2 Blackf. 278 | Ind. | 1829
William Weathers was indicted for perjury in the Ripley Circuit Court. The indictment states, that on the
This judgment cannot be sustained: it should have been arrested by the Circuit Court. The indictment is insufficient, inasmuch as it does not show conclusively, that the testimony given by Weathers was material to the issue between Gardner Woodbury, plaintiff, and Daniel Ross, Samuel Hodges, and Reuben Hodges, defendants. The facts sworn to must be material, in order to constitute the crime of peijary. A man may knowingly and corruptly swear falsely, and yet not be guilty of perjury. And the indictment, in order to-allege the crime of per
The indictment does not say, that the question whether Weathers paid the money to Knowlton after the assignment of the note was material; nor does it charge that he swore that he paid it before the assignment; therefore the deduction is clear, that the swearing may have been to a fact that the indictment does not allege to have been material. If the allegation of materiality in the indictment, is not sufficiently broad to cover the facts sworn to by the defendant, it is just the same as if the indictment contained no allegation of the materiality of the facts sworn to at all. And surely no lawyer would contend, that an indictment would be good without an allegation that the facts, to which the defendant deposed, were material. It therefore appears to us that, if we take the whole of the indictment as true, it does not fix upon the defendant the charge of perjury; for if the question of a payment to Knowlton, at any time subsequent to the assignment of the note, was not material, the swearing of Weathers, though false, may not have amounted to perjury. In fixing this conclusion,it must be remembered that the indictment does not pretend that the time when the note was assigned, and the time when Weathers gave this evidence, was the same; and in the very nature of the transactions, some time must have elapsed after the assignment of the note, before the defendant gave this evidence relative to this payment; and a question of payment, during this interval of time, is not said by the indictment to have been material; and for aught that appears in the indictment, it may have been in
The attorney for the state supposes, that the averment in the indictment that Weathers had not, before the time when he so swore, nor before the assignment of the said note, paid the said 73 dollars, removes this objection. But an averment, that Weathers had not paid the money before the assignment of the note, does not reach or limit the general terms of the swearing as to the time of payment. Nor does the general averment, that Weathers had not paid the money at any time before he gave this evidence, show that a question as to a payment at any time was material. It may be considered as showing that Weathers has certainly sworn falsely, but it does not reach the materiality of the facts sworn to, so as to show that a perjury had been committed.
There are other errors assigned that would demand our attention, if the one already examined did not show, conclusively, that the indictment is materially defective, and that the judgment must be wholly reversed.
The judgment is reversed. To be certified, &c.