125 Ark. 532 | Ark. | 1916
This is an appeal from a judgment of the circuit court of Garland County convicting appellant of the crime of perjury, which said offense was alleged in the indictment to have been committed by false swearing in a civil suit tried in the Garland Cireuit Court wherein appellant Van Camp was plaintiff, and J. T. Strite and A. L. Valentine were defendants.
Strite and Valentine were the owners of four horses said to be racers, and they brought their horses to the city of Hot Springs to attend races held there in the month of March, 1916. Appellant and one Jones resided in Hot Springs, and they applied to Strite and Valentine to get them badges which would pass them to the race track so that they could encourage betting. During the progress of the races, negotiations were opened up by appellant and Jones with Strite and Valentine for the purchase of the horses, and an agreement was finally reached for the sale of the horses or some of them to appellant and Jones. There is a conflict in the testimony concerning the terms of the sale. Strite and Valentine testified that they agreed to sell only three of the horses, named, respectively, Envy, Cooster and Cherry Seed, and that the other horse, named Encore, was not to be included in the trade. They also testified that only the horses were to be sold, and none of the racing equipments or the covers or bridles or saddles were to be included. Appellant and Jones both testified that the sale was to include all four of the horses and the blankets, saddles and bridles and other equipments. The price agreed upon was $1,500, and there is no dispute about that.
It appears from the testimony that the terms of the trade were finally agreed upon on a certain evening, and that appellant was to prepare the bill of sale, and the parties were to meet the next morning for the purpose of consummating the sale'. They met the next morning and in the meantime appellant bad prepared the bill of sale, which Strite and Valentine read over carefully, and they testify that the writing did not include the name of' the horse Encore or the other property, except the names of the other three horses. According to the testimony of Strite and Valentine, Jones left the parties to go to one of the banks to get the remainder of the money he needed to make the payment of $1,500, and on his return they repaired to the office of a justice of the peace, and when they reached there, Strite and Valentine signed the instrument, and their signatures were witnessed by the justice of the peace and a constable who happened to be present.
There is a sharp conflict in the testimony as to wbat occurred immediately afterward concerning the payment of the money. Strite and Valentine both testified that as soon as the bill of sale was signed, appellant picked it up and left the room; that Jones ran his hand into his pocket and walked into the next room, and when Valentine and Strite followed him Jones remarked that Van Camp wanted a commission for selling the horses; that they refused to allow any commission, and that Jones refused to pay the money except in tbe presence of appellant. Each of these men testified that the agreed purchase price was not paid then or at any other time. On the other hand, appellant and Jones each testified that the money was handed over to Strite and Valentine in the office of the justice of the peace, and that that ended the transaction. The bill of sale as exhibited at the trial shows that the horse Encore and the blankets, bridles, saddles, etc., were included therein, but Strite and Valentine testified that those things were not in the bill of sale at the time it was signed. The testimony of the justice of the peace and constable to some extent corroborates the testimony of appellant and Jones, but they do not swear positively that the money was actually paid over in the office or that the writing included the horse Encore or the other items in dispute. Strite and Valentine testified that after making considerable effort, without success, to get appellant and Jones together so that they could get the money, they went out to the race track where the horses were, and that later appellant came out there with an officer and tried to get the horses. They refused to give up the horses and a replevin suit was brought in the name of appellant.
In the trial of that cause in the circuit court, appellant testified as a witness and his testimony was substantially tbe same as that given in tbe trial of the present case. He testified in both trials that the horse Encore and the blankets, saddles, bridles, etc., were included in the trade and were described in the bill of sale, and that the price, $1,500, was paid in the office of the justice of the peace. The charge of perjury set forth in the indictment is predicated on the testimony given in the trial of the civil case which is alleged to be false. There is little, if any, controversy as to the substance of the testimony given by appellant in the trial of the civil case, the real controversy being over the question of the truth or falsity of that testimony concerning the alleged sale of the horses.
The assignments of error are very numerous and many of them are not of sufficient importance to call for discussion. Only those which are deemed important will therefore be mentioned.
Counsel for appellant then asked the witness whether or not he relied upon the rules of the association for a conviction in the case, and to prove that he did not sell the fourth horse, Encore, but the court refused to permit the cross-examination to proceed any further along that line, and we are of the opinion that the ruling of the court was correct. The question was really frivolous and the court properly stopped the cross-examination along that line.
Objection was made to an instruction given by the court submitting the question whether or not appellant purchased from Strife and Valentine four horses, naming them, “or any other horses,” it being contended that the undisputed testimony shows that three horses were purchased, and that that question should not have been submitted to the jury. It may be said, in the first place, that there is no dispute about the negotiations for the sale of the three horses nor for the price to be paid, and that there could not be any prejudice in that part of the instruction objected to, but what the court meant to submit there was whether the purchase of any horses at all had in fact been consummated by payment of the money. There was a sharp conflict in the testimony as to whether or not there had been a consummation of the sale which the undisputed testimony showed had been negotiated. That was one of the issues in the ease which affected the question of the truth or falsity of appellant’s alleged testimony.
It is insisted that the evidence is not sufficient to justify a conviction — that the testimony of Strite and Valentine was of such a character that it ought to have been entirely disregarded by the jury. We think, however, that that was a question for the jury, and that there was sufficient evidence to sustain the conviction.
The judgment is therefore affirmed.