Morrison v. State

371 S.W.2d 441, 212 Tenn. 633, 16 McCanless 633, 1963 Tenn. LEXIS 453
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 11, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 371 S.W.2d 441 (Morrison 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
Morrison v. State, 371 S.W.2d 441, 212 Tenn. 633, 16 McCanless 633, 1963 Tenn. LEXIS 453 (Tenn. 1963).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Burnett

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Morrison was convicted of voluntary manslaughter of James Hennigan. He has seasonably appealed, filed a brief and assignments of error, and arguments have been heard. After carefully reading the record, briefs *635 and authorities, we are now in a position to determine the matter. For convenience, the plaintiff in error, Morrison, will hereinafter he referred to as the defendant, his status in the trial court.

Factually there isn’t much dispute in this record. The deceased was a cousin of the defendant and had frequently visited his camp in Lawrence County where the defendant trained bird dogs. From this record it seems the deceased was a large man, weighing in the neighborhood of two hunddred (200) pounds, and was forty-six (46) years of age. He apparently had no gainful occupation and carried most of his worldly goods on his back, except a few toiletry articles which he carried in a sack.

The defendant is a much smaller man and older than the deceased. On Monday, May 8, 1962, the defendant returned to his camp in Lawrence County with one Hughes in the latter’s car. Upon arriving at the camp they found Hennigan there, apparently sober, making himself at home. The deceased and Hughes began a drinking party that lasted until about noon on May 10, at which time Hennigan was killed by Morrison under circumstances hereinafter related. Both Hughes and Morrison were indicted for this crime, but Hughes was vindicated from any part in it by the jury. This record shows that at the time of this killing the defendant was not drunk while the deceased was very much intoxicated to the extent that his autopsy showed a .32 per cent blood ethyl alcohol content.

The record fails to show any reason why deceased wished to enter the home of the defendant at the time of this homicide. During the night preceding this shooting both Hughes and the deceased had been drinking to *636 such, an extent that Hughes had a hangover and slept most of the next morning. During this time the defendant borrowed Hughes’s car and left with the deceased to obtain gasoline and whiskey. As far as the record shows there had been no argument between the deceased and the defendant which would account in any way for the homicide.

A few minutes before the shooting and about noon on May 10, Hughes and the deceased left the defendant’s shack, it being their intention to return to Hughes’ home in AIulmEm- After they left the shack the defendant locked the front door. About this time, and after the doors were locked, the deceased attempted to reenter the defendant’s house by the front door, but found that it was locked. As said above there was no reason whatsoever shown in this record why the deceased wished to reenter this house. When the deceased found the door was locked he began kicking the door and trying to get in. About this time, Hughes remembered that he had left his glasses inside and called to the defendant to give them to him. The defendant responded that he would put them out the back door, and, upon this statement being made, the deceased rushed around to the back door ahead of Hughes and started kicking the back door when he found it was also locked.

When the deceased couldn’t get in the back door, he returned to the front door, kicked it some more, picked up a stick of wood, and began to beat on the front door again. A pane of glass was broken and the latch or lock was knocked off. Before the deceased gained entry, Hughes, the only eye witness, repeatedly warned the deceased not to kick the door and not to try to get in be *637 cause the defendant might shoot him. The record shows that the deceased responded to this admonition by saying that the defendant wouldn’t shoot him because he was yellow. There is no question under this record but that the deceased was constantly cursing, and, according to the defendant, threatened to kill him. Hughes, who had run around the house when the glass was broken and the door was broken open, did not hear these statements. As Hughes ran around the house he heard a shot and then the defendant came out of the house. At this time, Hughes is supposed to have asked him, “Are you crazy?” Hughes says that defendant replied, “He broke into my house and I told him not to.” Hughes then went into the house and looked at the body. There is some conflict about it, but Hughes says that he did not see any stick but there was a lock lying on the floor some seven feet from the door. The deceased was lying inside the house with his feet just a few inches inside the door. After Hughes went into the house, he says the defendant said, “take me to mama’s”, which Hughes did. He drove the defendant to his home which was located a short distance across the state line in Florence, Alabama. Shortly thereafter officers were told about the homicide, and an investigation ensued.

There is a great deal made in the record about the fact that no stick was found close to Hennigan after this homicide. As we see it though this doesn’t make any material difference. Whether the deceased had stick of wood in his hand when he entered the defendant’s house is only one of the factors to be considered in determining whether the deceased appeared to have the means whereby he could seriously injure the defendant. Of course, he could have seriously injured the defendant in many *638 ways — -by tbe lock be bad in band; or merely by virtue of the fact that be was a much larger man and was, at tbe time, in a belligerent intoxicated mood. Tbe mere fact that tbe defendant bad locked him out apparently incensed him to sncb an extent that it is, in our judgment beyond argument that deceased in every way be could sought to inflict some kind of punishment on defendant. This is not tbe question though. Tbe question is bow did it appear to tbe defendant. The deceased was tbe assailant and as to whether or not there was apparently a present, pressing necessity for tbe defendant to take the life of tbe deceased to protect bis own, or to prevent great bodily barm, was a question for tbe determination of tbe defendant under tbe facts and circumstances at the time.

Tbe charge in this case by tbe trial judge to tbe jury is tbe stock printed charge given in murder cases with tbe correct printed definition of voluntary manslaughter, etc. There was no request made nor is there any charge concerning tbe rights of an individual when his home is broken into. Tbe charge is not questioned; but we feel that under this charge without any special request, or any particular definition of tbe rights of one when bis home is broken into under these circumstances, that the ■ jury very easily could have misconstrued tbe rights of tbe defendant.

Tbe law regarding defense of a habitation, or tbe place where one is living, is well stated in Wharton’s Criminal Law and Procedure, Anderson, Yol. 1, sec. 220, thus:

“When an assault on a dwelling and an attempted forcible entry are made under such circumstances as to create a reasonable apprehension that it is the design *639

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Bluebook (online)
371 S.W.2d 441, 212 Tenn. 633, 16 McCanless 633, 1963 Tenn. LEXIS 453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morrison-v-state-tenn-1963.