The defendant was indicted for perjury, in the circuit court of Maries county. He was duly arraigned, pleaded not guilty, and was convicted. He appeals to this court.
I. The instructions are challenged first because the court submitted to the jury the materiality of defendant’s evidence to the issue on trial before the justice. Each of the first four instructions given by the court in behalf of the State left it .to the jury to determine whether the alleged false evidence of defendant in the justice’s court was material to the question to be determined by the jury in the justice’s court.
It was decided by this court in an opinion by Judge Scott in State v. Williams, 30 Mo. 364, that “the court, and
Mr. Bishop in his “New Criminal Law,” section- 1039a, announces the same doctrine.
In Cothran v. The State, 39 Miss. 541, the Supreme Court of Mississippi said: “Where the record of that suit was produced, and the issue joined between the parties thereto brought before the court and jury, and his statement on oath as -a witness in said cause proven, its materiality to support that issue was a question of law for the court and not a question of fact for the jury,” and accordingly it was held reversible error to have submitted the materiality of the question to the jury. [People v. Jones, 1 Mich. N. P. 141.]
As said by Bishop, “Like any other question of law it may be so mingled with fact that it should be submitted under due instructions to the jury.”
In State v. Higgins, 124 Mo. 649, the trial court gave the proper instruction as to the materiality of the testimony to the issue but erred in not requiring the jury to find that the testimony was “willfully and corruptly false.” The court erred in giving these instructions.
II. Complaint is made that the court erroneously refused defendant’s third instruction as originally offered and erred in erasing the last clause thereof. There is nothing in the record to show that the court erased the clause mentioned, but if it did, no harm resulted therefrom, as the instruction embraced every principle after the erasure that it contained prior thereto.
III. The circuit court refused an instruction which re
It is true that the learned judge defined reasonable doubt in the sixth instruction as meaning a substantial doubt arising from the evidence and not the mere possibility of innocence. That instruction was given for the State and fell far short of the request made by defendant. This court in State v. Clark, 147 Mo. 22, reversed the judgment upon the single ground that the court failed to give one instruction that unless the jury found the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt they should acquit him. The defendant in every criminal case is entitled to a plain unequivocal instruction that, if the jury have a reasonable doubt of his guilt, they must acquit him. By refusing defendant’s instruction that defendant was entitled to an acquittal if the jury had a reasonable doubt of his guilt, and merely defining reasonable doubt, the court gave an undue prominence to the State’s case and at the same time ignored the view that should have been given defendant’s side. To deny the defendant so plain a right, as was done in this case, must be held reversible error.
IV. Lincoln Nagley was called as a witness by defendant, but it appearing that in violation of the order of the court he had been in the court house during the examination of several witnesses, the court excluded him. It does not appear that the defendant or his counsel were aware of this violation of the rule by the witness. It further appears that a witness for the State had testified and then remained in the court room and was afterwards recalled. The same objection was made but the court permitted him to testify. We are of opinion that inasmuch as the defendant was no party to the violation of the rule by Nagley the court should have permitted him to testify and punished him in some other way. [O’Bryan v. Allen, 95 Mo. 68.] At any rate the same rule
V. Over and against the objections and exceptions of the defendant, the State was permitted to read in evidence the original summons issued by the justice of the peace in the suit on the note in the case of Love v. Fannon, the defendant, the return on the writ, and an unsigned affidavit of defendant to his set-off. The pretended affidavit on its face did not purport to be the act of the defendant. Moreover, he was not on trial for and had not been indicted for making a false affidavit. The indictment charged him with swearing fasely on the trial and this evidence did not tend to prove that allegation in the indictment. No statute required the defendant to make such an affidavit, and as he did not sign it it seems highly probable .that the “learned justice” prepared the paper himself as an evidence of its filing. It should have been excluded. It was clearly hearsay and the fact that the justice had written it did not make it any the less so.
VI. The testimony of Clymer, Love’s attorney, as to the value of juggles, was improperly admitted. He did not know the market value of juggles. Indeed, none was established. Defendant was under no obligation to sell his juggles to Love at the latter’s valuation and the fact that defendant valued his wood at twenty-five cents a load was no evidence of perjury. The evidence of the defendant on his trial under this indictment was that the juggles were worth twenty-five cents a load to him and Love had continued to haul them in defendant’s absence. There will be no end to prosecutions for perjury if every man is to be indicted because he places a higher valuation on his property than some neighbor may put on it. "While it is not our function to determine questions of fact, we are justified in saying that the testimony of witnesses that a wagon load of wood, even of chips, was only worth 5 or 6 cents, is utterly incredible.
The judgment of the circuit court is reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.