179 A.D. 127 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1917
This court in deciding the appeal herein filed the following memorandum, viz.: “ Judgment of conviction and order reversed, and new trial ordered, upon the ground that the court erred in charging the jury, as a matter of law, that the testimony given by the defendant at the trial of the Barker case, recited in the indictment, was material, and because that question should have been left to the jury as a question of fact.”
From the remark of counsel upon the argument of the motion, it would appear that it is made upon the theory that we have in our such decision held in effect that upon the trial of a criminal perjury case the question of the materiality of the alleged perjurous statement is always a question of fact. While I am of that impression, our decision does not go to that extent. Upon this record it is a question in dispute whether or not, at the trial before the jury in the partition action of Barker v. Barker, in which the alleged perjurous statement by defendant in his testimony was made, as a witness for one of the defendants therein, there was really any issue as to the fact of the ceremonial marriage of the persons involved. At that trial the nominal issue was broad, viz.: “ Was the defendant, Estelle Dorgelch and the mother of the defendant Beatrice Arabelle Barker, then known as Estelle Whitney, married on or about May 1st, 1897, to Alphonsus Murtha or Murtaugh? ” But at the trial there was an admission by the parties against whom defendant was called of the.fact of a ceremonial marriage between said persons at that time, and the trial justice held and decided that it was immaterial that the parties to the same intended it to be a sham and not real, and, therefore, practically, upon such admission, directed the jury to answer the said question in the affirmative. Appellant’s counsel, therefore, claimed at the trial hereof, and here as well, that it should be held, as matter of law, that defendant’s said testimony was immaterial, as it tended only to prove what was not really at issue. It is manifest that such testimony tended merely to establish the identity of the parties to such ceremonial marriage, and that they treated it at the time as real and in earnest. The trial court at that trial, at least in the end, held that it was immaterial if they did not intend the ceremony to be real and binding, and that the fact of the ceremonial marriage was admitted. The learned counsel for the appellant here contended that such admission was made by the counsel for the opposing parties at that former trial in his very opening,
I am sensible that in People ex rel. Hegeman v. Corrigan (195 N. Y. 1) the opinion of the Court of Appeals, written by the then Chief Judge Cullen, declared broadly that the question “ whether in a prosecution for perjury the testimony, the falsity of which is charged, is material or not is a question of law for the court ” (p. 9). But in that case the converse of the question here was presented for determination, viz., whether or not the court should hold, as matter of law, that
Whatever theory may be adopted, it is clear that oiir reversal here proceeded solely upon a question of law, and that, therefore, the motion must be granted. The resettlement should be to the effect merely that the reversal was for error of law only. The motion, so far as it asks that the order should also be made to state that the facts have been examined and no error found therein, should be denied, as we did not reach an agreement upon the facts.
Jenks, P. J., Thomas, Mills and Blackmar, JJ., concurred; Putnam, J., not voting.
Motion granted, in accordance with opinion.