Dove v. State

50 Tenn. 348, 3 Heisk. 348, 1872 Tenn. LEXIS 3
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 17, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 50 Tenn. 348 (Dove 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
Dove v. State, 50 Tenn. 348, 3 Heisk. 348, 1872 Tenn. LEXIS 3 (Tenn. 1872).

Opinion

Nicholson, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Bichard Dove was tried and convicted of murder in the first degree, for killing William Diggins. The jury found that the murder was committed with mitigating circumstances, whereupon he was sentenced to the penitentiary for life. He has appealed to this court. The case was tried at the January Term, 1871, of the Crim[355]*355inal Court of Montgomery county, where the following evidence was adduced:

The first witness introduced by the State was Virginia Holland. Defendant objected to her examination on the ground that she was his wife, but refused to examine her on voir dire, and objected to her examination by the State to prove her competency. Defendant offered to prove by evidence aliunde, that she was his wife. The court gave leave to prove that fact. Defendant then offered to prove the marriage of the witness with defendant, by reputation, cohabitation, conduct, and acknowledgment of the parties; and tendered proof of that character, but the court refused to hear such proof, and ruled that a marriage could only be shown by the certificate of marriage, the testimony of the officer who performed the ceremony, or the evidence of witnesses who witnessed the performance of the ceremony. Defendant excepted to the ruling. Witness then proved that she had been living with defendant three or four years. They were living in a house in the coaling ground of Poplar Springs Furnace, in Montgomery, at the time of Wm. Diggins’ death, which took place in 1869. Dove was working for Diggins in the coaling grounds. Dove, witness, her two children, her mother, her sister, and Diggins, all lived in the same house, it having but one room. There were three beds in the room; witness and Dove occupied one, her mother and sister another, and Diggins and her oldest child, seven years old, the third. Dove and Diggins ate supper together; they were very friendly; there was no bad feeling between them; they laughed and talked together, [356]*356and then went to bed, and were so laughing and talking when witness went to sleep. About 2 o’clock at night, witness was awakened by the blows being struck by Dove with an axe, and by the cries of Diggins, who said: “Oh! Dick; oh! Dick.” Witness saw and heard Dove strike Diggins two or three blows with the axe. She jumped up and went to Diggins’ bed, saying, “Dick, you have killed my child!” She pulled the child from under Diggins., Dove said: “You see what I have done, and it is not the first 1 have done that way. I have done many a one that way.” He walked across the floor, and then said: “ Now if the old son-of-a-bitch has any money, I interrd to take it to travel on;” and took up Diggins’ pants, and took out his pocketbook and examined it, and said: “He’s got no money; here’s some scrip; I won’t have that; but I’ll take his knife;” and did put it in his pocket. He then threw a blanket over Diggins. Dove then asked witness what she was going to do; whether she was going with him. Sh,e replied she did not know; that she didn’t want to go with him. He then went out, and came in again with the axe in his hand and said: “Now say what you are going to do, and say it quick. I can’t leave you to witness against me. If you don’t go with me, I shall see the last of all of you. You sha’n’t be left for witnesses against me.” He then told witness’ mother to take Diggins’ chickens to the Furnace, about a mile and a half or two miles, and sell them, and collect a half dollar a negro owed him, and meet him at the Furnace that night at 12 o’clock. Witness, Dove, and her two children, then went off into [357]*357the woods; but; before leaving, Dove hid the ase under the sill of the house, where he said it could not be found. They stayed in the woods all day. Dove kept the knife in his hand, and said he would kill witness if she tried to leave him. Late in the evening they went towards the Furnace, and upon getting near the road, she saw Mr. Mathis and Mr. Brown, and she ran to them with her children, and asked for protection. She went on with them to the Furnace. Dove had lived with Diggins five or six months. She said Dove was once jealous of Diggins, but he had been satisfied about that. Diggins was an old gray headed man, about sixty years old. He was a quiet, good old man. She said Dove was a very passionate man; often got very mad without any cause; would be violent and irritable when no one had troubled him. Sometimes threatened witness and her mother, and had struck her without provocation. He frequently threatened to kill somebody; frequently said he would have the heart’s blood of somebody, walking the floor, in a great fury, throwing his arms wildly about, though nobody had done anything to him. His threats were not at anybody in particular. During one evening, while they were all sitting around the fire, he jumped up, gathered a chair, and tried to strike Diggins; but was ■ prevented by a young man present. There was no cause for this, no quarrel, nor was any warning given of his attack. He was not drunk, but had taken two or three drinks. He often complained of head-ache; he so complained during the day before Diggins’ death. To the question by the Attorney General, whether Dove, [358]*358from all she knew of him, was a man of sane or insane mind, answered: She never saw anything wrong about him; he was a very quiet man; a sullen and irritable man often, but talked like a man of sense.

Sarah Holland, the mother of the last witness, gave the same account of the transaction, and stated the character and peculiarities of Dove about as the last witness.

John W. Mathis proved that Dove was a lazy, trifling, indolent man; he was a strange man; nobody knew him; witness never knew him, though he had lived with him.

Sam. Tally, worked with Dove; he talked like any other man; he never had much to say; was very quiet. One day, when they were working, he suddenly stopped, and said, with an oath, “he would kill any man who would not work for himself, but made other people work for him.” He said Diggins did not work for himself, but made him work for him; that he would kill him before he would stand it any longer. This was some time before Diggins was killed. Diggins was not present, and they had no quarrel. He talked and acted like any other man.

The State introduced and read a paper purporting to be the return of a jury of inquest over Diggins’ body, over the objections of defendant.

Jefferson Sly, for defendant, had employed Dove to-work. He quit without cause; witness went to see him; complained of his head; acted strangely; walked the floor, and acted like a drunken man, but he had no whisky. While Dove worked for witness, he was very taciturn and gloomy; would sit by himself for [359]*359hours at a time; indulged in talking to himself a great deal; would mumble and sing to himself; complained often of pains in his head; wouldn’t work as long as he had anything in his house to eat. He was asked by defendant’s counsel what, from all he had stated, was the condition of his mind: was he of sound or unsound mind? The Attorney General objected to the question, and the objection was sustained by the Court.

James Andrews, T. J. Sly and Jeff. Wojoten, testified to similar characteristics of Dove as the last witness.

Patsey Cozzart, a sister of Dove, testified that he was 47 or 48 years of age; was born in Alabama; went to East Tennessee, and lived there until he was 13 or 14 years of age, when he came to Nashville. He was a clerk for Mr. Norman, in the grocery business, one or two years.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 Tenn. 348, 3 Heisk. 348, 1872 Tenn. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dove-v-state-tenn-1872.