Appellant was convicted of perjury, and given five years in the penitentiary. Hence this appeal. The grand jury of Hill County were examining witnesses to ascertain whether or not one W.C. Richardson had committed a rape upon the body of Mrs. Isabel Butler, wife of appellant, G.T. Butler. The appellant, G.T. Butler, was a witness before the grand jury, and testified in regard to this matter; swearing that W.C. Richardson, on or about the 31st day of August, 1894, submitted a proposition, through George Dameron, to pay to him, the said G.T. Butler, the sum of $5, if he, the said G.T. Butler, would drop the matter of charging him, the said W.C. Richardson, with rape upon Isabel Butler, wife of said G.T. Butler, and say no more about it. This statement was assigned as perjury. The first question arising is whether the statement is material to the matter pending before the grand jury, relating to the rape. If Richardson had been on trial for the rape, and in fact had made such a proposition, we are of opinion that it would have been competent testimony. The proposition may have been prompted by two motives or objects — one through fear of a conviction of rape, if tried therefor; the other through a desire to suppress all such matters, and prevent them from being publicly exposed in the courts of the country. If the jury took the first view as to the motive prompting the proposition, then they might have considered it as a circumstance against the accused, Richardson, to be construed in connection with all the facts in the case. We are of opinion that the statement was material, and upon which perjury could be assigned. Now, to constitute perjury, the statement made must not only be false, but the party making it must know it to be so. If the witness testified under a honest mistake or misapprehension, and believed what he testified to be true, a conviction cannot be had, though the statement be false. See, Byrnes v. Byrnes,
Reversed and Remanded.
