Plaintiff in error was informed against in the Criminal Court of Record for the County of Hills-borough upon a charge of perjury. The information was in two counts. Upon a trial he was found guilty under the second count and sentenced to serve a term of two years at hard' labor in the State prison.
The charge contained in the count of the information upon which plaintiff in error was convicted is in the following language: “That at and upon the trial of said issue so joined between the parties as aforesaid, it then and there became and was a material question whether the said A. Y. Yarbrough had seen and had in his possession one Buick Little Six Model 1918 automobile, the same being a gasoline motor propelled vehicle, the property of one Charles F. Aullck, and had' tried tо sell the same to one M. C. Tinsley for three hundred dollars on the 19th and 20th days of January, A. I). 1919, and had addressed a certain envelope and written a certain letter to one Chas. Clinton, as hereinafter set out in full, and that the said A. Y. Yarbrough being so sworn as aforesaid, then and' there upon the trial of said issue, on his oath aforesaid, falsely, corruptly, knowingly, wilfully and maliciously, before the said jurors as aforesaid, and before the said Honorable W. S. Graham, judge presiding over said court as aforesaid, did depose аnd swear concerning said' material questions in substance and to the effect following, that is to say: That he had not seen,
Plaintiff in error had a few. days before the trial in this case been tried in the same court upon an information charging him with the larceny of the automobile described in this infоrmation and was found not guilty'by the jury.
There are a number of assignments of error in the record but we shall consider those only that are discussed in the brief of counsel.
The first question discussed is the refusal of the trial court, after the tailing of the State’s evidence, to dirеct a verdict in favor of the defendant. There was no error in this ruling. It has been repeatedly held by this court that a defendant is not entitled as of right to an instruction to the jury to return a verdict of not guilty. Drayton v. State,
The question to which most of the brief of counsel is dеvoted, is based upon an assignment which challenges the soundness of the trial court’s order denying defendant’s application for a new trial. It is urged under this assignment that inasmuch as plaintiff in error had been acquitted upon the charge of the'larceny of the automobile described, upon the theory that he was not guilty of the theft of such automobile, that he could not thereafter be tried upon a charge of perjury on the ground that he testified upon the trial in the larceny charge that he had
In support of this contention the following authorities are cited: United States v. Butler, 38 Fed. Rep. 498; Cooper v. Commonwealth,
But that is not this case. Here the charge of perjury upon which plaintiff in error was convicted is not necessarily based upon the assumption that he was guilty of the charge of larceny. It does not follow that be-' сause he was acquitted upon the charge of larceny that all material evidence tending to prove his guilt in that case was false and all material evidence given in his behalf was true. Nor would it be sound policy to permit a defendant, as a witnеss in his own behalf, -to perjure
In the case of People v. Albers,
It is also urged (that there is no proof that the alleged fa’se testimony given by plaintiff in error was material to the issue involved in the case in which it was given.
Materially of the alleged false testimony is an essential element of the crime of perjury which, in order to sustain a conviction, must be alleged and proved. Brown v. State,
In order to test the question of its materiality it is necessary to ascertain just what the testimony of plaintiff in error was which is alleged to be false, for the giving of which he was convicted. The first count in the information charges that he did swear falsely, etc., in the triаl of á criminal cause in substance and to thé effect “that he (meaning the defendant) did not try to sell one Buick Little Six Model 1918 automobile, the same being a gasoline propelled vehicle, to one M. C. Tindall for $300,” but iipon this count he was acquitted.
We have inсorporated in this opinion the second count upon which he was convicted. In this count he is charged with having sworn falsely, etc., in the trial of a criminal cause in substance and to the effect “that he (meaning the defendant) had not seen and did not have in his possession, and.' did not on the 19th and 20ths days of January, 1919, try to sell to one M. C. Tindall for the sum of $300 said Buick Little Six Model 1918 automobile, same being a gasoline motor propelled vehicle.’’
For the purpose of this discussion it may be conceded that there was no sufficient proof of the materiality of the assignments predicated upon the denial of defendant that he did write a certain name and address and а certain letter set out in the information. The decisive question on this point then • is this: Was the testimony of the defendant given in the trial in which he was charged with the larceny of a certain automobile to the effect that “he had not seen,” and, “did not have in his possession” such automobile, material to the issue there involved', and is there proof of its materiality in this .record, sufficient to support a verdict of conviction?
There is evidence in the record to< the effect that the automobile alleged to have been stolen was stolen from the home of its owner in the City of Tampa on the night of January 18th, 1919, and that plaintiff in error was seen with it in his possession in the City of Lakeland during the next two or three days.
The unexplained possession, of recently, stolen goods raises the presumption that the possessor is the thief,
There is, however, an error in the record, which requires a reversal of the judgment. One of' the grounds for the motion for a new trial is that the verdict is not supported by the evidence. It is settled law that a verdict of conviction in a perjury case must have for its support something more than the testimony of one witness. In the case of McClerkin v. State,
In this case, more than one witness testified that plaintiff in error did testify under oath in the trial of the larceny case, as alleged in the information, that he had not seen and did not have in his possession the automobile alleged' to have been stolen, but to prove the falsity of this statement, only one witness was introduced, and there is in the record the uncorroborated evidence of one witness only to prove that plaintiff had seen and did have in his possession such automobile.-
The judgment will, therefore, be reversed.
