Sneed v. State

423 S.W.2d 857, 221 Tenn. 6, 25 McCanless 6, 1968 Tenn. LEXIS 512
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 8, 1968
StatusPublished
Cited by161 cases

This text of 423 S.W.2d 857 (Sneed 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
Sneed v. State, 423 S.W.2d 857, 221 Tenn. 6, 25 McCanless 6, 1968 Tenn. LEXIS 512 (Tenn. 1968).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Humphreys

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Woodrow Sneed, John Loyd Rector, Jr., and Jackie M. West were indicted by the Rhea County Grand Jury for armed robbery. Rector and West pleaded guilty, but Sneed pleaded not guilty. Represented by retained counsel he was then tried, convicted of armed robbery, and sentenced to serve ten years and one day in the State Penitentiary. Upon his affidavit of indigency he was furnished with a bill of exceptions and court appointed *9 counsel for this appeal; the same counsel he had retained for his trial.'

Sneed has appealed to this Court assigning1 a number of errors which make the points:

1. That the Court should not have allowed evidence to be introduced with respect to a rifle, identified by the proof as having been used by Sneed in the course of the robbery, because it came into the possession of the State by. an unconstitutional search and seizure;

2. Because the circumstances of the arraignment of the three defendants and the acceptance of the plea of guilty of Sneed’s co-defendants jeopardized Sneed’s constitutional rights without need or justification;

3. That the Court should have ordered a severance of Sneed’s case from that of the other two defendants;

4. That the court should have required the State to furnish a copy of the psychiatric report on Sneed, made after he had been observed and examined at Central State Hospital over a period of several weeks;

5. That the court erred in not requiring the district attorney-general to furnish counsel copies of statements made by defendant and co-defendents when they were interviewed by officers in the local jail; or to require them to present the names of the persons who' were present, a sufficient time before trial to allow Sneed to prepare his case;

6. That there is.no evidence of Sneed’s guilt, and such as there is preponderates in his favor.

The only evidence in the case is that introduced by the State, and it is to the effect that on the early morning of *10 November 16, 1965, Sneed, along with Johnny Rector, entered the Dayton Truck Stop, a restaurant, located near Dayton, in Rhea County, Tennessee. Sneed was armed with a pump rifle and Rector had a sawed-off shotgun. They were positively identified by Mrs. Arvie Sexton, who had no doubt as to their identity, and was unshaken in regard thereto by cross-examination. Immediately upon entering, Sneed and Rector pointed their guns at those present and ordered them to lie down on the floor. All complied except Mrs. Sexton, who was ordered by Sneed to open the cash register, from which he removed all of the paper currency, amounting to approximately $35.00. While Sneed was arguing with Mrs. Sexton about opening other drawers of the cash register, which she could not open, a Mr. Harris and a Mr. Ballard drove up in front of the truck stop. Rector went out the front door, holding his shotgun at a ready position so as to warn off or intimidate Harris and Ballard, while Sneed, noticing Rector’s absence and the presence of the parties mentioned at the front of the restaurant, went into the kitchen, broke out a window, and escaped. While Sneed and Rector were in the restaurant, both fired their weapons; one, evidently Rector, shooting the telephone off the wall, and the other, Sneed, firing his gun so as to leave several bullet holes and spent cartridge cases on the floor.

West’s involvement in the crime was that he drove the car in which Rector left the scene.

On November 18, after warrants had been sworn out for the three parties, Ballard, who identified himself as police commissioner of Dayton, and Flinton Travis (evidently a police officer), were notified by radio that Sneed wa s at a local hospital. They went there, but were unable *11 to apprehend Mm. While there, Ballard, who had the number of Sneed’s car and knew the kind of car he was driving, saw it sitting in front of the hospital. At that time they had a warrant for Sneed’s arrest. The car was parked in front of the hospital in an area provided for public parking. Ballard looked in the car to see if anybody was in it. When he looked in, he was standing outside of the car, beside it, and he saw a pump rifle. The car door on the opposite side was open, so Ballard opened the door on his side and took possession of the rifle, which he turned over to one Ed Walker, a T.B.I. agent, after taking the rifle’s serial number.

The rifle, together with several discharged .22 caliber cartridge hulls, picked up in the restaurant immediately after the robbery and the shooting, were turned over to the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation.

Ballard testified that the man he observed in the restaurant with the .22 rifle was the same size and build as Sneed; and, that while he could not identify the rifle he removed from Sneed’s car as being the rifle in the hands of the party he saw in the restaurant, the rifle was about the same length and like that rifle in the sense that most rifles of that kind are about the same length and size.

A Tennessee Bureau of Investigation agent, whose expert qualifications were conceded by the defense, positively identified the spent .22 cartridge hulls picked up in the restaurant as having been fired from the rifle removed by Ballard from Sneed’s car.

As to all of the assignments going to the evidence, and its sufficiency, these are overruled as it is obvious from our recitation of the facts that there is sufficient evidence of Sneed’s guilt to sustain the conviction.

*12 The strongest argument of the defense on the evidence is that the court should not have allowed the rifle to he introduced in evidence as it was gotten by an illegal search and seizure in violation of Sneed’s constitutional rights. The argument is, under the authority of Blankenship v. State, 219 Tenn. 355, 410 S.W.2d 159 (1966), that it would he impossible for this Court to say the evidence with respect to the rifle was not taken into consideration by the jury in reaching a verdict, and so the verdict cannot be sustained under the harmless error statute.

The State, on authority of Bromley v. State, 203 Tenn. 194, 310 S.W.2d 432; and Ellis v. State, 211 Tenn. 321, 364 S.W.2d 925, concedes the removal of the rifle from defendant’s car was the result of an illegal search, but argues that there is enough evidence without the rifle evidence to sustain the conviction.

If we were to agree with the State that the search and the obtaining of the rifle thereby was illegal, we would have to reverse the case and remand it for a new trial. As, certainly, the rifle evidence was some of the strongest evidence of Sneed’s guilt introduced at the trial.

However, we are compelled to disagree with the State’s position. Bromley v. State and Ellis v. State do not require such a holding on our part.

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Bluebook (online)
423 S.W.2d 857, 221 Tenn. 6, 25 McCanless 6, 1968 Tenn. LEXIS 512, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sneed-v-state-tenn-1968.