LThе state has charged defendant by bill of information with false swearing for purposes of violating public health or safety in violation of La.R.S. 14:126.1. The charge stemmed from an incident at a Kwik Stop service station in Zwolle, Louisiana, in which a Wildlife and Fisheries agent, off duty and in plain clothes, broke up a fight at the gas pumps between defendant and another person. While defendant’s antagonist fled the scene, the agent allegedly shoved a gun in defendant’s face and chest, and held him until the Zwolle police arrived. Defendant initially made a telephone complaint about the incident to
Defendant filed a motion to quash the bill of information on several grounds, including that the statute “is misleading and vague because it describes the crime as false swearing but does not appear to require that the prohibited false statement be made under oath.” The trial сourt denied the motion without written reasons but the Third Circuit set aside that ruling and ordered the prosecution quashed. State v. Williams, 09-993 (La.App. 3rd Cir.5/26/10),
The crime of false swearing for purpose of violating public health or safety in violation of La.R.S. 14:126.1 appears in “Sub-part C. Perjury” of Part VII, “Offenses Affecting Organized Government,” in the Louisiana Criminal Code. The legislature added the statute to the Criminal Code in 1960 La. Acts 81 as part оf a package of emergency acts signed into law by the governor on the same day during the social unrest accompanying the civil rights movement in the early 1960’s. See State v. Marshall,
In his motion to quash, defendant cоntended that R.S. 14:126.1 is unconstitutionally vague to the extent that its title conflicts with its text, that it is used in a racially discriminatory manner, and that its heightened penalty provision ^constitutes cruel and unusual punishment. In his supporting memorandum, defendant argued that R.S. 14:126.1 is fatally vague, overly broad, and reaches protected speech. He also took the position that the vagueness, at least, could be cured by reading the statute in conjunction with La.R.S. 14:126 to find that La. R.S. 14:126.1 applies only to false statements made under oath, an interpretation that would effectively end the prosecution against him, as defendant did not “swear” to the handwritten statement he made on a form supplied by the Zwolle Police Department.
It has been previously noted that the title of La.R.S. 14:126.1, to the extent that it refers to “false swearing,” is “misleading ... because the statute does not require that the prohibited false statement be made under oath or affirmation.” Marshall,
We need not decide here whether by terms of the Third Circuit’s analysis, the state charged an offense under a valid statute because defendant, by signing the printed form supplied by the Zwоlle Police Department, affirmed the truth of his statement. See La.C.Cr.P. art. 934(8) (“ ‘Oath’ includes affirmation.”). On a more fundamental level, the court of appeal erred in its analysis because La.R.S. 14:126.1 did not form part of the comprehensive set of criminal laws adopted by the legislature in the Criminal Code of 1942 (1942 Lа. Acts 43) and which set out the crimes of perjury and false swearing, including the parallel provisions that address the evidentiary import of the making of subsequent statements inconsistent with a statement made under oath or equivalent affirmation. The legislature added La. R.S. 14:126.1 to the Criminal Code 18 years later, as part of a singular package IfiOf emergency laws, and while the legislature “ ‘is presumed to have enacted a statute in light of the preceding statutes involving the same subject matter,’ ” Williams, 09-993 at 4,
As the state argues here, La.R.S. 14:126.1 plainly does not include any requirement that the offender make the fаlse statement under oath or equivalent affirmation. Although the title of La.R.S. 14:126.1 has created some confusion, the title of an act is not part of a statute and can be used to interpret legislative intent only when the language of the statute leaves doubt as to its meaning. State v. Modere,
Louisiana criminal statutes must be “given a genuine construction, according to the fair import of their words, taken in their usual sense, in connection with the context, and with reference to the purpose of the provision.” La.R.S. 14:3. As originally enacted, La.R.S. 14:126 operated in tandem with La.R.S. 14:125 because both statutes, part of the same act, explicitly require that the offender make the false statement under oath or an equivalent affirmation. That requirement was not carried forward some 18 years later by the legislature when it enacted La.R.S. 14:126.1; nor did it appear over 50 years later when the legislature enacted La.R.S. 14:126.3, 1995 La. Acts 788, defining the crime of health care facility application fraud as the “knowing and intentional offering of a false written or oral statement in any employment application or in an effort to obtain employment as a caretaker in any nursing home ... hospital ... or other residential facility required to be licensed or operated under the laws of this state or established by the laws of this state.” When the legislature means to impose the requirement of oath or an equivalent affirmation it does so expressly as part of its plenary discretion to define crimes and prescribe punishments. See, e.g., La.R.S. 14:125.1 (false swearing in paternity cases “is the intentional making of a written or orаl statement, known to [8be false, under sanction of oath or equivalent statement, where such oath or affirmation is given for use in any judicial proceeding filed by or on behalf of the state of Louisiana to establish paternity.”); compare La.R.S. 14:125.2 (prohibiting any person “to willfully and knowingly make a written or oral false statement concerning (1) biological paternity; or (2) surrender of parental rights pursuant to Title XI of the Louisiana Children’s Code”). Thus, nearly 50 years after enacting La.R.S. 14:126.1, when the legislature specifically addressed the filing of a false complaint against a law enforcement officer, including a wildlife agent, for the purpose of initiating an administrative action against the officer, 2006 La. Acts 287, and made the offense a six-month misdemeanor, it expressly imposed the requirement that the offender make the. false complaint “by affidavit under oath.” La. R.S. 14:133.5(A).
Removing the title of La.R.S. 14:126.1 as аn interpretative guide to the language of the text cures any vagueness that may arise from using the term “false swearing” to describe the making or communicating of “false statements.” We therefore subscribe to the views, of the Second Circuit in Marshall and the Fifth Circuit in State v. Bentley, 96-0795, p. 7 (La.App. 5th Cir.3/25/97),
COURT OF APPEAL DECISION REVERSED; CASE REMANDED.
JOHNSON, J., dissents.
Notes
. Both R.S. 14:126.1, and its complеmentary provision in La.R.S. 14:126.2, which proscribes the making of false statements to federal officials, including the F.B.I., about the deprivation or impending deprivation of rights, privileges or immunities by state or local authorities, went into effect immediately upon signature of the governor on June 22, 1960. Other emеrgency acts relating to the criminal law that went into effect at the same time ranged from 1960 La. Acts 73 (adding La.R.S. 14:79.1, entering into a common law marriage) and 1960 La. Acts 75 (enacting La.R.S. 14:79.2, conceiving and giving birth to two or more illegitimate children), to 1960 La. Acts 77 (amending and reenacting La.R.S. 14:59, relative to criminаl mischief to include taking temporary possession of any part of a place of business after being ordered to leave).
. The statute reads in full as follows:
No person shall make a false statement, report or allegation concerning the commission of a crime for the purpose of violating, disrupting, interfering with or endangering the public health or safety, or to deprive any person or persons of any right, privilege or immunity secured by the United States Constitution and laws or by the Louisiana Constitution and laws, or cause such false statement or report to be made to any official or agency of the state or any parish, city or political subdivision thereof, or to any judicial, executive or legislative body or subdivision thereof within this state, knowing or having reason to believe the same or any material part thereof to be false and with the intent to cause an investigation of or any other action to be taken as a result thereof.
Any person or persons convicted of violating the provisions of this Section shall be punished by imprisonment for not less than one year nor more than five years, with or without hard labor, or by a fine of not less than one hundred dollars nоr more than one thousand dollars, or by both such fine and imprisonment.
. In Marshall, the Second Circuit observed that the statute appeared "inarticulately drafted” because it could "be questioned whether it was intended that the language 'for the purpose of violating ... the public health or safety' and 'to deprive any person ... of any right ... secured by the United States Constitution' refer[s] to the 'commission of a crime’
