Court Opinion

ID: 4907612
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-03 05:59:55.896314+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:13:11.725084
License: Public Domain

White Presiding Judge.
On the trial of appellant upon & charge of theft of cattle, he made an application, under oath, for a continuance for two absent witnesses, Moses Dameron and H. K. Jones, and amongst other things, in said application, stated that said witnesses were “not absent by the procurement or consent of defendant.” He was indicted in the case under consideration for perjury, the matter assigned as perjury being the statement so made by him with regard to the absence of said witnesses.
On the trial it was proven by the State, by the witnesses Dameron and Jones, and also by other testimony, that they did not attend the theft trial after they had'been summoned as witnesses, because, some days before said trial, appellant had told them that they need not attend the trial; that he would not need them, and he excused them from attendance as witnesses in his behalf. To meet this evidence defendant proposed to prove by E. P. Brookin that after he, defendant, had excused said witnesses, and before the theft case was called for trial, defendant told said E. P. Brookin “to see the witnesses Dameron and Jones and countermand his order releasing them, and tell them to be at the district court as witnesses for him.” This E. P. Brookin promised to do, but never did; defendant himself being in jail, and unable to see the witnesses in person, nor had he seen E. P. Brookin from the time he requested him to see said witnesses until after the application for continuance had been made on account of their absence. On objection by the State, this testimony was excluded. In our opinion the court erred in excluding" the evidence because it tended to show, and if true did show, that the statement assigned as perjury would not be a false statement deliberately and wilfully made— the defendant at the time knowing it to be false (Penal Code, *703art. 188), but, on the contrary, was a false statement made through mistake, which is not perjury. (Penal Code, art. 189.)
Opinion delivered May 22, 1889.
In his charge to the jury the learned judge omitted to instruct them that a conviction for perjury could not be had unless upon the testimony of at least two credible witnesses or one credible witness strongly corroborated by other evidence, as is required by article 746, Code of Criminal Procedure. The Assistant Attorney General confesses error upon this' point, and the error is fundamental. (Washington v. The State, 22 Texas Ct. App., 26; Miller v. The State, ante, 497.)
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.

Reversed and remanded.