59 S.E. 115 | N.C. | 1907
The jurors for the State, upon their oaths, present: That Riley Harris, late of the county of Anson, on 9 March, in the year of our *331 Lord 1906, with force and arms, at and in the county aforesaid, did unlawfully commit perjury upon the trial of an action in the court of a justice of the peace in Anson County, wherein the State of North Carolina was plaintiff and Jeff Ratliff was defendant, by falsely asserting on oath that he, the said Riley Harris, never turned over to (457) Y. C. Allen his account and statement of rent due him, the said Riley Harris, by Jeff Ratliff, as security for the payment of house rent due said Y. C. Allen, and that he never told Jeff Ratliff to pay the same to Y. C. Allen; and that he, the said Riley Harris, never delivered to Y. C. Allen a statement of said account of rents due him by W. T. Ingram, knowing the said statement or statements to be false, against the form of the statute in such cases made and provided, and against the peace and dignity of the State.
ROBINSON, Solicitor.
There was judgment on the verdict, and defendant excepted and appealed.
After stating the case: It is chiefly urged against the validity of this conviction and sentence that the word "feloniously" is not used in the bill of indictment. The question is distinctly and properly raised, both by motion to quash and in arrest of judgment, but we are of opinion that the position cannot be sustained. It has been frequently held with us that, in indictments for felonies, the word "feloniously" must appear as description of the offense, and that no other or equivalent term will suffice. This principle, however, does not obtain where the Legislature otherwise expressly provides; and so it is here. Our Revisal of 1905, ch. 80, sec. 3247, establishes a form for a bill of indictment for perjury, and enacts in express terms that this form shall be sufficient. The statute does not make the word "feloniously" a part of the bill, and it does not appear in the form set out, and the same is, therefore, no longer required. The General Assembly has the undoubted right to enact legislation of this character, to modify (458) old forms of bills of indictment, or establish new ones, provided the form established is sufficient to apprise the defendant with reasonable certainty of the nature of the crime of which he stands charged. "To be informed of the accusation against him" is the requirement of our Bill of Rights, and unless such legislation is in violation of this principle or in contravention of some express constitutional provision, it should and must be upheld by the courts. The act in question is open to no objection of the kind suggested. "Did unlawfully commit perjury" *332
is the descriptive part of the charge required by the statute, giving, in addition, the court, the cause, the statement alleged to be false, with proper averments, also, as to the scienter; and, by the terms of such a bill, therefore, the defendant is fully notified of the charge made against him, and the present indictment, following with exactness the form established by law, the objection of the defendant must be overruled. S. v.Hester,
Our attention has been called by counsel to the cases of S. v. Bunting,
It is further contended that the bill is defective, for that the matter alleged therein to be false is not material, and objection is made on this account to the form of the bill and to the testimony offered in support of the charge as laid; but this objection is without merit. It is undoubtedly a correct position that one of the essentials in a charge of "perjury" is that the matter alleged to be false must be material. The conclusion is sound, but the premise is defective, or rather, it is nonexistent, for the alleged testimony was material. It was given in a criminal action, in which the present defendant, as landlord, was prosecuting one Jeff Ratliff, a tenant, for removing crops without having paid the rent. Ratliff, defense was that the defendant's claim for rent had been assigned by him to one Y. C. Allen, and that he (Ratliff) had paid the claim, or adjusted it with the assignee. This testimony, tending, as it did, to establish the assignment of defendant's claim as landlord, was not only material, but directly relevant to the issue, and the judge below made a correct ruling on defendant's objection.
There is
No error.
Cited: S. v. Cline,
(460)