Hurd v. State

119 Tenn. 583
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 119 Tenn. 583 (Hurd 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
Hurd v. State, 119 Tenn. 583 (Tenn. 1907).

Opinion

Me. Justice McAlister

delivered the opinion of the Oourt.

The prisoner was convicted in the criminal court of Hamilton county for the crime of murder in the first degree, with the judgment of death, for the unlawful killing of one T. O. Musgrove. The deceased was a policeman of the city of Chattanooga, hut at the time of his death was dressed in citizen’s clothes, and it does not distinctly appear that the prisoner knew at that time the deceased was a police officer. The theory of the state is that Musgrove at the time of his death was attempting to arrest defendant, Hurd, for the offense of unlawfully carrying a pistol.

The shooting, which resulted in the death of Musgrove a few hours later, occurred about 9 or 9:30 o’clock p. m., on White street, in South Chattanooga, near the saloon of one E. L. Shepherd. This saloon was' situated on the corner of Whiteside and White streets, fronting on the east side of Whiteside street and running back along the north side of WTliite street. There are large glass doors in the front of the saloon, and at the rear end. of the building there was a door leading from the back room of the saloon out into White street. The saloon was divided by a partition into two rooms, and the front room was known as the white bar, and the rear room as the colored bar; but there seems to have been an indiscriminate mixing of the whites and blacks at each of these bars. Witnesses testified that this saloon was the usual loafing place of Musgrove, the deceased, when [586]*586he was off duty. At the time of the tragedy, deceased was off duty, and had been around the saloon for some hours, sitting in the back room with some white men and some negroes; and it is stated by the barkeeper, a State’s witness, that Musgrove was endeavoring to sober up, as he was'expecting to go on duty the same night. Among other persons in the back room with deceased were J. D. Drennan, who, the barkeeper says, had been drinking, but was also sobering up. The prisoner went into Shepherd’s saloon about half or three-quarters of an hour before the shooting. It is shown he remained in the front room, and did not-go back to the rear room, where the deceased was; and it does not appear that deceased and the prisoner saw each other until the meeting in the street at the time of the shooting.

While the prisoner was in .the front room, the barkeeper, Culver, treated defendant a time or two, and the defendant treated Culver to drinks or cigars. The prisoner took four or five drinks, and during the conversation, according to the witness Culver, the prisoner was “telling them in there about the deputy sheriffs and police, and said that he always got on very well with the deputy sheriffs and police, but when one went to arrest him he is going to get the contents of my gun.” And in a few minutes he said, “I can’t tell you anything about white men, but I can tell you all about a nigger, and I ain’t got half time to tell you about them.” It seems that in a few minutes Shepherd, thé proprietor of the-saloon, who was an intimate friend of the deceased, and [587]*587■who had been in the back room with the deceased while the conversation between the prisoner and the barkeeper and others occurred in the front room, came into the f/ont room and began to check np his cash register. The prisoner, who knew Shepherd, asked him to “set ’em np.” Shepherd declined. The prisoner then asked Shepherd to take a drink writh him, or, as the barkeeper testified, the prisoner said, “If yon are going to he short about it, I will set ’em np,” and remarked to Shepherd, “I have been trading here with yon over two years,” to which Shepherd replied, “I don’t give a d-n if yon have; I am not going to set ’em np, and if yon don’t like it yon can just get out of my place,” to which the defendant replied, in substance, “All right, Mr. Shepherd; I will get out of your place — I am as. good a man as any man,” and started towards the door. As the prisoner-passed out of the front door to Whiteside street, Shepherd, the proprietor of the saloon, threw a glass at him, which struck the door faring and crashed, without striking the defendant. Culver, the barkeeper, testified that immediately thereafter he saw the prisoner out on the sidewalk with a pistol in his hand. Thereupon the barkeeper seized a pistol from behind the bar, and, covering the prisoner, said to him, in substance, “If yon shoot in here yon are a dead nigger,” and thereupon the prisoner started around the corner down Whiteside street eastward in the direction of his home.

As already stated, there was a door leading from the rear room of the saloon out into White street. As the [588]*588prisoner disappeared around the corner, going into White street, Culver, the barkeeper, passed through the partition door into the rear room of the saloon, and there stated to Musgrove, the deceased, that a fellow had gone around the house with a gun, and to go out and catch him. Thereupon Musgrove, the deceased, turned and went out of the back door of the saloon opening on White street, while Culver, the barkeeper, went out the front door leading into Whiteside street. Culver was accompanied by the witness W. R. McIntosh, a nephew of the deceased, and Drennan, who was sitting in the rear room with Musgrove, followed Musgrove out the back door. Musgrove intercepted the prisoner about the edge of the street car track, and immediately seized him, when a struggle ensued.

There is testimony tending to show that, as Musgrove approached the deceased, Drennan, who was following Musgrove, exclaimed, “Shoot the —:-; he has got a gun.” About this time the prisoner raised his pistol and fired two shots at Drennan, both of which took effect, one in the body and the other in the arm or hand. After shooting Drennan, the prisoner turned his pistol on Musgrove, shooting him three times. Extricating himself from the grasp of Musgrove, the prisoner ran from the scene, followed closely by Musgrove, who in the meantime had drawn his own pistol and emptied it at the prisoner, while the latter was running, but none of his shots took effect. The prisoner having escaped, Mus-grove reloaded his pistol and returned to the saloon, but [589]*589was soon carried to his own home, where he died a few hours later.

The prisoner admits that he knew Musgrove, at least by sight; but he states that he had never seen him except in a policeman’s uniform. In this connection, as already stated, Musgrove was in citizen’s clothing and was not wearing the uniform of a policeman.

It should be stated that the killing occurred in the .night, between 9 and 9:30 o’clock; but there was an electric light at the corner of Whiteside and White streets, and it was a moonlight night. The evidence, however, is undisputed that Musgrove, the deceased, had a policeman’s star under his coat. Culver and Musgrove, who Avere standing at the northwest corner of the saloon at the corner of Whitside and White streets when the tragedy occurred, both testify that when Musgrove seized the prisoner, and before the shooting, Musgrove threw back his coat, showing his badge, and saying to defendant : “Consider yourself under arrest, I am an officer of the law.” It is due the defendant to say that he denies that he heard this statement, or that he saw the star, or that he recognized the deceased.

The theory of defendant is that, when Shepherd threw the glass at him as he emerged from the door of the saloon, he was excited and alarmed, and immediately ran around the corner of Whiteside street and started directly home. He denies that he drew his pistol in front of the saloon on Whiteside street.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
119 Tenn. 583, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hurd-v-state-tenn-1907.