Crocke v. State
Crocke v. State
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
John Crocke was indicted in the Criminal Court of Shelby county for the murder of Lou Goodwin, convicted of murder in the second degree, and sentenced to fifteen years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary.
The first ground relied on for a reversal of the judgment is, that the Judge overruled the motion for a new trial, based upon the affidavit of defendant, dated January 3, 1873, that he was surprised by the testimony of E. W. Caldwell, the committing magistrate, who had detailed a confession made by defendant on the committing trial, and proposing to rebut his testimony by two witnesses, Col. W. L. Duff and J. P. Littell, who were present at the committing trial, and then present in court. The Judge held that defendant’s affidavit was insufficient in substance, and refused to hear the two witnesses. Defendant then moved the court to allow him to amend his affidavit so as to state specifically what he expected to prove by said two witnesses, which the court refused to do, and the two witnesses were not allowed to testify. To all of which defendant excepted, and prayed an appeal to the Supreme Court, which was. granted. Then follows in the bill of exceptions, in brackets, this entry: “But afterwards the court reconsidered its action, and said it would permit the
It appears that Lou Goodwin, the deceased, was a lewd woman, living in a house with two other lewd women, and that defendant was in the habit of visiting the house.
After her death she was examined by a physician,, who found on her head two wounds, one of slight character on the back of her head, and the other over the left eye, the bone being crushed in, from which the physician was of opinion she died of compression of the brain.
On the trial before the committing magistrate, the two lewd women referred to were examined as to the homicide, but on the trial in court they were not examined, it being proved by one of the State’s witnesses that they disappeared during the yellow fever epidemic, and their whereabouts since was unknown to him. It was not shown that any effort had been made to produce them on the trial.
There being no proof as to the killing before the jury, the State introduced the committing magistrate,, who testified as follows: “I committed the defendant to jail, and while I was writing the mittimus, or about the time I finished it, he, the defendant, remarked that he did strike her once or twice with a chair while they were drinking, but did not think he
Dunn, the officer, was examined in court by the State, but no question seems to have been asked him as to this statement of defendant detailed by the • committing magistrate.
It was to rebut the confession so proved by the committing magistrate, that the defendant asked leave of the court to have Col. Duff and Littell examined on his motion for a new trial. The materiality of the proof of the committing magistrate is obvious — it was, in fact, the only proof connecting the defendant with the killing. It was, therefore, of vital importance to defendant to rebut this proof, and this he proposed to do by the oral examination of two witnesses, who were present at the committing trial and then present in court.
But it may be said, that although the Judge erred in refusing to allow the affidavit to be amended, and
As we regard the error committed as fatal to the action of the court, in refusing to hear the testimony offered on the motion for a new trial, we deem it improper to examine the evidence further to determine whether it supports the verdict.
The judgment is reversed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.