Klaver v. State

503 S.W.2d 946, 1973 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 249
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 29, 1973
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 503 S.W.2d 946 (Klaver v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Klaver v. State, 503 S.W.2d 946, 1973 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 249 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

OPINION

OLIVER, Judge.

Indigent and represented below and here by appointed counsel, Klaver has perfected an appeal in the nature of a writ of error to this Court contesting his Rhea County *947 Circuit Court conviction of an assault upon his nine-year-old daughter with intent to carnally know her, for which he was sentenced to imprisonment for 10 years in the State Penitentiary.

By his first Assignment of Error the defendant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence, insisting that it preponderates against the verdict and in favor of his innocence. In summary, the material testimony obviously accredited by the jury shows that on the day in question the defendant came home late in the afternoon and went into the bedroom of his little daughters (nine-year-old Mary Leealla and 12-year-old Charlotte), and while they and the other members of his family were eating supper he undressed completely, called Mary Leealla into the room and told her to remove her clothes and get in bed with him where he attempted to have sexual intercourse with her; that she began crying and calling for her mother and ran nude from the bedroom to the kitchen and then fled the house clad only in a towel which she picked up as she ran; that the defendant emerged unclothed from the bedroom and told Charlotte and their 11-year-old brother Rickey (who by looking through the bedroom window saw the defendant and Mary Leealla unclothed on the bed where “He was, he was underneath her. He was on his back going up and down on her stomach,” and heard her screaming and yelling for her mother) to go after her and told them he would kill them if they didn’t bring her back; that she ran down the mountain from their home and through woods and underbrush and hid in a ditch where the children found her; that when the defendant followed and approached her she ran again and eluded them. While he and the children were near the scene of her disappearance, Mrs. Linda Johnson and Mrs. Susie Wilkey came along in a car. When Mrs. Johnson asked the defendant, who was dressed only in boots and a pair of pants, if a wreck had occurred, he said that his little girl had run away from home.

Mrs. Johnson testified: “I asked him why she ran away, and he said he just got on her and I said, Well, she’ll come back and he said, no, said, she’s bloody naked. That’s the expression he used. And I said, what do you mean, and he said, she don’t have any clothes on. And I said, you mean you made her take her clothes off to whip her, and he said, yes. And I said, where’s her mother. And he said, she’s at home, she’s pregnant. I said, don’t you think you ought to call the police and he said she’ll come out when it gets a little darker.” She further testified that later in the evening, between 7:30 and 7:45, she and Mrs. Wilkey and their husbands returned to the scene and Mary Leealla came out of the bushes nude and “shaking and scared” and covering the front of her body with a plastic sack she had found. Mrs. Johnson put her husband’s shirt on the child, who then told her “he made me go to bed with my clothes off and put his thing in me.” While Mrs. Johnson was talking with Mary Leealla, the police arrived and went and got the defendant who was still nearby, and came back and got Mary Leealla. The Johnsons and Wilkeys took Charlotte and Rickey home, met other officers as they started to their own home and then returned with them to the defendant’s home and took Mary Leealla and Charlotte to the Rhea County Hospital, where examination of Mary Leealla by a physician disclosed some bruises on her thighs but no evidence of sexual penetration, no disturbance of the hymen.

Rickey Klaver testified upon cross-examination that before Mary Leealla was found, Charlotte told the Johnsons and Wilkeys everything that happened to Mary Leealla, and that after Mary Leealla was found both she and Charlotte told them what had happened. Mrs. Johnson testified that when she first saw the defendant and Charlotte and Rickey, those children were about 40 feet from the defendant and she asked Charlotte, who was crying, “why did her little sister run away,” but she was instructed not to repeat what Charlotte said. Officer Darrell Holmes testified he *948 and Officer Bruce Ballard were present with the Johnsons and Wilkeys when the child was found, and that she was asked (“Yes, we did.”) what had happened to her, and “Using' her words, she told us that her father had had her in bed with no clothes .on and he was messing around with her,” that that was the term she used, “And then she told us she had ran, that she’d got away from him and ran, and was hiding in the woods and planned on waiting till dark and then come on and call the police,” and Officer Ballard testified the Johnsons and Wilkeys were with the child when he and Officer Holmes arrived and “She said her dad had got her in bed and pulled all her clothes off and took his clothes off and she had managed to kick him out of bed and run.” Daniel Johnson testified that enroute to the hospital, after the child had first been taken home and left a short while with her mother and the other children, “She said her father had her in the bed naked and somehow she managed to get away from him, and she had ran from her house-” The court intervened to stop the statement by saying, in effect, that he would not permit the witness to relate further details. When cross-examined by defense counsel about that statement, Mr. Johnson said, “Well, the little girl did the talking,” and “That’s the first conversation I heard.”

According to Russell Wilkey, when he and his wife and Mr. and Mrs. Johnson returned to the scene of Mary Leealla’s disappearance to see whether she had been found, when the defendant was asked where he thought his child could be he said he didn’t care. Wilkey also testified he told the defendant officers were on the way and he had better wait for them.

Testifying in his own behalf, the defendant said that he whipped all of his children when they needed a spanking; that his wife “never did get the knack of cooking. She just didn’t have the touch for cooking,” and that he “stayed on her constantly” about her lack of cleanliness, and “thought she was a little bit off”; that on the day in question before returning home he drank “a few beers” and took “a six carton of beer” home and placed it in the refrigerator; that his family were eating at that time, and he went in the girls’ bedroom and sat down in the doorway and pulled off his boots and asked Mary Leeal-la to bring him a beer; that when she brought the beer she was also carrying her plate and a spoon or fork; that “I got on to her about bringing that plate in there, and she just sorta sulled up, and I told her I was going to spank her, . . . and got a hold pf the shoulder of her dress, I was fixing to give her a spanking, you know, and she took off, and when she took off, I had the dress in my hand, and she went through the kitchen and out the back door, and I went into the kitchen. I didn’t have my boots on and I told, I told Charlotte and Rickey to catch that kid,” and that he and his wife followed looking for her, and that he searched for her until almost dark; that he did not attempt to rape Mary Leealla and did nothing other than grab for her when he started to spank her (because she didn’t return the plate to the kitchen as he told her to and he tries to teach the children not to carry plates, he said), and did not get her on the bed or get on top of her or touch her private parts, and that he was not undressed and had only taken off his shirt and boots.

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Bluebook (online)
503 S.W.2d 946, 1973 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/klaver-v-state-tenncrimapp-1973.