Fox v. State

441 S.W.2d 491, 1 Tenn. Crim. App. 308, 1968 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 124
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 17, 1968
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 441 S.W.2d 491 (Fox v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fox v. State, 441 S.W.2d 491, 1 Tenn. Crim. App. 308, 1968 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 124 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

OPINION

OLIVER, Judge.

Mrs. June Fox, the plaintiff in error and defendant below, after a change of venue at her instance from Loudon County to Blount County, was convicted in the Criminal Court of Blount County upon two separate indictments, apparently tried together by agreement.

In one case, under an indictment charging the defendant with feloniously assaulting Richard Alexander with a loaded gun with intent to commit first degree murder, the jury found her guilty of simple assault and battery, and the court sentenced her to pay a fine of $50 and to imprisonment in the County Workhouse for eleven months and twenty-nine days.

*313 In the other case, in which the indictment charged the defendant with first degree murder in the killing of Ernest Edward Julian, the jury found her guilty of second degree murder, and she was sentenced to imprisonment for ten years in the State Penitentiary.

Her motions for a new trial in each case being overruled, the defendant prayed and was granted and has perfected an appeal in the nature of a writ of error to this Court in each case.

The shooting occurred at the home of the defendant and her husband in Loudon, Tennessee, sometime between 8:30 p.m. and 9:00 p.m. on February 3, 1967. They had lived in that house about one year, but had lived in the immediate neighborhood for twenty-six years, an area thickly populated and containing numerous business establishments. She had been disturbed repeatedly by burglars and prowlers around their home at night. She was forty-nine years old, was not in good health and was in a very nervous condition; ten years earlier she had an appendectomy, five years later a cancer was removed from her arm, and two years before this tragic occurrence she had undergone a hysterectomy and had been highly nervous since that time. She and her husband lived alone. He was employed at night at a nearby gasoline service station, only two houses and a vacant lot from their home, about 225 feet. She was at home alone.

Ernest Edward Julian who was ten years old, and Richard Alexander who was thirteen, went into the defendant’s yard endeavoring to recapture an opossum that had escaped from them. The defendant’s dog was in a lot near the rear of her house. Alarmed when the dog began *314 barking and hearing a noise outside, she looked through a rear bedroom window and saw someone, picked up a pistol that was on the dresser, went out on the front porch without her glasses (without which, according to her, she was almost blind), did not turn on the porch light, and walked to the end of the porch. At this time Richard Alexander was walking from the rear of the defendant’s yard toward the front of her house, these two boys having decided to seek her permission to pursue the opossum further into her yard; when the defendant saw Richard approaching she began shooting downwardly in his direction when he was about three feet from the porch and continued firing in a generally wild and indiscriminate manner. One of the first shots struck Richard Alexander in the left leg about six inches below the knee, which felled him, but, the bone not being fractured, he got up and ran across the yard to the street; another one of the defendant’s bullets struck Ernest Edward Julian in the head mortally wounding him, and he fell in her yard near the side of and about half way between the front and rear of the defendant’s house. She was not acquainted with either of the boys. She testified that she did not intend to kill anyone, that she was scared and afraid and only shot to scare what she thought were burglars, and that she yelled “go away.” Richard Alexander asserted that she said nothing before opening fire. After the shooting she went back in the house and called her husband and the police.

The first officer on the scene was Policeman Whitney Williams, who was patrolling in the vicinity and received a call on his car radio. The defendant was on the front porch, her husband in the yard, and she volun *315 teered the statements that she did the shooting, that she thought they were burglars, and that she “didn’t miss them that time,” and “I didn’t miss him this time. I hit him right in the head.” Another witness, John L. Brown, said he heard the defendant say she shot the boys because they were making a race track through her yard. Brown’s wife said she heard the defendant say she shot the boys and that they had no business being in her yard.

In her first, sixth and thirteenth Assignments of Error, the defendant contends that the court committed reversible error in sustaining objections to some of her testimony and by excluding the testimony of the Clerk of the General Sessions Court of Loudon County and parts of the testimony of her husband and the Chief of Police. All of the excluded testimony pertained to an incident some four months earlier involving alleged prowling around the defendant’s home by one Hobart Nix, and his subsequent prosecution in the General Sessions Court of Loudon County on a “Peeping Tom” charge in which the defendant testified, and his alleged threat thereafter to return and “get her.” All of this was offered to show that the defendant was afraid of Nix, and was scared when she heard her dog barking and noise outside of her home the night in question and that her state of mind at that time negated any contention that she then entertained or was actuated by malice, an essential element of second degree murder.

The defendant testified at length regarding her state of mind at the time of the shooting, her fears and apprehensions based upon her previous experiences with nighttime prowlers, her failing health and her extreme nervousness. She testified that she was scared and afraid *316 of Nix. The defendant was singularly qualified to describe the state of her mind at the time of the shooting, and she was allowed sufficiently ample latitude in doing so.

The details of the Nix incident and his subsequent prosecution were immaterial. Moreover, her past experiences with prowlers and the condition of her health and her nervousness and fright constituted no excuse for her actions.

The defendant cites and relies upon Smith v. State, 212 Tenn. 510, 370 S.W.2d 543, in which our Supreme Court held that the evidence was not sufficient to show that the defendant acted with malice aforethought in killing the deceased, and that the evidence did not, therefore, sustain the verdict of second degree murder. The case before us here is clearly distinguishable factually from Smith. There the defendant was a night watchman on duty and was suddenly confronted with a person coming toward him in the dark with a flashlight, in a building where burglaries had been committed previously.

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Bluebook (online)
441 S.W.2d 491, 1 Tenn. Crim. App. 308, 1968 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fox-v-state-tenncrimapp-1968.