Abrams v. State

170 N.E. 188, 34 Ohio App. 13, 1929 Ohio App. LEXIS 529
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 15, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 170 N.E. 188 (Abrams v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abrams v. State, 170 N.E. 188, 34 Ohio App. 13, 1929 Ohio App. LEXIS 529 (Ohio Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

Vickery, P. J.

This case comes into this court on a petition in error to the common pleas court of Cuyahoga county, in which court Jonas Abrams, the plaintiff in error, was convicted of suborning one Abraham Goldman to give false testimony regarding the residence, and the length of it, of one Mrs. Ruby Meilke, who had started divorce proceedings in Cuyahoga county against her husband; she actually being a resident of Rochester, New York. In the trial below, as already stated, Abrams was convicted of this offense, and it is to reverse that judgment that error is prosecuted here.

*15 Three several grounds of error are urged why this verdict and the judgment thereon should be reversed :

First. That the verdict and judgment thereon are manifestly and clearly against the weight of the evidence and are not sustained by sufficient evidence.

Second. Because of the misconduct of the assistant prosecuting attorney in his argument to the jury, who represented the state of Ohio, to which an objection was made and exception taken at that time.

Third. That the conviction under the indictment could not be sustained, because the court in which the divorce action was being tried had not acquired jurisdiction, because of nonresidence of a party, and that the court, therefore, had no jurisdiction to hear the case, and, therefore, a perjury in such action could not be committed, nor, of course, could there be any subornation to give false testimony in said action.

In disposing of the various grounds of error alleged in this case, I shall take them up in the inverse order in which I have stated them. First, as to the question of jurisdiction. It is needless to say that this indictment and conviction of Abrams grew out of an evil that has grown up in our courts; that is, of having dissatisfied married persons living in New York, particularly in and about Rochester, come out to Ohio, and, by false testimony and by committing a fraud upon the courts, procure a divorce in Ohio, and it is rather startling to have the attorney who started the proceedings invoking the jurisdiction of the courts to procure a divorce for his client, knowing her to be a resident of New York state, subsequently taking the position or raising the question *16 that, no matter how guilty of perjury and fraud a lawyer or other parties might be in relation to the fraud which they practiced upon the court, they could not be guilty of perjury, or of subornation of perjury, because the court had no jurisdiction. We do not think that such a position is tenable for a single moment. The court has jurisdiction of the subject-matter, and if the proceedings were regular, and in accordance with the laws provided in such cases, and service was procured by publication, after filing the necessary affidavit upon which a procurement of service by publication may be made, and this appeared regular in all respects, the court would have apparent jurisdiction and could grant a divorce, and such a divorce this court and other courts have frequently held would be binding against any collateral attack, and could only be affected by a direct attack upon the jurisdiction. I say it would be a queer state of affairs, if a lawyer could invoke the jurisdiction of the court and suborn witnesses to testify to carry out his fraudulent scheme with his fraudulent client, and then avoid responsibility by denying the jurisdiction of the court which he had invoked. Such a proceeding would not and could not be tolerated for a momentP^It would heap only another insult and indignity upon the court of which he sought to make a tool with which to carry out his corrupt practices. He of all men, who procured the publication of the notice for service, surely invoked the jurisdiction of the court to carry out that purpose and to accomplish the thing for which he was employed; that is, to procure a divorce for a person he knows to be a nonresident. And in employing persons to commit per *17 jury, he cannot then avoid responsibility by showing that a fraud which he had attempted to perpetrate upon the court had not succeeded as a matter of fact, and that, even though it had succeeded, the court would not have jurisdiction because of the person not having a residence in the state, and that, therefore, there could be no perjury, or subornation of perjury. Such, indeed, would be a very strange set of facts. Such we do not conceive to be the law.

This court has taken strong grounds against the way in which certain divorces have been obtained in this county, and has reversed several cases because of the fraud practiced upon the court, when the matter was directly attacked and full information was brought to this court. We do not think, therefore, that there is any merit whatever in the soeallednalleged error which I am now discussing.

Our view of the law is well supported by 21 Ruling Case Law, pages 261 and 262, where the text substantially supports the position we have outlined above.'

Now, coming to the second ground of alleged error; that is, the misconduct of the prosecuting attorney in his argument. We have read the argument of the prosecuting attorney, and must confess that it far transcended the scope of legitimate argument. It must be remembered that Abrams was indicted for suborning Abraham Goldman to testify falsely in the divorce case. Goldman was suborned as a witness. He was not called upon by the state, nor was he called upon by the defendant, and we think, from subsequent events, that the defendant was not called upon to produce Goldman upon the witness stand, but he was there within the call of *18 the prosecuting attorney. What he would have testified to no one knows, except that subsequently, I believe, he was found guilty of the offense of committing perjury in this very case, and I believe was paroled by the judge who presided over the trial; but his testimony was not in this present case, and, as already, stated, he was in court and the prosecuting attorney referred to him many times, and held a paper in his hands and conveyed the impression to the jury that Goldman had confessed to this crime, and he asked many times, “Why did not the defense put him on the witness stand?” and made a rather vicious attack upon the defendant’s case because defendant did not place Goldman upon the witness stand, and intimated, as already stated, that the defendant did not do it because of the knowledge that he would testify that he was suborned by Abrams to commit the crime of perjury. Well, perhaps the knowledge of what Goldman would testify to could just as easily be ascertained by the state as by the defense, and if Goldman would have testified to that which would convict Abrams, if a witness for the defense, we do not see why the state did not use him for the purpose of convicting Abrams; and the argument, under the circumstances, was highly improper. It was not for the defendánt to prove himself innocent of the crime, and he need not put the witness upon the stand, to be subjected to cross-examination of the prosecutor, unless the state had made a case irrespective of that witness, and then it would be only a question of judgment on the part of the trial lawyer. We think, the conduct of the prosecutor in the argument of this case was not warranted and was misconduct.

*19

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Bennett v. District Court of Tulsa Co.
1945 OK CR 101 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1945)
In Re Abrams
173 N.E. 312 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1930)
Finch Bros. v. Betz
134 Ill. App. 471 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1907)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
170 N.E. 188, 34 Ohio App. 13, 1929 Ohio App. LEXIS 529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abrams-v-state-ohioctapp-1929.