284 A.2d 576 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1971
Each of the four defendants has moved to quash the first count of his information, which alleges the crime of perjury in violation of General Statutes §
The motions to quash this count filed by each defendant rely upon the claim that the coroner's hearing, at which the perjury is alleged to have occurred, is not a proceeding to which §
At common law, perjury was defined as the wilful giving of false testimony on a material point in a judicial or related proceeding by a person to whom a lawful oath had been administered by a competent authority. 3 Wharton, Criminal Law and Procedure § 1290. Coke, Mansfield, Blackstone and other eminent authorities agree that to constitute perjury there must be a violation of a lawful oath, taken before a competent jurisdiction. 3 Co. Inst. 165 (6th Ed.); 4 Blackstone, Commentaries *137; 1 Hawkins, Pleas of the Crown, pp. 172-73 (1716); TheKing v. Aylett, 99 Eng. Rep. 973, 976 (K.B.). There was also at common law the separate crime of false swearing, which involved false statements under oath in nonjudicial proceedings. 41 Am. Jur. 5, Perjury, § 3; note, 8 Ann. Cas. 881, 882; 3 Wharton, op. cit. § 1295.
The early statutes of this state specified various punishments for perjury, including, in less permissive times, placing the culprit in the public pillory for one hour with his ears nailed, but the crime was not defined. Statutes, 1796, p. 339; Statutes, 1821, p. 159 § 44; Statutes, 1849, p. 232 § 55; General Statutes, rev. 1866, p. 260 § 97. The common-law definition of the crime was found to apply to testimony before arbitrators, before a church tribunal, before a grand jury, and in taking the poor debtor's oath before a justice of the peace. Lyman v. Wetmore,
The first legislative attempt to define the crime of perjury appears in the 1875 Revision, at page 506 § 1, as follows: "Every person, who shall, upon oath or affirmation legally administered to him, willfully and corruptly testify or affirm falsely to any material fact, in any cause or proceeding in which such oath or affirmation may be necessary or required by law or usage, . . . shall be imprisoned . . . ." The inclusion of the words "or usage" gave a broader scope to the statute than the common-law crime of perjury, which was limited to judicial proceedings or related matters. Such an expansion of the common-law definition would have been necessary, perhaps, to reconcile the view of the majority in Chapman v. Gillet, supra, in which the false testimony occurred before a church tribunal with no legal authority. The statute was soon amended, however, to eliminate the reference to "usage," and it was simplified in other respects to read: "Every person who shall wilfully or corruptly swear, affirm, or testify falsely to any material matter where an oath or affirmation is required by law . . . shall be imprisoned *309
. . . ." Public Acts 1878, c. 3 § 1. This enactment left the statute in substantially its present form (General Statutes §
It seems a fair conclusion that the effect of the 1878 amendment was to revert to the common-law definition of perjury, which limited the crime to judicial proceedings. The words, "where an oath . . . is required by law," are appropriate for that purpose, although they might possibly be construed as embracing also the separate common-law crime of false swearing in nonjudicial situations where an oath is necessary. Such a possible interpretation of the statute has never been asserted in this state, and the enactment of specific statutes dealing with particular instances of false swearing, e.g., an elector before the registrar of voters, militates against such a broad view. General Statutes §
It is clear that the office of coroner performs an important function in the administration of justice and that a hearing before the coroner is to that extent a judicial proceeding. At common law, the office, which was created about a century after the Norman invasion, was highly regarded, no less a judicial personage than the Lord Chief Justice of the *310
King's Bench occupying the post of chief coroner of England. 18 C.J.S., Coroners, § 2. Coroners had power to require the attendance of witnesses at inquests, to put them on their oath, and to examine them. Our statutes, which authorize the coroner to compel witnesses to attend and testify, and also to punish them for contempt, are in affirmance of the common-law conception of that office. General Statutes §§ 6-70, 6-71; State v. Buteau,
The power to compel "testimony" imports the power to require an oath of a witness, because the word is usually defined as meaning oral statements of a person under oath. Webster, Third New International Dictionary; Black, Law Dictionary (4th Ed.). Universally, witnesses at a coroner's hearing have testified under oath. Although several officials, such as notaries public, have a general authority to administer oaths, the authority given to coroners to administer oaths is restricted to "any matter before them." General Statutes §
The defendants have relied in argument upon the absence of any rule or statute expressly requiring that witnesses at a coroner's hearing be sworn, in contrast to the rule of practice directing the clerk to administer the oath to each witness at a trial in court. Practice Book § 224. This rule of practice *311 first appeared in 1899 and cannot, therefore, have been the origin of the necessity for an oath or affirmation by a witness which had been recognized in this state almost a century before. Curtiss v.Strong, supra. It might be argued that the perjury cases prior to the 1878 codification of that crime rested upon a different state of the law, but it is inconceivable that two decades would elapse following that enactment during which perjury could not have been prosecuted because no statute or rule could be found directing witnesses to be sworn.
The defendants claim also that the coroner, in performing his function under the statutes in force at the time, was not limited to evidence submitted at the inquest. When he was notified of a suspicious death by the medical examiner or others, he might "view and take charge of the body and make all proper inquiry respecting the cause and manner of death." General Statutes § 6-57. "For the purpose of securing evidence," he was empowered to "enter any and all places in his county." § 6-70. He was under a duty to obtain statements from the victims of criminal acts who were dangerously wounded or injured and likely to die. § 6-67. The provisions for notice of the inquest to the suspected criminal and for his right to have counsel present (§ 6-62), for return of the result of the inquest to the clerk of the Superior Court (§ 6-64), and for preservation of the testimony of witnesses (§ 6-73) afford little support for the claim that the coroner could properly have made his finding by interviewing the defendants informally or neglecting to administer the oath. Even if such a claim were sound, where the coroner, in the lawful exercise of his authority, has chosen to perform his official duty by placing a witness under oath, clearly it is an occasion "when an oath or affirmation is required by law." §
It is concluded, therefore, that the perjury statute, §
It is clear that, at least until October 1, 1971, the effective date of the new criminal code, the criminal law of this state included both statutory and common-law offenses. General Statutes § 54-117;State v. Schleifer,
The second count of the information alleges, as constituting the crime of obstructing justice, exactly the same facts as are pleaded in the first count in support of the perjury charge. The purpose of this duplication may have been to provide an alternative ground of prosecution in the event that the first count, which relies upon the perjury statute, should be ruled invalid. Commendable as this foresight may be, since the court has now ruled that the perjury statute is applicable, it cannot expose the defendant to the hazard of a substantially greater penalty by sanctioning the additional prosecution for obstructing justice in the second count, based upon the identical acts. In providing a maximum of five years' imprisonment for perjury in violation of §
In a case closely analogous to this one, it has been held that "[o]ne convicted of perjury may not be convicted of obstructing public justice on the same evidence in both instances." Commonwealth v.Russo,
It is concluded that the second count of the informations, which attempts to apply the fifteen-year penalty of § 54-117 to facts falling within the scope of the perjury statute, carrying a five-year penalty, cannot be maintained simply by denominating the *315 offense as obstructing justice. This conclusion makes it unnecessary to discuss other claims raised by the defendants. The motions to quash the second count of the informations are granted.
In view of the action of the court in granting the motions to quash the second count, the motions to elect between the first and second counts, which were argued with the other motions, are denied as superfluous.
In summary, the court has denied the motions to quash the first count of the informations but has granted the motions to quash the second count. It has also granted the motion to quash the third count of the information in No. 8375, State v. Robert A. Guiher. The motions to require an election are denied.