Thе indictment contains two counts. The first count alleges that the defendant, as a notary public, falsely made a certain jurat and certifícаle to a certain affidavit, to the effect that the affiant, one Henry Breclitel; had sworn and subscribed said affidavit before him, the defendant, as such notary public, and that he had read said affidavit to said Breclitel, aud made him acquainted with the contents thereof, before its execution, and that said jurat aud certificate were false, in this: that the said Breclitel never did personally appear before the defendant, aud swear or subscribe to said pretended affidavit, and that defendant never did read said pretended affidavit to said Brechtel, or make him аcquainted with the contents thereof, and that said affidavit or writing was made in support of a certain claim of one Francis Geis, for a pension, then pending before the commissioner of pensions.
Bald count is framed under section 5421 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, which, so fаr as is material here, provides that:
“Every person who falsely makes, alters, forges or counterfeits, or causes or procures to bе falsely made, altered, forged or counterfeited, * * * any deed, power of attorney, order, certificate, receipt, or othеr writing, for the purpose of obtaining or receiving, or enabling any other person, either directly or indirectly, to obtain or receive from the United States, or any of their officers or agents, «any sum of money, * * *” shall be punished as prescribed in the section.
The cases, so far as my investigаtion extends, with one exception,— U. S. v. Hartman,
In the сase at bar, forgery is not predicated of the notarial certifi
The second count allеges that the defendant knowingly and willfully procured the presentation to the United States commissioner of pensions of a certain false, forged, and counterfeited affidavit, in support of and concerning a claim of one Francis G-eis for a pension from the United States. The affidavit and its alleged falsity, ivhich are set forth in full in said count, are the same as described in the first count. The second count is drawn under section 4746 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, which provides, among other things, that “every person who knowingly or wilfully in any wise procures the making or presentаtion of any false or fraudulent affidavit concerning a claim for pension, or payment thereof, or pertaining to any other matter within thе jurisdiction of the commissioner of pensions,- * * * shall be punished” as prescribed in the section. It will be observed that the words employed in this sectiоn to designate the instrument denounced are very different from those used, for the same purpose, in section 5421, which, as I have hereinbeforе held, applies only to forged instruments, the phraseology of the latter section being; “Every person who falsely makes, alters, forges, cоunterfeits,” etc. Of this latter statute it was said, in U. S. v. Moore, supra, “It punishes one who falsely makes an affidavit, and not one who malíes a false affidavit.” Pursuing the same line of thought, the court, in' U. S. v. Cameron (Dak.)
“To falsely make an affidavit is one thing; to make a false affidavit is another. A person may falsely make an affidavit every sentence of which may be true in fact; or he may actually make an affidavit every sentence of which shаll be false. It is the false making which the statute makes an offense, and this is \ forgery, as described in all the elementary books.”
Section 4746 refers, not to the falsely making of an affidavit, but to the making of a false affidavit, and would seem, therefore, to punish subornation of perjury, or the presentation of an affidavit in which perjury was committed. Seе U. S. v. Kuentsler,
Another objection urged to the second count, is its failure to allege that said affidavit -was presented in support of a claim then pending. This objection also seems to be well taken. U. S. v. Kessel,
