Simmons v. State

281 S.W.2d 487, 198 Tenn. 587, 2 McCanless 587, 1955 Tenn. LEXIS 410
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMay 6, 1955
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 281 S.W.2d 487 (Simmons 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
Simmons v. State, 281 S.W.2d 487, 198 Tenn. 587, 2 McCanless 587, 1955 Tenn. LEXIS 410 (Tenn. 1955).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Burnett

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal is from a conviction of' possessing whisky wherein the plaintiff in error was fined $300' and given a six-month workhouse sentence.

*589 The State has made a motion:

“1. To strike the entire transcript and dismiss the appeal. This for the reason that the instrument purporting to be a transcript of the. record is no-wligre authenticated by the Clerk of the lower Court ■ as being a true and correct copy * * *.
“2. The instrument purporting to he a hill of exceptions, he stricken from the record. The order overruling the motion for a new trial is not dated. This order allowed sixty days for the filing of the hill of exceptions but in the state of the record it is impossible to determine when the sixty days commenced or expired. The signature of the trial judge to the hill of exceptions is not dated and it does not appear that the bill of exceptions was ever filed with the Clerk of the lower Court.”

To this motion the plaintiff in error has filed a statement of the Clerk of the Circuit Court accompanied with a certified copy of the verdict, motion for new trial, the ovenmling thereof which shows that the same was filed on March 5,1954 and that it was entered on the minutes of that date, that is, the motion for new trial was filed on March 5, 1954, it was overruled on the same date and the order overruling it was entered on the minutes of the court on the same date. This statement of the clerk of the court also shows that the original bill of exceptions contained the notation that:

“Filed March 30', 1954, Willie B. Joyner, Deputy Circuit Court Clerk.”

There is no certificate or showing by the Clerk nor is the transcript authenticated as a true and correct copy. Too, the signature of the trial judge to this purported hill of exceptions is not dated. With these exceptions, that is, these corrections of the transcript as are authorized by *590 the diminution of the record, and an act of the Legislature of 1955 regulating the authentication of a bill of exceptions the transcript of the bill of exceptions can be considered by us.

Frankly we dislike very much to get these transcripts wherein the bill of exceptions has not been properly authenticated or certified and thus we are required under the authorities of this State, of more than 100 years, to sustain a motion to dismiss the appeal with the exception of things that can be considered on the technical record. It is much easier for us in working up the case, and it is far preferable, to consider the case on the merits rather than on these technicalities. The latest case on the question is that of Wilson v. State, 197 Tenn. 17, 270 S. W. (2d) 340. This case cites some of the cases and particularly that of Burkett v. Burkett, 193 Tenn. 165, 245 S. W. (2d) 185 which has a very clear analysis of prior decisions dating back to Davis v. Jones, 40 Tenn. 603, setting forth controlling precedence for the conclusion that we are forced to reach of why we cannot consider a case on its merits. See also Hamilton v. Wolfe, 194 Tenn. 428, 250 S. W. (2d) 910. The motion of the State thus will have to be overruled.

A highway patrolman searched an automobile upon one of the State highways and found therein six cases of whisky. This search was made without a search warrant and of course when that was determined in the course of the trial upon motion of the defense the jury was excused and the highway patrolman interrogated at length on this question. The substance of his testimony was to the effect that a short time before he stopped this car of the plaintiff in error and searched it he had been stopped by an informer near the West End Station in the City of Huntingdon and told that a certain automobile, de *591 scribing it, would be traveling’ along tbis highway, where he was eventually detained and arrested and searched and six Gases of whisky found.

At this point the defense asked the highway patrolman the name of the informer. When the highway patrolman declined to give it in the first instance, and later that he did not know it, the defense moved to take the case from the jury because the patrolman refused to furnish the‘name of his informer. The basis of this motion was our case of Smith v. State, 169 Tenn. 633, 90 S. W. (2d) 523. This case was recently affirmed in Shields v. State, 197 Tenn. 83, 270 S. W. (2d) 367, on somewhat the reverse of the proposition to that in the Smith case. In other words in the Shields case the constable Shields was being prosecuted for shooting or an unlawful act in Blount County and part of his defense was that he had been informed that there was a felony about to be committed and when he was asked who his informer was the trial judge required him to give the name of his informer and it was under this that this Court then overruled one of Shields’ assignments of error on appeal in holding that the trial court was correct in requiring Shields to give the name of his informer. It so happened in the Smith case that this Court concluded the informant’s name was necessary so that he might be called to see if the officer’s information was reasonable.

It seems to us that the instant case is entirely different from either of those. In the ease now before us the highway patrolman testified that the man who had informed him was a resident of Carroll County and that this informant had previously given him information which had always been reliable. Of course this was objected to by the defense and a very interesting argument is made of why this evidence of previous information *592 should not be given. We must remember that the information thus elicited from the patrolman and the statements made here are all in tbe absence of the jury. Here the trial judge is investigating as to where the information came from and we think that if he determines from this investigation that the information furnished the officer upon which the arrest and search were made was from a reliable source which the officer was justified in believing that he thus may act upon such information. It seems.to us that the reason for the rule announced in the Smith case supra, is to permit an inquiry into the reasonableness of the ground of the officer’s belief that a felony is being committed. Thus when the trial judge has the slightest doubt or any doubt about the question he may require the informant’s name to be given so that the informant may be summoned and interrogated if it is necessary to do so to get at the reasonableness of his belief that a felony is about to be committed. Of course if the name of this informer is given this permits further inquiry into his reliability and gives the court adequate information upon which to base a conclusion about the matter. The Smith case, supra, does not say that it will be mandatory that the name of the informer be given in all cases where there is not a warrant but it is to the effect that the name of the informer may be required for such an inquiry.

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Bluebook (online)
281 S.W.2d 487, 198 Tenn. 587, 2 McCanless 587, 1955 Tenn. LEXIS 410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simmons-v-state-tenn-1955.