Title: State v. Bosworth

State: louisiana

Issuer: Louisiana Supreme Court

Document:

#27510-vacate in pt and aff in pt-JMK 
2017 S.D. 43 
 
 
IN THE SUPREME COURT 
OF THE 
STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA 
 
 
* * * * 
STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA, 
Plaintiff and Appellee, 
 
 
 
 
 
v. 
 
ANNETTE MARIE BOSWORTH, 
Defendant and Appellant. 
 
 
 
 
* * * * 
 
APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF 
THE SIXTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT 
HUGHES COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA 
 
* * * * 
 
THE HONORABLE JOHN L. BROWN 
Judge 
 
* * * * 
 
 
 
MARTY J. JACKLEY 
Attorney General 
 
PAUL S. SWEDLUND 
Assistant Attorney General 
Pierre, South Dakota 
Attorneys for plaintiff 
 
and appellee. 
 
DANA L. HANNA 
Rapid City, South Dakota 
 
 
 
 
Attorney for defendant 
and appellant. 
 
 
* * * * 
 
ARGUED NOVEMBER 8, 2016  
 
OPINION FILED 07/19/17 
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KERN, Justice 
 
[¶1.]  
In order to get her name placed on the ballot for election to the United 
States Senate, Annette Bosworth submitted nominating petitions containing voters’ 
signatures to the Secretary of State.  On six of the petitions, Bosworth signed a 
sworn verification that she personally circulated the petitions.  An investigation 
revealed she was not the circulator, and the State charged Bosworth with six counts 
of perjury and six counts of offering false or forged instruments for filing.  A jury 
convicted Bosworth on all counts, and she appeals.  We vacate the convictions for 
perjury but affirm the remaining convictions.  
BACKGROUND 
[¶2.]  
In 2014, Bosworth ran for the Republican nomination for a seat in the 
United States Senate.  Bosworth was a physician practicing medicine in Sioux 
Falls, South Dakota.  In order for her name to appear on the ballot, state law 
required Bosworth to submit nominating petitions containing at least 1,995 voters’ 
signatures by March 25, 2014, to the Office of the Secretary of State. 
[¶3.]  
The State Board of Elections is authorized to promulgate rules 
regarding the procedure for acceptance and verification of petitions and the contents 
of petition forms.  SDCL 12-1-9.  A petition is defined as a form that is prescribed by 
the State Board of Elections, identifies the position the candidate is seeking, and 
contains the declaration of candidacy and the verification of the circulator.  SDCL 
12-1-3(8).  Pursuant to Administrative Rule of South Dakota (ARSD) 5:02:08:00.03, 
the circulator’s verification must contain the following language: “I, under oath, 
state that I circulated the above petition, that each signer personally signed this 
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petition in my presence, and that either the signer or I added the printed name, the 
residence address of the signer, the date of signing, and the county of voter 
registration.” 
[¶4.]  
Bosworth signed the circulator’s verification on six petitions.  She did 
not, however, personally circulate these petitions, and none of the voters who signed 
the petitions signed in her presence.  The voters signed the six petitions in January 
2014 while Bosworth was on a medical-aid mission in the Philippines.  After her 
return to the United States, Bosworth signed the petitions and verified them before 
a notary between January 20, 2014, and March 24, 2014.   
[¶5.]  
On March 25, 2014, Bosworth’s campaign consultant Patrick Davis 
delivered a number of petitions, including the six petitions bearing Bosworth’s 
verifications as circulator, to the Office of the Secretary of State.  Although 
Bosworth did not personally file the petitions, she directed Davis to do so.  
[¶6.]  
The Secretary of State conducted a signature-validation process to 
determine whether each petition had been properly completed.  After reviewing the 
petitions, the Secretary of State certified them as having met the legal 
requirements for valid petitions.  Accordingly, the Secretary counted the signatures 
on the petitions and placed Bosworth’s name on the ballot.  Bosworth subsequently 
lost in the Republican primary.   
[¶7.]  
Following the election, the Division of Criminal Investigation  
conducted an investigation into allegations that some of Bosworth’s petitions had 
been filed upon a false oath.  On June 17, 2014, the State indicted Bosworth on six 
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counts of perjury and six counts of offering false or forged instruments for filing.  
Bosworth pleaded not guilty to all charges.   
[¶8.]  
On May 18, 2015, Bosworth’s case proceeded to a jury trial.  Bosworth 
admitted she did not personally circulate the six petitions but denied she committed 
perjury or filed false or forged instruments with the Secretary of State.  Bosworth 
claimed she misunderstood the instructions for the circulator’s verification, 
mistakenly believing she was verifying that the signers were registered South 
Dakota Republicans and that their signatures were genuine.  Additionally, 
Bosworth testified that her misconceptions were based on legal advice she received 
from Joel Arends, the lawyer for her campaign.  Arends, however, testified for the 
prosecution and denied Bosworth’s claims, asserting he explicitly told her that she 
could not sign the circulator’s verification for petitions she did not personally 
circulate.  
[¶9.]  
Of the six petitions Bosworth verified as the circulator, only one 
contained nongenuine voters’ signatures.  This petition contained genuine 
signatures as well as signatures forged by the leader of a Hutterite religious colony 
on behalf of several of its members.  The leader added these signatures under the 
mistaken belief that he had authority to do so as the colony’s leader.  It is 
undisputed that Bosworth neither told the leader to forge the signatures nor 
learned of the forgeries until after she was indicted. 
[¶10.]  
Bosworth moved for a judgment of acquittal on the following grounds: 
(1) signing a circulator’s verification on a nominating petition and submitting it for 
filing is not done as part of a state or federal proceeding or action under SDCL 
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22-29-1; (2) a false verification on a nominating petition does not make the petition 
a false or forged instrument under SDCL 22-11-28.1; and (3) there was no evidence 
that Bosworth personally offered or filed any of the six petitions in question.  The 
circuit court denied the motion.  On May 27, 2015, the jury found Bosworth guilty of 
six counts of perjury and six counts of offering false or forged instruments for filing.  
The circuit court sentenced Bosworth to two years imprisonment, which was 
suspended on the condition that she spend three years on probation and complete 
500 hours of community service.  Bosworth appeals her convictions, alleging the 
circuit court erred by denying her motion for judgment of acquittal, and raises the 
following issues: 
1. 
Whether signing a circulator’s verification on a 
nominating petition and submitting it for filing with the 
Secretary of State is done in a state or federal proceeding 
or action under SDCL 22-29-1.   
 
2. 
Whether submitting a nominating petition with a 
circulator’s verification signed by someone other than the 
person who circulated the petition is offering a false or 
forged instrument under SDCL 22-11-28.1. 
 
3. 
Whether the evidence presented at trial was sufficient 
       
to support Bosworth’s convictions for offering false or  
       
forged instruments for filing.  
STANDARD OF REVIEW 
[¶11.]  
Statutory interpretation is a question of law, which we review de novo.  
Upell v. Dewey Cty. Comm’n, 2016 S.D. 42, ¶ 6, 880 N.W.2d 69, 71.  The denial of a 
motion for judgment of acquittal is also a question of law reviewed de novo.  State v. 
Brim, 2010 S.D. 74, ¶ 6, 789 N.W.2d 80, 83.  When reviewing whether evidence is 
sufficient to sustain a conviction, we “consider[] the evidence in a light most 
favorable to the verdict.  A guilty verdict will not be set aside if the [S]tate’s 
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evidence and all favorable inferences that can be drawn therefrom support a 
rational theory of guilt.  We do not resolve conflicts in the evidence, pass on the 
credibility of the witnesses, determine the plausibility of an explanation, or weigh 
the evidence.”  State v. Janklow, 2005 S.D. 25, ¶ 16, 693 N.W.2d 685, 693.  
DECISION 
1. 
Whether signing  a circulator’s verification on a 
nominating petition and submitting it for filing with the 
Secretary of State is done in a state or federal proceeding 
or action under SDCL 22-29-1.   
 
[¶12.]  
Bosworth argues that a statement made in the circulator’s verification 
on a nominating petition and submitted to the Secretary of State is not done in a 
proceeding or action under SDCL 22-29-1.  Proceeding and action are not defined in 
the statute.  Bosworth claims the words are terms of art that should be interpreted 
in line with their established legal meanings.  According to Bosworth, proceeding 
and action involve matters occurring in judicial or quasi-judicial adjudicatory 
settings.  Bosworth argues that other statutes in the South Dakota Code define 
proceeding and action in a way that is consistent with this approach.  Because she 
did not sign the petitions and submit them to the Secretary of State as part of a 
judicial or quasi-judicial proceeding, Bosworth submits that interpreting SDCL 
22-29-1 to criminalize her conduct defies legislative intent.   
[¶13.]  
The State argues that the phrase proceeding or action includes more 
than judicial and quasi-judicial settings, and that Bosworth’s narrow interpretation 
ignores the Legislature’s revision to the statute in 2002.  The 2002 revision replaced 
cases with state or federal proceeding or action, which the State claims broadened 
the scope of the statute.  The State submits that a signed, written oath presented as 
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part of a filing before an administrative agency constitutes a statement made in a 
proceeding.   
[¶14.]  
An act of perjury is defined in SDCL 22-29-1 to occur when:  
Any person who, having taken an oath to testify, declare, 
depose, or certify truly, before any competent tribunal, officer, or 
person, in any state or federal proceeding or action in which such 
an oath may by law be administered, states, intentionally and 
contrary to the oath, any material matter which the person 
knows to be false . . . .   
 
(Emphasis added.) 
[¶15.]  
Although neither proceeding nor action is defined in SDCL chapter 
22-29, the Legislature has defined the words numerous times throughout the code.  
See SDCL 15-1-1(1); SDCL 15-12-20(1); SDCL 15-24-5; SDCL 19-13A-2(7); 
SDCL 21-1-15(1); SDCL 37-5B-1; SDCL 47-1A-140(32); SDCL 47-1A-850.  
“Whenever the meaning of a word or phrase is defined in any statute such definition 
is applicable to the same word or phrase wherever it occurs except where a contrary 
intention plainly appears.”  SDCL 2-14-4.   
[¶16.]  
The Legislature has consistently defined the word action to indicate a 
matter involving an adjudication.  Under SDCL 15-1-1(1), “[a]n action is an 
ordinary proceeding in a court of justice, by which a party prosecutes another party 
for the enforcement, determination, or protection of a right, the redress or 
prevention of a wrong, or the punishment of a public offense.  Every other remedy is 
a special proceeding[.]”  (Emphasis added.)  Under SDCL 15-12-20(1), the word 
action means “any action or special proceeding in the trial court, whether civil or 
criminal or quasi-criminal[.]”  (Emphasis added.)  Under SDCL 21-1-15(1), an action 
means “any civil lawsuit or action in contract or tort for damage or indemnity 
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brought against a construction professional to assert a claim for damage or the loss 
of use of real or personal property caused by a construction defect.”  Under 
SDCL 37-5B-1, the word action means “any complaint, cross claim, counterclaim, 
and third-party complaint in a judicial action or proceeding, and their equivalent in 
an administrative action or arbitration[.]”  Bosworth’s submission was not done as 
part of an adjudication and was therefore not made as part of an action. 
[¶17.]  
The use of the word proceeding throughout the code, however, reveals 
more diverse definitions.  Under SDCL 15-24-5, prescribing Supreme Court 
procedure, the term proceeding “includes all public appellate arguments, hearings, 
or other proceedings before the Supreme Court, except those specifically excluded by 
the rules.”  In the Uniform Mediation Act, the word proceeding is defined in 
SDCL 19-13A-2(7) to mean: “(A) a judicial, administrative, arbitral, or other 
adjudicative process, including related pre-hearing and post-hearing motions, 
conferences, and discovery; or (B) a legislative hearing or similar process.”  Under 
SDCL 47-1A-140(32), found in the Business Corporation Act, the word proceeding 
“includes civil suit and criminal, administrative, and investigatory action[.]”  And 
under the same Act, in SDCL 47-1A-850, the word proceeding means “any 
threatened, pending, or completed action, suit, or proceeding, whether civil, 
criminal, administrative, arbitrative, or investigative and whether formal or 
informal.”  Although the definitions of proceeding vary, at a minimum, they include 
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an adjudicatory process or hearing before a tribunal or an investigation taken under 
its authority.1    
[¶18.]  
As there is no evidence that the Legislature intended a contrary 
intention or different meaning for proceeding in SDCL 22-29-1, we look to these 
statutory definitions for guidance.  State v. Sondreal, 459 N.W.2d 435, 439-40 
(S.D. 1990).  We, however, also consider that the Legislature amended 
SDCL 22-29-1 in 2002.  2002 S.D. Sess. Laws ch. 113, § 1.  The full title of the 
amending legislation was: “An Act to change the definition and venue of perjury 
prosecutions and to provide for the verification of certain information on certain 
state applications or other documents.”  2002 S.D. Sess. Laws ch. 113 (emphasis 
added).  As the title suggests, the act consisted of three parts.  The Legislature first 
changed the definition of perjury by deleting the words of the cases and replacing 
them with state or federal proceeding or action.  The Legislature also added a new 
code section relating to venue.  In the third section, the Legislature added a new 
code section defining a distinct form of perjury criminalizing the false verification of 
information on a petition submitted to the State:  
Any person who submits any petition . . . for the purpose of 
obtaining benefits or any other privilege from the State of South 
Dakota shall verify, under oath, that such petition, application, 
or information is true and correct.  However, it is sufficient if the 
claimant, in lieu of verification under oath, signs a statement 
printed or written thereon in the form following: “I declare and 
affirm under the penalties of perjury that this claim (petition, 
application, information) has been examined by me, and to the 
best of my knowledge and belief, is in all things true and 
                                            
1. 
At trial, the jury received Instruction 44, which defined proceeding as “[a]ny 
act or event that takes place in a progression of a lawsuit, or in the regular 
business of a court or other official body.” 
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correct.”  Any person who signs such statement as provided for in 
this section, knowing the statement to be false or untrue, in whole 
or in part, shall be guilty of perjury. 
2002 S.D. Sess. Laws ch. 113, § 3; see also SDCL 22-29-9.1.2 
[¶19.]  
Notably, SDCL 22-29-9.1 does not contain a proceeding-or-action 
requirement, and to interpret proceeding in SDCL 22-29-1 to include the submission 
of a falsely verified petition would render SDCL 22-29-9.1 superfluous.  This we will 
not do as “[w]e assume that the Legislature intended that no part of its statutory 
scheme be rendered mere surplusage.”  Pitt-Hart v. Sanford USD Med. Ctr., 
2016 S.D. 33, ¶ 13, 878 N.W.2d 406, 411.  We, therefore, conclude that Bosworth’s 
submission of a nominating petition to the Secretary of State was not done in a 
proceeding within the meaning of the statute.   
[¶20.]  
It is possible that the 2002 amendment broadened the application of 
SDCL 22-29-1.3  But we reject the State’s view that the legislation expanded SDCL 
22-29-1 to cover more than adjudicatory processes or hearings before tribunals or 
investigations taken under their authority.  Signing a nominating petition under a 
written oath before submitting it to a state authority is not a statement made in a 
proceeding or action under SDCL 22-29-1.  Because the State failed to prove an 
element of the offense, the circuit court erred in denying Bosworth’s motion for 
                                            
2. 
In 2005, the Legislature amended the statute, changing the phrase “shall be” 
(guilty of perjury) to “is.” 
 
3.  
Although we interpret the meaning of the words actions and proceedings, we 
do not analyze the scope of the word cases.  Without doing so, we cannot 
determine that the scope of the words actions or proceedings is broader. 
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judgment of acquittal on the perjury charges, and we vacate her convictions for 
violating SDCL 22-29-1.   
2. 
Whether submitting a nominating petition with a circulator’s 
verification signed by someone other than the person who 
circulated the petition is offering a false or forged instrument 
under SDCL 22-11-28.1.   
 
[¶21.]  
The State convicted Bosworth of six counts of offering a false or forged 
instrument for filing.  SDCL 22-11-28.1 provides:   
Any person who offers any false or forged instrument, knowing 
that the instrument is false or forged, for filing, registering, or 
recording in a public office, which instrument, if genuine, could 
be filed, registered, or recorded under any law of this state or of 
the United States, is guilty of a Class 6 felony. 
 
Bosworth argues that the circuit court erred by denying her motion for judgment of 
acquittal because “untrue statements in a voters’ petition do not make the petition a 
false instrument if the petition itself is not counterfeit, inauthentic, and devoid of 
lawful authority.”4  In her view, the use of false or forged in the statute suggests 
that false should be interpreted similarly to forged pursuant to the canon of 
interpretation noscitur a sociis, which means “a word is known by the company it 
keeps.”  Jarecki v. G.D. Searle & Co., 367 U.S. 303, 307, 81 S. Ct. 1579, 1582, 6 L. 
Ed. 2d 859 (1961).  Bosworth contends that the petitions “were in fact what they 
appeared to be: petitions signed by voters nominating a candidate for public office.”  
Because the falsity at issue involves a false fact stated in each petition, “not in the 
                                            
4. 
SDCL chapter 22-11 does not define the word instrument.  Bosworth disputes 
whether “false statements in a genuine legal document make that document 
a false instrument,” not whether a nominating petition is an instrument 
under SDCL 22-11-28.1.  We therefore assume, without deciding, that it is an 
instrument for purposes of this opinion.   
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genuineness of the petition[s] [themselves],” Bosworth claims the petitions are not 
false instruments.   
[¶22.]  
In response, the State submits that the petitions containing untruthful 
verifications are false instruments under SDCL 22-11-28.1.  The State relies on 
Reaser v. Reaser, 2004 S.D. 116, 688 N.W.2d 429, State v. Hayes, 37 S.D. 530, 
159 N.W. 108 (1916), and several other cases to support its position that the 
presence of a false statement renders an instrument false.  The State also contends 
that under ARSD 5:02:08:00.01(1)(b), the petitions at issue were improperly 
completed, so they were invalid and not genuine as Bosworth claims.  Finally, the 
State asserts that “Bosworth’s notion that a document must be literally forged to be 
a ‘false instrument’ under SDCL 22-11-28.1” contravenes the statute’s primary 
purpose of protecting the integrity of public records.  
[¶23.]  
Bosworth first argues that an instrument is false if it is not genuine 
and that it is not genuine if it is forged or counterfeit.  Although the definitions of 
false and forged suggest some overlap, they are distinct concepts.  Because SDCL 
22-11-28.1 uses or to cover two types of instruments, those that are false and those 
that are forged, the linguistic canon of noscitur a sociis is inapplicable in this case.  
“The use of the disjunctive usually indicates alternatives and requires that those 
alternatives be treated separately.”  1A Norman Singer & Shambie Singer, 
Sutherland Statutes and Statutory Construction § 21:14 (7th ed.), Westlaw 
(database updated November 2016).  SDCL 22-39-36 defines the crime of forgery: 
“Any person who, with intent to defraud, falsely makes, completes, or alters a 
written instrument of any kind, or passes any forged instrument of any kind is 
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guilty of forgery.”  False is defined as “1. Untrue. 2. Deceitful; lying. 3. Not genuine; 
inauthentic . . . . 4. Wrong; erroneous.”  Black’s Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014).  The 
definition of forgery includes falsely, but forgery only covers a certain type of 
falsehood: falsity in execution.  “Where the ‘falsity lies in the representation of facts, 
not in the genuineness of execution,’ it is not forgery.”  Gilbert v. United States, 
370 U.S. 650, 658, 82 S. Ct. 1399, 1404, 8 L. Ed. 2d 750 (1962) (quoting Marteney v. 
United States, 216 F.2d 760, 763-64 (10th Cir. 1954)).   
[¶24.]  
The distinction made by the Supreme Court of the United States in 
Gilbert is consistent with our holding in State v. Hayes.  In Hayes, the defendant 
was a corporate officer of a bank who signed and issued written evidence of $2,000 
in debt deposited by a relative, but in reality, the defendant knew only $10 was 
deposited.  37 S.D. at 532, 159 N.W. at 109.  The State charged Hayes with forgery, 
which at the time prohibited bank officers from “willfully sign[ing]. . . any false or 
fraudulent bond or other evidence of debt[.]”  Id. at 533, 159 N.W. at 109.  After a 
conviction, the circuit court granted Hayes’s motion in arrest of judgment, but the 
State appealed to this Court.  Id.   
[¶25.]  
On appeal, Hayes argued that “because the instrument was the 
genuine act of respondent[,] it was not a false instrument; that there is a distinction 
between a false instrument and one which contains false statements; and that the 
statute does not cover the latter case.”  Id. at 534, 159 N.W. at 110.  We 
acknowledged “a distinction between the false making of an instrument and the 
making of a false instrument” but held that the statute related “to the making or 
issuing of a false or fraudulent instrument.”  Id. at 534-35, 159 N.W. at 110.  
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Accordingly, we reversed the circuit court’s decision because “the willful issuing by a 
bank officer of a certificate of deposit in an amount in excess of the actual deposit 
renders the instrument a false evidence of debt within the meaning of [the statute].”  
Id. at 535, 159 N.W. at 110.  We also held that if someone other than an officer of 
the bank had “signed the name of John Hayes [(the relative)] to the certificate of 
deposit” and issued the certificate, “he would have been guilty of forgery in the first 
degree . . . but . . . not” guilty under this corporation-specific forgery statute.  Id.   
[¶26.]  
The takeaways from Hayes are that falsely executing an instrument 
with the name of another was forgery and that issuing an instrument containing an 
untrue statement of fact was sufficient to render the instrument “false or 
fraudulent.”  Id.  The petitions in this case were not forgeries because Bosworth’s 
executions of the circulator’s verifications were genuine––she signed her own name.  
The falsity of the petitions stems from Bosworth’s misrepresentations of fact: 
contrary to Bosworth’s verifications, voters did not sign the petitions in her 
presence.  Thus, the petitions contain untrue statements of fact and, accordingly, 
are false instruments.5   
                                            
5.  
The concurrence correctly points out that under SDCL 22-11-28.1, “a ‘false 
instrument’ must be one that is not ‘genuine.’”  Infra ¶ 42.  To conclude, 
however, that Bosworth’s petitions are false instruments because they “lacked 
the qualities of what nominating petitions purport to be or to have” conflates 
distinct concepts.  Id.  An instrument that is not genuine is not necessarily a 
false instrument.  In SDCL 22-11-28.1, the Legislature determined that 
neither false instruments nor forged instruments are genuine.  Both types of 
instruments, however, have more precise meanings than being nongenuine.  
Although the petitions were not what they purported to be, what made them 
false instruments is that they each contained an untrue statement of fact. 
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[¶27.]  
Prohibiting the knowing filing of instruments containing false 
statements of fact also comports with SDCL 22-11-28.1’s vital purpose of ensuring 
that filings with state offices are truthful.6  The presence of false facts in publicly 
filed documents poses serious concerns regarding the integrity of public records and 
legal processes.  The regulations governing nominating petitions exist to ensure 
“the integrity of the circulation process, and in turn, the political process.”  
Cunningham v. Schaeflein, 969 N.E.2d 861, 876 (Ill. App. Ct. 2012).  Further, SDCL 
22-11-28.1’s purpose underscores what its text suggests: that fraud upon the 
government may be perpetrated by knowingly filing false instruments as well as 
forged instruments, and that both types of documents are nongenuine and not 
properly filed with the State. 
[¶28.]  
Additionally, Reaser v. Reaser supports the proposition that an 
instrument containing an untrue statement of fact is a false instrument.  In that 
case, we discussed whether the filing of a stipulation containing a false statement 
about a child-support obligation could constitute falsification of evidence in violation 
of SDCL 22-11-22, a statute akin to SDCL 22-11-28.1.  Reaser, 2004 S.D. 116, ¶ 20, 
688 N.W.2d at 435-36.  SDCL 22-11-22 provided: “Any person who prepares any 
false book, paper, record, instrument in writing, or other matter or thing with intent 
to produce it or allow it to be produced as genuine in any trial, proceeding, inquiry, 
or investigation authorized by law, is guilty of a Class 6 felony.”  (Emphasis 
                                            
6. 
SDCL 22-11-28.1 includes the element of scienter.  Any violation must be 
knowing. 
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added.)7  The stipulation purported to provide for a child-support obligation, but the 
parties had privately entered into a separate agreement, which disavowed any such 
obligation.  Reaser, 2004 S.D. 116, ¶¶ 4-5, 688 N.W.2d at 431.  We held that “[a] 
reasonable person could conclude that under the facts of this case, the making of the 
. . . stipulation was the preparation of a false instrument made with intent to 
produce it or allow it to be produced as genuine in a proceeding authorized by law.”  
Id. ¶ 20, 688 N.W.2d at 435-36.  The stipulation was presumably truthful and 
genuine in other respects, but the untrue statement of fact regarding the child-
support obligation was sufficient to render the stipulation a false instrument in 
violation of a criminal statute with elements similar to SDCL 22-11-28.1.   
[¶29.]  
Although the State also relies upon State v. Paulson, 2015 S.D. 12, 
861 N.W.2d 504, we find the case inapposite.  In Paulson, the criminal conduct 
involved filing with the circuit court phony orders from an illusory court.  See id. 
¶¶ 3, 23, 861 N.W.2d at 505, 510.  Arguably, the orders might have been false as 
well as forged, but we neither defined nor differentiated the two terms.  Rather, we 
discussed the nature of the orders and simply concluded that, “with the facts taken 
in a light most favorable to the verdict, the order was a false instrument, devoid of 
                                            
7. 
The crime of falsification of evidence has been transferred from SDCL 
22-11-22 to SDCL 22-12A-16.  The wording of the statute remains the same.  
Notably, SDCL 22-12A-15 defines the crime of offering forged or fraudulent 
evidence: “Any person who, in any trial, proceeding, inquiry, or investigation 
authorized by law, offers in evidence as genuine, any book, paper, document, 
record, or other instrument in writing, knowing that it has been forged or 
fraudulently altered, is guilty of a Class 5 felony.”  Again, the Legislature has 
demonstrated its ability to differentiate between false and forged 
instruments by creating different crimes prohibiting the offering of two types 
of nongenuine instruments: those that are false and those that are forged.   
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authority, yet it mimicked a genuine court order[.]”  Id. ¶ 24, 861 N.W.2d at 510.  
This statement was not intended as a definition of false instrument.  It is worth 
noting, however, that we explicitly rejected Paulson’s contention that the order he 
submitted “was valid, and therefore not a false instrument[,]” because we 
determined the order lacked “any legal support.”  Id. ¶ 22, 861 N.W.2d at 510.   
[¶30.]  
Bosworth makes a similar argument as the defendant in Paulson: she 
claims an instrument must be “inauthentic and devoid of legal authority” to be a 
false instrument under SDCL 22-11-28.1.  In support of this assertion, Bosworth 
relies on State v. Jones, 218 P.3d 1012 (Ariz. Ct. App. 2009), a decision of the 
Arizona Court of Appeals.  Like in this case, the defendant in Jones “falsely verified 
that signatures on [nominating] petitions were made in his presence,” and he was 
prosecuted under a statute nearly identical to SDCL 22-11-28.1.  Jones, 218 P.3d at 
1013-15.  The Jones court held the petitions were not false instruments because 
they were not “counterfeit, inauthentic or otherwise not genuine[.]”  Id. at 1013.   
[¶31.]  
We are unpersuaded by this reasoning as in our view Bosworth’s 
untrue statements of fact rendered each petition a false instrument.  Bosworth 
signed the circulator’s verifications under oath, representing that she circulated 
each petition and that “each signer personally signed this petition in my 
presence[.]”  Her verifications were untrue statements of fact.  Knowing the 
instruments were false, she then caused them to be filed with the Secretary of State 
in violation of SDCL 22-11-28.1.  The circuit court did not err by denying Bosworth’s 
motion for judgment of acquittal. 
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3. 
Whether the evidence presented at trial was sufficient to 
support Bosworth’s convictions for offering false or forged 
instruments for filing. 
  
[¶32.]  
Bosworth argues that no rational jury could have found her guilty of 
violating SDCL 22-11-28.1 “because it was undisputed that she did not offer or file 
any of the petitions in question.”  Ashley Klapperich, who was working at the front 
desk in the Secretary of State’s Office when the petitions were delivered, testified at 
trial that Bosworth was not present at that time.  Based on this testimony, 
Bosworth moved for a judgment of acquittal, but the circuit court denied the motion, 
stating, “I think it’s clear that [the petitions] were filed if not directly by her, 
certainly on her behalf and by her agents.”  Bosworth argues the jury instructions 
did not include an instruction on vicarious liability.  Instead, the jury instructions 
asked the jury to determine whether the “defendant knowingly offered a false or 
forged instrument for filing[.]”  Because the jury was bound to apply the law they 
were given, Bosworth argues they could not find that she offered the petitions for 
filing.   
[¶33.]  
In response, the State argues the evidence presented at trial was 
sufficient to sustain Bosworth’s convictions under SDCL 22-11-28.1.  The State 
relies on Bosworth’s admission that as a candidate, she received and read the 
written instructions regarding nominating petitions.  Other testimony at trial 
established that Bosworth was aware that she could not verify petitions she did not 
personally circulate.  Further, the State emphasizes that “Bosworth admitted that 
[Patrick] Davis filed the petitions for her at her direction.”   
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[¶34.]  
From our review of the record, the evidence presented at trial is 
sufficient to sustain Bosworth’s convictions under SDCL 22-11-28.1.  The petitions 
were false instruments (Bosworth improperly signed the circulator’s verifications), 
they were presented for filing in a public office (the Office of the Secretary of State), 
and they could be filed with the Office of the Secretary of State if they were genuine.  
The evidence established that Bosworth knew the instruments were false when she 
offered them.  Arends, Bosworth’s campaign’s lawyer, testified that he explicitly 
warned her to not verify petitions she did not personally circulate.  The Secretary of 
State also provided Bosworth with written circulating instructions, which explained 
that signatures on a petition had to be personally witnessed by the circulator.  
Bosworth testified at trial that she was sure she read these instructions.   
[¶35.]  
The remaining issue is whether the evidence supports the jury’s 
finding that Bosworth offered the petitions.  Although Bosworth did not personally 
present the petitions to the Office of the Secretary of State, she caused Patrick 
Davis, a campaign consultant, to deliver them.8  Bosworth’s contention that the jury 
                                            
8. 
Bosworth testified at trial, and the following colloquy occurred during 
cross-examination by the State:  
Q:  Now, you asked Patrick Davis to take the petitions to Pierre 
for you, correct? 
A:  Asked?  It was part of Patrick’s job.  It was part of the 
campaign’s duties. 
Q:  You caused those petitions to be delivered to Pierre instead 
of delivering them yourself because you had patients to see, 
correct?  
A:  I saw patients on Tuesday, the delivery date, yes. 
Q:  So you caused the petitions to be delivered to Pierre by 
somebody else?  
A:  I caused it?  Sure.   
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could not find that she offered the petitions because they were not instructed on 
vicarious liability is misplaced.  Vicarious liability, also known as the doctrine of 
respondeat superior, provides that a principal or employer may be held responsible 
for “the employee’s or agent’s wrongful acts committed within the scope of the 
employment or agency,” under theories of tort or contract law.  Bernie v. Catholic 
Diocese of Sioux Falls, 2012 S.D. 63, ¶ 8, 821 N.W.2d 232, 237; see also SDCL 59-6-9 
(setting forth when a principle is liable to third persons for the negligence or 
wrongful acts of his agent); Kirlin v. Halverson, 2008 S.D. 107, ¶¶ 11-27, 758 
N.W.2d 436, 444-48 (explaining and applying the law of vicarious liability).  The law 
of vicarious liability is inapplicable in this context.  An instruction on the law of 
agency, however, might have been helpful.  The law of agency is broader than 
vicarious liability, and an agency instruction would include the specific aspects of a 
legal relationship that would allow Bosworth to be bound by the actions of her 
agents.  See SDCL 59-1-1 (“Agency is the representation of one called the principal 
by another called the agent in dealing with third persons.”). 
[¶36.]  
Bosworth did not object to the jury instructions on these grounds or 
propose instructions of her own on this issue, so “the jury instructions [are] the law 
of the case,” see Alvine Family Ltd. P’ship v. Hagemann, 2010 S.D. 28, ¶ 20, 780 
N.W.2d 507, 514, and we must merely decide whether the evidence was sufficient to 
show she offered false instruments.  Importantly, the statute does not include 
language requiring Bosworth to personally offer the false instruments, and the jury 
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was instructed in accordance with the elements of the statute.9  And several other 
courts have found that “the use of an intermediary to file a false instrument with a 
public office will not insulate a person from liability.”  People v. Freda, 817 P.2d. 
588, 593 (Colo. Ct. App. 2002) (holding that psychiatrist with knowledge of 
falsehood who directed staff to submit forms to Medicaid for payment on his behalf 
offered instruments within meaning of statute); see also People v. Bel Air Equip. 
Corp., 346 N.E.2d 529, 533 (N.Y. 1976) (holding that delivery of vouchers to DOT by 
employees constituted a filing which could be attributed to employer).  Even 
without an agency instruction, a reasonable jury could have found that Bosworth’s 
directive to Patrick Davis was sufficient to show she offered the petitions for filing.  
To hold otherwise, as the court noted in Freda, would “defeat the statute’s purpose 
by granting immunity to any defendant so long as he persuaded an intermediary to 
mail or present the false instrument to the public office.”  817 P.2d at 593.  We will 
                                            
9. 
Jury Instruction No. 25 provided: 
Any person who knowingly offers a false or forged instrument 
for filing, registering, or recording in a public office, which 
instrument, if genuine, could be filed, registered or recorded 
under any law of this state or of the United States is guilty of a 
crime. 
 
Jury Instruction No. 26 provided: 
The elements of the crime of offering a false instrument for 
recording, each of which the state must prove beyond a 
reasonable doubt, are that at the time and place alleged: 
 
1. The defendant knowingly offered a false or forged instrument 
for filing, registering or recording in a public office. 
 
2. The instrument, if genuine, could be filed, registered or 
recorded under a law of this state. 
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not disturb the jury’s verdict as there was sufficient evidence for the jury to 
conclude that Bosworth knowingly offered the false instruments for filing.   
CONCLUSION  
[¶37.]  
The circuit court erred by denying Bosworth’s motion for judgment of 
acquittal regarding her perjury convictions.  Submitting a petition that was 
certified under a written oath to a state agency to qualify for an election is not part 
of a proceeding or action under SDCL 22-29-1.  Accordingly, we vacate Bosworth’s 
perjury convictions.  The circuit did not err, however, by denying Bosworth’s motion 
for judgment of acquittal on the remaining convictions for filing false or forged 
instruments.  A petition is false under SDCL 22-11-28.1 when it contains a 
circulator’s verification signed by someone other than the circulator.  Finally, the 
evidence presented at trial is sufficient to sustain Bosworth’s convictions under 
SDCL 22-11-28.1, and they are affirmed. 
[¶38.]  
GILBERTSON, Chief Justice, SEVERSON, Justice, and WILBUR, 
Retired Justice, concur. 
[¶39.]  
ZINTER, Justice, concurs in part and concurs in result in part. 
 
ZINTER, Justice (concurring in part and concurring in result in part). 
[¶40.] 
I join the Court’s opinion on issue one (perjury) and issue three 
(sufficiency of the evidence).  I concur in result on issue two (false instruments). 
[¶41.] 
On issue two, the question is whether the nominating petitions at issue 
were false instruments.  Under SDCL 22-11-28.1, a “false instrument” must be one 
that is not “genuine.”  Id. (prohibiting the offering of a “false . . . instrument . . . for 
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filing, . . . which instrument, if genuine, could be filed” (emphasis added)).  A thing 
is genuine if it is “authentic or real” or if it has “the quality of what a given thing 
purports to be or to have”; a genuine instrument is also one that is “free of forgery 
or counterfeiting.”  Black’s Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014).  There is no claim here 
that Bosworth’s petitions were forged or counterfeit.  Therefore, Bosworth could be 
convicted of filing a false instrument under SDCL 22-11-28.1 if her petitions lacked 
the qualities of what nominating petitions purport to be or to have. 
[¶42.] 
Bosworth’s petitions were not what they purported to be because 
Bosworth verified petitions as the circulator even though they had been circulated 
by someone else.  Nor did they have the qualities of what nominating petitions 
purport to have because they did not contain the signatures of voters the circulator 
obtained.  That type of falsehood was more than just an untrue statement of fact.  
Like the falsehood in State v. Hayes, 37 S.D. 530, 534-35, 159 N.W. 108, 109-10 
(1916), Bosworth falsified the very essence of what the petitions purported to 
represent.  See Larson v. Hazeltine, 1996 S.D. 100, ¶ 23, 552 N.W.2d 830, 836 
(noting that one of the purposes of the circulator’s verification is “to allow potential 
challengers to contact the circulators to verify the signatures”).  Because Bosworth’s 
statements were materially false, the petitions were not genuine, which rendered 
them false instruments within the meaning of SDCL 22-11-28.1.  I would hold that 
the petitions were false instruments for these reasons alone. 
[¶43.] 
I cannot join the Court’s additional analysis suggesting that documents 
become “false instruments” merely because they contain some “untrue statements of 
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fact.”  Supra ¶¶ 26, 31.  SDCL 22-11-28.1 requires more: the document must not be 
“genuine.” 
[¶44.] 
I also do not agree with the Court’s reliance on two cases.  First, in my 
view, Reaser v. Reaser is not authoritative here because in that case, we merely 
stated in dicta that a divorce stipulation “could conceivably violate SDCL 22-11-22.”  
2004 S.D. 116, ¶ 20, 688 N.W.2d 429, 435.  We never analyzed the meaning of “false 
instrument,” much less concluded that the stipulation was in fact a “false 
instrument.”  Second, the Court’s opinion stretches Gilbert v. United States beyond 
its holding.  In that case, the Supreme Court only concluded that false statements 
do not create a forgery.  Gilbert v. United States, 370 U.S. 650, 658-59, 82 S. Ct. 
1399, 1404, 8 L. Ed. 2d 750 (1962).  Nothing in Gilbert supports the proposition that 
an instrument containing untrue statements is a “false instrument.”