanted.com/selfdefense/story/134194/
10/27/2009 8:25:42 PM
http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?court=nc&vol=appeals2004/&invol=031192-1
10/27/2009 8:31:12 PM
The first clause of the statute is sufficient to cover those charges.
10/27/2009 9:18:38 PM
death or great bodily harm /= stealing your plasma
10/27/2009 9:39:47 PM
OK, if my understanding of all this is correct, basically you have the right to shoot while somebody is actively breaking into your house. Once in, however, you can't shoot unless one of two things happens, you are threatened with severe bodily harm or sexual assault, or you have reasonably believe they are going to commit a felony. This is where most of the arguments have started, but it seems to me that if they attempt to take ANY of your property they commit a felony, burglary, because once they have broken into your house and attempted to take something, regardless of the value, larceny immediately becomes burglary.
10/27/2009 11:37:29 PM
nutsmackr, have you had a concealed carry class?it is clear that biofreak, maximadrvr, and wdprice have taken this class. They are repeating everything that I learned, and im positive that I didnt have the same instructor.Is it possible that there is a difference in law regarding handguns for home defense versus shotguns and rifles?
10/28/2009 12:30:24 AM
Like I said earlier, it's funny when you can pick out who has had the CCW class.
10/28/2009 1:03:23 AM
Caveat to the castle doctrine: Idiots
10/28/2009 1:19:56 AM
because the act of defending your home is not necessarily a negligent act unlike veering off the roadwhich is 100% likely to be caused by some degree of negligencehell they, can find out this dude is totally lying and fully intended to cap his fiancee, but assuming the statement is true, nah he wasnt negligent just an unfortunate accident while "legally" defending his home[Edited on October 28, 2009 at 9:21 AM. Reason : f]
10/28/2009 9:18:24 AM
10/28/2009 9:26:52 AM
if there's no body, there's no murder, self defense or not........
10/28/2009 9:39:47 AM
10/28/2009 10:51:38 AM
10/28/2009 11:05:49 AM
10/28/2009 12:00:05 PM
10/29/2009 12:30:33 PM
But the statute specifically states you have a right to use deadly force once they are inside your house if you have reason to believe they are going to commit a felony. It doesn't specify what type of felony.
10/29/2009 1:59:01 PM
10/29/2009 2:46:22 PM
If i were designing a CCW class for a state that historically falls on the side of "shoot first ask questions later", I'm pretty sure which side of the can I shoot him or not? question I'd ask my instructors to tend toward.Just digging around for reasons explaining the discrepancy between CCW class members and other posters...
10/29/2009 2:58:32 PM
10/29/2009 3:11:01 PM
You can only use deadly force (without an immediate threat of death or great injury) while they're trying to get inside the house. If someone's trying to force their way in most people will assume they intend to commit a felony, that's why ii is put in the law.You cannot use deadly force when:-you are outside the house-they haven't tried to go into the house-they are already inside the house*Except when there's a threat of great bodily harm or death.You also can't use deadly force when there's no immediate threat, like:-they're stealing your junk-they're fleeing
10/29/2009 3:44:10 PM
This is what I have been saying the entire time, but those few people who were posting earlier kept saying because stealing something can be classified as a felony, that it is ok to shoot themwhich is completely ridiculous- I think my last comment in this thread was along these lines, and it was gonna be my last in the thread, period. I just wanted to thank you for helping enlighten all the people who are just reading what is in the book and who have not talked to any law enforcement or lawyers EVER about this
10/29/2009 4:42:32 PM
No problem.The biggest problem is people read:
10/29/2009 4:49:10 PM
10/29/2009 11:42:10 PM
^ amen to that. Collateral damage cuts both ways.
10/29/2009 11:49:27 PM