214 Mo. 325 | Mo. | 1908
On September 13, 1907, the grand jury of Henry county, Missouri, returned an indictment against the defendant charging him with having committed willful and corrupt perjury by testifying falsely in a proceeding before the grand jury of said county on the 12th of September, 1907. The de
“State of Missouri, County of Henry, ss.
“In the Circuit Court, September Term, 1907.
“The grand jurors for the State of Missouri, duly impaneled, sworn and' charged to inquire within and for the body of the county of Henry, and State of Missouri, upon their oath present and charge: That at the county of Henry, and State of Missouri, on the 12th day of September, 1907, and during the September term, 1907, of said court, the grand jury of the State of Missouri, within and for the body of the county of Henry, were then and there duly and legally convened, having been' then and there duly and legally impaneled, sworn upon their oath, and charged according to law in said court, and that a certain complaint was then and there made and presented before said grand jury, against one Harve Smith and George Brent, for the offense of illegal sale of intoxicating liquor, including beer, committed by said Harve Smith and said George Brent, in the said county of Henry, outside of the city of Clinton, and that in the investigation and hearing of said complaints before said grand jury, so impaneled and sworn as aforesaid, it developed that on or about the night of the 17th day of June, 1907, one Clarence Ackerman, a drayman operating a dray wagon in said Henry county, between Clinton and Deepwater, hauled a dray wagon load of beer, said load of beer consisting of twenty-five or thirty cases of beer from the back door of J. N. Bixman’s dramshop^- in said city of Clinton, to the barn and residence of Harve Smith, in said city of Deep-water, and there unloaded the same, and that at various times since said 17th day of June, said Clarence Ackerman hauled loads of beer at night from Clinton*328 for said Harve Smith, at Deepwater, consisting of fifteen to twenty cases of beer to the load, and that at various times prior to- said 12th day of September, 1907, said Clarence Ackerman hauled wagon loads of beer in cases from Clinton to and for George Brent of Deepwater.
“That at said investigation said Clarence Ackerman was duly summoned as a witness before said grand jury and did then and there personally appear as a witness before said grand jury in regard to said complaint, and that said Clarence Ackerman was then and there duly sworn by the foreman of said grand jury and took upon himself his corporal oath, the said foreman, to-wit, one Charles H. Williams, being then and there duly and legally authorized and empowered and having competent authority to administer’ the said oath to the said Clarence Ackerman, and that then and there it became important and was material to the issue and to the investigation of said complaints by said grand jury, whether said Clarence Ackerman had any knowledge of said transportation and hauling of beer from Clinton to Deepwater, and for whom the hauling was done, and the time and circumstances thereof.
“And then and there he, the said Clarence Ackerman, on his corporal oath and before said grand jury, did feloniously, falsely, corruptly, knowingly, willfully and maliciously depose and swear in substance and .to the effect- following: That he, never, at any time, hauled a dray wagon load of beer to Deepwater; that he never unloaded any beer at Harve Smith’s barn;, that'he never hauled anything for Harve Smith; that he never hauled ¡any beer for George Brent; that he never hauled any beer for Harve Smith; that he never made a trip to- Deepwater at night, whereas, in truth and in fact, the said Clarence Ackerman, on or about the 17th of June, 1907, hauled a dray wagon load of*329 beer to= Deepwater; and whereas, in truth and fact, he did haul beer for George Brent; and whereas, in truth and fact he did haul beer for Harve Smith; and whereas, in truth and fact he did make trips to Deepwater at night, all of which the said Clarence Ackerman then and there well knew. And so the grand jurors, aforesaid, upon their oath aforesaid, do say that the said' Clarence Ackerman, at the county of Henry aforesaid, on the 12th day of September, aforesaid, in the year 1907, in the manner and form aforesaid, feloniously, falsely, knowingly, willfully and corruptly committed willful and corrupt perjury, contrary to the form of the statute, and against the peace and dignity of the State.
“Nicholas B. Conrad, Prosecuting Attorney.
“A true bill.
C. H. Williams,
Foreman of the Grand Jury. ’ ’
The defendant is not represented in this court by counsel and we must look to the grounds assigned in the motion to quash, as the basis of the judgment of the court in quashing the indictment. From these it appears that it was insisted by the defendant in the circuit court that, assuming the truth of all that was charged against the defendant, the matters sworn to by him before the grand jury were wholly immaterial’ and collateral to the question or matter under consideration by the grand jury, to-wit, the illegal selling of intoxicating liquors, including beer, by Harve Smith and George Brent in said county, and therefore could not form the predicate for a charge of perjury.
It appears from the averments in the indictment that the grand jury had been duly and legally selected, impaneled and sworn in the circuit court of Henry county at its September term, 1907, and that a certain complaint'had been presented to them against Harve
In State v. Faulkner, 175 Mo. 546, we had occasion to investigate the sufficiency of a charge of perjury committed before a grand jury, and in the course of the opinion in. that case, we followed with approval the opinion of this court in Ward v. State, 2 Mo. 120, wherein it is said.: “It is a solemn and important duty that every citizen owes to his country to give evidence in courts of justice against offenders against the peace and good order of. the community.” And in the Faulkner case, we reiterated the ruling made by this court in State v. Terry, 30 Mo. 368, that perjury can he committed before a grand jury in its investigation of crime, and said: “Any knowledge or information possessed by him [the defendant in the case] concerning 'the existence of such fund and the purposes for which it was to hei used’ was material to the inquiry the grand jury was then making. It was the natural and orderly way in which the grand jury would ascertain the material facts upon which to base-an indictment or to refuse to find one. It was their sworn duty to obtain the legal evidence to ascertain the witnesses by whom the charge could be* substantiated, and to endorse their names on the indictment, not alone for the benefit of the prosecuting attorney, hut for the protection of the person charged »in the indictment in the preparation of his defense. This inquiry and the defendant’s answer, taken in connec
So, in this case, in the investigation of the charge that Smith and Brent had been guilty of illegal sales of intoxicating liquors, including beer; that the same had been sold in said county outside of Clinton, the county seat, we think it was a perfectly natural thing for the grand jury to seek evidence as to the possession of such liquor by the said Brent and Smith at the time of the alleged sale, and they had the right to require the defendant in this case to disclose the fact, if such it was, that he had in the month of June, 1907, hauled a dray load of beer from a saloon in the city of Clinton to the residence of the said Smith in the city of Deepwater, and also wagon loads of beer from Clinton to the said Brent in Deepwater. It was not necessary that the said defendant should have been present and witnessed sales of the said beer to other persons in Deepwater by the said Brent and Smith, or that they should have told the defendant of such sales. It is not to be expected that any one witness before a grand jury, any more than in the trial of a case in court, will' be able to depose to the whole case. As said by this court in State v. Day, 100 Mo. l. c. 249, “Nor is it necessary in such cases that the false statement tends directly to prove the issue in order to sustain the indictment for perjury. If it be circumstantially material or tends to support and give credit to the witness in respect to the main fact, it is perjury.” And to the same effect is State v. Wake-field, 73 Mo. 549, and the cases therein cited. In the same case, 9 Mo. App. 326, it was said: “Each fact, although insufficient of itself alone to prove even that a crime has been committed, is yet, because of its relation to other facts in proof, material to the issue or investigation. Were it otherwise, there might be false
In our opinion the circuit court erred in quashing this indictment on the ground of the immateriality of the alleged testimony of the defendant before the grand jury. And hence the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded to the circuit court for further proceeding. And it is so ordered.