48 So. 840 | Miss. | 1909
delivered the opinion of the court.
It was error in the court below to permit the state to show, by the testimony of-George Malone, Emma Speers, and Lillian Gardner, the different conversations had, in the absence o-f the appellant, between Bryant Lemon and these parties. This testimony had nothing to do with the guilt or innocence of this appellant on the charge perferred against him, and it could only have tended to- inflame the jury against him, by clouding the question of his guilt or innocence on this specific charge with incompetent testimony showing the disreputable conduct of Lemon, with which conduct this appellant is not shown to have any connection whatever. This- testimony is expressly condemned in the case of Brown v. State, 57 Miss. 424, a case of perjury.
It was also manifest error to allow the state, over the objection of the appellant, to prove that Bryant Lemon had fled, and introduce the judgment of forfeiture on his bond in the trial of this case for perjury. Lemon had been arrested, charged with robbery. Whether Lemon had fled or not had nothing to- do with the guilt or innocence of Saucier on this charge of perjury. The case of Pulpus v. State, 82 Miss. 555, 34 South. 2, settles this. See, also, 1 Wigmore on Evidence, p. 353, § 276, note “c,” and People v. Stanley, 47 Cal. 114, 17 Am. Rep. 401.
It was also error to give the first instruction for the state, which is in the following words: “The court instructs the jury, on behalf of the state, that if you believe from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant, Wallace Saucier, testified as a witness in the justice of the peace court before H. D. Moore, on the 27th day of August, 1908, on the trial of the case of the State of Mississippii against Bryant Lemon, charged with the robbery of S. E. Beleaise, and that said defendant, Saucier, was sworn by the said H. D. Moore, justice of the peace as aforesaid, to testify to the-truth in said matter, and that the said Saucier then and there, under said oath, did wilfully, corruptly, knowingly, and feloniously testify in said court in said cause that he, the said defendant, Saucier, was with the said
When the state asked the law applicable to this indictment for perjury, it should, in some of its charges, have told the jury that the assignment of perjury should be established by the testimony of two< witnesses, or one witness and corroborating circumstances. The quantum of proof required in perjury is well known, and somewhere in the state’s charges that quantum should be stated to be necessary. It is true it is stated in the ninth and eleventh charges for the defense; but, even if it could properly be said that these charges nine and eleven cured this omission in the first charge for the state, it nevertheless remains true that the state ought always, on a charge of perjury, somewhere in its own charges, to state the quantum of proof necessary, in order that the law of the case may be properly given. Suppose no instructions had been given for the defense on this subject; manifestly the case should be reversed for this erroneous charge number one in that attitude of the case. The charge number one for the state in this respect is therefore none the less erroneous. Whether, in view of the fact that the ninth and eleventh instructions were given, this omission in the first instruction for the state on this point would constitute reversible error of itself alone, it' 'is not necessary now to decide.
This instruction is erroneous in a second particular, which is. not cured by any instruction given for the defense, to wit: This first instruction left it to the jury to decide whether the assignment of perjury was a material matter in the case. This is expressly held error in Cothran v. State, 39 Miss. 541. See State v. Famnon, 158 Mo. 149, 59 S. W. 75, also. But this, also, we do not hold reversible error.
The true doctrine on this subject is very clearly stated in the
LEt is to be most especially observed, further, that the indictment in this case nowhere charges that the justice’s court was held on the 26th day of August. The allegation, so far as time is concerned, is merely, and only, that Saucier, the appellant,, committed the perjury on the 26th day of August. There is no allegation that the court was held on the 20th day of August. It is simply averred on this piont in the indictment that Wallace-Saucier, late of the county aforesaid, on the 26th day of August, A. D. 1908, at a term of the justice of the peace court held in the city of Gulfport, supervisor’s district 2, Harrison county,. Miss., and presided over by H. H. Moore, justice of the peace for said supervisor’s district, in said county and state, in said court of law, in case of the State of Mississippi against Bryant Lemon, charged with robbery, testified, etc. The “then and there” refer to the time of the alleged commission of the perjury by said Saucier, not to any time when the court was held. Besides all which, it is further to be observed that there is no particular term of court of a justice of the peace when suck court is held as a committing court. There is, therefore, not in this case any allegation as to the term of the justice of the-peace’s court being held at any particular time, and so no necessity for treating such description of the term of the court as one not to be contradicted by parol. In short, when the indictment is critically examined, it appears that the only point left to be
But for the many manifest errors which we have hereinbefore .pointed out the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.