Harris v. State

45 S.W. 438, 100 Tenn. 287
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 2, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 45 S.W. 438 (Harris 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
Harris v. State, 45 S.W. 438, 100 Tenn. 287 (Tenn. 1898).

Opinion

Wilees, J.

Dan Harris is convicted of the murder of Lizzie Edmundson and sentenced to death, and has appealed. Able counsel has been appointed to represent him in this Court, and he has, after examining the record, presented to the Court certain matters, which it is insisted are defects in the pro[289]*289ceedings of the Court below. It appears that the jurors selected for the May term, 1896, were appointed and designated by the Judge of the Criminal Court. Out of the panel, the Judge selected and appointed the grand jury, and it is objected that this was irregular and vitiated the proceedings. The Acts of 1853-54, Ch. 13, which created the Criminal Court of Davidson County, provides in Section 5, that the Judge of the Court shall, from time to time,' appoint a grand jury and two petit juries to attend its regular and special terms. Under this statute, it was entirely 'competent for the Judge of the Criminal Court of Davidson County to designate, by name, thirteen qualified persons to serve as a grand jury, or he could designate a larger panel, and from them select the required number of thirteen. Turner v. The State, 5 Pickle, 558.

There was no error in this feature of the trial. It appears that when the indictment was found the regular Judge, Hon. J. M. Anderson, was not in attendance at Court. The cause of his absence is not stated. It further appears that the Deputy Clerk caused an election to be held for a special Judge to hold Court, under § 5730 (Shannon’s Code), when Hon. Matt W. Allen was elected to act in the absence of the regular Judge, and the indictment •was found and returned into open Court. This indictment was prepared by E. S. Ashcraft, Attorney-general pro' tern., who had previously been appointed by the Court to act as such in the absence of the [290]*290regular District Attorney, Robert Vaughn. It is said that this proceeding is irregular, and defendant has not been proceeded against according to law.

The Code, § 5730 (Shannon’s compilation), provides: “When, from any cause, the Judge of any Court of Record in this State, except the Supreme Court, fails to attend, or, if in attendance, cannot properly preside in a cause or causes pending in such Court, or is unable to hold the Court, a majority of the attorneys of the Court, who are present and are residents of the State shall elect one of, their number then in attendance to hold the Court for the occasion, who shall have all the qualifications of a Judge of such Court, and who shall accordingly preside and adjudicate.” Subsection 1 provides: “The election shall be held by the Clerk, and, in case of a tie, he shall give the casting vote.” Subsection 2: “The person elected shall, during the period that he acts, have all the powers and be liable to all the responsibilities of a regular Judge.”

This Act appears, from the record, to have been complied with in the selection of the special Judge, and ■ the Act has been held to be constitutional and applicable in criminal cases, as well as civil. John Ligan v. State, 3 Heis., 159; Halliburton v. Brooks, 7 Bax., 320; Hundhausen v. Ins. Co., 5 Heis., 705; Brewer v. State, 6 Lea, 199.

It is objected that the election was held by a Deputy Clerk, and not by the Clerk, as the first [291]*291subsection of the Act provides. Under the statutes and decisions of this State, a deputy has full' power to transact all the business of the Clerk. Code (Shannon’s), §4050, Subsec. 4; §§409, 410; Martin v. Porter, 4 Heis., 413.

It is said that E. S. Ashcraft, Attorney-general pro tempore, is not an official legally authorized to draw and prefer indictments, and hence the indictment in this case is a nullity. Code (Shannon), § 5769 provides that if the Attorney-general for a district fails to attend any term of the Circuit Court or is disqualified from acting or if there is a vacancy in office, the Court shall appoint some other attorney to supply his place. Section 5770: “The acts of such Attorney-general pro tempore shall be as valid as if done by the regular officer,” etc. See, also, Turner v. The State, 5 Pickle, 555-8. It is said, finally, that while any one of these objections may be cured under the statutes, still, when there is a combination of such irregularities it must be fatal. It is said that here there was a special Judge, a Deputy Clerk, an Attorney-general pro tempore, a panel named by the regular Judge, and a grand jury selected from such panel by him, and thus there is little, if any, of the regular machinery of the Court involved in the trial of this case. But this, we are of opinion, can avail nothing, as in such instances there is a proceeding according to law, and officials appointed and selected under the law, and each authorized by the law to act and [292]*292perform the duties which they have performed. In addition, all such objections come too late when made for the first time in this Court, even in criminal cases. State v. Cole, 9 Hum., 628; McTigue v. The State, 4 Bax., 314; Wallace v. The State, 2 Lea, 31; State v. Dines, 10 Hum., 512; Turner v. The State, 5 Pickle, 559.

We see no error of law in the record. The charge is full, correct, and unobjected to.

The only other question involved in the case is whether the verdict is warranted by the evidence. The defendant is a negro man about twenty-five to thirty years of age. The party killed was a negro woman, with whom he had been living in illicit relations for some time. She is described by the witnesses as a small woman, weighing about 115 or 120 pounds. The defendant is unusually large, tall, well-developed, and robust. It appears that on the day before the killing was done, at night, he had been drinking some, but the great weight of the evidence is that he was not drunk, and, according to the testimony of his own witnesses, was not so much under the influence of whisky, before and at the time he did the killing, as not to know what he was doing nor so as to affect his walking or actions. He went to the house where the deceased usually stayed, looking for her. Is appears that she was evading Mm, and that she was badly frightened at bis threats previously made.

The defendant caught the deceased at the house [293]*293of Mary Mayberry, into which she ran for protection, the defendant pursuing her. She plead with him not to kill her, and to those around for protection. He caught her and carried her into the street, saying: “I am going to kill you; I told you I would do it, and I will cut your d — d head off.” When he dragged her into the street he cut her with a knife across the back of the neck a serious, if not fatal, wound. He then threw her upon the ground and stamped her in the face, chest, and stomach, first with one foot and then the other, holding on to the fence with first one hand and then the other. Several persons saw the deed and heard the cries and the stamping, but no one dared to interfere, and several witnesses say that seeing they could not be of any aid, they turned a,way in horror. The woman cried aloud, begging for mercy, and for help, and called him pet names, and plead with him to spare her life, until, after repeated blows from his feet, her cries, sank into low moans, and she then became unconscious.

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Bluebook (online)
45 S.W. 438, 100 Tenn. 287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-state-tenn-1898.