78 P. 333 | Or. | 1904
delivered the opinion.
The defendant, Frankie Woolridge, was convicted of the crime of perjury, and appeals from the judgment which followed. .
This then follows:
“ That thereafter, and on the 5th day of November, 1903, the defendant, Frankie Woolridge, appeared before one F. S. Fields, who was then and there duly appointed, qualified, and acting county clerk of Multnomah County, Oregon, and ex officio clerk of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Multnomah County, and duly empowered and authorized by law to take depositions, testimony, and evidence in said county, and to administer oaths to witnesses in said county, and particularly to do said things and to so act with reference to said defendant, Frankie Woolridge, in said cause hereinbefore mentioned, to give evidence and testimony as a witness in said cause, and to have her deposition taken by said F. S. Fields, clerk of the said court and county, as aforesaid, to be used upon the trial of said cause; and that then and there and on said date of November 5, 1903, in said Multnomah County and State of Oregon, then and there being, said Frankie Woolridge appeared before said F. S. Fields, clerk of said court and county, as aforesaid, and was then and there duly sworn by said officer of said court and county to testify the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth in said cause then and there pending in the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Multnomah County wherein said John Roberts was plaintiff and said Oregonian Publishing Company, a corporation, was defendant.”
It is argued by defendant’s counsel that, the information having stated that Fields, the county clerk, was “authorized by law to take depositions, testimony, and evidence in said county, and to administer oaths to witnesses in said county, and particularly to do said things and to so act with reference to said defendant, Frankie Woolridge, in said cause hereinbefore mentioned,” is an averment that he was empowered to administer oaths in the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Multnomah, of which he was ex officio clerk, and not an allegation of his authority to administer an. oath in the proceeding in which the perjury is assigned. “The oath,” says'a text-writer, discussing the crime of perjury, “must be taken before a person having competent authority to administer it; otherwise the false statement would be no offense”: 3 Archhold, Crim. Pr. & Pl. (Waterman’s Notes), 594. An indictment for perjury must allege that the officer administering the oath was authorized to do so : People v. Dunlap, 113 Cal. 72 (45 Pac. 183), and if it fails in this respect it is fatally defective: State v. Owen, 73 Mo. 440. The statute prescribing the mode of alleging the facts constituting the crime of which the defendant was convicted is as follows: “In an indictment for perjury or subornation of perjury, it is sufficient to set forth the substance of the controversy or matter in respect to which the crime was committed, and in what court, or before whom, the oath alleged to be false was taken, and that the court or person
“ On his examination as witness, duly sworn to testify the truth, in the trial of an action at law in the court of -between C. D., plaintiff, and E. F., defendant, which court had authority to administer said oath, he testified falsely, that (stating the facts alleged to be false), the matters so testified being material, and the testimony being wilfully false: 1 B. & C.Comp., Form No. 18, p. 752.
In State v. Ah Lee, 18 Or. 540 (23 Pac. 424), on the trial of a defendant for perjury, it was held that an indictment which contains every allegation mentioned in the form given in the appendix to the Criminal Code for such crime was sufficient. The forms thus prescribed have been held sufficient in other cases: State v. Dodson, 4 Or. 64; State v. Brown, 7 Or. 186 ; State v. Wintzingerode, 9 Or. 153 ; State v. Lee Yan Yan, 10 Or. 365. In State v. Spencer, 6 Or. 152, in an indictment for perjury alleged to have been committed by the defendant as a witness in a civil action tried in the circuit court of this State, it was held that the averment that the false oath was taken in such court, without designating the officer by whom it was administered was sufficient. Mr. Chief Justice Prim, speaking for the court, in distinguishing the mode of alleging the necessary facts in other cases, said : “ But if the oath in which perjury w*as assigned had been administered by the clerk in some outside matter then it would have been necessary to allege that it was taken before the clerk.” To the same effect is the case
2. It is insisted that the information does not state that an oath was in fact administered to the defendant in the proceeding before the clerk. The transaction in the presence of Fields was the taking of her deposition to be used in the action mentioned, and, in our opinion, the averment that “ Frankie Woolridge appeared before said F. S. Fields, clerk of said cotirt and county, as aforesaid, and was then and there duly sworn by said officer in said court to testify the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth in said cause then and there pending in the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Multnomah County wherein the said John Roberts was plaintiff and said Oregonian Publishing Company, a corporation, was defendant,” sufficiently states that an oath was administered to her by Fields.
3. It is maintained that the information doés not allege that the testimony given by the defendant was material to any issue in the ca,use in which the deposition was taken. The statute regulating the mode of securing written declarations under oath is as follows: “The testimony of a witness in this State may be taken by deposition, in an action at law, at any time after the service of summons, or the appearance of the defendant; and in a special proceeding after a question of fact has arisen therein, in the following cases: * * (2) When the witness’s resi
4. It is contended by defendant’s counsel that the court erred in permitting Fields as a witness for the State to answér the following question: “State to this jury what, if anything, the defendant, Frankie Woolridge, at the time she was sworn by you, as aforesaid, as a witness, on the 5th day of November, 1903, in the cause of John Roberts against the Oregonian Publishing Company, said as to whether or not she had a conversation with W. F. Kiernan, Sally White, Reporter Hill, or Patrolman Goltz, or either of them, at or about the hour of half past ten o’clock or eleven o’clock on October 8, 1903, at the police station in the City of Portland, with reference to her having been out carousing and drinking with Special Officer Jack Rob
The crime of perjury, if perpetrated, was fully consummated when the defendant gave the alleged false testimony : 22 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2 ed.), 682 ; 2 Roscoe, Crim. Ev. (8 ed.), *842. Perjury may be committed in the giving of a deposition, which, by reason of some informality, would have prevented its reception in evidence if it had been offered at the trial: State v. Whittemore, 50 N. H. 245 (9 Am. Rep. 196.) Thus, as was said by the court in State v. Langley, 34 N. H. 529 : “ To constitute perjury it is necessary that the false testimony be in relation to matters material to the issue; but it is not material to the perjury that the testimony is in such form, or comes from such sources or through such channels, that it is competent to be used at the hearing for which it was taken.”
In Covey v. State, 23 Tex. App. 388 (5 S. W. 283), it was ruled that, though the testimony taken at an examining trial should have been reduced to writing, as required by the law of Texas, yet perjury might be assigned upon oral testimony taken, but not reduced to writing, in such trial. In Commonwealth v. Hatfield, 107 Mass. 227, in dis
5. It is maintained that, the defendant’s testimony having been taken down by a stenographer, his notes thereof afford the best evidence of what she said, and, as it was incumbent on the State to introduce the highest proof it could produce, the court erred in permitting the- county clerk to detail the testimony she gave before him. It has been held that the notes of a stenographer taken at a former trial may be read on a subsequent examination of the same cause, or in a different suit or action; but such notes when transcribed, do not exclude the testimony of an intelligent bystander, who has heard and paid particular attention to the testimony of the witness: 26 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2 ed.), 781; Brice v. Miller, 35 S. C. 537 (15 S. E. 272); Taylor v. Preston, 79 Pa. 436. No error was committed in permitting Fields to testify as to what the defendant said under oath before him.
6. A request to instruct the jury to return a verdict of not guilty having been denied, and an exception saved, it is contended that an error was thereby committed. It is argued that because the bill of exceptions discloses that no affidavit or other paper was filed in the case of Roberts against the Oregonian Publishing Company showing the necessity for taking the defendant’s deposition, the right to secure which was special, depending upon the existence of certain facts (B. & 0. Comp. § 826), the clerk had no authority to take her testimony, and hence she was not guilty of the crime with which she was charged. The bill of exceptions states that when the defendant appeared before the county clerk the attorneys for the respective par
Other alleged errors are assigned, but deeming them, in view of what has already been said, unimportant, the judgment is affirmed. Affirmed.