Dennis v. State

279 S.W.2d 512, 198 Tenn. 325, 2 McCanless 325, 1955 Tenn. LEXIS 375
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 11, 1955
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 279 S.W.2d 512 (Dennis 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
Dennis v. State, 279 S.W.2d 512, 198 Tenn. 325, 2 McCanless 325, 1955 Tenn. LEXIS 375 (Tenn. 1955).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Swepston

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Minnie Dennis was convicted for the homicide of her husband for murder in the second degree with a punishment fixed at 15 years in the State prison.

On appeal the principal questions raised by her assignments of error are: (1) That the evidence preponderates against the judgment, and (2.) that the Trial Court erred in admitting evidence of a subsequent autopsy on the body of the deceased.

Briefly stated, the theory of the State is that Minnie Dennis drove out to a tobacco field about 2:00 o’colck in the afternoon where her husband was working with three other men, and that after some discussion or argument *327 between them which was not heard by any of the witnesses -in fairly close proximity she shot him while he was walking or running away from her. The theory of the defendant is that her husband became angered at her because a short time previously she had refused to endorse a note for him and that particularly the night before the killing her husband had cursed, threatened and generally abused her, and that she had gone out to the field in the afternoon the next day to take him a jar of ice water which he had forgotten to take with him after he had returned to town for lunch; that he was still angry with her and when she arrived at the field with the jar of water in order to ameliorate his feelings that he knocked her down and was kicking her when she, in self-defense, pulled a pistol from her bosom and shot him in order to protect herself from great bodily harm.

This couple had been married for several years and for the last two or three years the wife had been operating a taxicab and she testified that it was her habit, at' the suggestion of her husband, that she carry a pistol with her which she said she customarily did in the bosom of her dress. The deceased was engaged in farming as well as other activities. He owned an automobile in addition to the taxicab which was operated by his wife.

On the day of the homicide the deceased was working in the tobacco field with three other men from rather early in the morning until about noon-time when two of them went in one direction to obtain lunch, while the deceased and another one of them went in the automobile of deceased back to town and ate lunch, not at home but at a public eating-place. Some time after they had returned to work and were working near one another the defendant drove up in her. taxicab and the deceased left the vicinity of the other workers and went over to the taxicab where *328 lie and Ms wife engaged in conversation wMcli was just out of earshot of these other three men. The next thing any one of these three men who testified at the trial knew about it was when one of them yelled to the deceased to look out while he was walking away from his wife and back toward these three men. They say that at that in•stant she began firing her pistol, that he fell and that she then walked to her car and drove away. One of the witnesses testified that she was on the ground.

James Bagwell testified that the defendant was sitting in the car for a while and that when the deceased started back toward them, the other workers, the defendant got out of her car, walked around to the side of the car that the deceased was on, with a gun in her hand, and shot the deceased; that he fell and she fired altogether four times. That she then got back in her car and drove away without saying anything. That deceased fell face down and seemed to be dead when he got to him and that he saw a bullet wound right back of his ear. He did see some water and ice cubes on the ground.

Frank Smith testified that after the defendant drove up in her car and the deceased went over to it and they began talking, he could not hear them and did not pay any more attention until George Thomas Clardy yelled, “Look out, Dan, look out;” that when he looked up he saw George Thomas Clardy running “opposite from me;” that he himself started running and that he did not see the pistol fire but he heard the four shots; that he squatted down in the rows and he saw the deceased run and fall; that after the last shot he saw George get up and look around and he saw the defendant get up ‘ ‘ in about hands reach of Dan; ’ ’ •that the defendant was “laying” on the ground; that the deceased was dead and lying face-down when he went *329 up there and that the deceased had been shot in the hack of the head, that the defendant got in the car and left.

George Thomas Clardy testified that when the defendant drove np in her car and turned it around the deceased went to the car and talked to her a minute or two, then turned to come on hack to the field where they were all working and that the defendant went around her car and when she came around it she had the gun in her hand, threw up the gun and he yelled, “Look out, Dan,” about the time she started firing the gun; he says that the defendant was about 20 feet from the deceased when she started firing the pistol, that he had his back to her at the time he was shot, and that he saw the deceased stumbling and falling.

None of these witnesses, who were the only eyewitnesses, saw any weapon in the hand of the deceased and none of them saw the deceased strike or kick the defendant, although some of them saw where the water had been poured on the ground.

The defendant testified, on the other hand, that her husband knocked her down on the ground and was kicking her when she pulled the pistol from her bosom and fired upward striking him while he was standing somewhat over her and facing her.

Two physicians who examined the body testified. One of them said that the bullet entered his head back of and above the left ear. The other physician testified that there was' a wound over the left eye, that he probed at that point and that the bullet entered at that point in the front of his head rather than in the rear.

On account of this conflict in the testimony of the two doctors the Trial Judge ordered that the body be exhumed and that an autopsy be made, although there was no order entered on the minutes of the Court to that effect. *330 This order was carried out over night by the undertaker who had buried the deceased and by séveral doctors of admitted ability and it was definitely determined that the fatal shot entered from back behind the left ear, that the .bullet remained inside the skull and that the skull was not broken in front where the gash appeared over the left eyebrow.

Under the fourth and fifth assignments of error it is insisted that the Court was in error in overruling his objections to the introduction of the testimony of the undertaker and the doctors as to their findings upon such autopsy based in part upon the result of X-ray pictures; that the Court erred in not granting the defendant’s motion for mistrial and it is further insisted that the action of the Judge in writing notes to the undertaker and the doctor .directing the exhumation of the body and the autopsy without same being spread on the minutes and .'without any notice to the defendant and her counsel, as the same was a failure to comply with Code Sec. 9966.1, which is Chapter 61, Section 1, of the Acts of 1949, embodied in the 1950'Code Supplement.

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Bluebook (online)
279 S.W.2d 512, 198 Tenn. 325, 2 McCanless 325, 1955 Tenn. LEXIS 375, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dennis-v-state-tenn-1955.