194 P. 506 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1920
A jury convicted the appellant of the crime of perjury. He appeals upon the ground chiefly that the evidence is insufficient to convict. The indictment charges that the appellant testified falsely in making certain answers to questions propounded to him while being examined on voir dire as a prospective juror in a criminal case in which one Fuski was being tried for a felony. These questions and answers are as follows:
"Question: If you are chosen as a juror in this case, you will try this case solely upon the evidence produced in court and the instructions of the court?
"Answer: Yes, sir.
"Question: Nothing outside of the case, that is, outside of the evidence and instructions of the court will enter into your deliberations when you go to the jury-room?
"Answer: No, sir."
The appellant was not asked to state any fact as to the then present condition of his mind, nor, indeed, to state any fact of any kind; but only to declare under oath that he would try the case solely upon the evidence and the instructions of the court, and that he would not let anything outside of the case enter into his deliberations in the jury-room. His declaration to this effect was not more than his solemn oath that he would well and truly try the case on the evidence. His answers constitute, in effect, the usual oath administered to trial jurors. He merely swore or promised that he would keep his oath as a juror.
The second line consisted of the evidence given by certain fellow-jurors of appellant; and it becomes necessary to examine this second line of evidence to ascertain whether the testimony of any one of them, or of all taken together, is sufficient to establish the crime. We take it that to justify a conviction herein it must be established beyond a reasonable doubt by the testimony of these fellow jurors: (a) That appellant believed, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the party on trial was guilty, since otherwise, it would have been his duty to vote as he did for acquittal; (b) That he did not try the party solely on the evidence and instructions; and (c) That he knew when he was answering questions as a prospective juror that he would not try the case on the evidence and instructions.
A juror, Mr. Sturges, testified that the appellant said to him, while in the jury-room, that he believed Fuski to be guilty, but that he would not vote for a verdict of guilty. This falls very far short of showing that, at the beginning of the trial, he knew that he would not try the case on the evidence and instructions. It does not even show that, at the moment these admissions were made in the jury-room, he believed that Fuski should be convicted.
The law exacts from a juror very much more than a belief that an accused person is guilty. The law requires that this belief must be so strong that it amounts to a belief beyond a reasonable doubt, and that, if it falls short of this degree of certainty, the juror must vote for a verdict of not guilty. The appellant, in his admissions to the above-named juror, gave no intimation that he knew or believed from the beginning that Fuski was guilty. His entire opinion as to the guilt of Fuski may have grown up from disclosures made by witnesses during the progress of the trial. Two or three other jurors corroborated the testimony of the juror above named. Another juror, Mr. Bauer, testified that the appellant said in the jury-room: "that he thought it was a frame-up — there were others that ought to be convicted, the same as Fuski." The last clause of this admission is broad enough to warrant the inference that the appellant was convinced of the guilt of Fuski to *112 that degree that would demand a verdict of guilty. Still, it is coupled in the same sentence with a statement that is wholly inconsistent with the idea that he believed him guilty, since he expressed the belief that the prosecution was a "frame-up." But even this strong and unsavory statement is entirely consistent with innocence of the crime, since it does not relate back to the beginning of the trial. It does show a degree of moral obliquity rarely observed in the class of persons listed as jurors. But the appellant is not on trial for general moral delinquency. The charge is the commission of a specific act criminal in its nature, to wit, falsely stating that he would try the accused solely on the evidence and the instructions, knowing that he would not do so. He can, of course, be convicted of no other. At most, the testimony of these fellow-jurors generates a bare suspicion that the appellant is guilty of the specific act charged; but it falls far short of sustaining a legal inference to that effect. Perjury requires a higher measure of proof than any other crime known to the law, treason alone excepted. Any other crime may be established by the testimony of one witness who is entitled to full credit. Both perjury and treason require more than the testimony of one witness. And the charge against the appellant is much more difficult of proof than perjury cases in general. In the ordinary perjury case, the falsity of the oath may be shown by extraneous proof showing the existence or non-existence of the alleged fact; but in a case like this, where the very essence of guilt consists in misrepresenting the state of the offender's own mind, it is difficult to meet the demands of the law in showing the necessary mental condition. But the difficulty of showing this does not relieve courts and juries from the duty of requiring evidence that shows guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, and this reasonable doubt is not overcome by the testimony of a single witness, be he ever so truthful. [3] The evidence submitted to us on this appeal would not sustain a verdict against him even in a civil action, where the mere weight or balance of evidence governs, far less sustain the conclusion beyond a reasonable doubt.
After it is proved that the crime was committed by some person, then, and then only, may the omissions of the accused be used to show that he is the one committing it. Cases of the kind charged against the appellant are unique in this particular, that proof of the corpus delicti is so interwoven with proof of the identity of the person committing the offense that it is difficult to establish the first fact without also, at the same time establishing the other. In other words, since proof of the admissions of the appellant is not competent to establish the fact of the perjury, and since proof of the fact of the perjury must, in this particular case, show that the appellant is the person committing it, evidence of his admissions cannot do more than confirm other and basic proofs. These basic proofs are wholly wanting.
[4] The prosecution, doubtless recognizing and seeking to avoid this rule, offered in evidence in this case, the entire volume of evidence that was given in the case of the People v.Fuski,
Nor could this evidence in the Fuski case show, or tend to show, that the appellant intended from the beginning to vote for an acquittal.
This was the only evidence, apart from the admissions of the appellant, that was offered in the case. This leaves thecorpus delicti wholly unproved. It is not a case where the evidence on this point is weak. It is a case where it is wholly wanting.
[5] So many California cases hold that the corpus delicti
must be proved by evidence independently of admissions of the accused that it would be impracticable to refer to more than a few of them. In People v. Tapia,
Viewed from every angle it seems impossible to uphold the conviction. The judgment and order appealed from are reversed.
Hart, J., and Burnett, J., concurred.