The plaintiff in error was convicted under an indictment which, under section 126 of the Penal Code (Comp. St. § 10296), charged him in two counts with subornation of perjury in the execution of certain supersedeas bonds. For the reversal of the judgment he contends, first, that the indictment failed to allege that the persons who were suborned knew at the time when they were suborned, or at the time of giving their testimony, that they were committing the crime of perjury.
The indictment, however, charged in the first count that the plaintiff in error willfully, knowingly, unlawfully, and feloniously procured and suborned Ella Green and Ivy B. Jividen willfully and contrary to their oath to state and subscribe in said supersedeas bond a certain false and untrue material statement that they and each of them were worth the sum of $25,250, whieh statement they did not believe to be true, and knew to be untrue, and that at the time of the subornation the plaintiff in error well knew that the aforesaid statement was a false and untrue statement, and well knew that said sureties did not believe the same to be true. Elsewhere in the count it is alleged that the plaintiff in error suborned Ella Green and Ivy B. Jividen to state and subscribe in said supersedeas bond a certain false and untrue material statement, and that he knew that the statement was a false and untrue material statement, and that the proposed sureties then and there well knew that each surety was not worth to exceed $2,000 and $5,000 respectively.
In the second count, in addition to allegations similar to those contained in the first, it is charged that the plaintiff in error did knowingly and feloniously procure and instigate and suborn Ella Green and Ivy B. Jividen to state under oath that the properties described in the supersedeas bond referred to therein were worth the sum of $35,-000 and $60,000, respectively; that the said plaintiff in error, the said Ella Green, and said Ivy B. Jividen, each of them, then and there well knew that the said statements were material statements, and that they, and each of them, then and there well knew that the said material statements were false and untrue.
We do not find that either count is far tally defective. “To sustain an indictment for subornation of perjury, it is necessary that perjury shall have been in faet committed; that the testimony of the witness claimed to have been suborned shall have been false; that it shall have been given by him willfully and corruptly, knowing it to be false; that defendant shall have known or believed that the testimony given would be false; that he shall have known or believed the witness would willfully and corruptly so testify; and that he shall have induced or procured the witness to give such false testimony.” 30 Cyc. 1423; United States v. Dennee,
Nor is the question of the validity of the judgment against the plaintiff in error affected by the faet that the separate indictment against Ivy B. Jividen for perjury was dismissed. The grounds of the dismissal do not appear in the record, and the mere faet that the indictment was dismissed is not inconsistent with the guilt of the plaintiff in error upon either count of the indictment against him.
Nor do we find merit in the contention that the indictment is defective for its failure to set forth in hssc verba the superse-
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deas bond, or support for that proposition in any of tbe eases cited by tbe plaintiff in error. On tbe contrary, the decisions hold that the rule which requires the setting out of an entire instrument or its tenor in an indictment in the federal courts is limited mainly, if not wholly, to eases of forgery, counterfeiting, and sending threatening letters. United States v. Heinze (C. C.)
No merit is found in the contention that error was committed in placing the plaintiff in error on trial by reason of the fact that, at the time he was under conviction and undergoing sentence in the United States penitentiary at Leavenworth, Kan. The record shows that, in order that he might go to trial in the court - below, he filed therein a petition for a writ of habeas corpus ad prosequendem, that the petition was granted, and that pursuant thereto he was brought at his own request, and not at the instance of the prosecution,1 for arraignment, pleading, and trial in the court below, in whose territorial jurisdiction the offense was alleged to have been committed. No objection to the jurisdiction was made in the court below, and the question is here presented for the first time. That the objection was one which the accused could -waive, and that he did waive it, is too clear to require discussion.
Nor is merit found in the contention that it was error to deny the application of the plaintiff in error for subpranas to certain witnesses at the expense of the United States. The denial of the application was the ex- ■ ercise of the trial court’s discretion in a matter which is not subject to review by an appellate court. Goldsby v. United States,
The judgment of the court below imposed upon the plaintiff in error imprisonment in the United States penitentiary at Leavenworth, Kan., on each of the two counts, for the term of four years, “sentences to begin to run upon the expiration of the sentence now being served by the defendant.” It is contended that the sentence was erroneous, in that the trial court had no authority to suspend or postpone the operation of a sentence for a definite or indefinite period of time, but authority only to impose a sentence to operate from the date of the arrival of the accused at the penitentiary, or from the date of the judgment, citing Ex parte United States,
Miner v. United States (C. C. A.)
The judgment is affirmed.
