Drye v. State

184 S.W.2d 10, 181 Tenn. 637, 17 Beeler 637, 1944 Tenn. LEXIS 286
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 2, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 184 S.W.2d 10 (Drye 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
Drye v. State, 184 S.W.2d 10, 181 Tenn. 637, 17 Beeler 637, 1944 Tenn. LEXIS 286 (Tenn. 1944).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Chambliss

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal is from a conviction of murder in the first degree, with a prison sentence of twenty-five years. Drye shot and killed his wife. His defense, brought here by assignments of error, is (1) that there was an absence of criminal responsibility because of insanity, and (2) that the killing was in passion under provocation and, therefore, not murder in the first degree. '

Drye is a veteran of the first World War. He entered the Army in 1915 and was honorably discharged as mentally unsound, his condition being then diagnosed as dementia praecox. He was in and out of various Government hospitals more than twenty times throughout his troubled mental life during twenty-five years. The Government records show that his condition varied, sometimes diagnosed as dementia praecox, hebephrenic type (that is, characterized by silly behavior and rapid loss of mentality), or described as psychosis, maniac type, again as maniac depressive insanity. All the Veteran Hospital Clinics in Tennessee, Kentucky, Maryland and elsewhere found him seriously mentally diseased. His last hospi *639 talization appears to have been in Mountain Home, Tennessee, from which he was signed out by his wife and removed while under medical care “against medical advice” in October, 1941. He had tried at different times to commit suicide. In 1937 he was adjudged “incompetent” by the County Court of Washington County and the Peoples Bank was appointed his guardian under provisions of the Uniform Veterans’ Guardianship laws. This disability has never been removed. It was shown that relatives in North Carolina, where Drye was born, were insane and that he had been adjudged insane there in 1981 and committed to a hospital for treatment.

An expert testified that his type of insanity was “circular,” [cyclical] going through depressions and then into periods of remission, We understand this to mean that he had clearing up periods in which he was rational and when he could and did act normally. This is a composite picture of the defendant’s troubled mental life.

Some time before this tragedy he had obtained work as a butcher in the grocery store of W. T. Bond at Kings-port. He had married the deceased several years before and it is shown that, while he was devoted to her, indeed “crazy about her,” to use a common phrase, she was a woman without regard for her marital vows, who persisted, despite his pleadings and protests, in cohabitation with other men. It is clear that this conduct distressed and disturbed him greatly. A few days before the homicide he went with some friends to a nearby town to investigate reports that his wife was spending week ends there with a certain man. His fears were confirmed. His wife was boarding in Johnson City. He saw her and begged her to mend her ways and not to thus disgrace him. She responded with sneers. Mr. Bond testifies that during this time he would hear Drye talking to his wife over *640 the phone, protesting and pleading with her and that “it would tear him to pieces and he would walk the floor, wring his hands and cry.’ ’ Surely, it is not to he wondered at that his diseased mentality was seriously affected by this strain upon it. Mr. Bond testifies that on the morning of the homicide he came to the store looking like a wild man. A Mrs. Teal testified that the couple lived with her several years; that Drye was good to his wife; that sometimes when she went out and left him he would cry and pull his hair and once went out and tore up the garden he had planted. She thought him of unsound mind. A Mrs. Hyatt testified to having known the deceased to call him and abuse him over the telephone, when he would ‘ ‘ go all to pieces. ’ ’

Coming to the day and immediate incidents of the homicide, on that morning the deceased called Drye from Johnson City over the phone at the Bond store in Kings-port and told^him, among other things, that she was “three times seven” and would date any one she pleased. Mr. Bond says Drye was called over the phone and he went to pieces, was nervous, shaking all over. We quote now from the brief of the Assistant Attorney-General his summary of the succeeding events:

“The plaintiff in error’s reaction was instantaneous. This telephone conversation seems to have excited the •plaintiff in error to some extent and his employer testifies that to him he looked like a wild man on that morning. He immediately caught a bus from Kingsport to Johnson City, upon his arrival there, he went to the home of a friend and telling the friend’s wife that her husband had agreed to lend him a pistol, procured it from this woman. He then went to the home of a Mrs. Marshall, where his wife sometimes had been found. After some preliminaries, he requested Mrs. Marshall to go to the place where *641 Ms wife was then staying and to tell her that he wanted to see her at Mrs. Marshall’s home. Mrs. Marshall demurred at this request and thereupon the plaintiff in error produced this pistol and told Mrs. Marshall that although she had been a very good friend of his, he would kill her if she did not go and deliver this message to the deceased. He also told Mrs. Marshall at the same time that he intended to kill deceased and her paramour.

“Mrs. Marshall -no doubt persuaded by this pistol, called a taxicab and went to the house where deceased was staying for the purpose of warning her that plaintiff in error was armed and had threatened to kill her. After Mrs. Marshall got out of the cab, it returned to her home and there plaintiff in error entered it. He inquired of the driver as to the location he had taken Mrs. Marshall and upon finding this out, had the driver to carry him to a spot approximately two blocks from where the deceased was staying.

“In some manner the plaintiff in error reached the back door of the house where deceased was living and upon entering it the deceased evidently saw him and began to run. No one seems to have seen the actual homicide but suffice it to say that plaintiff in error fired two shots at deceased, one of which took effect killing her almost instantly. 'She ran into the yard next door and there collapsed and died shortly after her arrival at the hospital.

“As showing the sanity and clear recognition of the consequences of his act, the plaintiff in error is shown to have told the witness Blevins, who sought to disarm him, to get out of the way and not touch him. He also made the statement that the deceased had gotten what she deserved and also told tMs witness to take the weapon and keep it until the officers came and then give it to them. *642 When the officers appeared upon the scene and were investigating the homicide, the plaintiff in error is shown' to have walked np to them and to have notified them that, he was the man that they wanted and in response to questions, informed them that he had killed the deceased. According to the officers in question, he talked most coherently when they arrived upon the scene and the witnesses who were present testify that he calmly rolled a cigarette in the interval between his surrender of the pistol and the arrival of the officers. The record shows that he was taken to the jail and when informed of- the death of the deceased, broke down and cried.

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Bluebook (online)
184 S.W.2d 10, 181 Tenn. 637, 17 Beeler 637, 1944 Tenn. LEXIS 286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drye-v-state-tenn-1944.