State of Tennessee v. Jewel Moses Bess

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 29, 2018
DocketM2017-01519-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Jewel Moses Bess (State of Tennessee v. Jewel Moses Bess) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of Tennessee v. Jewel Moses Bess, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

11/29/2018 IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE Assigned on Briefs August 14, 2018

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. JEWEL MOSES BESS

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Rutherford County No. F-67665 David M. Bragg, Judge ___________________________________

No. M2017-01519-CCA-R3-CD ___________________________________

A Rutherford County grand jury indicted the defendant, Jewel Moses Bess, with first degree murder for the death of his wife, the victim. Following trial, a jury found the defendant guilty as charged, and the trial court imposed a sentence of life imprisonment. On appeal, the defendant challenges the trial court’s evidentiary rulings allowing testimony of the victim’s intent to end their marriage and the defendant’s prior physical abuse of his son. After reviewing the record and considering the applicable law, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed

J. ROSS DYER, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which ROBERT W. WEDEMEYER and D. KELLY THOMAS, JR., JJ., joined.

J. Russell Nixon, Murfreesboro, Tennessee, for the appellant, Jewell Moses Bess.

Herbert H. Slatery III, Attorney General and Reporter; Alexander C. Vey, Assistant Attorney General; Jennings H. Jones, District Attorney General; and J. Paul Newman, William C. Whitesell, and Matthew Westmoreland, Assistant District Attorneys General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

Facts and Procedural History

On the evening of August 19, 1986, the defendant, Jewel Moses Bess,1 shot his wife, Deborah Sherfield Bess (“the victim”), in the head after an argument about the 1 The defendant is also referred to as Jewell Moses Bess, Mosses Bess, Moses Jewell Bess, and Moses Bess throughout the record. defendant’s infidelity. Although the shooting was originally ruled a suicide, several witnesses came forward in 2011, and the defendant was subsequently indicted for one count of first degree murder. Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-2-202 (1986). After a jury trial, the defendant was convicted of first degree murder and sentenced to life imprisonment. At trial, the State presented the following facts for the jury’s review.

The victim and the defendant were married in the spring of 1986. They had two daughters during their relationship, and each had three children from prior marriages. The defendant owned property in Rutherford County he referred to as “Moses Mountain,” where he frequently held parties. Drugs, alcohol, guns, and fighting were commonplace, even among the children.

Prior to her death, the victim began to express her dissatisfaction with her marriage to the defendant. The victim was the defendant’s “maid, his sex slave.” She was responsible for cleaning, cooking, and raising the children. In addition, the victim discovered the defendant was having an affair with a woman named Sandra Coleman, who often attended parties on “Moses Mountain.”

When Robin Croy, the victim’s friend, observed the victim tell the defendant that she was leaving him, the defendant responded, “b****, you will die before you take my kids.” Another day, Ms. Croy went with the victim to look for apartments. When they returned to “Moses Mountain,” the defendant “came flying out the door,” and “dragged the victim out [of the car] by the hair,” pulling her into the trailer. Ms. Croy refused to leave before verifying the victim was okay, and when she saw the victim ten minutes later, the side of the victim’s face was “swelled up” and it “looked like [there was] a handprint on her face.” Another of the victim’s friends, Joani Bush offered to let the victim stay with her because “[the victim] was physically scared of [the defendant].” Eventually, the victim decided to rent a trailer from her mother-in-law. However, when Ms. Croy and the victim began to move items into the new trailer, the defendant confronted them, threatening that he would hate to see Ms. Croy’s “daughter without a mother.” The victim also told her oldest daughter, Staci Morgan, that she was going to take all of the children with her when she left, including the defendant’s three sons.

During the summer of 1986, the victim began working at Cracker Barrel to buy the children new clothes for school and to save enough money to move out. She told her co-workers, Sue Burchell, Christine Creech, and Angela Faulk, that she planned to leave the defendant. After she told Ms. Burchell she was leaving the defendant, Ms. Burchell suggested the victim apply for Section 8 housing and food stamps to afford living on her own. The day before she died, the victim told Ms. Creech “she wasn’t happy. She was scared of her husband. She was going to go home and ask him for a divorce.” That same day, the victim told Ms. Faulk “she was going home to leave [the defendant].” -2- On the morning of August 19, 1986, the victim was “happy” and “normal” when she had coffee with her neighbor, Loretta Ewing. She then took the children to register for school and to pick up school clothes that had been placed on layaway. The victim later asked Michael Bess, the defendant’s oldest son, if he knew where the defendant’s gun was located. She wanted to shoot the tires on the defendant’s truck to prevent him from going to the bar. Mr. Bess, however, did not tell her where the gun was kept. The victim also told Mr. Bess it was “time for her to go” and “she was going to take [the children] with her.”

After dinner, Mr. Bess heard the defendant and the victim in their bedroom, arguing about the defendant’s infidelity. The victim told the defendant to “go back to the bar to [be with the defendant’s] whore,” Ms. Coleman. Mr. Bess, who was fifteen-years- old at the time, and his two younger brothers crept closer to the defendant’s bedroom to listen to the argument. Although there were no lights on in the bedroom, Mr. Bess could see what was happening due to a light from inside the closet. The defendant told the victim he was “going to f****** kill [her],” grabbing the victim by her hair and placing his .44 magnum under her chin. Although the victim was holding a bayonet in her hand, she did not raise it to defend herself. The victim lifted her other hand to push the gun away as the defendant pulled the trigger, and Mr. Bess saw a “blood cloud” as “[the victim’s] brains and stuff” filled the room. Mr. Bess then ran into the bedroom and grabbed his eighteen-month-old sister, lying on the bed in her mother’s blood. The defendant told Mr. Bess to go to Charles Ewing’s house and call 9-1-1. Jami Sherfield, the victim’s teenage daughter, was in bed when she heard the gunshot and went with her step-brothers to the Ewing’s house next door.

Ms. Ewing was standing outside her home when the children told her to call 9-1-1 because the victim had been shot. Charles Ewing and Mr. Bess then went back to the defendant’s home, where the defendant told Mr. Ewing that he “F’d up.” The men told Mr. Bess to wait outside for the police. However, Mr. Bess went back into the bedroom and saw the defendant and Mr. Ewing standing over the victim’s body, placing the gun in her hands. When they heard the police sirens, the defendant handed Mr. Ewing the bloody sheets from the bed, and Mr. Ewing returned to his home, telling Ms. Ewing to wash the sheets and his bloodied pants.

Glenn Morton was employed by the Rutherford County Sheriff’s Department in 1986. On the night of the shooting, he responded to a call at the defendant’s home at approximately 10:30 p.m. where he encountered the defendant standing on the front porch smoking a cigarette. The defendant had “chunks of human tissue and blood” stuck in his beard, and he told Officer Morton the victim had shot herself.

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State of Tennessee v. Jewel Moses Bess, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-jewel-moses-bess-tenncrimapp-2018.