Toler v. State

260 S.W. 134, 152 Tenn. 1
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 6, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 260 S.W. 134 (Toler 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
Toler v. State, 260 S.W. 134, 152 Tenn. 1 (Tenn. 1923).

Opinion

Me. Justice Hall

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal in error by Calvin Toler, who will hereinafter be referred to as defendant, from a judgment of conviction rendered by the circuit court of Cheat-ham county, at its March term, 1923, of murder in the *3 second degree upon the body of one Ennis Harper, alleged to have been committed September 25, 1922. The judgment provides that defendant shall undergo confinement in the penitentiary for a term of not less than ten nor more than twenty years.

By the first assignment of error it is insisted that the evidence preponderates against the verdict and in favor of defendant’s innocence.

The alleged homicide was committed shortly after noon on the date above mentioned in a field in which the deceased was at work. Defendant and deceased were neighbors, and lived within one hundred yards of each other at the time of the tragedy in question. They had been friends for several years and on the morning before the killing occurred, that afternoon, and up until about an hour before the tragedy, defendant had assisted one Steve Hooper in cutting and piling tobacco in the field where deceased was afterwards killed, which was located about one-fourth of a mile from the homes of defendant and deceased. Defendant and deceased were engaged in assisting Steve Hooper in cutting and piling his tobacco, and when the noon hour arrived Hooper invited defendant to accompany him and deceased to his house for dinner; to this invitation defendant replied that he would have to go home to dinner, and left for his home, telling Hooper that he would be back that afternoon to further assist him in cutting and piling his to'bacco. The evidence is uncontroverted that when he left the tobacco patch at noon he and deceased were on perfectly friendly terms. The deceased was twenty-three years of age, married, and the father of two children. Defendant was forty-one years of age, married, and the *4 father of five children; among them was a young daugh-. ter, Jessie May, who lacked only a few days of being-sixteen years of age at the time of the alleged homicide. Defendant also had a yonnger daughter, Christine, who was nine years of age. Both of these daughters lived in defendant’s home and constituted a part of his family.

On his way home to dinner from the tobacco patch, defendant met his brother-in-law, Joe Pogus, who lived in the same neighborhood. Pogus told defendant that his (defendant’s) married daughter, Jerdie Garland, and her husband, Eugene Garland, knew something in regard to Ennis Harper (the deceased) and his daughter, Jessie May, that he ought to know, and that he ought to go and see them. Fogus further stated to defendant that if his daughter and son-in-law told him anything, then he (Fogus) would probably tell him something when he came back. Pogus says that defendant told him he would go and see Garland and his wife, and immediately left and went in the direction of where Garland and his wife were engaged in hauling hay on the Mat Hooper farm. Defendant says that upon receipt of this information from Pogus he did go to the barn where his son-in-law and daughter were unloading hay from a wagon into the barn. He says upon reaching the barn he asked his son-in-law: “What is that you know that Cap Harper don’t want you to tell me!” It appears that deceased was commonly called Cap.' His son-in-law replied, “Ask Jerdie” (referring to his wife and defendant’s daughter). Defendant then says that he asked his daughter Jerdie what it was. Defendant says that Jerdie then told him that on an occasion about two months previous when defendant, his wife, and all of his children except his daughter, *5 Jessie May, had gone on a visit to defendant’s father, and had left Jessie May to stay with his married daughter, Jerdie Garland, until the family returned home, that in the afternoon she sent Jessie May out into the field near deceased’s home to pick some blackberries, and that Jessie May stayed longer than she thought she ought to; that it was getting late, so she (Jerdie) went over into the field to find Jessie May and tell her to come home; that she went over into the field and around the edge of the hill, where the berries were to be found; that she went along between the corn rows, and when she got to the place where the berry patch was she saw Jessie May and deceased together; that Jessie May was lying down on the ground and deceased was on top of her in the act of violating her; that when she got within four or five steps of where deceased and Jessie May were that she asked, “What in the world is the matter with Jessie May?” That deceased replied, “nothing, she is just drunk. ’ ’ Mrs. Garland said that she told deceased that she was going to tell her father (defendant), and that deceased said, “If you do tell him, I will kill him;” that she took hold of Jessie May and lifted her from the ground and took her home and put her to bed; that she had to help Jessie May home by holding her, as she appeared to be drunk; that Jessie May told her the nest day that deceased persuaded her to take a drink of whisky out of a bottle which he had, he having come to where she was picking berries, after which she became dizzy; that she remembered deceased taking hold of her, and that was the last she remembered until she came to herself at her (Mrs. Garland’s) house; that she had not informed him of deceased’s conduct because she was *6 afraid the deceased would kill him; that the deceased had been to see her several times after the occurrence between him and Jessie May in the blackberry patch, and told her, and also her husband, that if they told him (defendant) he would kill defendant, and that defendant was not the only one he would kill. Mrs. Garland’s husband, in his testimony, corroborated defendant’s statement as to what Mrs. Garland told him. Mrs. Garland also testified that she made the statement above detailed to her father (defendant), and that it was true.

Defendant says that when his daughter told him what deceased had done it was a terrible shock to him; that he had never heard it before; that he thought the déceased was his friend, and had never suspicioned that he had mistreated his family in any way. Defendant also says that after his daughter Jerdie had told him what deceased had done to his daughter Jessie May, then his son-in-law, Eugene Garland, immediately told him that in August, after the occurrence between the deceased and Jessie May in July, he (Garland) went over to defendant’s house on an occasion when no other member of the family was at the house except defendant’s little daughter Christine; that when he got in front of defendant’s gate he heard Christine crying and calling her mother; that he went into the house as soon as he could, as he knew Christine’s mother was not at home, and when he entered the house he found that deceased had hold of Christine and seemed to be trying to throw her on the bed, and that Christine was crying and trying to get loose from the deceased. Defendant says that Garland told him that he asked the deceased what that meant, and that the deceased said that he was just teasing Christine, and then *7 left the house hurriedly. He says that Garland told him on this occasion that the deceased told him (Garland) that if he ever told him (defendant) what he had seen that he would kill defendant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
260 S.W. 134, 152 Tenn. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/toler-v-state-tenn-1923.