Mattingly v. State
Mattingly v. State
Opinion of the Court
This appeal is from a judgment of the District Court by which the appellant was convicted of the offence of perjury.
The sufficiency of the indictment, which was called in question in the court below by motion in arrest of judgment, forms the first and most important subject of inquiry presented .by this appeal. The perjury assigned is in an alleged false oath taken before the grand jury, during an investigation into violations of the act of the Legislature commonly known as the “ local-option law,” and in answer to a question propounded to the defendant by the foreman of the grand jury, set out in the indictment. We here set out such portion of the indictment as charges the offence, including the question and the answer upon which the charge of perjury rests.
After seemingly appropriate averments as to the meeting of the court and the organization of the grand jury, the authority of the foreman to administer the oath averred to be false and that the law was in force in Jasper County at the time, that it was the duty of the grand jury to inquire
Either from facts alleged, or by direct averment, the evidence which is charged as having been false must appear tp have been material to the issue (2 Bishop’s Cr. Proc., sect. 915), or material for the ends of public justice, in the
By reference to the statute it will be seen that the sale of whiskey or other intoxicating liquor is not per se a violation of the local-option law. It is provided in the first section of the act that nothing contained in it shall be so construed as to prohibit the sale of wines for sacramental purposes, nor alcoholic stimulants as medicines in case of actual sickness, when sold upon the written prescription of a regular practising physician, certifying to its actual necessity as a, medicine.” So that whilst in an indictment for violating the law it might or might not be necessary to aver negatively the proviso, yet when it is sought to hold one charged with perjury for having testified before the grand jury simply that he had not sold whiskey or other intoxicating liquor, it should also have been stated that the sale was not within the proviso, as without this the law would not have been violated. Whether the matter contained in the proviso should be averred in the indictment, or whether it is -matter of defence, still the fact remains that a violation of the provisions of ihe law must be made to appear from the body of the section as well as the proviso, in an indictment like the one here under consideration. To our minds, less than this would not set out in plain language the materiality of the alleged false statement. The different sales averred in
Our Penal Code defines the crime of perjury as being a false statement, either written or verbal, deliberately and wilfully made, relating to something past or present, under the sanction of an oath, or such affirmation as is by law equivalent to an oath, when such oath or affirmation is legally administered under circumstances in which an oath or affirmation is required by law, or is necessary for the prosecution or defence of any private right, or for the ends of public justice. Penal Code, art. 287; Rev. Penal Code, art. 188. And oaths legally taken before a grand jury are included in the description of this offence. Penal Code, art. 290 a; Rev. Penal Code, art. 192. The statement of any circumstance utterly immaterial to the matter in respect to which the declaration is made is not perjury. Penal Code, art. 221; Rev. Penal Code, art. 193. An indictment for perjury “ must state the acts and things done and said by the defendant; with such facts and circumstances connected with them, with such fulness and particularity for it to appear plainly and intelligibly that the matter wherewith he is charged contains the essential constituents in the definition of the offence.” The State v. Peters, 41 Texas, 7; Smith v. The State, 1 Texas Ct. App. 620; West v. The State, at the present term, ante, p. 119.
Because the indictment does not show upon its face that the act which it is averred the defendant did, and which he alleged he did not do, was any violation of law, the materiality of the alleged false statement does not appear from the face of the indictment, and for this reason the indictment does not charge any offence against the law; and for this reason the motion in arrest of judgment should have prevailed.
Because the indictment upon which the appellant was tried and convicted is defective and insufficient to sustain the conviction, the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.