26 Tenn. 542 | Tenn. | 1847
delivered the opinion of the court.
The prisoner was indicted and convicted in the Circuit Court of Hardin county, for the murder of one David Sellers, and has prosecuted his appeal in error to this court. Many grounds of error have been here assigned on behalf of the prisoner, and among them, that the declarations of Sellers very shortly before his death were improperly received as testimony upon the trial against the prisoner. The witness proving these declarations, stated, that when the deceased, after having been wounded was brought to the house, he told his wife “not to be alarmed, that he was not badly hurt and was not going to die.” About ten minutes afterwards, deceased told Wiley Mangum that Nelson, the prisoner, “had stabbed him.” He seemed to talk with great difficulty, and said other things which witness did not distinctly understand, but thinks he was trying to say, “that Nelson had tried to kill him two or three times before, but he did not at this time express any fear or opinion as to his death.”