The trial and conviction were on an indictment for “the crime of an attempt to commit the crime of subornation of perjury.” Subornation of perjury is defined in section 105 .of the Penal Code as follows: “ A person who willfully procures or induces another to commit perjury, is guilty of subornation of perjury.” Section 34 of the Penal Code defines an attempt to commit a crime as follows: “ An act done with intent to commit a crime, and tending but failing to effect its commission, is an attempt to commit that crime,” and section 686 of the Penal Code provides
Section 97 of the Penal Code provides that irregularity in the administration of an oath is no defense to a prosecution for perjury, and section 98 provides that it is no defense to such a prosecution that the witness was incompetent to give the testimony or to make the deposition or certificate. Section 99 provides that it is no defense to the, prosecution for perjury that the defendant. did not .know the materiality of the false statement or that it did not in fact affect the proceeding in or for which it was made; and that it is sufficient that it was material and might have affected such proceeding. Section 100 of the Penal Code provides that the making of the deposition or certificate is deemed to be complete from the time when it is delivered by the defendant to any other person, with intent, that it be uttered or published as true.
It is charged in the indictment that the defendant committed thé crime on the 20th day.of July, 1908, by willfully and feloniously soliciting and instigating and attempting and endeavoring to suborn,
The only point presented by the appeal which requires consideration is the claim that the materiality of the testimony was not shown. It appears that an action was duly begun in the Supreme Court of this State by Helen K. Gould against her husband for a divorce upon the ground of adultery, by the service of a summons upon him on the 24th of June, 1908. The answer in the action was served on the twenty-seventh day of July thereafter, and in the meantime the complaint was served on the attorney for the defendant in the action, but on what day, whether before or after the twentieth day of July,-that being the day on which the crime is
It needs no further argument to show that th <s promotion of justice and carrying into effect the objects of the law require that a construction should be given to these statutes which will bring the acts done by the defendant within the palé of -the law, and it only remains. to be seen whether that may be done without departing from “ the fair import ” of the terms of these sections of the Penal Code. It will be observed that section 96, in defining perjury, does not provide in' express terms that the deposition or testimony must be material to the issues' as framed in an action or proceed-' ing. , It is sufficient that the deposition or testimony be knowingly false and that it relates to' “ any material matter.” It is significant also that the crime does not depend upon whether the party or witness making the deposition or giving the testimony knows it to be material, or whether he be- competent'to give- it, and it has been held that it is not essential that the evidence should be admissible under the issues as framed. (Reg. v. Philpotts, 5 Cox C. C. 363; Reg.
I am, therefore, of opinion that the conviction should be affirmed.
Ingraham, Houghton and Scott, JJ., concurred; McLaughlin, J., concurred in result.
Judgment affirmed..
