State v. Tansimore

71 A.2d 169, 3 N.J. 516, 1950 N.J. LEXIS 298
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJanuary 23, 1950
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 71 A.2d 169 (State v. Tansimore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Tansimore, 71 A.2d 169, 3 N.J. 516, 1950 N.J. LEXIS 298 (N.J. 1950).

Opinions

[520]*520The opinion of the court was delivered by

Wachenfeld, J.

The appellant appeals from a conviction of murder in the first degree. The trial jury not having returned a recommendation of life imprisonment, the death penalty was imposed under the statute.

The fatal shooting occurred on Sandford Avenue in the City of Newark in the early morning of September 4, 1948. The defendant does not deny the shooting of Nettie Waters, which was abundantly proven, but asserts he had no recollection of it and contends if he is guilty of any offense, it is only murder in the second degree or manslaughter.

Buford Tansimore is fifty-two years old. He lived in Newark and then moved to East Orange, where he first met Nettie Waters early in 1936. They went around together for three or four months, became intimate, occupied the same bedroom and this arrangement continued even after the deceased's daughter and her baby moved into the apartment. The baby was later taken to the defendant's mother's home in Virginia and he contributed toward her support.

The parties continued to live together up to October, 1946. The defendant was a good provider. He purchased furniture and many things for the home and bought clothes, dresses, fur coats and a limited amount of jewelry for the deceased.

The defendant's health was not of the best and he was confined to the Beth Israel Hospital in 1939 to undergo a surgical operation for a lung abscess.

In 1943 disagreements cropped up between the parties and, as -a result of a conversation with a friend of his, the defendant began to follow the deceased and found her going with another man. This occurred on a number of occasions-and ultimately an altercation took place between the defendant and a man named Downer in which blows were exchanged. The deceased promised reformation, admitting she had been on familiar terms with Downer and unfaithful to the defendant. This, according to his story, had a most depressing and upsetting effect upon him, causing him to lose his appetite and become extremely nervous and destroying his ability to work [521]*521for about three and a half months. During this period he was taken care of by the deceased’s daughter.

In 1944 Tansimore and the Waters woman purchased a house in East Orange, both contributing, and she lived there until September, 1948. In 1945 the defendant went into the general contracting business but in 1946 Downer again appeared upon the scene and proved -to be the same disturbing element. The defendant’s health was again adversely affected and despite the pleas of the deceased he moved elsewhere. There were a number of distressing incidents and she was accused of stealing money, which resulted in complaints to the local police department, but .despite these difficulties the defendant and the deceased saw each other daily. She, in the meantime, attempted to persuade him to forget their differences and resume living together. She repaid certain sums of money to him, which does not seem to be disputed. The intimate relationship continued up to the fatal day.

Early in September the defendant made inquiry of the deceased’s daughter as to where she and her mother were going over Labor Day and was informed they would not accompany him on his contemplated trip to Virginia as they were going to Uorth Carolina and she thought her mother was going there with one Arthur Hall. When he met the deceased he repeated his invitation with respect to the Labor Day trip, without avail.

On September 3rd the defendant drank quite heavily and again visited the deceased and asked whether she would go to Virginia with him, which she refused to do, saying that if she wasn’t good enough for the defendant to live with, then she wasn’t good enough to go to Virginia with him.

That night he went to the house of Eowlett, a friend of his, brought some whiskey with him and drank to a considerable extent. He told Eowlett he wanted to trail his girl friend because she was going away and Eowlett agreed to accompany him with his car on this errand. The defendant drove his own automobile to the garage, picked up a revolver and some shells and put the gun inside his shirt where it was not visible. Eowlett first drove to the deceased’s place of employ[522]*522ment and found it closed. They then went to the deceased’s home but her car was not there so they journeyed on to her garage and finally located her car on Olcott Street facing Central Avenue.

They secured and imbibed in more liquor and then the defendant slept while his friend watched the deceased’s car until one A. m. The defendant felt sick and expressed his intention to go home but was persuaded by Rowlett to take another nap. He was awakened later and informed that people were coming out of the house. He saw tire deceased cross Olcott Street with five other people carrying some baggage.

Rowlett and the defendant followed the deceased’s car and after some time the defendant told Rowlett to close in, which he did, by cutting off her car and forcing it to stop. The defendant got out, walked back to the deceased’s car, while Rowlett drove on to the next intersecting street, where he waited. In a moment he heard shots. Then the defendant returned, opened the door and got into the car. When asked as to what happened, the defendant said, “Oh, nothing happened. I just wanted to see—I only done that to scare the people.” He told Rowlett to take him home.

As a matter of fact, when Tansimore left Rowlett’s car, he walked swiftly to the decedent’s car, had his hand on his belt and demanded, “Everybody get out.” Mocile Lassiter and the decedent both got out of the car and stepped on the sidewalk and as they did the shooting began. Six shots were discharged. There was no conversation between the defendant and the decedent excepting the order to get out of the ear.

The deceased was wounded by five or six bullets, all of them entering either from the side or from the back. One wound was in front and near the lobe of the left ear surrounded by considerable powder smudge. This bullet entered the skull, passing backward and upward, penetrating the brain, and was classified as fatal. The second bullet passed through the left arm, entered the chest on the left side and continued to cross the chest in a slightly forward direction, piercing the heart after passing through the right lung. This wound was also fatal. The third wound was below the arm pit in the [523]*523right chest, while the fourth was in the back, the bullet going through her skirt slightly to the left of the mid-sacral line. It penetrated the intestines and was also fatal. . The fifth bullet was in the back of the head. It took an upward direction. There was also a wound called a 'defense wound between the index and the little fingers of the left hand.

There was testimony that the bullets extracted from the decedent’s body were fired from a gun found on the defendant at the time of his arrest.

The defendant claimed on the night in question he followed the deceased simply to determine whether she was being good and he carried the loaded gun for protection. He denied memory of the killing although he told in great detail everything up to the moment of it and said the deceased struck him in the mouth and from that point on he remembered nothing until he found himself in his Cadillac automobile in New Brunswick on the way to Yirginia.

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Bluebook (online)
71 A.2d 169, 3 N.J. 516, 1950 N.J. LEXIS 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-tansimore-nj-1950.