Harris v. State

332 S.W.2d 675, 206 Tenn. 276, 10 McCanless 276, 1960 Tenn. LEXIS 514
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 5, 1960
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 332 S.W.2d 675 (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, 332 S.W.2d 675, 206 Tenn. 276, 10 McCanless 276, 1960 Tenn. LEXIS 514 (Tenn. 1960).

Opinion

*278 Mb. Justice peo tem S. A. Mabable

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The plaintiff in error, hereinafter referred to as the defendant, was indicted, tried and convicted in the Criminal Court for the offense of assault and battery upon a female over the age of twelve years, with the intent, forcibly and against her will, to have unlawful carnal knowledge of her, and his punishment was fixed at not more than twelve years in the State penitentiary.

From this verdict of the jury and judgment of the court the defendant has appealed and assigned a number of errors, which, for convenience, may be summarized briefly as follows: (1) That there is no evidence to sustain the verdict of the jury, which is contrary to the law and facts in this cause, and the evidence preponderates in favor of the innocence of the defendant and against his guilt; (2) that the trial court erred in overruling the defendant’s plea of former jeopardy and former conviction; (3) that the trial court erred in overruling the defendant’s motions to quash the warrant issued for defendant’s arrest, and the indictment subsequently returned against him, on the ground that said warrant was void, as alleged in Assignments Nos. 3, 4 and 5; and, (4) that the verdict of the jury is void because the sentence imposed by the jury is not authorized by law-in that it did not state all of the elements'of the offense, *279 and that no legal judgment of the court can he predicated thereon, as alleged in Assignments Nos. 6 and 7.

The following facts appear from the evidence submitted in this case:

One Roxie Logan, a negro woman, eighty-four years of age, lived alone in a small two-room house situated in the back yard of Bernice Eedditt’s home and about thirty feet therefrom. On November 20, 1957, she had been engaged in some employment away from her home and returned that evening about dusk. After lighting a lamp' in her room, eating her evening meal and latching the front door from the inside, she turned the light in the lamp down, but left it still dimly burning, and went to bed with her clothes on, it being a very cold night. There was a small window in this room, from which some of the panes of glass were out, and the opening left thereby covered by pieces of paper and tin. An empty oil drum or barrel had been kept in the yard back of her home and about thirty-five or forty feet therefrom, and was apparently in its usual place that evening when Roxie Logan, returned to her home.

Later during the night the old negro woman was awakened by a noise, and looking up she saw a man, later identified as the defendant, a negro then eighteen years' of age, standing about the middle of the room. According to her testimony, “he came and fell down on the bed, just like anybody would, just laid down on the bed. He came to the bed and laid across the bed on me, on top of the cover.” She further testified that he made an indecent remark, and put his hand over her mouth when she began screaming, and told her to “hush hollering” or he would kill her. Her testimony shows that she- *280 struggled and fought with him all the while, and did what she could to resist him. During the struggle on the bed the defendant choked her, and put his hand on her hare leg, the bed covering evidently having become disarranged while they were struggling. Both finally slipped from the bed to the floor where the struggle and her outcries continued. She stated that the defendant was on her while on the floor, that he was ‘ ‘ stretched out on me ’ ’, and that he was on her when the officers arrived pursuant to a call made by Bernice Redditt whose attention had been attracted by the screaming and outcries of the old woman.

During her struggles with the defendant, Roxie Logan was struck and choked by him, had four teeth knocked out, and sustained a cut over one eye which bled profusely staining her own clothing and the clothing of the defendant, all of which evidenced the terrific struggle between the parties.

The officers received Bernice Redditt’s telephone call to come to the home of Roxie Logan about 1:22 a.m. November 21, 1957, and they reached her home about fifteen minutes thereafter. The defendant had evidently entered the home sometime about 1:00 a.m., on above date, or shortly before that time. When the officers arrived they found the window in Roxie’s room torn out and open, and the oil drum above mentioned standing under the window.

According to Deputy Sheriff J. M. Thomason, one of the two officers responding to Bernice Redditt’s call, he flashed a light through the open window, and saw the defendant jump up, start towards the window through which he had entered the room, and then run back to the *281 door in Ms efforts to escape. He was arrested by the other officer, Deputy Sheriff Carlisle, as he emerged from the doorway of the house. Deputy Thomason testified that shortly after the defendant was arrested he had a conversation with him as follows: “We asked him what he went in there for, and he said he went in for money; and he said after he got in there, with her in bed, and saw her in bed, he decided to rape her.”

Whether the defendant intended, when he entered Roxie Logan’s home that night, to obtain money or commit the offense of burglary, the only reasonable conclusion that can be reached, from the undisputed facts as to what took place in the room thereafter, is that he also had an intent to rape her, formed either before he broke into the house, or after he had gained entrance and saw her on the bed, and that he did attempt to do so. If he had any other intention upon entering the house, that intention was evidently changed when he saw her on the bed, and he then sought to commit the offense for which he was charged and convicted in this case.

The defendant offered no explanation of his presence in Roxie Logan’s house that night. In his testimony at the trial, he stated that he became so drunk on the Mght of November 20, 1957, while at a tavern known as the Bungalow Inn, that he did not know what happened thereafter, that the last thing that he remembered was sitting at the table at the Inn, with some others, where they had been drinking intoxicating liquors, and that he knew nothing after that until he was in the Juvenile Court some time following his arrest. He testified that he did not know whether he went to Roxie’s house, except what he had been told, and that he had no knowledge of the event at all because of his intoxication.

*282 To" support Ms contention of intoxication, the defendant offered two witnesses. The first witness, Tommy Williams, a young negro friend, stated that he stopped at the Bungalow Inn that night, “about midnight”, to pick up another friend ■ named Earl, and that he saw the defendant there with his head on a table, and also saw some beer, whiskey and wine on the table; that the defendant didn’t act like he was able to hold his head up or know what he was doing. On cross-examination, this witness stated that he didn’t know really what kind of condition the defendant was in that night.

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Bluebook (online)
332 S.W.2d 675, 206 Tenn. 276, 10 McCanless 276, 1960 Tenn. LEXIS 514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-state-tenn-1960.