9 N.M. 400 | N.M. | 1898
This cause comes into this court on appeal from the district court of Dona Ana county.
This prosecution was an indictment based on the statute making it a felony to knowingly and willfully swear to and present a false account against a county, etc. The indictment alleges that one Beltram Williams made out and swore to an account, and presented the same for allowance against said Dona Ana county for $69.08, said amount of charges being as claimed by said Williams for mileag’e and per diem for one guard or assistant so employed by him to transport one Dick Wilson, a prisoner, from Springer, New Mexico, to Las Cruces, New Mexico. Said indictment further alleges that such charge for mileage and per diem was false.
Defendant Williams was tried in said court on this charge of perjury, and convicted, and now seeks a reversal of said verdict and judgment of conviction.
Twenty-three different grounds of error were assigned in defendant’s motion for a new trial, and which appear on the face of the record for examination in this court.
The second assignment of error, to wit: That .“The verdict of the jury is contrary to the evidence,” we think well taken, after an examination of all the evidence in the case. The record does not raise in our minds a question as to the weight of the evidence, but an absence of evidence. The whole evidence discloses the fact, which is not disputed, that defendant Williams was a constable in and for a certain precinct in Dona Ana county, and as such officer went to the town of Springer, the county seat of Colfax county, armed with a warrant for the arrest of one Dick Wilson, who was then charged with a felony; that Williams found Dick Wilson in the jail at Springer, and took him by rail to Las Cruces, Dona Ana county, and lodged him in jail.
In order to effect a lawful conviction of defendant, it was incumbent on the territory to prove, first, that the alleged false oath to said alleged false account was made at Dona Ana county, in the territory of New Mexico, by this defendant; second, that said account was presented by this defendant to the proper accounting officer or officers for allowance; third, that defendant knowingly and willfully swore to such false account; and, fourth, that such account was, as a matter of fact, false, and each and every one of these elements of the crime of perjury as counted on in the indictment must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt; if the territory fail to prove any one of these elements of the offense, then the defendant must be acquitted.
The judgment therefore is reversed and cause remanded for a new trial.
Judge McEie, being of counsel for defendant in the trial court, did not sit in this case.