McCommon v. State

130 Tenn. 1
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 130 Tenn. 1 (McCommon 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
McCommon v. State, 130 Tenn. 1 (Tenn. 1914).

Opinion

Mr, Justice Buchanan

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The indictment was in one count, and charged that on a day (not named) in March, 1913, B. B. McCom-mon did willfully, unlawfully, feloniously, maliciously, [5]*5deliberately, and premeditatedly make an assault npon the body of Miss Esther Derry with a gun, with the felonious intent her, the said Miss Esther Derry, then and there, unlawfully, etc., to kill and murder, and to commit the crime of murder in the first degree, to which indictment, McCommon interposed a plea of not guilty. On the trial there was a verdict of ‘ ‘ guilty in manner and form as charged in the indictment,” and the jury assessed the punishment at confinement in the penitentiary of the State for a period of seven years, upon which verdict the cpurt (having overruled a motion for a new trial and a motion in arrest of judgment) pronounced sentence in accordance with the verdict from all of which plaintiff in error prayed and was granted an appeal to this court, and has assigned errors.

The first and second assignments of error raise the question that, while the indictment was in one count and charged one offense, to wit, an assault with intent to commit the crime of murder in the first degree upon the body of Esther Derry, yet the defendant was in fact tried upon two separate, distinct, and independent offenses, and the jury were charged by the court in respect of two separate, distinct, and independent offenses, wherefore it is insisted for plaintiff in error that there was a variance between the indictment and the evidence introduced upon the trial of the cause,' that the verdict of the jury and judgment of the court cannot be sustained as determining his guilt of either offense, because it is uncertain on which of the [6]*6two plaintiff in error was impleaded and of which he was convicted.

To the foregoing points, made hy plaintiff in error, the State replies, in substance, that the two phases of the evidence, which plaintiff in error terms distinct and separate offenses are,, in fact and in law, hut separate parts of a single offense. The two phases of the evidence, while indeed separate acts of the plaintiff in error in point of time, are so connected hy a single intent and purpose to do murder in the first degree upon the body of Esther Derry, and so nearly related or closely connected in point of time, as to amount in law to a single and continuing transaction, pursuant to and prompted by single criminal intent. The legal principle relied on by the State is well expressed by a learned author as follows (Wharton on Criminal Law, voL 1 [11th Ed.] p. 48, section 34):

“No matter how long an offense may take in its perpetration, it continues but one offense. . . . The distinction is this: When the impulse is single, but one indictment lies, no matter how long the action may continue. If successive impulses are separately given, even though all unite in swelling a common stream of action, separate indictments lie.”

See, also, the cases cited in notes to Hughes v. Commonwealth, 31 L. R. A. (N. S.), 693, and State v. Sampson, 42 L. R. A. (N. S.), 907:

Another illustration of the same principle is stated thus:

[7]*7“And where a person fires a shot at another under circumstances not justifying it, and this is immediately followed by another shot to prevent the other from getting his pistol to renew an assault under circumstances which would justify it, the whole is to be regarded as a continuing transaction, and, though the latter shot causes the death, the killing cannot be held justifiable as in self-defense.” Wharton on Homicide (3d Ed.) section 337, p. 545.

And again:

“The principle upon which the decisions in these cases rest is that two or more separate offenses, which are committed at the same time and are parts of a single continuing criminal act, inspired by the same criminal intent, which is essential to each offense, are susceptible to but one punishment. The most familiar illustration of the rule is that burglary with intent to commit larceny and larceny committed at the same time and as one continued act do not subject the perpetrator to two punishments, one for the burglary and another for the larceny, because the same criminal intent is indispensable to each, and they are each parts of a continuing criminal act.” Stevens v. McClaughry, 207 Fed., 18, 125 C. C. A., 102.

Looking to the transcript, we see that, on the trial of the cause, the court allowed evidence to be introduced on behalf of the State tending to show a. willful, felonious, and premeditated assault by the plaintiff in error upon the body of Esther Derry, with intent to kill and murder by means of pointing at her and dis[8]*8charging with, that intent a shotgun loaded with powder and No. 4 leaden'shot, which, so discharged, inflicted upon her body divers wounds, hut did not result in her death; and, in addition to this evidence, there was introduced on behalf of the State other evidence tending to show that, being so wounded, Esther Derry fled from the spot where she was standing:, but, on reaching a point variously estimated at from 55 to 100 feet from that at which she was standing when shot, she fell to the ground, and while lying thereon was pursued by plaintiff in error, who then and there struck her two blows upon the head with the barrels of his gun used as a club or bludgeon, inflicting a cut on the scalp extending' to the bone, serious enough to require a week or ten days to heal.

No motion was made by plaintiff in error 'at any time during the trial of the cause that the State be required to elect upon which of these two phases of the evidence it would ask for a conviction.' On the contrary, he saw fit to meet the State’s evidence by his own, which tended to show, by way of defense to what he now insists was the first assault, that he fired at Esther Derry only after she had fired four or five shots at him, and therefore in his proper and necessary self-defense ; that, after firing the first shot, he attempted to reload the barrel of his gun which had been fired, and to that end unbreeched the gun, the same being a double-barrelled shotgun, and placed a cartridge in the barrel which had just been fired, but on account of some defect in the mechanism of the gun he was un[9]*9able to rebreecb tbe same; that, in bis efforts to effect tbe latter result, be struck tbe ground with tbe stock of tbe gun, causing tbe accidental discharge of tbe cartridge in tbe barrel which bad just been fired, and breaking tbe stock from tbe barrels of the gun. Thereupon, with tbe barrels of tbe gun in bis band, and leaving tbe stock at tbe place where it bad'been broken, be ran in pursuit of Esther Derry to the point at which she was still lying on tbe ground, and when near enough to strike her with tbe gun barrels which be still held, in bis band, be asked her what she was there for, and she said she was looking for her brother. Thereupon, be said she bad a pistol in her right band, and was moving it around some, and looked as if she was making some effort to get up, when be, in apprehension that she might shoot him with tbe pistol, struck her on tbe bead bard enough to keep her from shooting him. Plaintiff in error, in tbe conduct of bis defense, acquiesced in tbe treatment of tbe facts by tbe State as showing one transaction. It is now too late for him to complain. Forrest v. State, 13 Lea (81 Tenn.), 105; Givens v. State, 103 Tenn. (19 Pickle), 665, 55 S.

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Bluebook (online)
130 Tenn. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccommon-v-state-tenn-1914.