Mays v. State

145 Tenn. 118
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 145 Tenn. 118 (Mays 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
Mays v. State, 145 Tenn. 118 (Tenn. 1921).

Opinion

Me. Justice Hall

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The plaintiff in error, Maurice Mays, was convicted in the court below for the murder of Mrs. Bertie Lindsay, and was sentenced by the jury to suffer death by electrocution.

[123]*123A motion for a new trial was overruled, and the plaintiff in error has appealed to this court and has assigned errors.

The material facts of the hilling lie within a narrow compass. On the night of August 29, 1919, an intruder entered the house of Mrs. Lindsay on Eighth avenue near Gillespie avenue in the city of Knoxville, and shot her to death. She was in bed with her cousin, Miss Ora Smith, who has since married a man by the name of Parsons, and no other person was in the house at the time. The facts are stated by Mrs. Parsons, who says that Mrs. Lindsay awoke her by calling her name and taking hold of her arm; that she observed a negro man standing in the room with a flash light; that Mrs. Lindsay arose and stood in bed, and the intruder commanded her to lie down or he would shoot her; that Mrs. Lbjdsay did lie down, but arose again and was again commanded to lie down. She did so, but again arose and stepped off of the bed onto the floor and looked out at a window. The intruder again commanded her to lie down or he would shoot her. Mrs. Lindsay then took a step towards the door, and the intruder shot her. She fell and soon expired, if not instantly. The intruder then turned to Mrs. Parsons, who was still lying on the bed, and put his hand on her person and said he had a good notion to shoot her, and made an indecent proposal to her, using language which she would not repeat because of its obscenity and profanity. She asked him to spare her life and take her money. The intruder asked her where her money was. She told him it was in a vase on the dresser. He then went to the dresser and found Mrs. Lindsay’s purse and took it and departed through the back door of the house.

[124]*124As soon as lie was ont of the honse Mrs. Parsons made her exit through the front door and went to the house of her closest neighbor, Mr. Dyer, who was a patrolman for the city of Knoxville. Mrs. Dyer heard the sound of the pistol and went to her front door. Mrs. Parsons went to Mrs. Dyer’s hack door first and afterwards passed around to the front door.

The intruder, in passing out of the Lindsay yard, ran against a wire, which connected the house with a hedge fence, and fell down, dropping the purse which he had taken from the dresser, where it was later found. It seems that in leaving the Lindsay premises the intruder went down below the Dyer residence for a distance, and then turned and came back and passed in front of the Dyer residence while Mrs. Dyer was on the front porch. The Dyer front por;ch was some twenty-five feet from the street. By the aid of a strong arc electric light located near the corner of Eighth and Gillespie avenues, Mrs. Dyer saw the intruder as he returned. She says that he was walking rather leisurely with his flash light in his hand and burning, but had it turned down towards the pavement. She called to her husband, who was then engaged in dressing, and the intruder, upon hearing her voice, ran through an alley that opened on the opposite side of Eighth avenue practically in front of the Dyer residence and disappeared.

Mr. Dyer telephoned information’ to police headquarters that Mrs. Lindsay had been killed. Capt. Wilson and four other policemen were sent to the scene, and arrived in about twenty minutes. They had an extended conversation with Mrs. Parsons about the killing, and she [125]*125gaye to Capt. Wilson a full description of the person, clothes, and voice of the intruder, in consequence of which he detailed Patrolmen White, Hatcher, and Kirby to go and arrest the plaintiff in error.

The plaintiff in error lived about one mile from Mrs. Lindsay’s house. The patrolmen did not know where he lived, hut did know where his father lived, and went there first. There they learned where the plaintiff in error lived and went to his house. They walked up on the front porch and called repeatedly and somewhat loudly to plaintiff in error, hut received no response. They then struck upon the front door with a policeman’s billy and called each time the plaintiff in error’s name. They did this repeatedly, but received no response. They then left the front porch and went to the house of his next neighbor, who had been awakened by the noise made by the patrolmen attempting to arouse the plaintiff in error. They asked him if Mays lived at this place, and he informed them that he did. They then asked him if Mays were at home, and he informed them that he supposed he was, as he had heard a noise at Mays’ place about one hour before which sounded like some one had come in. They returned to. the Mays house and made another effort to arouse him, hut could not do so then went around to the side of the house and held a flash light to the window hut could not see any one. They then went to another window and raised the shade and turned on the flash light and discovered that Mays was lying on the bed with his head to the foot of the bed. Patrolman Kirby says that he could see that Mays was not asleep. The officers returned to the door, and [126]*126knocking was again repeated on tlie door, when Mays responded to the calls which accompanied the knocking. The patrolmen say that they knocked very hard and made dents in the door; one of them saying that he knocked as hard as he conld, not to knock the door down. Mays opened the door and admitted them, first giving as a reason for not opening the door sooner that he was asleep and did not hear their calls, but later said he did not admit any one in his house at night. The officers, upon being admitted, began a search of the house. They discovered that his pants were folded between the mattresses with the legs protruding from ábout the knees down. They say the pants were damp as if he had been walking in weeds. It had rained in the early part of the night in the section of the city where the murder was committed, and there were weeds and high grass in the alley, through which the intruder traveled as he left Mrs. Lindsay’s house. They examined his shoes, and they had red mud and cinders on the bottoms and on the sides. The surface of the alley through which the intruder ran after the murder was composed of cinders and red clay. There was only a small quantity of red mud and cinders on the shoes.

They asked Mays for his pistol, and he informed them where it was. They examined the pistol and found it to be a 38 double-action Smith & Wesson. All of the chambers except one had the appearance of having been loaded for quite a while, but one had the appearance of having recently been fired and reloaded with a bright and fresh cartridge. Lint had gathered in the ends of all the chambers but one, and the cartridges in all the chambers [127]*127but one were corroded as if they bad been carried in the pistol for quite a while. The barrel of the pistol gave evidence that it had been recently fired, and had a smell of fresh burnt powder. The plaintiff in error offered testimony to the effect that the pistol had been fired at a rat about four months previous. Mays also offered the testimony of himself, his father, and Jim Smith that the pistol did not bear the smell of fresh burnt powder.

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Bluebook (online)
145 Tenn. 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mays-v-state-tenn-1921.