Presley v. State

30 S.W.2d 231, 161 Tenn. 310, 8 Smith & H. 310, 1929 Tenn. LEXIS 60
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 19, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 30 S.W.2d 231 (Presley 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
Presley v. State, 30 S.W.2d 231, 161 Tenn. 310, 8 Smith & H. 310, 1929 Tenn. LEXIS 60 (Tenn. 1930).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Swiggart

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The plaintiffs in error were jointly indicted, tried and convicted for an assault with intent to commit murder in the first degree. The punishment assessed against J. D. Presley is confinement in the penitentiary for not less than three years nor more than eleven years. The punishment assessed against Herman Presley is the minimum term of three years, fixed by law for the offense of an assault with intent to commit murder in the first degree.

The contention urged in support of the appeal of J. D. Presley is that the evidence fails to sustain a conviction for assault with intent to commit murder in the first degree, but that his offense is a lesser degree of felonious assault, not involving premeditation or deliberation.

The victim of the assault was the wife of J. E>. Presley. She had a short time before instituted an action for divorce. The assault was committed about 9 P. M. Prom an hour in the late afternoon until Mrs. Presley left her place of employment, about 8:30 P. M., the two plaintiffs in error were lurking near-by, as if to watch the movements of Mrs. Presley, and when she left, they followed her to the Confederate Memorial Park, a few *313 blocks distant. There they came upon, her engaged in conversation with R. E. Stamps, standing near or against an ornamental cannon. Three witnesses, other than Mrs. Presley, testified that there was nothing in the conduct or attitude of Mrs. Presley to suggest or indicate any misconduct, and the evidence of these witnesses, accepted by the jury and trial judge, is that'J. ]>. Presley made an unprovoked and unjustifiable assault upon his wife and upon Stamps. The evidence of the State is that when, in answer to his inquiry, Presley was informed that Stamps was offering employment to Mrs. Presley, he first struck her and then assaulted Stamps with a knife; that after he had knocked Stamps down and had stabbed him, he pursued- his wife,- who was fleeing, and, after tripping her and throwing her to the ground, he stabbed her several times in the left side and arm; and desisted from this assault only at the interference and intervention of the witness Brown.

During the assault, Herman Presley, a younger brother (J. D. Presley was about thirty-four years of age, while Herman was nineteen years of age), was present aiding and abetting his brother by restraining the bystanders, particularly -the witness Taylor, from interfering in what he termed “a family matter.”

The evidence of the two Presleys, supported by the testimony of James B. Leach, a person whom J. D. Presley met in jail, is that Stamps and Mrs. Presley were engaged in an act of gross indecency when J. D. Presley came upon them; that Stamps first assaulted Presley with a knife; and that Mrs. Presley drew a pistol on him, which he took from her. A fourth witness, Branch Goss, fails to support the plaintiffs in error in this defense.

Stamps and Mrs. Presley were in plain sight of several persons from the time they entered the park, and *314 the testimony of the plaintiffs in error is not only inherently unreasonable, but is contradicted by credible evidence, which the jury and trial judge have accepted.

Whether J. D. Presley is guilty of a deliberate and premeditated assault with intent to kill, constituting murder in the first degree, depends upon whether his resort to violence was the result of motive or passion created in his mind after he came in contact with his wife and Stamps, or whether he had previously formed the design and intent to make the assault if and when he came upon his wife in the park in company with another man. This was essentially a question or inference of fact for the jury and trial judge. According* to the evidence of the State, there was nothing to excite or provoke the assault except the presence of the parties, and we think the evidence justified the inference made by the jury that this plaintiff in error followed his wife with the intent and purpose to do her harm, at least in the. event he should find her with another man. There is no preponderance of evidence against this finding.

“If the design to kill was formed with deliberation and premeditation, it is immaterial that defendant was in a passion or excited when the design was carried into effect.” Leonard v. State, 155 Tenn., 325, 338.

The record indicates that the jury had no difficulty in reaching* the conclusion that the assault committed by J. D. Presley was accompanied by such deliberation and premeditation that it constituted an assault with intent to commit murder in the first degree. The- case against Herman Presley was not so clear to them, and they propounded to the trial judge an inquiry: “Whether or not we can find Herman Presley gpilty of1 a different degree of crime than we might find J. D. Presley.”

*315 To this inquiry the trial judge responded as follows:

“The conrt charges you that you' are the sole judges of the guilt or innocence of the defendants and of the different degrees of crime heretofore defined and explained to you.”

This failure of the trial judge to respond definitely to the inquiry of the jury was the result of an admitted uncertainty on his part as to the correct answer. The same uncertainty confused the minds of the jury; and in their verdict finding Herman Presley guilty of an assault with intent to commit murder in the first degree, the jury not only assessed the minimum punishment against Herman Presley, but recommended that the mercy of the court he extended to him.

We not only think that Herman Presley was entitled to have the jury given an affirmative answer to their inquiry, hut that, since the charge as given failed to differentiate his status from that of his brother, and the jury had indicated confusion on the point, additional instructions should have been given to guide the jury in determining the degree of Herman Presley’s guilt.

In so far as the guilt of Herman Presley of some degree of an unlawful assault is concerned, there can be no question upon the proof but that he was present aiding and abetting his brother by preventing the interference of bystanders in behalf of Mrs. Presley.- The intervention and assistance of Herman Presley was rendered indisputably unlawful by the unlawfulness of the actions of J. D. Presley, in whose behalf the assistance was rendered. Johnson v. State, 125 Tenn., 425, 434-435, and cases there cited.

And if Herman Presley had knowledge of the fact that his brother had followed his wife with intent to as- *316 sanlt her, or to do her violence, and came with his brother to assist him and did assist him, his guilt as an aider and abetter is in the same degree as that of his brother in whose unlawful purpose and design he shared. Moody v. State, 46 Tenn. (6 Cold.), 299; Reagan v. State, 155 Tenn., 397.

In Riggs v. State, 43 Tenn. (3 Cold.), 85, this court noted the converse of the rule stated in Moody v. State, supra,

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Bluebook (online)
30 S.W.2d 231, 161 Tenn. 310, 8 Smith & H. 310, 1929 Tenn. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/presley-v-state-tenn-1930.