Nelson v. State

292 S.W.2d 727, 200 Tenn. 462, 4 McCanless 462, 1956 Tenn. LEXIS 430
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 20, 1956
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 292 S.W.2d 727 (Nelson 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
Nelson v. State, 292 S.W.2d 727, 200 Tenn. 462, 4 McCanless 462, 1956 Tenn. LEXIS 430 (Tenn. 1956).

Opinion

*464 Mr. Justice Swepston

delivered the opinion of the Court.

These two men were indicted for the violation of Section 10895.1 et seq. of the 1950 Code Supplement, T.C.A. 39-1401 et seq., which sections make it a felony to damage or destroy real or personal property by means of explosives. They were tried jointly by consent on two separate indictments, were found guilty and their sentence was fixed at not more than 3 years upon each indictment, from which they have appealed. A third person, Craig, was indicted and tried as an accessory before the fact but was acquitted by the jury.

The indictments arose out of two occurrences in May, 1955, during a strike of certain employees of the Southern Bell Telephone Company. The defendants were former employees who were on strike. Early on the morning of May 5th two connection boxes located on telephone poles 8 or 9 feet above the ground were dynamited. One of them was on the Asheville Highway in Knox County nearby Ohilhowee School. The other was on Johnson Street in the Lonsdale Section of Knoxville. As a result of the first the Telephone Company property and the school property were damaged. As a result of the other explosion the property of the Telephone Company and that of an individual were damaged. The first explosion occurred near the school at about 4:15 a.m. and the second one on Johnson Street at about 5:00 a.m. About 15 minutes thereafter an officer arrived and detected the odor of dynamite in the air. Another witness, Beal, was an employee of a filling station located on the Asheville Highway, about a half mile west of the school building. Shortly before the explosion two men whom he later identified as being the defendants stopped at his station *465 and bought some gas. They were driving a Chevrolet car. After obtaining the gasoline, they drove east toward Chilhowee School and about 15 minutes later witness heard an explosion. He went out to the highway at once and very shortly thereafter noticed this same automobile, which had stopped at the station a short while before, as it passed him going west at a very high rate of speed. He immediately telephoned a man named Atchley, a friend of his who operated a station still further west, so that the latter might be on the lookout so as to obtain the license number of the car. Atchley went out and when the car passed at a high rate of speed he was only able to obtain the prefix number, which was 33, denoting Eoane County.

The county officer, above mentioned, who arrived there shortly after the explosion and smelled the dynamite, saw two men drive up to the scene near the Chilhowee School and they answered the description that had been given him of the men in the automobile. He therefore arrested them, took them to the county jail and notified the District Attorney General. After talking with both of these suspects the Attorney General remanded them to jail with instructions to let no one talk to them.

The authorities then made a searching examination of the Chilhowee School vicinity and it was found that the telephone pole on which the box had been located bore marks of having been climbed recently with linemen’s climbing irons, and in one of the holes made by these irons a piece of leather was found. In the automobile which was the property of the defendant Hatton, there was found a hacksaw and a pair of climbing irons. Later on a knife was taken from Nelson. One blade of this knife had some black gummy material on it. On further *466 examination of the shoes of Hatton this piece of leather seemed to match a torn place in them. He was then required to remove his clothes for examination.

The authorities semed to be pursuing the investigation very rapidly because all this occurred on the same day of the explosion. The above mentioned material, a piece of leather and a hacksaw, Hatton’s clothes and Nelson’s knife, was sent to the laboratory of the F. B. I., together with some wood from the pole on which this box was located. Later that day a piece of fuse found at the scene of this explosion was also sent to the F.B.I.

The tests made by the F. B. I. disclosed that this piece of leather had come from Hatton’s shoes, that in his trousers were found slivers of wood of the same composition as the telephone pole on which the box was located and that the knife and hacksaw blade both contained fragments of fuse of the same type as that found at the scene.

In the afternoon of the same day the Attorney General confronted Nelson with the above mentioned evidence and about 3:45 p.m. Nelson signed a confession in which he admitted his guilt. The next morning about 9:00 o’clock when Hatton was confronted with the evidence of guilt and with Nelson’s confession he confessed to his part in the transaction. As a part of Hatton’s confession he disclosed that he had hidden some fuse and dynamite near another school in Knoxville, and thereafter the officers with Hatton’s assistance found this material at that location.

Neither defendant took the stand to testify before the jury, contenting themselves only with testifying before *467 the judge in resisting the admissibility of the confessions.

The defendants have filed several assignments of error, but they have argued only two propositions as a ground for reversal. One of these grounds involves the construction of our case of Wynn v. State, 181 Tenn. 325, 181 S.W.2d 332, and counsel presents the question in this form: “After the trial court has conducted a preliminary hearing in the absence of the jury upon the admissibility of a confession, and has ruled that such confession is admissible, can the same evidence and all other circumstances relating to the procuring of the confession be introduced before the jury to aid the jury in their determination of the weight to be given the confession?”

It appears that the court and counsel were in agreement that the only thing that the jury can consider is whether or not the accused made the confession and, if so, whether it is true, that is, stated another way, the question of admissibility is a question for the court alone to decide preliminarily, and that having held that the same was admissible because voluntary, it then remained for the jury to determine its weight and credibility. However, the court was of the opinion, and so ruled, that, since under the rule in Tennessee the question of voluntariness is for the court alone, none of the evidence given on the preliminary examination before the judge relating to hope or fear, or promise or threat is admissible before the jury.

With deference to the above trial judge we believe that he was in error in this ruling. In Wynn v. State, supra, it will be noticed that after the judge had heard the evidence and ruled that the confession was voluntary and therefore admissible the opinion states that the accused parties then testified before the jury that they *468 were abused and mistreated by the officers, which the officers testified in denial of such accusation.

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Bluebook (online)
292 S.W.2d 727, 200 Tenn. 462, 4 McCanless 462, 1956 Tenn. LEXIS 430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nelson-v-state-tenn-1956.