Tullis v. State

257 S.W. 380, 162 Ark. 116, 1924 Ark. LEXIS 148
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 21, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 257 S.W. 380 (Tullis v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tullis v. State, 257 S.W. 380, 162 Ark. 116, 1924 Ark. LEXIS 148 (Ark. 1924).

Opinion

Hart, J.

Elmer Tullis was indicted for murder in the first degree, charged to have been committed by killing Jim Norwood by shooting him with a pistol, in the town of Mineral Springs, Howard County, Ark. He was tried before a jury and convicted of murder in the second degree, his punishment being fixed at fifteen years in the State Penitentiary. To reverse the judgment of conviction against him, the defendant has duly prosecuted an appeal to this court.

According’ to the evidence adduced by the State, Jim Norwood came into the store of T. P. Dillard, at Mineral Springs, Howard County, Ark., on the afternoon of Saturday, the seventh day of April, 1923, and took a seat on the counter, about the middle of the store. About four o’clock in the afternoon the defendant, Elmer Tullis, came to the back door of the store, and called Jim Norwood, out behind .the store. In a few minutes after Norwopd went out of the back door, the persons in the store heard a gun fire. Then Jim Norwood'came running through the store, with Elmer Tullis running after him, about two or three feet behind him. Tullis was snapping his pistol at Norwood. Norwood was crying, “Oh, don’t shoot me!” The pistol fired once while they were going through the store, and the shot went into the stairway about the middle of the store. They then ran out oí the store, and another shot was fired. This shot struck an old negro who was in the street. Norwood continued running, and ran through another store, and Tullis kept close behind' 'him, snapping, his pistol at him. Norwood then fell, and died in fifteen or twenty minutes.

The town marshal heard the shots, and ran to the scene of the killing. Tullis told him that he had shot Jim-Norwood. He said that Jim Norwood had got a lidense to marry his daughter, and that he objected to it. He said that he demanded the license from Norwood, and, when he did that, Norwood ran his hand in his bosom, and he shot him.

Other -witnesses for the State testified that Norwood was running, with his hands up, and that Tullis laughed after he had killed. Norwood.

The father of Norwood said that he had had a conversation with Tullis some weeks before the killing, and that Tullis remarked to him that if ever a man tried to marry his daughter he would kill him.

Another witness testified that he had a conversation with Tullis, about three weeks before the killing, and tliat Tullis told him that, before he would let Jim Nor-wood marry his daughter, he would kill-. him, even though he went to the electric chair in fifteen minutes.

In the application for a license to marry Jewell Tullis, Jim Norwood gave his own age as 19 and Jewell Tullis’ age as 15 years.

The defendant was a witness for himself. According to his testimony, he had lived in Howard County nearly all of his life, and was a farmer. He had a wife and six children living. Jewell Tullis was Ms oldest child, and was fourteen years old at the time he shot Jim Norwood. About a month before the defendant shot Norwood he found out that he was courting his daughter. Norwood had been married before, and his wife had been dead something like a year. The defendant was informed that she had died on account of neglect. He objected to Jim Norwood’s courting Ms daughter, and told him that his little girl was too young to keep company with any one. He used all the means in Ms power to keep Norwood from courting his daughter. Within a week before the killing two persons had told him that Norwood had threatened to kill him if he did .not let him marry his daughter. The defendant sent an order to the county clerk, directing him not to issue a marriage license to Jim Norwood and Jewell Tullis. On the day of the killing Norwood passed the house of the defendant, in a wagon, going to Mineral Springs. The defendant got on the wagon and rode a short distance with Norwood. He told Norwood that he had heard that he was fixing to run away with his daughter and marry her the next day. Norwood denied this, and said that they had never thought about marrying. The defendant told Norwood that his little girl was too young to keep company with any one. Norwood replied that, if the defendant objected to her keeping company with him, he would stop, and never write to her again. The defendant then g*ot off the wagon and went home. A neighbor came by later in the day and told him that Nor-wood had already got a license to marry his daughter. The defendant then spoke to his daughter about it, and asked her if she was going to marry Jim Norwood the next day. She said “Papa, Jim Norwood said he was going to kill you if I did not marry him, and I don’t want to marry him. He pulled a gun out of his pocket and says, ‘If you don’t marry me I am going to kill your daddy.” The defendant then hitched .a horse to his buggy and went to Mineral Springs. He saw Jim Norwood’s team back of Dillard’s store, and went into the store and saw Jim Norwood sitting on the counter. He told Nor-wood that he wanted to talk to him, and asked him to go out back of the store. He told Norwood that he heard that he had bought a license to marry his girl. Norwood replied, “I have not got a license, but I will get you.” At the same time Norwood stuck his hand in his bosom like he was going to get his gun, and the defendant said that he did not know what happened from then on. He did not know whether he followed Norwood or not. He remembered nothing more until after the whole transaction was ended, and he found himself up stairs, looking out of a window of a room.

A brother of the defendant and two other witnesses testified that, within a week before the killing, Jim Nor-wood had told them that he was going to have Jewell Tullis or kill Elmer Tullis. Another witness testified lliat, just after the shooting, Tullis snapped his pistol at him because he tried to stop Mm; that the defendant was jerking, and laughed an unnatural laugh, and appeared to be insane.

Several physicians testified as expert witnesses. It was their opinion that Elmer Tullis was suffering from paranoia and was insane at the time of the killing. He had a delusion that Norwood’s first wife had died from neglect, and that Ms daughter would die in the same way if she married Jim Norwood.

The evidence for the State is sufficient to warrant the verdict -of the jury.

The main reliance of counsel for the defendant for a reversal of the judgment is that the trial court erred in admitting the testimony of 'Beatrice Norwood, to contradict the testimony of Jewell Tullis on a collateral issue. It appears that Jewell Tullis was introduced by the defendant, and testified that she told Jim Norwood that she had decided not to marry him, and that he reached in his pocket and pulled out a gun, saying, “If you don’t marry me I will kill Elmer Tullis, your daddy.-” She told her father about this threat on the day of the killing, before it -occurred.

-On cross-examination she was asked if she did not show Beatrice Norwood, a sister of Jim Norwood, a pistol hanging on the wall at her father’s house, and tell her that it was the pistol with which her father was going to kill Jim Norwood. She denied having told -this to Beatrice Norwood.

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Related

Dillard v. State
543 S.W.2d 925 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1976)
Odom v. State
533 S.W.2d 514 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1976)
Martin v. State
527 S.W.2d 903 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1975)
Ederington v. State
428 S.W.2d 271 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1968)
Ark. State Highway Comm. v. Blakeley
329 S.W.2d 158 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1959)
Amos v. State
189 S.W.2d 611 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1945)
Bacquie v. State
285 S.W. 18 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1926)
Perkins v. State
271 S.W. 326 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
257 S.W. 380, 162 Ark. 116, 1924 Ark. LEXIS 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tullis-v-state-ark-1924.