DocketNumber: No. 13835.
Citation Numbers: 55 P.2d 1330, 98 Colo. 306, 1936 Colo. LEXIS 291
Judges: Young, Holland
Filed Date: 2/10/1936
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff in error, defendant below, was tried and convicted of perjury in the district court of Pueblo county and sentenced to the penitentiary for a term not less than one year nor more than 18 months.
Defendant, with his brother, operated a restaurant in Denver, Colorado. They had in their service as a waitress, one Helen Lombardi, who, with Emma Lou Batcha, was charged in the district court of Pueblo county with having committed the crime of aggravated robbery in that county on August 20, 1934. One of the defenses was an alibi. In that case plaintiff in error, Papas, testified for defendant Lombardi that she was in Denver working in his restaurant on the day the robbery was alleged to have been committed in Pueblo county. He was asked on cross-examination if he had not stated in substance to three officers, who he admitted were in his place of business in Denver on August 21, 1934, that Helen Lombardi was not in his restaurant all day on August 20,1934. He denied that he had made such statement to them. All the officers testified that he did make the statement at the time and place mentioned. Clearly the fact of such statement having been made, if it was so made, was material to impeach his testimony given on the trial of Helen Lombardi to the effect that she was in Denver at work in his restaurant on the day she was
In Thompson v. People, 26 Colo. 496, 59 Pac. 51, we held, that to be material to the issue the matter need not be on the primary issue raised by the plea or involved in the case, and we quoted with approval in that case the following from Dilcher v. State, 39 Ohio State, 130: “A witness may be guilty of perjury, not only by swearing corruptly and falsely to. the fact which is immediately in issue, but also to any material circumstance which legitimately tends to prove or disprove such fact; or to any circumstance which has the effect to strengthen and corroborate the testimony upon the main fact.”
Having determined that perjury may be predicated on such false testimony, given with knowledge of its falsity, two things necessary to the disposition of this case remain for determination: 1. Is the information
The information, omitting the formal parts, was as follows : “* * * that G-eorge Papas on or about the thirteenth day of October, A. D. 1934, within the county of Pueblo, state of Colorado, did then and there before Division B of the district court of the Tenth Judicial District of the state of Colorado, sitting within and for the county of Pueblo, state of Colorado, the Honorable John H. Voorhees, one of the judges of said court, presiding in a certain criminal case and prosecution coming on to be heard wherein the people of the state of Colorado were plaintiff and Emma Lou Batcha, alias Emma Lang, alias Mildred Phillips, and Helen Lombardi, alias Sylvia Stover, were defendants upon a certain issue therein between the people of the state of Colorado and the said Emma Lou Batcha, alias Emma Lang, alias Mildred Phillips, and Helen Lombardi, alias Sylvia Stover, of which said cause said court had full jurisdiction, and which was then and there tried by a jury in that behalf, duly sworn between the parties aforesaid, upon which trial the said G-eorge Papas then and there was cited as a witness for and on behalf of the said defendants, and was then and there duly sworn before the said Honorable John H. Voorhees, judge of the said court as aforesaid, by E. P. Nichols, the clerk of said district court, that the evidence which the said George Papas should give to the court then and there and to the jury so sworn as aforesaid, touching the matters in question in said cause wherein the people of the state of Colorado were plaintiff and Emma Lou Batcha, alias Emma Lang, alias Mildred Phillips, and Helen Lombardi, alias Sylvia Stover, were defendants, should be the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth, he, the said E. P. Nichols, as clerk of said district court aforesaid, then and there having full power and lawful authority to administer said oath to the said George Papas in that behalf, and at and upon
1. “That said * * * Information does not state what matter was judicially pending, and does not state or specify the alleged public offense theretofore being investigated in this court, and wherein and during which, the defendant is charged in this Information with corruptly violating an oath administered to him in said prior proceeding. ’ ’
2. “That the allegations contained in said Information are conclusions and not averments of fact.”
3. “That the # * * Information does not allege that the defendant testified to facts as being true, but which when he thus testified, he knew to be false. ’ ’
4. “That it appears from the allegations of the Information that the defendant made contradictory statements while not under oath from statements in said (information) alleged to constitute the assigned perjury, and that in this respect the said (information) wholly fails to allege the materiality and applicability of such alleged contradictory statement to the assigned perjury herein.”
Defendant contends that in the particulars specified the information does not comply with sections 6776 and 6779, O. L. 1921, which are as follows:
“6776. Every person having taken a lawful oath or made affirmation in any judicial proceeding, or in any other matter where by law an oath or affirmation is required, who shall swear or affirm wilfully, corruptly and falsely in a matter material to the issue or point in question, or shall suborn any other person to swear or affirm as aforesaid, shall be deemed guilty of perjury or subornation of perjury, as the case may be, and upon conviction thereof shall be punished by confinement in the peni*312 tentiary for a term not less than one year nor more than fourteen years. ’ ’
“6779'. In every indictment for perjury or subornation of perjury it shall be sufficient to set forth the substance of the offense charged upon the defendant, and before what court or authority the oath or affirmation was taken, averring such court or authority to have had full power to administer the same, together with the proper averment or averments to falsify the matter or matters wherein the perjury is assigned, without setting forth any part of the record or proceedings either in law or equity, other than as aforesaid, and without setting forth the commission or authority of the court, or other authority before whom the perjury was committed, or the form of the oath or affirmation or the manner of administering the same.”
A comparison of the foregoing information and the information in the case of Thompson v. People, supra, makes it clear that the district attorney, in all essential particulars, followed the form of the information approved in the Thompson case, which was attacked on the ground, “First, that the information is fatally defective in matters of substance. * * * In support of the first ground it is contended that the information is defective because it does not appear, either by express averment or a statement of facts from which it might be presumed, that the district court of El Paso county had jurisdiction of the case in the trial of which the perjury is alleged to have been committed; and because it does not set forth in what manner the testimony of the defendant was material to the issue. ’ ’ There was set forth in substance the same objection as is made by defendant in this case under 1 and 2, supra. On this question our statements in that case are equally applicable to the case at bar and dispose of defendant’s said objections 1 and 2. We said: “While it is true that the information does not contain an express averment that the district court of El Paso county had jurisdiction of the case in which the alleged
As to the third objection, that “the * * # Information does not allege that the defendant testified to facts as being true, hut which when he thus testified, he knew to he false,” it is sufficient to say that a reading of the information itself furnishes a complete answer. Stripped of all nonessentials, the information charges that whether the defendant had made a certain statement, (a) became and was material to the issue and point in question in a certain trial; (b) that on the trial defendant swore that he did not make the statement; (c) that defendant did in fact make the statement. It is further stated in the very language of the statute, section 6776, O. L. 1921, that the defendant feloniously, “wilfully, corruptly, and falsely” swore that he did not make such statement to the persons at the time and under the conditions charged.
In Williams v. People, 26 Colo. 272, 57 Pac. 701, which was a case in which the defendant was convicted of the crime of perjury, our court used the following language: “Among other essential elements of the crime of perjury under our statute (Gen. Stats. 1883, sec. 787; 1 Mills’ Ann. Stats, sec. 1270) [Now section 6776, C. L. 1921] which, of course, must he set out in an information, is
In the instant case the district attorney has done exactly what the district attorney in thé Williams case was criticized by this court for not doing. The information charges that the defendant “feloniously, wilfully, corruptly and falsely” swore that he did not make the statement and then charges that he did make the statement, and concludes with the further allegation “all of which he, the said George Papas, well knew.” With these allegations in the information, it is not conceivable that the defendant was not advised that he was charged with swearing falsely that a certain fact was true, with knowledge of its falsity. To hold otherwise requires so “skillful an elimination of the obvious” that it would not be attempted except by one versed in the technicalities and evasions of the criminal law.
The fourth objection, “That it appears from the allegations of the information that the defendant made contradictory statements while not under oath from statements in said information alleged to constitute the assigned perjury, and that in this respect the said information wholly fails to allege the materiality and applicability of such alleged contradictory statement to the assigned perjury herein,” is based on a misconception of the charge contained in the information. The charge is that the defendant, knowing that he had told the officers that Helen Lombardi was absent from Denver on a certain date, “feloniously, wilfully, corruptly and falsely” swore that he had not told them she was absent on that date. It was not the fact of her presence in, or absence from, Denver that was material to the issue, but what the defendant had said about her presence or absence that was material to the point in question, which was his credibility as a witness. If she was in Denver on the date in question and on her trial he swore truthfully that she
In the Thompson case, we said: “That on a trial for perjury, the question of the materiality of the testimony is one of law for the court.” Prior to trial it is sufficient if materiality appear in the information in either of two ways: (a) By a setting forth of so much of the testimony or by a recital of such facts that the court can say as a matter of law that it was material, (b) By a direct averment that it was material, as in the instant case, where it is stated in the language of the statute (See. 6776, C. L. 1921, supra) that “it [the testimony] then and there became and was material to said issue and point in question between the parties.”
Section 7062, O. L. 1921, provides: “Every indictment or accusation of the grand jury shall be deemed sufficiently technical and correct which states the offense in the terms and language of this Code.” If this language means anything it must mean that a charge so worded that it is “sufficiently technical and correct,” also sufficiently sets forth the substance of the offense. To hold otherwise would be an absurdity. If an indictment is “correct” when it charges in the words of the statute, then it must contain the substance of the offense. Section 6779, O. L. 1921, supra, reads in part: “In every indictment for perjury * * * it shall be sufficient to set forth the substance of the offense charged.” We hold therefore that the materiality of the testimony charged to be perjured appears by averment.
The analysis we have made of the issue involved disposes of the contentions made by defendant that the evidence was not sufficient to support the conviction. The
Defendant relies for a reversal on our holding in the case of Treece v. People, 96 Colo. 32, 40 P. (2d) 233. A reading of the opinion in that case discloses an attempt to harmonize it with the holding in the Thompson case, rather than a specific intention to overrule it. Statements are made by the court in the majority opinion in the Treece case which, taken as announcements of general propositions of law, unrelated to the specific facts of that case, have the effect of overruling the Thompson case. The strong dissenting opinion of Mr. Justice Butler, concurred in by Justices Burke and Campbell, shows that they considered it as announcing a doctrine contrary to that of the Thompson case. The Treece case involved an alleged perjury in testimony given before a grand jury and therefore is distinguishable from the Thompson case and from the case here under consideration. The distinction should be pointed out, since it appears to have been overlooked. It will be observed that in the instant case and in the Thompson case it was set out in the information that the testimony was given in the trial of a certain criminal case in a certain court in which the people were plaintiffs and certain named parties were defendants, and that the matter was material to the issue involved in each case. In the Thompson case it was held
For the foregoing reason the Treece case is distinguishable from the Thompson case and from the instant case. The general statements contained in the Treece case, which appear to have the effect of overruling the Thompson case, should be held, and we do hold them, strictly applicable to the specific facts of the Treece case, and not the announcement of general principles having the effect of overruling our holding in the Thompson case. Sound logic, as well as our holding in the Thomp
The judgment is affirmed.
For the reasons stated in the foregoing opinion and those stated in the dissenting opinion in Treece v. People, 96 Colo. 32, 40 Pac. (2d) 233, Mr. Justice Butler concurs in the affirmance of the judgment.
Mr. Justice Hilliaed and Me. Justice Holland dissent.