State v. Collins
State v. Collins
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
Defendant is convicted of killing one William J. Edens. He was found guilty of murder in the second •degree, and sentenced to fifteen years in the penitentiary, in accordance with the verdict of the jury; and has appealed in error to this court.
It is first urged that the verdict is not sustained by the testimony. The rule in such cases is, that after a verdict, and refusal to grant a new trial by the trial judge, the presumption of innocence made by our law in favor of an accused party is gone, and in order to a reversal by this court, a decided or clear preponderance of testimony against the verdict must appear in the record.
No such preponderance is found in this case. There is some decided conflict between the testimony ■of the witness for the State, who saw the shooting, and two witnesses on the part of the defense, who were likewise near enough to see the transaction. But one of these witnesses is totally discredited as unworthy of belief, and the other so weakened by the attack made on him, as well to justify the jury in disregarding his - testimony on this ground alone. The facts proven as to the location of the wounds on the body of the deceased corroborate the statements of the State’s witness.
It is next insisted the court erred in not allowing a physician, Dr. Jones, to be examined as an
An affidavit is tendered on the motion for a new trial, showing that a knife had been found in a field in the direction deceased went after he was shot, which might have inflicted a number of wounds found on defendant after the struggle. There is nothing in this. There could be, and was no dispute about deceased having had a knife. The serious cuts on the person of defendant involved this necessarily, or some other sharp instrument. Affidavits also were tendered tending to show that a juror named Turner had said, in a conversation 'with one Collins, substantially, that defendant would be hung.
This not very decided expression of opinion is denied by the juror, and he swears he had no bias against the prisoner, or any opinion of the case, when sworn, or at any time, except such as was generated by the testimony heard on the trial. Both parties are shown to have been reputable men. The circuit judge, who was the trier of this question, had better knowledge of the witnesses, with far better means of deciding on the weight of what they deposed to, than we can have. We see nothing in the affidavits
Upon the whole case we see no reversible erroi, and think the verdict, to say the least of it, is the legitimate legal result of the case as presented in the record, and the judgment must be affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- State of Tennessee v. Claiborne Collins
- Status
- Published