22 Tenn. 315 | Tenn. | 1842
delivered the opinion of the court.
The prisoner was indicted for murder in the first degree, in the circuit court of Sumner county, was found guilty, and sentence of death pronounced against him. He has appealed in error to this court. The errors assigned in argument and insisted on here are:
1st. That in the progress of empanneling the jurors for his trial, he challenged, for cause, certain persons summoned for the purpose of being jurors, that his challenges were disallowed, and he had to challenge them peremptorily.
2d. That the state was permitted to prove the mild and pacific temper and habits of the deceased, for whose murder he stood indicted.
3d. That a witness who had arrested the prisoner in Arkansas, and who had been examined in chief and had been discharged, brought into court in the progress of the trial, a pistol, knife, See., which, in the presencé of the jury, he handed to the-court, saying that they were the property of the prisoner, taken from his person when arrested.
4th. That certain conversations of the deceased, the night before he left home, touching the object of his next day’s trip, were permitted to be proved as a fact, explaining the motives and purposes of his journey, or as connected with and parcel of the transaction.
Upon the first question, the bill of exceptions informs us that on the trial of the qualifications and competency of those furnished as jurors before the court, four of those called said that upon report, they had formed and expressed an opinion as to the guilt or innocence of the prisoner, and, that so far as they knew, they had heard none of the witnesses speak of the case. The report they had heard related to Isaac Lindsey’s death, and contained the circumstances of his death, but whether .all. the circumstances of his death or not, they did not know, and a fifth said he had heard the same circumstances of the case, to wit, the finding of the body of the man that was killed, in the river, and that the prisoner was in some way connected with that circumstance. That he had not heard any body speak
It has been contended here, that they were incompetent by operation of the rule laid down by this court, in the case of McGowan against the State, 9 Yerg., and reviewed and affirmed at this term in the case of Payne vs. State. The court in the case of McGowan vs. State, sought to distinguish between impressions or opinions ' founded upon rumor merely, however circumstantial in its narrative and detail, and those opinions of greater dignity and weight founded upon information derived from persons who .professed to know, and who detailed the circumstances of the case, and whose statements were relied on and believed* although not eye-witnesses of the transactions, or witnesses in the case. We are certain the fifth person above spoken of does not come within this rule, and wre believe none of them do; but this is the less material because the prisoner on the trial did not exhaust his peremptory challenges — he challenged but thirty-one jurors; and in the same case of McGowan against the State, it was ruled that under such circumstances the act of the court in putting an incompetent juror to the prisoner would not constitute'a ground for reversal.
2d. It is insisted that the court erred in permitting testimony to be given, that the deceased was of mild and pacific temper and habits. There is nothing in this objection.
The case depended upon circumstantial proof, and it was proper to suffer this fact to be proved as a circumstance tending to aid the jury in ascertaining the-probable grade of the of-fence. It would also haVe been competent for the prisoner to have made proof, if he could, of a contrary character, independently of the fact that the State made the proof in question.
As to the third objection, .taken to the proceeding in the trial, that a witness examined in chief and discharged, afterwards brought the articles mentioned into court and stated them to be the property of the prisoner, taken from his person in the State of Arkansas — this was of no importance in the case, unless it could
4. The fourth objection relates to the testimony given by a witness of the name of Warren, as to the conversations of the deceased the night before he left home, touching the motives and objects of his next day’s trip. To show the status of the case, and the connection of testimony with the general transaction, we will set forth some of the testimony which preceded it and some which followed it. W. R. Sanders proved that from two to six weeks before the 14th December, the day of the death, he passed by the house of the deceased and saw prisoner there. He returned the same evening and staid all night, prisoner was still there and staid all night; deceased, when lighting witness to bed, had some conversation with him as to prisoner and his business. In the morning the deceased and prisoner were in the passage between the ends of the house; deceased called witness to them, arid in allusion, to the last night’s conversation said: “I was mistaken as to the place where the silver ore which Mr. Carroll proposes to sell is ‘concealed; it is in the river bottom neax Nashville, and not in the bottom in this neighborhood.” Prisoner said, “Parson, if yVi let me, I’ll be off;” deceased replied “well, well,” and added that he had told witness of the ore and the proposed trade because he had known him from childhood, and wished to make him a partner in the purchase, as he himself could not raise the means to pay for it. The defendant said he would take $300 or $400 for the ore, and would be satisfied with $100 or $150 in hand, forwhich sum he had immediate use, but could wait for the balance till next fall, when he expected to leave. Deceased said he had $100 which he could pay down, and if witness would join him he could raise the rest. When witness left, prisoner went with
Alexander Jackson proved that his wife is the- daughter of Mrs. Sims, and the niece of the prisoner, that the prisoner staid all night at Mrs. Sims’ on the night of the 13th, that on the morning of the 14th, before breakfast, deceased came there; at breakfast he and the prisoner made preparation to leave together, deceased saying that he and “Green,” meaning the prisoner, were going on a “speculating spree” and might be at Nashville before they returned, that they started together, deceased riding and prisoner walking on foot, and carrying his gun. We now cometo the point in question. Warner, the second witness called, having testified as above stated, was asked by the prosecuting counsel to state in the first place what deceased said-on the morning of the 14th December, 1840, relating-to the trip or absence from home about to ensue, and witness stated that deceased made his preparations very early to leave home, but would not communicate to him and his wife very distinctly his object, but borrowed witness’s saddle rigging, and said, on witness asking him, that he should be back on Tuesday, and if not till Wednesday, he hoped he would i!break no squares with him,” alludingto his partnership cropping,
The counsel for the State then offered to prove by witness the conversation of the deceased the evening before on the subject of his proposed trip and absence; the prisoner objected to the legal competency of the testimony, and the court overruled the objection and permitted witness to state any conversation on the subject of the trip, and the object of the trip which took place on that evening, and the witness proceeded and stated that deceased said the prisoner had told him he had discovered a silver ore mine in the State of Missouri, on Congress land, that he had brought a quantity of it and deposited it in the river bottom between that and Nashville, and that defendant had proposed to trade it to him, and that he was going to make the trade, and the next day he was going to see the defendant and examine the ore; the witness replied that he did not believe the prisoner had any ore, and stated his reasons at length for the belief, in reply to which the deceased remarked that “he believed the prisoner to be as clever a man as any that spoke hard of him.” The question now' is, was this testimony competent; and we think it yvas competent. On two distinct grounds we think this maintainable,
1st. Because the testimony shows that a few evenings before, the prisoner told the deceased that he must come over and close the trade, and when they were at Sims’s, deceased said in the act of starting, and in the presence of prisoner, that they were going on a “speculating spree” and might go as far as Nashville; the same morning, at home, he told Warner, in. allusion to the conversation of the preceding evening, that he was going to “finish the trade” one way or another.
It was competent to show by the conversation of the preceding evening what was meant by the terms ‘ ‘speculating spree’ ’ and “finish the trade,” and what was the object of his trip, and that he really believed and confided in, and was about to act upon, the long depending and mysterious story of the silver ore.
2d. But- independently of the ground above set forth, that
If a man say to his family, I shall leave home to-morrow morning, and state his purpose, shall we count upon the clock, and say the act of leaving home and the declaration of the purpose are not concomitant, and therefore separate the act and declaration of purpose, prove the one and exclude the other? I do not so understand the author, and I am sure such is not the sense and reason of the thing. The author, in the same section and speaking on the same subject, remarks that “the affairs of men consist of a complication of circumstances, so intimately interwoven as to be hardly separable from each other. Each owes its birth to some preceding circumstance, and in its turn becomes the prolific parent of others, and each during its existence has its inseparable attributes and its kindred facts, materially affecting its charapter and' essential to be known in order to a right understanding of its nature;” and he adds, “these surrounding circumstances, termed the res gesto, may always be shown to the jury along with the principal fact, and their admissibility is determined by the judge accoiding to the degree of their relation to that fact, and in the exercise of his sound discretion, it being extremely difficult, if not impossible, to bring this class of cases within the limits of a more particular description.” — See Greenleaf’s Law of Evidence, sec. 168. Upon this point of the case we have been referred by prisoner’s counsel, to the case of Kirby vs. the State, 9 Yerg. 385, as controlling this case. In that case a witness testified “that he saw Elrod, the deceased, the day before he was said to have been killed, and while on his way to the Pine mountain; that he asked Elrod to go with him; he said he could not, that he had promised
We have not thought it necessary to discuss the general evidence in the case, for it is not contended that it does fully support the verdict. So neither have we gone into the charge of the court, for in reference to the facts proved, we are of opinion that it is correct. Upon the whole matter, therefore, we must affirm the judgment in the case.