Huffman v. State

292 S.W.2d 738, 200 Tenn. 487, 4 McCanless 487, 1956 Tenn. LEXIS 433
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJune 8, 1956
StatusPublished
Cited by74 cases

This text of 292 S.W.2d 738 (Huffman 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
Huffman v. State, 292 S.W.2d 738, 200 Tenn. 487, 4 McCanless 487, 1956 Tenn. LEXIS 433 (Tenn. 1956).

Opinions

MR. Justice Burnett

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Huffman and two other people were indicted by three separate indictments charging them with assault and battery with intent to maim. His two co-defendants were acquitted. The three parties were tried together under the three separate indictments. Huffman was convicted in each and his punishment fixed at a jail sentence of 11 months and 29 days and a $500 fine under each of the indictments. The trial court directed that the jail sentences run concurrently and that two of the $500 fines be suspended, thereby leaving in effect only one fine. The plaintiff in error has seasonably appealed, filed his assignments and brief and we have heard argument here. The case now comes ón for our disposition.

This is one of those cases occurring during the telephone strike in the early part of 1955. On April 15, of that year, the prosecutor It. H. Ford was a non-striking employee at Morristown. About 10:00 in the evening he had finished his duty and he in company with two other people went to where their car was parked for the purpose of [491]*491going Rome. The proof shows that the plaintiff in error was engaged in walking the picket line in front of the telephone building. Upon seeing the prosecutor leaving the telephone building on his way home, the plaintiff in error left this picket line and got in his automobile with three women who were seated therein. The plaintiff in error immediately turned his automobile around and proceeded to chase the car that Ford was driving. The record shows that Huffman’s car had some placards which were being displayed calling the prosecutor and his passengers scabs and that a spotlight from Huffman’s car was continuously flashed on the car of Ford.

When Ford’s car had proceeded some three or four blocks it was violently rammed from the rear by the car driven by Huffman and minor injuries were inflicted upon the occupants of the Ford car. Ford at the time seems to have been slowing down for a traffic light.

Huffman and his lady companions all testified that the prosecutor’s car came to a stop, that he went into reverse gear and backed into them and that this caused the collision.

There are nine assignments of error which should be grouped into three general groupings. The first of these groupings is that the evidence preponderates against the verdict and two that the trial court erred in entering a judgment on more than one indictment and third that the verdict is void.

Under the evidence as submitted to the jury we think that the jury was well warranted in looking to the conduct of Huffman prior to the accident and leading up to the accident in determining the question. Ford, the prosecutor, seemed to have been going about his business and on his way home in a very peaceful manner, taking [492]*492Ms two passengers to the neighborhood where they lived. When he left the telephone building Huffman and his companions got into the car and gave pursuit. Quite obviously Huffman and his companions ’ excuse was that they merely wanted to see who was in this car. Obviously the jury did not believe them but credited the prosecutor and his companions who were the witnesses for the State. The jury was well warranted in this belief under tMs record. Huffman denied using his spotlight and that he was throwing it on Ford’s car. This is testified to by a disinterested witness and obviously it presents purely a question of fact for the jury. The next contention of Huffman is that Ford stopped his car and went into reverse gear in an attempt to back up and ram Huffman’s car. This seems to us to be very unreasonable. Clearly the jury were within their rights in discrediting these statements of the plaintiff in error and his witnesses. These fact questions clearly were questions for the trial jury to determine. This body determines whether or not the State’s witnesses were testifying truthfully or whether or not the plaintiff in error’s witnesses were doing so. The jury accepted the testimony of the State’s witnesses and we clearly think that there is ample proof and the logic of the testimony warrants this deduction by the jury. So it is that we are clearly of the opinion that the evidence does not preponderate against the verdict.

The State concedes that the three verdicts cannot stand because a defendant would be guilty of only one crime where he injures three or more persons as a result of one guilty stroke. Smith v. State, 159 Tenn. 674, 21 S.W.2d 400. This case is directly in point and thus under the authority of this case and on recommendation of the [493]*493Advocate General the judgments of conviction in the indictment charging the assault upon the two guests of Ford’s car must be reversed and these indictments dismissed.

The indictments charge that the plaintiff in error and his companions on a certain date “did unlawfully, wilfully, maliciously and feloniously mate an assault upon R. H. Ford, with an automobile, in that said James I. Huffman, Sue Stapleton and Margaret Sawyer, being engaged in a joint venture, drove an automobile into and against a vehicle occupied by R. H. Ford, with wilful, malicious and felonious intent to maim and injure said R. H. Ford, against the peace and dignity of the State of Tennessee.” This indictment merely charges an assault and battery. Haslip v. State, 1817, 5 Tenn. 273. The Advocate General concedes:

“The indictment against plaintiff in error evidently was undertaken to be drawn under Code Section 10801 (39-603 T.C.A.) but since it fails to aver a felony sought to be committed, its validity is doubtful. Definitely under it, there could hardly be a conviction for assault with intent to commit voluntary manslaughter and if nothing else existed, the verdict would probably be a nullity.”

The conviction and finding of the jury was that the plaintiff in error was guilty of an assault with intent to commit voluntary manslaughter. The trial judge in charging the jury assumed that the indictment was drawn under and based on T.C.A. sec. 39-604, sec. 10797, Williams’ Code. In other words the trial judge read to the jury this Code Section T.C.A. sec. 39-604, which is the section where one is charged with an assault in an attempt to commit murder may be imprisoned in the [494]*494penitentiary for not less than 3 nor more than 21 years. The trial judge then under T.C.A. sec. 40-2518 proceeded to instruct the jury as to all the law of each grade of the offense which he thought was charged in this indictment under T.C.A. sec. 39-604. It was under this charge of the offense of an assault with the intent to commit voluntary manslaughter that the jury found the plaintiff in error guilty.

The Advocate General argues that the crime which the plaintiff in error is charged with committing in the indictment is embraced within a conviction for assault and battery with the intent to commit voluntary manslaughter and that under the authority of Forsha v. State, 183 Tenn. 604, 194 S.W.2d 463, “this Court may treat the verdict as being absolutely valid so far as it convicts the plaintiff in error of the offense of assault and battery. The punishment in the instant case, upon application of the plaintiff in error was fixed by the trial jury and lies within that allowed in cases of conviction for assault and battery.” It is then said that we may sustain the conviction here under the Forsha case which merely follows Corlew v. State, 181 Tenn.

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Bluebook (online)
292 S.W.2d 738, 200 Tenn. 487, 4 McCanless 487, 1956 Tenn. LEXIS 433, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huffman-v-state-tenn-1956.