Lyles v. State

146 Tenn. 70
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 146 Tenn. 70 (Lyles 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
Lyles v. State, 146 Tenn. 70 (Tenn. 1921).

Opinion

Mr. L. D. Smith, Special Judge,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Plaintiff in error was convicted of murder in the second decree upon an indictment charging him with having killed his brother-in-law, one Gallie Mitchell, colored, under circumstances constituting murder in the first degree. His motion for new trial having been overruled by the trial judge, he has appealed to this court.

Only two of the assignments of error need be noticed. In the first assignment the defendant contends that the evidence preponderates against the verdict and in favor of his innocence; his defense being that he did not kill the deceased, but that he was at another place, where it'was impossible for him to have done it. His second contention is that the court erroneously admitted testimony showing .that the principal witness for the State, and the only witness who identifies plaintiff in error as being the man who killed deceased, made a statement some hours after the killing, and before she was examined as' a witness, similar to that given in her testimony on the trial, to the effect that it was Will Lyles, plaintiff in error, who killed the deceased.

The deceased and the defendant were brothers-in-law, defendant having married a half-sister of the deceased. They both had homes on the same farm, which belonged to an old colored man named Jim Dunn, who was the grandfather of the deceased and the defendant’s wife. At the time of this homicide deceased’s mother, Sis Kerley, together with her husband, Henry Kerley, and another son, [73]*73Dan Kerley, lived in the home of Jim Dunn. The deceased, Gallie Mitchell, was a son of Sis Kerley, evidently having been born prior to the marriage of Sis and Henry Kerley. Dan Kerley, and Ida Lyles, the wife of the defendant, were the children of Henry and Sis. While defendant and his wife had a home on the farm about a mile and a quarter from Jim Dunn’s, at. the time of the homicide they were staying at the home of Jim Dunn, where Ida’s father and mother made their home, and had been there for some weeks, so that the old people could take care of their children while she aided the defendant in working his tobacco crop. The deceased and his wife lived on the same farm about a quarter of a mile from the Dunn home. The killing occurred late in the evening, about dusk, at the home of the old man Dunn, on Friday, August 14, 1920, Deceased had arranged to take his wife and daughter to the fair at Hartsville on Friday, but instead of doing so he took a negro woman by the name of Lee Hall, who lived in the same neighborhood. There is no direct testimony to show just why he failed to take his wife and daughter and took this particular woman, unless it can be inferred from the evidence, which shows that it was the reputation of Lee Hall that she had been living in adultery with the deceased for a number of years, and it also appears that the wife of the deceased was suspicious of their relationship, judging from a remark she made to her step brother-in-law Dan Kerley. She asked him that morning if deceased Avas going to take Lee Hall to the fair. Upon his replying that he did not know, she said, “If he carried that bitcjh to the fair he had better not come back home.”. The deceased got home from the fair late in the afternoon, and, after having had his supper, went up to Jim Dunn’s house, where his [74]*74mother and stepfather lived. This was just about dusk. Tn the meantime the woman Lee Hall, who lived a short distance from the Dunn home, had gotten there. There were at the Dunn home old man Dunn, Henry Kerley, and his wife, Sis, Lee Hall, the deceased, and the defendant’s wife, Ida. Dan Kerley was not there. It seems that he had gone away to church during the day, and had not yet returned. The deceased had a son named Gallie Mitchell, Jr., being referred to in the record as Gallie Mitchell, Jr., who was about the same size as Dan Kerley. His whereabouts at the time‘are not accounted for in the record.

Soon after deceased got over to his mother’s home he engaged in a quarrel with his mother. It seems that he liad arranged to have them kill and dress a sheep for some kind of an association the next day, and this had not been done. The quarrel became heated, and deceased drew his knife on his mother, and sister, who had intervened when his stepfather Henry Kerley, induced him to go out on the gallery and sit down. Scon after he sat down in a chair on the gallery some person who came into the yard through the gate fired a shotgun at him and killed him. It was dark at this time, as a lamp had been lighted in the room to enable the women to get supper.

The only,witness who identifies defendant as being the, man who fired the gun is the negro woman Lee Hall. She claims to have been standing in the hallway, and to have seen and to have identified defendant by the flash of the gunfire and the light of the lamp, which was in the kitchen. The deceased evidently saw the man coming toward .the house, and thought it was his half-brother Dan Kerley, because he made the remark, as all the witnesses say, when this man came through the gate and approached the house: [75]*75“There comes Dun now. Come on, Dan, we can settle this matter about the killing of the sheep.” Henry Kerley evidently saw the man fire the gun, and he says he thought it was his son Dan at the time, and he made the remark when he saw the man run: “Come back Dan; don’t run. You had the right to do it. This is your home.”

Ida Lyles, the defendant’s wife, said she was standing-right by the side of Lee Hall, and she did not see the flash of the gun. She claims it was impossible for her or Lee Hall in the position they were to be able to see the party who did the shooting.

The defendant testifies that he did not do the shooting, but that at the time he was at the home of John Volentine, a mile and a half away from the place of the killing. He is corroborated in this by the testimony of John Volentine and another witness by the name of Hall Hart, both of whom testify that the defendant went to Volentine’s house just about dusk — one and one-half miles from the place of the killing, and that he remained there, and was there until news was brought that Gallie Mitchell had been killed.

Shortly after the killing Dan Kerley on his Av-ay home met up with young Gallie Mitchell. Just where they met with reference to the place of the killing is not shown, but it is evident that it was not very far away. Young Gallie told Dan that his father had been killed, and that they were claiming that he (Dan) had done it. Dan and young Mitchell went immediately over to John-Volentine’s house and told them about the killing. The defendant was there when they got there.

The State’s witness, Lee Hall, although she claims' to have identified the defendant as being the man who fired the gun, did not say anything, about her identification of [76]*76the defendant or about having seen the man who did the killing, although she admits that she heard the deceased speak of the man who did the shooting as his brother Dan Kerley, and heal'd Henry Kerley call to the man who did the shooting, and refer to him as his son Dan.

She says she went immediately after the killing and told Betty Mitchell, the wife of the deceased, about her husband having been killed. She says she does not know Avhy she did not tell Betty Mitchell who had killed her husband. She admits that she never made any statement to that effect until about eleven o’clock that night, when the sheriff came there.

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146 Tenn. 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lyles-v-state-tenn-1921.