By the Rev. Sts. c. 128, § 1, it is enacted that “ every person who, being lawfully required to depose the truth on any proceeding in a course of justice, shall commit perjury,” shall be
The immediate inquiry here is, to what tribunals is the crime here punishable limited ? We may answer, first, that it is not confined to courts of record. False swearing before any judicial tribunal, having lawful authority to summon witnesses and administer oaths, might be perjury. We do not suppose that a technical suit by civil process is the only case in which perjury can be committed in civil proceedings. It would seem to be a sound principle, that if the tribunal was one before which witnesses might properly be called to testify under oath, false swearing before it might be punishable as perjury.
It becomes material to examine our statutes and ascertain the precise character of the tribunal before which the false swearing is alleged to have taken place in the present instance. We find the board of fence-viewers to be public officers, required by law to consist of two or more, to be chosen annually in each town, who are required to be sworn to the faithful discharge of the duties of their office. Rev. Sts. c. 15, § 33; c. 19,
These duties indicate that a board of fence-viewers is a tribunal created with authority to adjudicate upon important rights of property, and clothed with final jurisdiction upon matters which may be of very considerable pecuniary importance. Treating the questions to be settled by them as adversary in their nature, the statute, in order to secure the proper discharge of their duties, requires them to give notice to each party before proceeding to act. A hearing necessarily implies an opportunity given to the parties to show the facts appertaining to the case, and this further implies that such facts may properly be required to come from witnesses under the usual safeguard of the administration of an oath, to testify the truth. Looking at the character of this tribunal as thus developed, and as we are conversant with it practically, the court are of opinion that pequry may be committed by a person testifying falsely and corruptly as a witness at a hearing before a board of fence-viewers legally assembled to adjudicate upon the rights of adjacent landowners as to their division fences.
If the occasion was a proper one for taking testimony, a justice of the peace, in their presence, and at their request, might administer the oath to the witnesses. Rev. Sts. c. 85, § 36.
Exceptions sustained.
