Porter v. State

151 S.W.2d 171, 177 Tenn. 515, 13 Beeler 515, 1941 Tenn. LEXIS 21
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMay 24, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 151 S.W.2d 171 (Porter 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
Porter v. State, 151 S.W.2d 171, 177 Tenn. 515, 13 Beeler 515, 1941 Tenn. LEXIS 21 (Tenn. 1941).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McKinney

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Lee Willie Porter and Carl Leonard Cole, referred to herein as defendants, have appealed to this Court from a *517 conviction for murder in the first degree, their punishment being fixed at death by electrocution.

While several errors have been assigned on behalf of defendants, upon the argument of the case in this Court counsel virtually conceded that they were properly convicted, but made an earnest appeal for a recommendation to the Governor for a commutation of punishment to life imprisonment, due to the ignorance, lack of opportunity for a normal development, and the youthfulness of the defendants.

Upon a careful reading of the record, we find that the defendants are clearly guilty, were ably represented by counsel, and were accorded a fair trial by an impartial jury.

Due to the gravity of the crime, we will briefly review the main facts. The offense for which the defendants were convicted was the murder of Grant Vernon on the night of August 9', 1940. The deceased was the night watchman at the extensive plant of the Coca Cola Bottling Work in Jackson, and had been so employed for some time. There were some six or seven stations on the premises, including one at the garage where the trucks of the Bottling Works were parked, and it was the duty of deceased to punch a time clock every hour at each of these stations.

The Bottling Works employed a number of salesmen who left the plant each morning in trucks loaded with Coca Cola for delivery to its customers. These salesmen returned in the late afternoon or early evening, checked in with the deceased,- and turned over the proceeds from sales to him, which he placed in the cash drawer in the office. This drawer was kept locked and deceased carried the key to it in one of his pockets. On the day in question one of the salesmen, Fred Milam, returned to the plant *518 at 5:10 P. M. and delivered to deceased $49.18 in cash. Another, Ed Stevenson, returned about 5:30 P. M. and turned over to deceased $136 in cash. A third salesman, Chester Butler, returned to the plant about eight o’clock and delivered his proceeds of sales to deceased in the sum of $133.50, including $8 in checks. Butler left the plant at nine-thirty-five. About five-thirty the nest morning deceased was discovered at the back end of the premises, near the rear of one of the trucks, seated on the ground. lie was unconscious and died about noon of that day without ever having regained consciousness. He had been struck in the head twice with some heavy instrument, which the attending physician testified caused his death. The keys of deceased had been taken from him and were found in the cash drawer from which about $300 in money had been taken. The holster in which deceased carried his pistol had been torn off and was lying-near him, as was his time clock. There were pools of blood on the ground. The premises of the Bottling-Works was inclosed with a wire fence 8 feet high. The gate through which the premises was entered was kept locked at night.

According to the confessions of defendants, they procured a heavy iron bar at Tannenbaum’s junk yard, 7% pounds in weight and 32 inches in length," climbed over this 8-foot fence, secreted themselves in or about the garage for the purpose of knocking deceased in the head and robbing him, and just after he punched his clock at the garage station struck him two blows with this iron bar, took his keys and pistol, entered the building and opened the cash drawer with these keys, extracted the money therefrom, left the building, threw the iron bar in the cemetery, located across the street from the Bottling Works, divided the money, and then separated. *519 Among the funda taken from tlie cash drawer were two packages of nickels which had been procured from a local bank and placed in the cash drawer in the paper in which they were wrapped by the bank. This paper bore the stamp of the Coca Cola Bottling Works.

In some way not definitely disclosed by the record suspicion was directed to Porter. It appears that his wife was spending a considerable amount of money, much more than her economic condition would justify. Also, the officers had information that Porter had lost some money in a crap game. In any event, Porter was arrested and carried to the city jail on the afternoon of August 10, 1940. At the time of his arrest Porter had $50 in money on liis person. Beginning about ten-thirty that night and continuing intermittently until four o’clock the next morning Porter was interrogated by the officers. At the hour last named Porter stated to the officers that he had seen his codefendant in the vicinity of the Coca Cola plant with some money sacks and that Cole had given him $10' not to tell on him. Shortly thereafter the officers accompanied Porter to the place where he lived where, under the floor of the coalhouse, Porter produced $38 in money, including the two packages of nickels referred to above. Prom this same hiding place Porter produced the 45-caliber pistol which was identified as the one that the Bottling Works had furnished the deceased. Porter then made a full confession, telling the officers where they had deposited the iron bar in the cemetery, and where it was discovered the next morning’ by the sexton of the cemetery. The sexton testified that he passed the exact spot where the bar was found late on the preceding afternoon and it was not there.

When Cole was arrested he strenuously denied his guilt, but when confronted with Porter, who repeated *520 the occurrences of the night of August 9, 1940, Cole likewise confessed. Both confessions were reduced to writing and verified by the defendants. Each, however, insisted that it was the other who inflicted the fatal blows with the iron bar.

Neither defendant testified in his own behalf.

From the foregoing it appears beyond any doubt that the defendants deliberately planned and executed this diabolical crime, and we are unable to find any extenuating or mitigating circumstances to relieve them of the punishment imposed by the jury. Both defendants are negroes.

At the time of the crime Porter was nearly nineteen years of age and was living with his wife about two and a half blocks from the Bottling Works. It appears that he was born out of wedlock, his reputed father having died in the penitentiary. lie only attended school a few months and was' considered a backward pupil. One witness testified that he was a waif upon the streets of Jackson. There is no testimony, however, that he did not know right from wrong, or did not possess sufficient mentality to realize the enormity of his crime.

The defendant Cole was twenty-two years of age when this crime was committed, lived with his wife, was an irregular employee of the Bottling Works, and was familiar with the manner and custom by which its business was conducted. There is no suggestion that Cole was subnormal or mentally deficient, and it is not unlikely that he planned and engineered this homicide and robbery. Both defendants had lived in Jackson all of their lives. So that, with respect to the facts, we see no basis for interfering with the verdict of the jury.

We think the confessions of the defendants were properly admitted in evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
151 S.W.2d 171, 177 Tenn. 515, 13 Beeler 515, 1941 Tenn. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/porter-v-state-tenn-1941.