Gibbs v. State

300 S.W.2d 890, 201 Tenn. 491, 5 McCanless 491, 1957 Tenn. LEXIS 327
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 1, 1957
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 300 S.W.2d 890 (Gibbs 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
Gibbs v. State, 300 S.W.2d 890, 201 Tenn. 491, 5 McCanless 491, 1957 Tenn. LEXIS 327 (Tenn. 1957).

Opinion

Me. Justice Burnett

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Gibbs'was indicted, tried and convicted' for ’ the murder of Mrs. Vassey Bratcher and as a penalty was sentenced to electrocution.

This homicide occurred in the early part of March, 1955. The deceased lived' with her husband in Warren County ’about 8 miles from McMinnville. Living with this couple was their daughter, about 12 or 13 years of age and the 2 year old granddaughter. The plaintiff in error is a young man who lived a very short distance from the Bratchers.

" A few days after this homicide the soil of the deceased went to his parents home to see them and to visit his little 2 year old child. This son lived in the town of McMinnville. His first wife had died when the little girl who lived with the grandparents was about 4 months old and they apparently had kept her since. When the boy reached the home of his parents he found a note pinned on the door to the house that the family had gone to'take the baby, to a hospital. He immediately undertook to find [493]*493out where tlie baby was but could find no trace of her or his family. In the meantime, some officers of Warren County had seen the plaintiff in error in possession of a truck which belonged to Mr. Bratcher and they then, when his son was hunting for them, advised him of this fact. In hunting for his parents it was also learned that the plaintiff in error had sold certain personal property, meat, sow and pigs, etc., which belonged to the husband of the deceased Mrs. Bratcher. As a result of finding this a warrant was taken out for the plaintiff in error for the theft and he was put in the county jail of Warren County.

The next day the Sheriff and a number of his deputies searched the Bratcher premises. In a cistern near the barn they found the body of this 2 year old girl floating, and at a sink hole on the premises they found the body of Mrs. Bratcher and the 12 or 13 year old daughter. They also found the body of Mr. Bratcher but it is not very clear as to where his body was located.

Upon finding these things the Sheriff immediately went and transferred the plaintiff in error from the Warren County jail to the jail at Tullahoma.

Upon finding these facts and bodies this was reported to the District Attorney General and he in company with the members of the T.B.I. force questioned the plaintiff in error with reference to these homicides and he made a statement to them in the presence of his father.

The substance of this statement is that the husband of the deceased and plaintiff in error got into an argument, the husband shoved the plaintiff over a stump and then ran and as he ran the plaintiff in error shot, him with his rifle. His confession is to the effect that he did [494]*494not intend to kill Mr. Bratcher but meant to shoot him in the leg but instead of this he shot higher. When he reached the body after the shooting he saw that Mr. Bratcher was going to die and then he turned around and shot him several times in the head and the neck. The statement further recites that probably as a result of these shots and very shortly thereafter the mother, Mrs. Bratcher, came out of the house carrying this baby. When the plaintiff in error saw this he said that he made her throw the baby into the cistern and then as she was running he shot her and then hit her in the head and she fell there in the hallway of the barn. Then he dragged her up into a gear room and left her there. The plaintiff in error then says that he drove off to town in Mr. Bratcher’s truck and sold some meat after he had searched the Bratcher’s house and tried to find money and could not find any. Upon his return the school bus, coming home from school, got there about that time and the 13 year old daughter got off of this bus and came up to the house. Very shortly thereafter she found the body of her mother and began to cry and scream. Then it was that the plaintiff in error says that he hit the girl on the head with something and hit her again and killed her. He says then that he went off to town again and came back early next morning about 4:30 and took the mother and daughter down.to the sink hole and pushed them in and covered them up with brush and buried the father.

Other testimony was introduced, in addition to this confession or statement given to the T.B.I., on behalf of the State showing that the plaintiff in error with a rifle had been seen going in the direction of the premises where the bodies were found, also to the effect that he sold certain property belonging to this family after the [495]*495homicide. There was also introduced a confession of the plaintiff in error written in his own hand writing in which he attributes the reason for his acts herein to liquor. The plaintiff in error introduced no evidence in his behalf.

One minor insistence made on this appeal is that the plaintiff in error committed these acts due to his intoxication. We feel though that deliberate intoxication, if such was the case, is not an excuse for an act of the kind here committed. Even thought it was not intended when he took the liquor to kill these people yet under this record, if there was intoxication (the only thing in the record being in the confession of the plaintiff in error to that effect) this intoxication was voluntarily and deliberately assumed. At the same time the plaintiff in error went out with a loaded rifle and we feel that this being true that even though the killing of these people was not intended this would amount to murder anyhow. See Rogers v. State, 196 Tenn. 263, 265 S.W.2d 559, and authorities there cited. Be this as it may the facts were before the jury and plaintiff in error did not see fit to take the stand or to offer any other evidence as to his condition in an effort to mitigate this crime if he could have done so. Under the evidence before the jury they were clearly justified in the conclusions reached.

The main and practically the only insistence made here, which was made throughout the trial below, is that the trial court erred in admitting evidence or so much of the plaintiff in error’s confession as narrated or told of his prior killing of the husband and father and then of the subsequent killing of the 13 year old daughter.

[496]*496To our minds the evidence of the homicide of Mr. Bratcher was a necessary element in the proof by the State for the homicide of Mrs. Bratcher, because this record clearly shows that the killing of Mrs. Bratcher was done by the plaintiff in error in an attempt to conceal his identity as the slayer of her husband and thus this being true it was clearly permissible to prove that plaintiff in error had previously killed Mr. Bratcher. This Court has said:

“Evidence is also admissible to show the motive prompting the commission of the crime charged by the accused, and is admissible notwithstanding it also shows the commission by the accused of another crime of a similar character. Thus it may-be shown that the crime charged was committed for- the purpose of concealing another crime, or to prevent the accused from being convicted of another crime.”

Mays v. State, 145 Tenn. 118, 141, 238 S.W. 1096, 1103.

We could repeat the paragraph last above as to the homicide of the daughter. This confession and the evidence here discloses that when the daughter discovered the dead body of her mother she began to cry and run and plaintiff in error then killed her.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
300 S.W.2d 890, 201 Tenn. 491, 5 McCanless 491, 1957 Tenn. LEXIS 327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gibbs-v-state-tenn-1957.