64 Tenn. 619 | Tenn. | 1875
delivered the opinion of the court.
The prisoner was indicted for the murder of Mrs. Housen in the Criminal Court of Davidson. He was-tried, convicted of murder in the second degree, and' sentenced to twenty years in the penitentiary.
Mrs. Housen was taken from her house at night and carried some distance and hung to what the witnesses term a “hog pole.” Near the. place where-
Upon the trial of this cause, the bill of exceptions ■ shows that “the State brought in a pan of mud and placed it immediately in front of the jury, and then masked the witness if the mud in the pan was about as soft as the mud in the branch where he saw the ’track. Witness said it was. (To all of which defendant objected and the same was overruled.) The Attorney General then called upon the defendant to .put 'his foot in the mud.” Upon objection, the court ’told the defendant he could put his foot in the mud if he wanted to, but he would not force him to -do so.
Subsequently another witness was asked “if he saw the pan of mud setting there before the jury. He -said he did, and he was asked if he saw any track in it. He said he saw none. (To all which defendant objected.) Here the Attorney General again ■called upon the defendant to put his foot in the mud.”
Because of this action of the Attorney General, and
In this ease, as before stated, we are satisfied that-the action of the Attorney General in bringing the pan of mud into court and requesting the defendant to put.