Green v. State

14 S.W. 430, 88 Tenn. 614
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 6, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 14 S.W. 430 (Green 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
Green v. State, 14 S.W. 430, 88 Tenn. 614 (Tenn. 1890).

Opinion

Caldwell, J.

John W. Green is under sentence of death for the murder of Miss Ova Davis on June 18, 1887. He was tried twice, and found guilty of murder in the first degree each time. The trial Judge set aside the first verdict, and awarded a new trial, hut pronounced judgment on the second one; and defendant has appealed in error.

Though a general plea of not guilty was interposed, the commission of the homicide by the defendant was virtually admitted, and the real de[616]*616fense was that he was insane when the act was done.

The great body of the testimony on both sides was directed at the single question of the defendant’s mental condition at that time. The jury found that he was sane, though instructed by the Court, i'n. accordance with the rule laid down in Dove v. The State, 3 Heis., 373, that they could not so find unless convinced, beyond a reasonable doubt, of his sanity.

The principal contention of defendant’s counsel before this Court is that the proof shows him to have been insane, and that the verdict is, therefore, contrary to the evidence.

On Saturday, June 18, 1887, when the act was committed, the defendant was about twenty-five years of age, unmarried, and possessed of a good character among his neighbors. The deceased was a young lady, eighteen years old, attractive, and innocent. They respectively lived with their parents in the same neighborhood, in Putnam County. The two families were on friendly and intimate terms. He had been her accepted lover; hut a few months before the homicide he ceased to visit her, and another young gentleman — James Parks— became engaged to her. The fact that the defendant had been supplanted in the young lady’s affections, and that she was soon to be married to Parks, seems to have been known and commented upon more or less extensively in the neighborhood; and several persons, his brothers among [617]*617them, say they had but recently “joked” the defendant about Ms rejection by the deceased and her preference for others.

Only the deceased and a. sister two years younger were at their father’s house when the homicide occurred. Her sister says:

“ I was up-stairs at the time, and Ova was in the hall ironing. * * * I heard sister say, ‘ Don’t you come in.’ The defendant replied, ‘ I generally go where I d — d please.’ I heard five shots. "When I heard them I ran down-stairs and out at the back door, and went over to Albert Austin’s. * * * After sister told defendant not to come in I heard sister say, ‘Lord, have mercy! ’ ”

John 0. York, one of the first witnesses to arrive on the scene, describes it in these words:

“No one was there but John W. Green and the deceased. Both were lying on the porch. She was shot through the head, and was. lying on her back. He was. about two feet from her. I thought she was dead. I saw a pistol lying there. Two or three barrels were empty, and two or three cartridges in it, and some cartridges and empty hulls lying there on the porch. * * * The girl was left lying there until help came. Defendant was lying rather between the girl and the pistol, and the pistol in two or three feet of her head. After awhile he commenced groaning, and rolled oft' the porch, and lay there until his folks came.”

[618]*618This was . about eight and one-half o’clock in the morning, and the young lady-died “about two or three o’clock that evening.”

The defendant had shot himself in the head several times, and was for hours expected to die at any moment. When his mother and other members of his family arrived, they took him to a spring near by, washed and bathed his wounds, and otherwise administered to his wants until near night, and then removed him home. While at the spring he was asked “why he had done this,” and he replied, “That is the question;” and after some further conversation he said, “A man could always see after it was too late.”

At home that night he gave a full account of the sad occurrence in its minutest details. He commenced by asking his brother where Ova Davis was, and, on being told that she was dead, said: “I told her of this six months ago. I told her well of it.” George Pai’ks, who claims to have heard that part of the conversation, as well as what followed, says: “He said there were two more he wanted to kill — Tom Cameron and James Parks; and he wished he had waited until Sunday, as he intended to do; that he could have killed them at Sunday-school; that they had been in his way with Ova. He said that Ova was in the porch ironing, and said, ‘Don’t come in,’ and he replied, ‘ I will be d — d if I don’t show you whether I don’t come in or not,’ and he went in, and she fell on her knees and commenced crying, and he [619]*619shot her. He looked at her, turned her over, and saw the ball had gone straight through and come out on the other side of the head, and the brains were oozing out, and he saw her gape, and knew she was dead. He said he then shot himself twice in the same place, in the back of the head, and his pistol snapped several times, and he took the loads out and reloaded it and shot himself again in the same place. He said he had been watching for a chance for some time to kill her; that he' had watched Davis’ spring to kill her on Friday, a week before the killing, but she sang so pretty he could - not kill her, and on the day before, but her sister Sallie was with her, and he couldn’t have a chance. He said he was up in the field, on the morning of the killing, pulling grass for his horse, and saw Mr. Davis and wife going from home, and he thought that would be his time to kill her. He said he had made up his mind he had rather kill her and himself than see her marry another man.”

Some eleven days after this the defendant was removed from his mother’s house, and confined in the county jail on a charge^ of murder in the first degree. J. C, G-abbert, the jailer, who had him in charge, was called as ■ a witness by the State. Referring to the defendant, this witness says: “ I had a conversation with him. He said he killed Ova _ Davis; that they had been engaged to be married, and had an agreement that if either went back on the other, that the one gone [620]*620back oil -should kill the other. That he understood she and another fellow were to get married on the next' Sunday. * * * He aimed at first to go to church and kill her, Tom Cameron, and Jim Parks. He heard Davis and wife had gone from home and crossed the river. He went over to Davis’ house and found deceased ironing in the hall, and told her he had come to do what he said he would. She fell on her knees and threw up her hands, and he shot her in the head and she fell over. He examined her, and found the ball had gone in on one side of her head and passed straight through and come out on the other side. He then put the pistol to the back of his head and fired twice. The second shot knocked him down. He then snapped the pistol a time or two, but it failed to fire, and he reloaded it and put it to the back of his head to the same place and fired again. * * * He said he thought he would kill her at the spring once, but his heart failed him, she looked so nice and pretty and he thought so much of her. He said he thought he would kill her and himself, and both go to hell together.”

These quotations from the testimony sufficiently show the details of the transaction, the antecedent facts, and the motive prompting the defendant’s action, if he was capable of cherishing a motive.

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Related

Brown v. State
423 S.W.2d 493 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1968)
United States v. Washington
6 C.M.A. 114 (United States Court of Military Appeals, 1955)
State v. Shuff
72 P. 664 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1903)

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Bluebook (online)
14 S.W. 430, 88 Tenn. 614, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-state-tenn-1890.