Rowan v. State

369 S.W.2d 543, 212 Tenn. 224, 16 McCanless 224, 1963 Tenn. LEXIS 417
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 369 S.W.2d 543 (Rowan 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
Rowan v. State, 369 S.W.2d 543, 212 Tenn. 224, 16 McCanless 224, 1963 Tenn. LEXIS 417 (Tenn. 1963).

Opinion

Mr. Justice White

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The plaintiff in error, defendant, was indicted upon a charge that on the 21st day of April, 1962, she did unlawfully, wilfully, feloniously, deliberately, premeditatedly, maliciously, and of her malice aforethought, assault Randall Humphrey with gun with intent at the time to kill and murder the said Randall Humphrey.

Upon the trial of the case the jury found her guilty of an assault with intent to commit voluntary manslaughter and sentenced her to serve not more than one year and one day in the State Penitentiary.

*226 Tire State has agreed that the sentence shonld he modified so as to sentence her to the minimum fixed by law of not less than one year in the State Penitentiary.

The defendant made a motion for a new trial in due course and upon consideration thereof the same was overruled and from that action the plaintiff in error has perfected an appeal, and assigns several errors.

Assignment of Error number one is to the effect that the defendant should have been given a continuance because of her physical condition, and Assignment number two is to the effect that the District Attorney General conducted himself improperly ■ in his argument óf the case, both of which have been • abandoned because the record in nowise supports such assignments. ■ • .

Likewise, no argument is made in support of the insistence that the evidence preponderates against the verdict and in favor of the innocence of the accused. The jury having determined the facts and resolved all conflicts in the evidence in favor of the State, as indicated by their verdict, this assignment of error is not well taken. Hargrove v. State, 199 Tenn. 25, 281 S.W.2d 692; Cooper v. State, 123 Tenn. 37, 138 S.W. 826.

Before disposing of the other assignments we think it necessary to make a brief, statement of the facts as they appear to us from our examination of the record.

The prosecutor Humphrey and his friend, Kincaid, were returning from a trip to the mountains to their respective homes in Blount County when they stopped at an unnamed place on the highway, where dancing is one source of entertainment. At this place they met the defendant and a girl friend of hers, and from there they *227 went to another place known as “441” to get some sandwiches. They then went to the home of the girl friend. From there Humphrey took Kincaid and the defendant to a cabin ont on the Walland Highway, which the witness recalled had the name “Willow Groves” where they were left to spend the night.

On the following morning Humphrey went back and picked them np and there was some misunderstanding" about some money which the defendant claimed was taken from her pocketbook by Kincaid. At that time she took a pistol from her pocketbook, apparently intending to use it, but the same was taken away from her by Kincaid and the bullets extracted therefrom. The defendant then accused Humphrey of taking her money, which he denied.

Thereafter, the three of them got in Humphrey’s car and came back into the City of Maryville and stopped near a taxicab station. They then became separated and the two men went to a restaurant to eat breakfast. They had been there for a short time only when the defendant came in and sat down beside Kincaid, and apparently had breakfast also.

After the three of them had finished they' started to leave the place by way of the back door, Humphrey leading the way, the defendant in the second place, and Kin-caid bringing up the rear. Humphrey had stepped only a few feet out of the building when he heard a shot and then felt it hit him in the back. He said:

“She shot twice, but the first one hit me in the side. Then, as I turned; after I felt the bullet hit me, I turned, and the second one hit me in the center of the back. And it came around my rib cage, came out in under my arm, came to the point of the skin. When the second came *228 around like this (indicating), well, I was turning, I was looking back towards the defendant and Kincaid had grabbed her.

“When Kincaid had her by the arm, she had the pistol in her hand. He, Kincaid, took his other hand and reached up and took the pistol out of her hand. When he got the pistol, he turned and asked me how bad I was hurt. And at that time, she turned and ran up the steps and back through the Sandwich Shop. And Kincaid started after her. Then he turned and ran back where I was at, and said he would take me to the hospital. ’ ’

Humphrey said that it was a .22 caliber pistol and that when he turned around to see who had shot him that she, the defendant, had it, the gun, in her hand and that Kincaid took it out of her hand.

Humphrey said that the defendant was not drinking at that time, but that she had been drinking the night before. We imagine that all four of them had been drinking. Humphrey remained in the hospital for about a week.

Humphrey was asked if he knew why she shot him and he replied:

“No Sir, the only thing was just the argument over the money. Said someone had took her money.

“Q. And you hadn’t been with her during the night there at the cabin then?

“A. No Sir.”

The prosecutor admitted that he had been convicted of larceny and when asked how many times, he said, “I don’t know.” He also had been convicted of public drunkenness on several occasions.

*229 When pressed on cross-examination about whether or not he actually knew who shot him, he made this statement:

“Well, no I couldn’t exactly say that she shot me because I didn’t see her. But what I was saying is that when I turned, I seen the pistol in her hand. ’ ’

This must have seemed to the jury, as it seems to us, a rather strong circumstance that the defendant shot the prosecutor.

Kincaid testified that he spent the night with the defendant in the cabin aforesaid, and that on the following morning they engaged in an argument about some money, and then about a pistol which she was supposed to have had in her pocketbook. She finally took the pistol from her pocketbook and said to Kincaid, “I want my money.” The pistol was taken away from her by Kincaid once and given back to her, and when taken away the second time, the shells were extracted therefrom and given back to her.

He then relates their return trip to Maryville and the fact that they had breakfast at the Sandwich Shop, and corroborates the testimony of Humphrey about leaving the restaurant through the back door, Humphrey leading the way with the defendant second, and Kincaid last. He said that he heard shots from the gun and then saw that Sue had the gun in her hand. He took it away from her and then took Humphrey to the hospital.

About two days after the shooting, the defendant was arrested by Policemen Boring and Phillips. They found her on Brick Mill Road in a honeysuckle patch, and at that time she had a large butcher knife in her hand.

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Bluebook (online)
369 S.W.2d 543, 212 Tenn. 224, 16 McCanless 224, 1963 Tenn. LEXIS 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rowan-v-state-tenn-1963.