64 S.E. 591 | N.C. | 1909
The defendant was called upon to plead to the following bill of indictment:
"That B. S. Cline, of Catawba County, did willfully, unlawfully and feloniously commit perjury upon the trial of an action in a justice of the peace's court, before J. H. McLelland, in Catawba (855) County, wherein W. H. Marlow was plaintiff and B. S. Cline was defendant, by falsely and feloniously asserting, on oath, that he, the said B. S. Cline, offered to D. M. Boyd, a member of the Board of County Commissioners of Catawba County, the sum of $25 to influence his official action as a member of said board in procuring for and awarding to the said B. S. Cline the contract with the said board of county commissioners as keeper of the Home for the Aged and Infirm of Catawba County for two years, and subsequently paid to the said D. M. Boyd, commissioner, as a foresaid, $10 on the said offer, after having been awarded said contract for one year by said board, and that the said D. M. Boyd accepted the same, knowing said statement or statements to be false, or being ignorant whether said statement was true."
Defendant moved in apt time that the solicitor furnish a bill of particulars; motion allowed; bill of particulars filed; whereupon defendant *702 moved to quash the bill of indictment, on the ground that the same, with the bill of particulars, does not charge any crime in law. Motion denied. Defendant excepted and pleaded "not guilty."
After hearing the evidence, his Honor instructed the jury as follows:
"If you shall find from the evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, that in the trial of Marlow v. Cline the defendant, Cline, made the statements set out in the bill of indictment, under oath, and that after an oath was lawfully administered to him, and that such statements were willfully, corruptly and falsely made, it will be your duty to return a verdict of guilty.
"If you shall find, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the statement or statements were not true, and if you shall further find, beyond a reasonable doubt, that other essential elements or ingredients of perjury, as I have defined it, appear in this evidence, then it will be your duty to return a verdict of guilty.
"But if the defendant has satisfied you, gentlemen, that the statements he made are true, and, further, that they are lacking any of the essential ingredients or elements of perjury, as I have defined it, then it will be your duty to return a verdict of not guilty."
(856) Defendant excepted to the last paragraph. There was a verdict of guilty. Motion in arrest of judgment, for that the bill did not charge any indictable offense; motion denied. Judgment, and appeal. Professor Greenleaf, with his usual accuracy, thus defines perjury at the common law: "The crime is committed when a lawful oath is administered in some judicial proceeding or due course of justice to a person who swears willfully, absolutely and falsely in a matter material to the issue or point in question." 3 Greenleaf Ev., 191, citing 3 Inst., 164; 4 Blackstone Com., 1371; Hawk P. C., 69; 2 Roscoe's Crim. Ev., 1045, 836. The indictment in this case conforms to the statute (Revisal, secs. 3246, 3247). The defendant, when called upon to plead, moved the court to quash the indictment because it failed to set forth facts showing that the alleged false testimony was material to the issue being tried in the case in which it was given. His Honor refused the motion. Defendant excepted. The statute relieves the State from alleging mere matters of form, as was theretofore required. It does not, however, do violence to the constitutional provision which requires that before a citizen is called upon to answer a criminal charge he must be informed of the accusation against him. Matters of substance *703 must be alleged, to the end that the court may see that an indictable offense is charged.
It has always been uniformly held that to constitute perjury the false oath must be in regard to "some material fact tending to injure some person. If it be entirely immaterial it can not affect any one." S. v. Dodd,
While not necessary to the decision of this appeal, we think it proper to say that exception to the last paragraph of the instruction is well taken. While probably not so intended by his Honor, it was calculated to make the impression upon the jury that it was the duty of the defendant to satisfy them that the statements he made were true and had no other essential elements of perjury. It will be noted, upon that hypothesis alone, he instructed the jury that they could return a verdict of not guilty. In the trial of criminal cases it is always best to adhere closely to well-settled forms of expression. Save in a few exceptional cases, of which this is not one, the State carries the burden of proof to show beyond a reasonable doubt all the essential elements of the crime charged.
Error.
(860)