Cribbs v. State

325 S.W.2d 567, 205 Tenn. 138, 9 McCanless 138, 1959 Tenn. LEXIS 349
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMay 1, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 325 S.W.2d 567 (Cribbs v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cribbs v. State, 325 S.W.2d 567, 205 Tenn. 138, 9 McCanless 138, 1959 Tenn. LEXIS 349 (Tenn. 1959).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Tomlinson,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal by Cribbs from a conviction of the offense created by Code Section 59-1001, commonly known as the “hit and run” statute. His punishment was fixed at a fine of $2,500 and confinement in the workhouse for eleven months and twenty-nine days. He denies that he was the driver of the offending car, or was in Haywood County that day, and, along with other evidence, offers evidence which he says establishes a complete and irrefutable alibi. The person struck by the offending automobile was the prosecutor, Arthur J. Walton. He was so seriously injured as to necessitate the amputation of his leg and a considerable stay in the hospital.

Although it is true that the Trial Court erred in not requiring Walton to testify on cross-examination as to whether he had a civil suit pending against Cribbs by reason of this occurrence, and thereby was the more interested in the outcome of this case, and, although it is true that the district attorney made an apparently incompetent statement in his jury argument, nevertheless, neither of these errors was prejudicial. At the outset, therefore, is reached the only other question made, to-wit, whether the evidence preponderates against the verdict.

To avoid repetition, it is well at this point to state that the offending automobile was a black five passenger 1956 Chevrolet with an aerial on its left rear fender. Only the driver was in it at the time of the accident. Cribbs, at that time a member of the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, was in possession of, and operated, a Chevrolet [140]*140car of that description. The weight of the evidence is that the Chevrolet he operated was perhaps the only such Chevrolet in Dyer County, where Cribbs lived. The point of the hit and run accident was nineteen miles from Dyersburg. Cribbs lived sis miles beyond Dyersburg, or twenty-five miles from the scene of the accident. There were no eye witnesses other than "Walton and the driver of the Chevrolet.

The accident occurred somewhere between 6:00 and 6:30 P.M. on Wednesday evening, September 4, 1957, about one half mile north of a place known as Forked Deer. The lights of the Chevrolet were turned on as it approached the truck, according to the prosecutor, and it was “just about sun down”, according to State’s witness, Jordan; or as State’s witness, Daniels, puts it “it was between 6:15 and 6:30, it was right at night, it was still light”; or as fixed by State’s witness, Oscar Jefferson, it was around “just about dark”.

At the point of the accident, Walton alighted from his southbound truck, after stopping it on his right hand side with the right wheels entirely off the traveled portion of the highway. As he started to walk along the left hand side of the his truck towards its rear, he saw approaching from the south the Chevrolet in question. This Chevrolet, when close to Walton, was suddenly guided from its own right side to its left side of the highway, and continued at what Walton describes as a slow speed to the truck, where it mashed Walton between the two vehicles and dragged his upstanding body to the rear of the truck where he fell, while the Chevrolet continued on its way without stopping.

[141]*141Henry Jordan beard the crash. Very shortly thereafter this Chevrolet driving north towards Grates and Dyersbnrg passed him at a rapid speed and “a little bit wavy”. He arrived at the scene Immediately after Robert Clark, who was the first man to reach the injured Walton. He was passed by this Chevrolet a short distance north of the accident point, and was driving in such a manner as to almost rnn him down. Neither of these men saw the face of the driver well enough to identify him.

A Chevrolet of this description was seen by State witnesses, Bub Haynes, Walter Goodman, Roy Hibbitt and Russell Groves on the day of the accident at times ranging, according to them, between 4:00 and 5:30 P.M. They necessarily refer to times previous to the accident. One of them says that it was being driven so fast that he had to step back to keep from being run over; another, that this reckless speed and manner of driving was over a quite rough road full of holes, and with which road the driver of the Chevrolet seemed not to be familiar.

Walton says that when the car approached he knew the man’s face, but did not know his name. His first recollection of Cribbs is that he saw him some years before in a beer joint and was told by some one there that his name was John Cribbs, and some years before the accident, when Cribbs was a deputy sheriff, he electioneered with Walton in Dyersbnrg. He said he had seen him “plenty of times”, and that when the Chevrolet first approached him at the scene of the accident “I thought he was an old friend”; just couldn’t recall his name. When a patrolman interviewed him at the hospital a few days later, and discussed the identity of the offender, [142]*142Walton did not suggest, according to the patrolman, tliat tlie offender was known by Walton to be a former deputy or sheriff of Dyer County. Nor did Walton mention any other time or place where he had ever seen the face of the driver of the Chevrolet.

The patrolman just mentioned had a joint photograph of Cribbs and another TBI agent. He presented that picture to Walton at the hospital. Walton’s testimony is that it was dark there, but that he told the patrolman that one of he men “looks sort of like him, but would not say”. This patrolman, Bogers, testifies that on this occasion Walton told him that “I believe I could identify him if I ever come face to face with him again, ’ ’ but that “none of these people in there (the photograph) was the one that was driving the car”, but did complain about not having his glasses. It was not until two weeks before the trial more than a year later that Walton first saw Cribbs after the accident. He positively identifies him at the trial as being the driver of the Chevrolet which ran him down.

Haynes, who saw the car speeding by him between 4:30 and 5:00 got “a minute’s view” of the driver of the Chevrolet car, and “it was a second and he was gone”. He says that this driver “favored” the defendant. Hib-bitt, who was with Mr. G-roves, and saw a Chevrolet of this description around 4:00 P.M., testifies that the defendant “looks like the man who stopped and talked to Groves”. Groves, who saw such a Chevrolet about 5:30, said that the defendant Cribbs “favors him a lot if he had a little more flesh on his face”. (Cribbs had had more flesh on his face at the time of the trial than he did at the time of the hit and run occurrence a year before.) [143]*143“Looks near enough, like him to be his twin brother, hut I don’t know whether to he positive on the identification or not”. The defendant had been bald for a number of years. Groves said that be surely must have had a hat on because “I thoug’ht the man had hair, and it was an odd color * * * must have been a shadow coming through the windshield”. He observed that the man who was driving this car had a pretty full face and weighed between 200 and 225 pounds. Cribbs weighed 180 pounds at time of trial; a little less at the time of the accident. Goodman, who saw this Chevrolet around 5:30, said he could not identify the man.

A State’s witness named Daniels said that the driver of this Chevrolet stopped at the store where he happened to be and asked “Will this road carry me out to Gates'?” Cribbs and his wife had lived at Gates a number of years before and was familar with the roads. Witness says he got a good look at him.

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Related

State v. Russell
735 S.W.2d 840 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee, 1987)

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Bluebook (online)
325 S.W.2d 567, 205 Tenn. 138, 9 McCanless 138, 1959 Tenn. LEXIS 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cribbs-v-state-tenn-1959.