Gamble v. State

383 S.W.2d 48, 215 Tenn. 26, 19 McCanless 26, 1964 Tenn. LEXIS 537
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 19, 1964
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 383 S.W.2d 48 (Gamble 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
Gamble v. State, 383 S.W.2d 48, 215 Tenn. 26, 19 McCanless 26, 1964 Tenn. LEXIS 537 (Tenn. 1964).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Holmes

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The plaintiffs in error, who hereinafter will be referred to as defendants, were convicted of grand larceny and sentenced to serve not more than 6 years in the State Penitentiary. The Judge overruled defendants’ motions for new trial. They have perfected their appeals to this Court and have filed numerous assignments of error. Prior to the occasion which gave rise to this prosecution, *29 the defendants were members of the Memphis Police Department.

Shortly before two o’clock on the morning of March 10, 1962, the Big Star Grocery & Market at the corner of Macon Road and Victor Drive, in the city of Memphis, was broken into and the safe therein containing over $10,000.00 in money was removed. Within less than one honr after the safe was taken it was fonnd by the police, unopened, in a panel truck which had been abandoned in a “lonely area” on' Water’s Edge Street, just off of Birchfield, in the eastern part of the Frayser area of the city of-Memphis about 7 miles from the grocery. At the time of this crime, the defendants Kelly and Beckett were on duty as police officers in an unmarked detective cruiser. The defendant Gamble was not on duty.

Officer Nixon of the Memphis Police Department testified that he and his partner, Officer Hubbard, were proceeding west on Macon Road shortly before 2:00 A.M., on this morning when they saw a truck, without its lights on, pulling away from the Big’ Star Store, turning north on Victor Drive. These officers followed the truck. When it got to the intersection of Victor Drive and Graham Street, a few blocks north of the grocery, this truck passed a car. As Nixon and Hubbard passed this car, they saw it was occupied by the defendants Kelly and Beckett. Nixon testified these defendants flashed their spotlight on his car and blinked their lights, so Hubbard and Nixon stopped. The defendants Kelly and Beckett pulled alongside of them with- the defendant Kelly driving. Prior to this time, while following the truck which had its back doors open, Officers Nixon and Hubbard had seen what they thought was a safe in this truck. When *30 the defendants Kelly and Beckett pnlled alongside Officers Nixon and Hubbard, Officer Nixon testified:

“A. I asked them when they pnlled np, I asked if they were with the truck; he said he was.
“Q. Did you ask what that was in the truck?
“A. Yes, Sir; he said, ‘That’s a gocart I’m taking home.’ I said, ‘It looks like a safe to me.’ And at that time nothing else was said about the safe. ’ ’

While this conversation was taking place the truck had proceeded several blocks on Graham and had turned off on another street. Officers Nixon and Hubbard then returned to the Big Star Grocery aiid found the front door had been broken in and immediately notified their superior by radio. In a few minutes the defendants Kelly and Beckett arrived at the Big Star Grocery, having heard the radio transmission relative to this breakin. This was normal procedure.

While they were waiting for their superiors to arrive at the scene, a young lady living across the street from the grocery came to the scene. She testified that shortly after going to bed at 1:30 that morning she heard a noise in front of the Big Star Grocery. She looked out her window and saw two men run and jump in a car that was stopped fairly close to the front door of the grocery. This car started off and she saw a truck start right behind it. Both vehicles turned north on Victor. In a few minutes she heard the noise of police radio at the store and saw uniformed officers on the scene and came to report what she had observed. She then returned to her home:

In a few minutes Lieutenant Smith, who was the superior of Officers Nixon and Hubbard, arrived at the scene. *31 Officer Nixon testified that the defendant Beckett told Lieutenant Smith the lady had stated it was a white panel or pickup truck, whereupon Officer Nixon corrected him by saying that she had only told them-it was a light colored van-type truck. Lieutenant Smith testified that the defendant Beckett told him the lady had stated it was' a white pickup truck and that he broadcast on the radio the description of the truck as a white pickup truck. He further testified:

“* * * and as I cleared that Officer Nixon shook his head and said no, that is not right. He told me it was a light colored panel truck and at that time Officer Beckett agreed with him, and that is what I put on the air then.”

After making this broadcast, Lieutenant Smith, accompanied by Officers Nixon and Hubbard, started across the street to interview the young lady and, at this time, Officers Nixon and Hubbard advised Lieutenant Smith of what had transpired between them and the defendants Kelley and Beckett just before the discovery of the breakin. As these officers went to interview the young lady the defendants Kelly and Beckett drove away from the. scene. Lieutenant Smith directed Officers Nixon and Hubbard to follow them, but they were unable to locate these defendants.

About 2:40 that morning Lieutenant Bailey of the Police Department was ordered to go to the truck at Birchfield and Water’s Edge to process the safe and truck for fingerprints and other evidence. When he arrived at the scene of the truck he was instructed to come back to James Road and Birchfield Street to meet Assistant Chief McCarroll of the Memphis Police Department at that location, which, according to a map of *32 the city of Memphis introduced in evidence, is not over one mile from the place the truck was found. He had passed this intersection on his way to the truck and saw no one there. When he returned to this intersection shortly after 3:00 A.M., he saw the defendant Gamble standing there. When he inquired of Gamble as to what he was doing there at that hour of the morning, Gamble stated he was waiting for Kelley to pick him up. It was a cold rainy night and the defendant Gamble sat in the car with Lieutenant Bailey and they talked for a few minutes, then Lieutenant Bailey received a radio call to meet Chief McCarroll at James Road in the town of Raleigh. The defendant Gamble rode with Lieutenant Bailey to Raleigh, where Lieutenant Bailey was instructed to return to the truck and process it. He let the defendant Gamble out of his car at a telephone booth in front of a filling station near Birchfield and James Road. He noticed that the defendant Gamble had “quite a bit” of mud on his shoes.

Shortly thereafter Chief McCarroll went to the truck and learned that Lieutenant Bailey had let the defendant Gamble out of his car at- the telephone booth. Chief McCarroll went to this location and asked the defendant Gamble who he was calling. This defendant stated he was calling Kelly. The defendant Gamble was then disarmed and placed under arrest. He told Chief McCarroll that the defendants Kelly and Beckett had picked him up at a drive-in ice cream place across from the Fairgrounds in Memphis, that he had ridden around with these defendants, that they had taken him to the vicinity of Birchfield and James Road and let him out, that the defendant Kelly had agreed to pick him up there when Kelly got off duty at three o’clock that morning.

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Bluebook (online)
383 S.W.2d 48, 215 Tenn. 26, 19 McCanless 26, 1964 Tenn. LEXIS 537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gamble-v-state-tenn-1964.