Hill v. Alsobrook

370 S.W.2d 506, 51 Tenn. App. 546, 1962 Tenn. App. LEXIS 125
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 17, 1962
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 370 S.W.2d 506 (Hill v. Alsobrook) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hill v. Alsobrook, 370 S.W.2d 506, 51 Tenn. App. 546, 1962 Tenn. App. LEXIS 125 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

BEJACH, J.

In this cause Katherine Hill, David Alsobrook, Isaac Alsobrook, Arelean Alsobrook, and James Alsobrook brought suit against Minnie Lee Also-brook, Life Insurance Company of Georgia, Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, Interstate Life & Accident Insurance Company, Dan Mitchell, Shelby County Commissioner, and M. A. Hinds, Sheriff of Shelby County, Tennessee, seeking to prevent Minnie Lee Alsobrook from collecting or receiving the proceeds of insurance policies and wages due Q. Z. Alsobrook, the former husband of Minnie Lee Alsobrook.

The parties will be styled in this opinion, complainants and defendants, or called by their respective names.

Complainants are the brothers and sisters of Q. Z. Alsobrook, and they undertake to prevent Minnie Lee Alsobrook, his widow, from inheriting, acquiring, or taking the proceeds of insurance policies on his life or any other personal property, such as wages due him as an employee of Shelby County, on the ground that defendant, Minnie Lee Alsobrook, feloniously killed him on June 10, 1961. Minnie Lee Alsobrook defends on the ground that the killing was accidental or in self defense. [548]*548An Administrator ad Litem was appointed by the Chancellor, and some of the assets of Q. Z. Alsobrook have been paid to him. The law applicable to the case is set out in Section 31-207 T.C.A., which is as follows:

“Any person who shall kill, or conspire with another to kill, or procure to be killed, any other person from which said first named person would inherit the personal property, or any part thereof, belonging to such deceased person at the time of his death, or who would take said property, or any part thereof, by deed, will, or. otherwise, at the death of the deceased, shall forfeit all right therein, and the same shall go as it would have gone by the law of distribu-, tion, will, deed or other conveyance, as the case may be, provided, that this section shall not apply to any such killing as may be done by accident or in .self-defense.”

Deceased, Q. Z. Alsobrook, and defendant, Minnie Lee •Alsobrook, his wife, were both employed at the Shelby County Hospital. On the evening of June 10, 1961, Q. Z. Alsobrook and Minnie Lee Alsobrook had been out together. He had been drinking. She was driving the automobile in which they were riding. They had quarrelled on the way home, and at about 11:00 to 11:30 P.M. when they arrived at the Shelby County Hospital, where both of them were employed, he got out of the automobile and came around to the driver’s side of same. He opened the door, and began hitting his wife in the face, striking both upward and- downward in his attack on her. ■ Minnie Lee testified that this was the most severe beating she had ever received at the hands of her husband. The fact that' he was beating her is corroborated by George H. Sing, night watchman at the Shelby [549]*549County Hospital, who testified that he flashed his- spotlight on the automobile in question and saw Q. Z. beating Minnie Lee, but that he did nothing about it. Later, both Q. Z. and Minnie Lee Alsobrook went to their room to retire. According to her testimony, while she was putting on her hair net, Q. Z. renewed the altercation and began beating her again. She testified that he was between her- and the door, which prevented her leaving the room and going elsewhere to spend the night, as she had done on several previous occasions. In that situation, according to her testimony, she reached up into a box where she kept a pistol which she had purchased several years before, and shot twice. Her testimony is to the effect that she meant to “scare” him, and that his death from the shooting was, therefore, accidental,- but that, in any event, the shooting was in necessary self defense, because she feared death or serious bodily injury at his hands. One of the shots fired by Minnie Lee struck Q. Z. near the right shoulder - and ranged downward through his body. The bullet from the other shot was found embedded in the mattress of the bed on which Q. Z. lay. His body was found lying crosswise of the bed, with one leg over the bullet which was embedded in the mattress. There was, however, no wound in that leg, and the bullet had not damaged the leg of his trousers. Minnie Lee called the Police Department, and as a result of this call, two deputy sheriffs were sent out, the Shelby County Hospital being outside the corporate limits of the City of Memphis. According to the testimony of these deputy sheriffs, Minnie Lee cooperated with them and gave to them substantially the same account of the killing as she gave in her testimony in this case. She was taken first to John Gaston Hospital where she [550]*550was examined by Dr. Martin Baker, at that time an intern there. He testified that “she had obviously sustained a rather severe beating. ’ ’ She had, according to his testimony, considerable swelling about the nose and mouth, and had a scleral hemorrhage, which he explained meant a bleeding in the white portion of the eye. Dr. Baker testified that it would normally take about 6 to 12 hours for such swelling to dissipate. A photograph of Minnie Lee showing comparatively little injuries is filed as one of the exhibits in the record, and complainants rely on this as tending to show that Minnie Lee, at the time of the killing, had not been seriously injured, and therefore could not have justifiably feared either death or serious bodily injury. We consider this contention to be without merit, however, because the photograph in question was not taken until about 16 to 18 hours after the killing.

It appears in the record that, in the Criminal Court, Minnie Lee Alsobrook was convicted of voluntary manslaughter, which conviction has been appealed. It is conceded, however, by counsel for complainants that the conviction in the Criminal Court is not controlling in this case. The law applicable, in a civil suit, is the same as if the cause were being prosecuted in the Criminal Court, except that in the civil suit a mere preponderance of the evidence is sufficient. Hunt-Berlin Coal Co. v. Paton, 139 Tenn. 611, 202 S.W. 935.

After a hearing on oral testimony, which is preserved in the record before us in a bill of exceptions, the Chancellor found in favor of the defendant and dismissed complainant’s bill. From the opinion of the learned Chancellor, we quote as follows:

[551]*551“It appears that on Saturday, June 10, 1961, both Alsobrook and his wife were employed at the Shelby County Hospital and occupying a room there.
“Alsobrook was employed in the kitchen and his wife as a waitress in one of the dining rooms.
“Alsobrook is shown in proof to have been what may be termed as a steady and constant, though possibly an intermittent drinker. When drinking he was quarrelsome and abusive with and to his wife, and at times violent.
“Because of an attack made by him on her, she had, on numerous occasions, been compelled to leave their joint room and sleep in the women’s dormitory. On one or more occasions, it was necessary that the law enforcing authorities be called to quiet him.
“On the day of the killing, Alsobrook left work earlier than did his wife, and at about 4:30 p.m. joined with one George Tucker.
“Tucker testified that he and Alsobrook drank a pint of whiskey together and when he left Alsobrook about 8:30 p.m., he left him with the greater part of a half pint of Gin.

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Bluebook (online)
370 S.W.2d 506, 51 Tenn. App. 546, 1962 Tenn. App. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-alsobrook-tennctapp-1962.