82 Tenn. 475 | Tenn. | 1884
delivered the opinion of the court.
The indictment in this case contained three counts. The first charged all of the defendants with murder in the first degree, of the deceased — one Jim Brown. The' second and third counts charged "William Morrow as principal, and Hansom Morrow and Bellamy as accessories before the fact, in said murdejr of said deceased, Brown.
William Morrow has been convicted of murder in
The first error assigned is upon the action of the court in holding the plea of former acquittal as to Bellamy insufficient, as to the second and third counts of the indictment. This action of the court was correct: 1 Arch. Crim. Plead. and Prac., 72, note 1.
The offense of being accessory before the fact, with which he is charged in this indictment, was not included among the o flenses embraced in the former indictment, nor could he have been tried or convicted ns an accessory under that indictment, and consequently he had never been in jeopardy under the first indictment for the offense with which he is charged in this.
The only questions necessary to be considered arise upon the assignment of errors by the defendants. The •evidence upon which the conviction was mainly had, was the confessions or admissions of William Morrow made to witnesses that he had killed the deceased,
The affidavit of Ransom Morrow stated in substance, that the State, in order to establish said murder,, would rely upon certain alleged confessions of William Morrow not made in his presence, that he (said William Morrow), killed the deceased, and which said confessions included statements that said affiant counseled him to do so; and that said alleged confessions, while not competent as evidence against him, would necessarily, upon a joint trial, prejudice him in the minds of the jury; that said Brown — a negro — did immediately before the killing; make an assault with intent to commit a rape upon his daughter, who was the wife of his co-defendant, Bellamy, and this fact can only be proved by said co-defendant, Bellamy, and his said wife, the daughter of said affiant, and without a severance, he was advised, that he could not have the benefit of said testimony; that he can also prove by said witnesses that he was informed by
Defendant, Bellamy, in his affidavit, stated that he did not counsel, advise, or in any manner procure William Morrow to commit said murder, and that he ■can prove by said William Morrow that he did not •either counsel, advise, or in any manner procure him to kill said deceased Brown; that he knows of no other person by whom he can prove these facts, and without a severance he is advised that he will be deprived of said testimony. The court overruled each of said motions, and declined to permit a severance, and the defendants were jointly tried. Upon the trial the defendants, William Morrow and Ransom Morrow, each tendered Mrs. Bellamy as a witness, by whom they offered to prove substantially the facts which were stated in their respective affidavits for a •severance, that they desired to and could prove by her; and the defendants, Ransom Morrow and Bellamy, each offered defendant, William Morrow, as a witness, by whom they proposed to prove respectively .that they never did advise, counsel, or in any manner procure, or attempt to procure him, William Morrow, to kill or murder the deceased, James Brown. A witness on part of the State had testified that the .deceased, on the morning of the day upon which he was killed, had gone to the house of defendant, Bellamy, to return some meal which had been borrowed. Defendants, William and Ransom Morrow, also offered .to prove by Mrs. Bellamy that the deceased did not .come to her house on the morning of the killing
The question as to whether a severance should be allowed is one which addresses itself to the sound discretion of the court, and unless abused this’ court will no't grant a new trial on account of the refusal of the court to permit a severance: Robinson v. State, 1 Lea, 673. Where the defenses are antagonistic, and the ends of justice will be better obtained by separate trials, the court should grant a severance: 5 Cold., 40; 2 Hum., 99; 4 Sneed, 425. In Moffit v. The State, 2 Hum., 99, it was held that the wife of one of two persons jointly indicted for an assault and battery, is a competent witness for the other defendant tried separately. And in Workman v. The State, above cited, it was held that where two persons jointly indicted for murder, the one as principal, and the other as “present aiding and abetting,” and they sever in their trials, the wife of one of them is a competent witness for the other. And in Poteete v. The State, it was decided that a party jointly indicted for the same offense, but who has obtained a severance, and has not been put upon his trial, is a com-
We are of opinion that the ends of justice would have been better subserved, and the offenses with which the defendants were charged were so' distinct and separate as to require that a severance in the trials should have been had, and the defendants re
It is next insisted that the court erred in admitting the confessions or admissions of William Morrow to establish the offense of which he was guilty, so far as it affected the defendants, Ransom Morrow and Bellamy, but that as to them the offense of the murder of the deceased by William Morrow must be made out by proof outside of his confessions. This position is untenable. If the defendant, William Morrow, had not been on trial, his confessions would have been competent to go to the jury, after the facts of the killing of the deceased had been established by other testimony, to show that he did it, and also the grade of offense of which he was guilty, that is, to establish the murder just as if he had been alone on trial; but these confessions are not evidence to fix guilt upon the defendants charged as .accessories: Self v. The State, 6 Bax., 244. While there are authorities to the contrary, yet we approve the reasoning of Chief Justice Nicholson in the case referred to, and hold in accordance with it.
It is insisted for the defendants, Ransom Morrow .and Bellamy, that the court erred in permitting. a witness, Piccaud, in detailing the confessions of William Morrow as to the killing of the deceased, .also to give • his statements as to what they had said to him in their absence. These statements as evidence in chief would have been incompetent as to them, but upon looking to the record they appear to
Several objections have been taken to the charge of the court, which we think is in some respects subject to serious criticism, 'but as these may be obviated upon another trial, we have not deemed it necessary to discuss them. ••
Eor the errors above specified the judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded for another trial. The defendants will be permitted to sever, and be tried separately.