147 S.E. 473 | W. Va. | 1929
Defendant was indicted, tried and convicted of perjury, and on March 1, 1928, sentenced to three years confinement in the penitentiary; and prosecutes this writ of error thereto.
At the November Term of the circuit court of Taylor county, one Thomas Neal was indicted for feloniously and burglariously breaking into and entering a certain garage and stealing an automobile therefrom; and at the November Term, *125 1926, was tried on that charge and found not guilty. Defendant, Claude Lake, was a State's witness in the trial. It is charged in the indictment against him that he knowingly, wilfully and falsely swore to a fact material to the issue in the Neal case. Logically the first point of error to be considered is the demurrer to the indictment which was overruled by the court and which is here charged as error.
The indictment asserts that in a certain trial in Taylor county, of an indictment against Thomas Neal for a felony for breaking into a garage and stealing an automobile therefrom, Claude Lake appeared as a witness for the State and was duly sworn to speak the truth; "and it then and there became material to inquire of the said Claude Lake whether he, the said Claude Lake didn't sign a certain paper then and there exhibited to the said Claude Lake, such paper being a certain statement which purposed (purported) to have been signed by said Claude Lake and sworn to before W. Merle Watkins, a notary public, on the 15th day of October, 1926, and the said Claude Lake being so sworn as a witness aforesaid and touching the matter then and there material to be inquired into, in answer to a question then and there propounded to him, 'Didn't you sign that paper?' thereupon did, on the said trial in the county, aforesaid, feloniously, wilfully and corruptly depose, swear and testify, among other things knowingly, and falsely, that he, the said Claude Lake, did not remember of signing said paper and that he, the said Claude Lake, 'Never seen it,' meaning the said paper, and the said statement was material to the issue on said trial, whereas, in truth and in fact, the said Claude Lake did then and there remember that he had signed the said paper referred to, and the said Claude Lake, in truth and fact had theretofore seen the said paper, as the said Claude Lake and then and there well knew, whereby the said Claude Lake did then and there, upon the said trial in the county aforesaid, unlawfully, wilfully, knowingly and corruptly swear falsely and feloniously commit wilful perjury."
The substance is that it became material in the trial to ask Lake if he had not signed a certain paper exhibited to him purporting to have been signed by him, and upon being asked *126 if he had not signed it, feloniously, wilfully and corruptly, did swear, among other things knowingly and falsely, that he did not remember of signing the paper, and had never seen it, when in truth he did remember signing and had seen the paper, and thereby did unlawfully, wilfully, knowingly and corruptly swear falsely, and feloniously commit wilful perjury.
The points urged against the sufficiency of the indictment are: (1) That in the charging part thereof it is not charged that defendant wilfully and falsely swore to a matter material to the issue in the Neal case; and (2) that the affidavit is not set out nor the substance given in the indictment to show its materiality to the issue. On the first point State v. Aley,
The judgment will be reversed; the verdict of the jury set aside, and a new trial awarded.
Reversed; new trial awarded. *129