Kress v. State

144 S.W.2d 735, 176 Tenn. 478, 12 Beeler 478, 1940 Tenn. LEXIS 90
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 19, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 144 S.W.2d 735 (Kress 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
Kress v. State, 144 S.W.2d 735, 176 Tenn. 478, 12 Beeler 478, 1940 Tenn. LEXIS 90 (Tenn. 1940).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McKinney

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Vina Kress, referred to herein as defendant, has appealed to this court from a sentence of ten years in the State penitentiary pursuant to a verdict of guilty of murder in the second degree.

About nine-thirty on the night of July 10, 1939, defendant shot T. W. Snrgenor with a pistol, two or more balls taking effect in his body and producing wounds from which he died about one o’clock on the afternoon of July 18, 1939.

According to the testimony of defendant, she was jnsti- - fied in taking the life of deceased; while, according to the dying declaration of deceased, as testified to by his wife, she deliberately shot deceased at a time when she was neither in danger of death nor great bodily harm. In addition to this, as soon as she shot deceased she hid the pistol on the adjoining premises, and denied having shot deceased for some time when she finally admitted it.

The deceased was a married man, having a wife and two children at the time of his death, and had been married since 1911, their home, prior to 1937, being in Appalachia, Virginia. Defendant, prior to 1937, had likewise resided in Appalachia for many years, having also married there in 1911, and gave birth to three children, now residing in Florida, prior to separating from her husband in 1925. In about 1927, defendant and deceased *480 became infatuated with, each other and lived together as common-law husband and wife from that time until the death of deceased. In 1937 they moved to Knoxville, where they established a beer garden and rooming house at 300 Magnolia Avenue.

The testimony is in narrative form, the important part of that of defendant being as follows:

“The witness further testified that about two years ago Surgenor came to Knoxville and opened up a restaurant and beer stand, returned to Virginia and tried to persuade her to come to Knoxville and help him operate the beer stand, but that she refused to come with him: he told her that if she did not come he would kill her, and that she, being afraid that he would take her life or do her some bodily injury, finally came to Knoxville to live with him and help him operate the beer stand.
She further stated that during the time they lived together and operated the beer stand in Knoxville for a period of about a year and a half they had numerous quarrels and fights; that on one occasion they got into a fight and Surgenor burst a beer bottle over her head, whereupon she stabbed him with an ice pick; that they both were arrested as a result of this altercation, and placed in the municipal jail by the Knoxville police, but were finally released. '
“She stated that in March, 1939, after having another fight with Surgenor, she left him and turned the beer stand over to him and went out into Union County, Tennessee, on Bullrun Creek, and there opened up a place of her own and proceeded to operate it.
‘ ‘ She had not been out there very long when Surgenor came after her one night, arriving there some time after midnight; he brought with him a Mr. Humphreys and his wife, and' had two pistols; she stated that he was drink *481 ing and slie -attempted to get him to go to sleep hoping that he would change his mind after he slept off the effects of the intoxicants, hut instead he stayed awake all night, telling her that he could not operate his place of business and get along without her and she was either going to come back to Knoxville with him or he was going to blow her brains out. On the following morning he forced her to return to Knoxville with him and. live with him and leave her business in the care of her nephew, Robert Wilson, who had been helping her operate it. Upon leaving Surgenor told her nephew, Wilson, that he could have the business for $10.00, that Vina was not coming back to operate it any more because she was going to stay with him.
“She stated that upon returning to Knoxville he continued to drink, and that after they came back to the house and beer stand on Magnolia Avenue, he drank a large quantity of beer, sat down at a table, took out a pistol, and first threatened to shoot a hole through the icebox, then threatened to shoot her, and that after much persuasion on her part and with the aid of Mr. and Mrs. Humphreys, she persuaded him to eat some breakfast which she had prepared for him, and finally got the two guns away from him and put them away.
1 Sometime after this they became involved in another quarrel and Surgenor broke her nose with his fist; she further stated that he was a large and strong man, weighing about 220 pounds, and in good health, and that every time he got to drinking, which was quite often, he would assault her and beat her, often inflicting upon her severe and painful bruises and injuries about the face, eyes and other parts of her body. She stated that he was a dangerous man, and that she was afraid of him and was often *482 forced to call the police officers for protection against Mm.
“She stated that on -the evening of July 16, 1939, Surgenor came into the beer stand, which was operated in one room of the house in which they lived, and took $60.00 in money, which she had in her bosom, away from her, assaulted and beat her, inflicting upon her body several bruises.
“Soon after this his sister and brother-in-law came to see him and he went out to the front porch and sat down to talk with them; she said that she also went out and down the street where she met a Mr. Shannon whom she requested to call the officers to arrest Surgenor for beating her and taking her money; after Shannon had called the officers for her, she went back to the house and the officers came up in an automobile just before she entered the house; she talked with them and told them what he had done to her, and they refused to go into the house and arrest him until she went to the court and swore out a warrant for him; this was on Sunday night, and the officers told her to come to the courthouse or jail upon the following morning and get a warrant and they would come back and arrest Surgenor; she stated that at the time she was talking to the officers their car was parked on Morgan Street at the west side of the house where she and Surgenor lived.
“After talking to the officers some ten or fifteen minutes she went back into the house entering at the back door with the intention of going to her room and going to bed. This was about 9:30' P. M. according to her best impression of the time.
“She stated that in going to her room she had to pass through a hallway and by the room where Surgenor slept. She stated further that when she entered the house all *483 of the lights had been burned out, and none of them were burning; upon passing the door to Surgenor’s room he stepped out into the hallway, seized her by the bosom of her dress, jerked her into his room, and said:

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Related

Hughes v. State
465 S.W.2d 892 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee, 1970)
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370 S.W.2d 506 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1962)

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Bluebook (online)
144 S.W.2d 735, 176 Tenn. 478, 12 Beeler 478, 1940 Tenn. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kress-v-state-tenn-1940.