Fine v. State

246 S.W.2d 70, 193 Tenn. 422, 29 Beeler 422, 1952 Tenn. LEXIS 308
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 9, 1952
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 246 S.W.2d 70 (Fine 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
Fine v. State, 246 S.W.2d 70, 193 Tenn. 422, 29 Beeler 422, 1952 Tenn. LEXIS 308 (Tenn. 1952).

Opinion

Me. Chief Justice Neil

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The plaintiff in error, who will be later referred to as the defendant, was convicted in the criminal court of Knox County of voluntary manslaughter and sentenced to the penitentiary for not less than two (2) and not more than ten (10) years.

While numerous assignments of error are assigned to the action of the trial court in refusing to grant de *424 fendant a new trial we think the determinative question is whether or not the deceased died as the result of a criminal agency or from natural causes. The defendant, Fine, and the deceased, Hodges, were residents of Jefferson County and lived upon adjoining farms. They were interested in buying and selling livestock and had come to the Knoxville Stock Yards on the day of the alleged homicide. The two men had previously engaged in a dispute about a line fence, but this difference was not of a serious nature. A witness for the State, one James Bailey, testified that the defendant had made the remark, “I’ll get mine if I have to beat the devil out of him (referring to the deceased) and throw him in the creek.” The defendant evidently was referring to the fact that the deceased owed him a few dollars for repairing the line fence.

There is little, if any, conflict in the evidence upon which the State relies to support the conviction of the defendant. A fair statement of the facts appears in the State’s brief, as follows:

“Witnesses introduced on behalf of the State testified that within ten to thirty minutes after Hodges’ arrival at the stockyards they saw him and Plaintiff in Error together outside the calf barn. Plaintiff in Error was seen to place his hand on deceased’s shoulder and shake him. He then placed one or both hands about Hodges’ throat and choked him. Plaintiff in Error turned him loose within a matter of seconds and deceased slumped to the ground near, if not against, the side of the calf barn. * * *
“Deceased was taken immediately to a Knoxville hospital and transferred that same afternoon to St. Mary’s Hospital, also in Knoxville. He stayed at 'St. Mary’s about two weeks and never regained conscious *425 ness while there. He was then taken to Milligan Clinic in Jefferson City where he stayed another two weeks, never regaining consciousness there. F'rom Milligan Clinic he was taken to his home where he died on February 17, 1950. He remained paralyzed from the time of the assault until his death. His wife seemed to think that after he was taken to his home he was conscious part of the time. After his death she refused to give permission to perform an autopsy.”

Dr. Herbert Aeuff, a State’s witness, saw the deceased at St. Mary’s Hospital on the afternoon following the alleged assault. He gave it as his opinion that Hodges had suffered a ruptured blood vessel in the brain which had paralyzed his right side. The blood pressure of the deceased was found to be 220 over 120, which according to Dr. Aeuff, was “alarmingly high”, and “excitement of any hind or nature will accelerate that pressure, and of course the acceleration of the pressure forcing into the little blood vessels in the brain.” (Emphasis supplied.)

“Q. State whether or not in your opinion the increase in blood pressure caused the cerebral hemorrhage at that time, while he was being choked. A. Well, from some cause or other the pressure increased; because he had an alarmingly high pressure, and if he was already carrying all the column the pressure could stand, and then he was beaten, or any excitement, or what not, would normally cause a hemorrhage.

“Q. Would you or would you not, then, Doctor, say that this assault on the body of Mr. Hodges in the condition he was in either directly or indirectly caused this cerebral hemorrhage with the resulting death? A. I wouldn’t want to say that that alone did it, because the man had the high pressure he did.

*426 “Q. Yes, I understand. A. I mean * * *

“Q. But was it a contributing factor or not! A. I can truthfully say that it was a contributing factor. ’ ’

It definitely appears that this expert medical witness, in response to a hypothetical question, was rather hesitant in expressing the opinion that the act of the defendant in ‘ ‘ choking the deceased ’ ’ was the ‘ ‘ effective agency ’ ’ in causing his death. He would go no further than to say that in his opinion “it ivas a contributing factor.” This opinion was later modified. He gave the following testimony on cross-examination:

“A. Well, the blood pressure for a man of his age should have been around 150 over around 80 to a hundred. (Mr. Hodges was about 75). So the 220 was an inordinately high pressure.
“Q. He had how much above the normal pressure! A. At least 70 or 80 above. And in addition to that a man at that age has hardening of the arteries, and any pressure or any sudden stroke or anything of that character would break the artery and cause it to rupture. And so for that reason I think that this sudden increase in the pressure for whatever cause was responsible for the split in the vessel.
******
“Q. Is that a highly dangerous condition!' A. Yes.
“Q. Would a person of that age with that blood pressure be liable to have a stroke without anybody even touching them! A. Yes, he could have.
“Q. ’Could he have it while he was in bed! A. He could have.”

The defendant testified he had known the deceased for about five years and they had always been on friendly terms; that when they met at the stockyards they talked *427 briefly about the repairs to a line fence; that in the course of the conversation Hodges became very angry when the defendant suggested that deceased owed him “about $5.00”, saying, “You are a damned liar, it ain’t that much.” The defendant further testified that deceased ‘‘had a wild, angry look on his face, one he had' never seen before.” He thought deceased was about to attack him and he “grabbed him by the shirt collar” as deceased ran his hand in his pocket. When asked how long he held Hodges, he stated, “I turned him loose just as I took a breath; it was over just in a second”, that he staggered back about three or four steps against the seed house and slumped over on his left side. The testimony of the defendant was corroborated by several eyewitnesses.

While there is testimony to the effect that there were fingerprints and scratches on deceased’s neck, the hospital records fail to confirm these facts. Dr. Frank L. Milligan, a qualified medical expert, testified that it would be very difficult to ascertain without an autopsy, if the hemorrhage was due to a ruptured blood vessel or tumor. The hospital records also showed that the deceased suffered a cardiac condition in August, 1949, when he had a temporary partial paralysis of the left arm. In answering the same hypothetical question which had been propounded to Dr. Acuff, Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
246 S.W.2d 70, 193 Tenn. 422, 29 Beeler 422, 1952 Tenn. LEXIS 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fine-v-state-tenn-1952.