Commonwealth v. Focht
Commonwealth v. Focht
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The defendant was tried and convicted under an indictment which set forth that “Daniel Focht, late of the said county, yeoman, on the 9th day of March, in the year of our Lord, 1908, at the county aforesaid and within the jurisdiction of this court, ‘ with force and .arms, etc., did unlawfully, wilfully, corruptly and falsely swear before the Honorable Charles D. Schaeffer, Mayor of the City of Allentown, County aforesaid and State of Pennsylvania, in the matter heard before his Honor, Charles D. Schaeffer, wherein one May Peters was charged with selling liquor without a license and keeping and maintaining a disorderly house, before whom he testified that he was not at May Peters’ house on the morning of the 9th of March,” etc.
Section 14 of the penal code, Act of March 31, 1860, P. L. 382, provides: “If any person shall wilfully and corruptly commit wilful and corrupt perjury, or shall by any means procure or suborn any person to commit wilful and corrupt perjury, on his or her oath or affirmation, legally administered either before any committee of the legislature of this commonwealth, or in any judicial proceeding, matter or cause which may be depending in any of the courts thereof, or before any judge, justice, mayor, recorder, alderman or other magistrate, or before any arbitrator, prothonotary, clerk, notary public, commissioner or auditor, appointed by any court of this, commonwealth, etc., ... . shall be guilty of wilfully and corruptly making a false oath or affirmation,” etc.
When the mayor was recalled, he was asked by the district attorney: “Q. In this case that Daniel Focht testified to on the evening of the 9th of March, what case did he appear in before you? A. He was subpoenaed to testify in the case against the cab drivers and also expected to testify in the case against May Peters which had developed in the testimony in the morning. Q. Did he there testify in the May Peters disorderly house case and for selling liquor without a license? A. Well, he said he hadn’t been there and I had no chance to ask him any questions. By the court: Was he interrogated in both cases or in one? A. It was the first case, he said he hadn’t been there, then I didn’t get him for the second case.”
Whether or not there was a case before the mayor, in which May Peters was, as set forth in the indictment, “charged with selling liquor without a license and keeping and maintaining a disorderly house,” in view of all the testimony, may well be doubted. It does not appear that any information was made against May Peters, or that any warrant was issued for her arrest, or that any docket entries were made, in which such a charge was contained, but even if there had been and she had been legally charged with the offense set forth, it clearly appears from the testimony of the mayor that the defendant was not called as a witness in such a case but was a witness in the case of the commonwealth against the five cabmen, in which May Peters was the prosecutor.
Subsequently, on cross-examination, the defendant endeavored to show by the mayor that there had been no separate charge or hearing against May Peters, as appears by the testimony: “Do you mean to say there was a charge on your docket in the morning against May Peters? A. We can’t tell, but in the morning it developed that Mrs. Peters was selling liquor according to their statement without a license and at the same time was maintaining a disorderly house, and then I directed the chief of police to have her there and at the same time to have her enter bail of $100 or keep her in custody. By the
However doubtful it may, therefore, be, whether or not May Peters was charged, as alleged in the indictment, with a separate offense, or a separate hearing was held in her case, it is clear from the testimony that the defendant was not examined as a witness in the proceeding in which he is alleged to have sworn falsely in the indictment. There is no allegation that the indictment itself is not good, but that the evidence does not sustain it, and this, upon a careful examination of the testimony, we think is established. The defendant was, therefore, entitled to an affirmance of his fourth point, that “Under all the evidence in the case, the verdict must be one of acquittal,” the refusal of which constitutes the second assignment of error.
The defendant also complains in his first* assignment of a qualification to the answer of the court to the affirmance of his first point. The entire answer was as follows: “I could deny this point taken as a whole, but I might lay myself open to be misunderstood by the jury, and I, therefore, affirm it, with this qualification, that it must be taken with my instruction as to what constitutes a reasonable doubt, and further, that the court has already decided that the fact which it is alleged Focht testified to is material. The point is affirmed. In other words, gentlemen of the jury, you must find that he testified in a proceeding had before Mayor Schaeffer against May Peters for keeping a disorderly house or whatever proceeding is charged in the indictment — for selling liquor without a license.” The appellant construes this to mean that the court gave binding instructions to the jury to find the fact stated in the qualifying clause in the answer. We do not so construe it. As we view the qualification in the answer, it is as if the court had said, “ In other words, gentlemen of the jury, in order to a conviction you must find, or it is necessary that you should find,” etc. It simply
Holding as we do, that the evidence did not sustain the indictment in its material averments as to the proceeding in which the testimony of the defendant alleged to be false was taken, we are of the opinion that the conviction cannot be sustained.
Judgment reversed and the defendant is hereby discharged without day.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.