Long v. State

213 S.W.2d 37, 187 Tenn. 139, 23 Beeler 139, 1948 Tenn. LEXIS 420
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 17, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 213 S.W.2d 37 (Long 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
Long v. State, 213 S.W.2d 37, 187 Tenn. 139, 23 Beeler 139, 1948 Tenn. LEXIS 420 (Tenn. 1948).

Opinion

Me. Justice Gailoe

delivered the opinion of the Gonrt.

Defendant appeals from conviction of murder in the second degree and punishment by imprisonment of not less than 10 and not more than 19 years and a day in the penitentiary.

The victim of the homicide, May Long, was the second wife of defendant with whom he was living at the time of the murder which occurred sometime before midnight on the 21st day of July, 1946, in the home of the couple in a remote section of Wayne County. Their two children, a boy 5, and a girl, Lorene Long, who was 9 years old when she testified for the State, were the only other occupants of the dwelling at the time the killing occurred.

After visiting a neighbor and drinking heavily during the day, which was Sunday, defendant returned home before dark and was too drunk to feed his stock. At that time he was in a belligerent mood and muttered threats against the neighbor who had been his drinking companion, but offered no physical violence to any member of his family. His married daughter, Laura West, who was a child of defendant’s first marriage and stepdaughter of the deceased, was on a visit to her father’s home at the time. She realized her father’s condition and went out to the barn and fed the stock. When she returned to the house the wife, May Long, and the two children had gone to bed in one of the beds in what is called the living room of the house, and the defendant, fully clothed, was lying on the other bed in the same [142]*142room, cursing, muttering and banging the wall with Ms fist. The defendant started a quarrel -with tMs married daughter and finally ordered her to leave the house. She did not do this immediately but went into an adjoining room out of the presence of the defendant and lay down on a bed with her clothes on. Later, and before the homicide, she slipped out of the house and went to the home of a neighbor, where she spent the night.

Lorene Long, the 9 year old daughter of the defendant, testified for the State that she woke in the night to hear her mother screaming for help; that the defendant was beating her mother with a metal ash pan and later beat her with sticks of stove wood; that this occurred in the room where she (Lorene) was sleeping; that her father tied a rope to her mother’s leg and dragged her body out into the yard and later dragged her back into the house; that her mother was dead when he dragged her body back into the house; that her mother was doing nothing to provoke or justify the assault; that the defendant lifted the body from the floor to one of the beds and by whipping her (Lorene) with a rope, forced her to wash up the blood stained floor. She identified broken pieces of wood and a blood stained plow line as articles used in the commission of the crime. Defendant then started to leave the house and when Lorene tried to go with him, he again beat her to make her stay at home with her little brother. Knots ■ and welts on this little girl’s body testified to by other witnesses for the State are we think conclusive of the severity and brutality of the beating she received at the hands of her father, although he testified that it was merely a “whipping.”

Between one and two o’clock in the morning the defendant turned'up at the home of a neighbor, Eaton, [143]*143where he told a story that he had returned home between ten and eleven of the previous evening to find his wife’s body lying on the flpor, that she had been brutally beaten by an unknown assailant and was then, at one or two o’clock in the moaning “in a dying condition if not already dead.”

Since, on the following day, Monday, defendant confessed the crime to his daughter, Laura West, there is no need to recount further details of this brutal and bloody murder.

The substance of defendant’s testimony and his defense is that he was drunk and didn’t remember anything that happened. He admits that he whipped Lorene to make her stay at home when he went for help, but in view of the false statement he made to the Eatons about the commission of the crime, and about the severity of the beating administered to the little girl, the jury would have been fully justified.in disbelieving his entire testimony. However, they did not, but considered his plea of intoxication sufficient to justify a reduction of the grade of the offense from murder in the first to murder in the second degree.

By the 8th and last assignment of error, defendant complains that the evidence was insufficient to support the conviction. It is difficult to see the ground for this assignment in view of the defendant’s voluntary admission of the charge to his married daughter, Laura West. From our statement of the proven facts it is clear that the defendant was guilty as found by the jury, and that the conviction of murder in the first degree with greater punishment was justified by the evidence, in spite of the evidence of defendant’s intoxication. Wharton Crim. Law., Vol I, sec. 407, 1932 Ed. Although [144]*144the jury found the plea of voluntary intoxication justified by the defendant’s testimony, the only legal effect of the finding is to reduce the grade of the offense from first to second degree murder. Clearly, the effect to he given the defense is wholly within the jury’s province, based on their finding of the extent' of the intoxication under all the proven facts. Mullendore v. State, 183 Tenn. 53, at page 60, 191 S. W. (2d) 149 and cases there cited.

The other seven assignments of error are directed at alleged error committed during the examination and acceptance of the jury. Before considering the assignments, it is well to recall the well established rule that the defendant’s only right is to have a fair trial at the hands of an unprejudiced, unbiased and impartial jury. He has no right to select certain jurors. Manning v. State, 155 Tenn. 266, 275, 292 S. W. 451. He has only the right to reject talesmen tendered who are biased and prejudiced, as “bias” and “prejudice” have been limited and defined by statute and decision. Mahon v. State, 127 Tenn. 535, 156 S. W. 458.

By his first assignment, defendant insists that prejudicial and reversible error was committed against him because 'the Attorney General successfully challenged for cause five talesmen, who in answer to appropriate questions revealed their disbelief in capital punishment.

■ He insists that this was error because (1) the prosecutor did not ask all prospective jurors questions about their belief in capital punishment, and (2) because the result was to give the State nine peremptory challenges when it was entitled to only six under Code sec. 10020.

As to the first objection, defendant cites no authority, and we are confident that none can be found to [145]*145compel the prosecutor to ask all prospective jurors any certain questions. All- prospective jurors are presumed to he qualified when they are presented and within legal limitations to be enforced by the Trial Judge, questions asked by the attorneys on the voir dire are within the discretion of the attorneys. When the record shows that the jurors were “elected,-impaneled, tried and sworn,” it is presumed that they were fair and impartial jurors since the Trial Judge has the exclusive right to pass upon the selection of jurors. Hughes v. State, 126 Tenn. 40, 88, 148 S. W. 543,, Ann Cas. 1913D, 1262; Turner v. State, 28 Tenn. 119; Isham v. State, 33 Tenn. 111; McBean v. State, 50 Tenn.

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Bluebook (online)
213 S.W.2d 37, 187 Tenn. 139, 23 Beeler 139, 1948 Tenn. LEXIS 420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-v-state-tenn-1948.