8 Mass. 199 | Mass. | 1851
This action is founded on the Rev. Sts. c. 109, § 78. It is somewhat remarkable, that although a similar statute has been in force in this commonwealth for nearly sixty years, no case has before arisen which has directly called on this court to decide any question growing out of its provisions.
Several exceptions were taken to the rulings of the court at the trial, but by far the most important one relates to the instructions given to the jury as to the amount of evidence upon which they might rightfully find a verdict of guilty against the defendant. In the consideration of this question, it is quite obvious, that there is no rule or precedent directly applicable to the case. The cause of action is created by statute; it had no existence at common law. It therefore becomes necessary to seek out such analogies as may enable us to determine the important question presented for our con
In the first place, it is quite material to understand the precise nature of the action to which the defendant is called to answer. By reference to the statute, it will be found that it is a special action on the case, the gist of which is the false answer, under oath, of the defendant, knowingly and wilfully made in his examination on the trustee process. Upon the proof of this falsity, the right of the plaintiff to recover entirely depends, and if proved, the defendant is rendered liable to consequences, which are highly penal.
This being the nature of the action, it is important in the next place to consider the duties and obligations enforced by the statute on a person summoned as trustee in the original process. And it cannot be denied that in some respects the law fastens on him an onerous duty. Although he is commonly a mere depositary or stakeholder of the goods and effects of others, he is yet compelled to appear in a suit, in which he can be supposed to have no personal interest, and to disclose on oath the exact state and condition of his dealings and accounts with the principal defendant. The obligation thus imposed is not unirequently attended with serious difficulties and embarrassments. A trustee cannot always have the best means of making accurate answers. He may be unable to settle his accounts with the principal defendant, and may therefore be under the necessity of stating them without the aid of the party with whom he originally dealt, and without the best opportunities for accurate statement and precise adjustment. Under such circumstances a very honest man, through inadvertence or misapprehension, might make serious errors and misstatements in his answers. Besides ; his own statements, although conclusive on the rights of parties in the trustee process, may be contradicted by the principal defendant in the ulterior proceedings founded on the provisions of the statute on which this action is brought, so that it might happen, from misunderstanding or ill will on the part of the principal defendant, that his oath would be directly opposed in material particulars to the oath of the trustee.
By the well settled rules of law, there is a class of cases which do not come within the general principles of evidence, but which must be proved by a greater amount of testimony than is ordinarily required to establish a case in a court of justice. Whenever a false oath is the gist of the matter to be proved, or it becomes necessary to control the statement of a party who is compelled to answer under oath allegations made against him, something more than the testimony of a single witness is necessary to constitute legal proof. The reason for this rule is consonant to the plainest dictates of justice. The law attributes such force and effect to the oath of every man given in the course of judicial proceedings, that it cannot be overcome or outweighed, to Ms prejudice, by the simple, naked, unsupported oath of another person. In such cases there is oath against oath; the scale of evidence is exactly balanced, and something more is necessary to destroy the equilibrium, which must be done by other witnesses or corroborating testimony. So strictly was this rule formerly held, that in proof of the crime of perjury two witnesses were necessary; and although, by the course of modern decisions, this rule is now modified, it is still essential, that the oath of the opposing witness should be corroborated by independent evidence of such a character as clearly to turn the scale and overcome the oath of the defendant. United States v. Wood, 14 Pet. 440; Commonwealth v. Parker, 2 Cush. 212. Nor is the application of this rule confined, as was suggested in argument by the counsel for the plaintiff, to criminal cases. In an action of slander for accusing a party of perjury, in order to sustain the defence of justification on the ground
And so entirely does the same rule as to the amount of evidence to prove perjury apply to civil and criminal cases, that by the common law and practice in England it has long been held, that in an action for slander for charging the plaintiff with perjury, a verdict of a jury in favor of the defendant on issue joined on a special plea in justification, on the ground of the truth of the charge, is of itself equivalent to an indictment, and has the same effect as if found by the grand inquest, it being, in the pointed language of Buffer, J., " strong to show that what is said in a civil proceeding may be taken as the foundation of a criminal one.” Rex v. Jolliffe, 4 T. R 293. 1 Chit. Crim. Law, 165. And this furnishes us with a striking analogy to the case at the bar, because, by the statute, the same falsity, which would make the defendant liable civilly, would also subject him to punishment criminally.
The same principles of evidence apply with equal force and for like reasons to answers in chancery, in’regard to which the rule is well settled, that something more than the testimony of a single witness is necessary to establish any material fact alleged in the bill, which the defendant denies on oath, and without such corroborating evidence, the bill will be dismissed. Cook v. Jackson, 6 Ves. 40.
The rule of law thus recognized and established is so much in harmony with the spirit of English and American law, that the English statutes in relation to treasons (5 & 6 Edw. 6 c. 11, & 7 Wm. 3, c. 3, § 3,) the provisions of the constitution of the United States (Const. of U. S. art. 3, § 3,) and of our own statutes (Rev. Sts. c. 124, § 4,) requiring two witnesses to the same overt act, had their origin in the principle, that this testimony of one witness was insufficient to overcome the oath or duty of allegiance of the accused party.
Upon a careful consideration of the nature of this action, and of the principles of the law of evidence, which govern
One other exception was taken to the ruling of the judge, which it may be well to dispose of, inasmuch as the same question may arise at another trial. It appears, that the defendant made his answer, on the scire facias, under oath before any interrogatories were put to him, and that the matter charged as false in the plaintiff’s declaration in this action was contained in that answer. The defendant now contends, that although he made the answer on oath, yet he was not required so to do by the statute, and that he is only liable in this action for false statements made in answer to interrogatories. It is true, that the language of the statute is that he shall be liable for false statements in “ his examination on oath.” But if a party comes into court either in the original suit, or on scire facias, and voluntarily makes answers under oath, instead of filing his general answer or pleading to the action, which answers are material to the question of his liability as trustee, they constitute a part of his examination, and come within the clear meaning of the statute. By his own act the trustee waives all interrogatories, and it would be but a useless and idle ceremony to require them to be put. It is none the less an examination because voluntarily given, in