Barber v. State

142 S.W. 577, 64 Tex. Crim. 96, 1911 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 526
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 6, 1911
DocketNo. 1347.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 142 S.W. 577 (Barber v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barber v. State, 142 S.W. 577, 64 Tex. Crim. 96, 1911 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 526 (Tex. 1911).

Opinion

HARPER, Judge.

Appellant was indicted, charged with perjury, and when convicted, his punishment was assessed at two years confinement in the penitentiary.

*98 The evidence in this case would indicate that appellant was a land agent, and as such agent a number of years ago, was attending to business for Mrs. Shannon, now Perry. At that time, he borrowed from her $1,000, giving his note due in two years. Shortly thereafter, Mrs. Shannon made a conditional trade for some other property, and placed in appellant’s hands, a check for $1,000, endorsing thereon “earnest money and first payment on Chas. Barbier lot.” Appellant cashed this check and placed the money to his credit in the bank. The' trade with Barbier was not completed, and Mrs. Shannon instructed appellant to use the money in paying a note she was due Cicero Smith. On September 23, 1907, appellant did pay to Cicero Smith this $1,000 and took up a note due by Mrs. Shannon to- Smith. This note, with Mrs. Shannon’s name signed thereto, thus came into possession of appellant. Nothing more was done about the matter until the note given by appellant "to Mrs. Shannon became due, when Mrs. Shannon sent the note to an attorney for collection. The note was abstracted from this attorney’s possession. Suit was brought, alleging the loss of the note, when appellant filed an answer in that suit, asserting that he had paid the Cicero Smith note out of his individual funds, and that Mrs. Shannon had given him a receipt to that effect .and delivered to him his note. He had his note, that the attorney said had been abstracted out of his office, in his possession, and also an instrument in writing as follows:

“9/23, 1907.

This to apply on note dated June 26, 1907, due June 26, 1909, for $1000.

(Signed) Mrs. Nona Shannon.

Witness, J. H. Dodd.”

Appellant testified that Mrs. Shannon had executed this instrument and delivered it to him, and it was intended as a receipt and acknowledgement of payment of the note due by him to her, and she had subsequently delivered to him his note. It will be noticed that it bears the same date as the check given by defendant to Cicero Smith. This was the issue in the civil suit, and the indictment for perjury is based on the testimony of defendant in that suit. The assistant attorney-general has so fully briefed this ease, we have adopted his brief, in the main, as our opinion in this case, it being as follows:

“Appellant’s brief assigns as the first error that the indictment is insufficient to charge any offense and insufficient to charge perjury. The indictment charges that defendant in the case of Perry v. Barber testified and swore: 1st. That he took a receipt from Mrs. Shannon (Perry). 2d. That the receipt he took from her was the one set out in the indictment and offered in evidence in the trial of Perry v. Barber. 3d. That he saw her sign the receipt. 4th. That she delivered this receipt to him. 5th. That he wrote the receipt and that *99 she signed it after he wrote it. 6th. That J. H. Dodd was present at said signing of the receipt, and that Dodd saw her sign the name. The indictment also states that at the trial of said case of Perry v. Barber, it ‘became and was a material inquiry:’ 1st. ‘Whether . . . the said Mrs. Shannon (Perry) had, on or about the 23d day of September, 1907, signed and delivered a receipt to the said Flake Barber/ and 2d. ‘Whether or not she signed and delivered the written instrument above set out to the said Flake Barber/ and 3d. ‘Whether one J. H. Dodd saw the said Mrs. Shannon sign said receipt/ and 4th. ‘Whether the said Flake Barber took such a receipt from said Mrs. Shannon/ and 5th. ‘Whether the said J. H. Dodd was present and saw the said Mrs. Shannon sign the receipt/ and 6th. ‘Whether the said Flake Barber saw the said Mrs. Shannon sign the receipt/

“Not only does the indictment say in so many words that all of the above six matters ‘became and was a material inquiry’ in the ease of Perry v. Barber, but it further alleges that that case was a ‘certain civil judicial proceeding in said District Court, wherein Mrs. Nona Perry (formerly Shannon) joined by her husband, C. L. Perry, were plaintiffs and Flake Barber was defendant, . . . wherein issue was therein duly joined . . . and in the said civil judicial proceeding the said plaintiff . . . was suing . . . the said Flake Barber, upon an action of debt and seeking to recover judgment against the said Flake Barber, for a debt of one thousand dollars, with accrued interest, and also seeking to recover judgment upon various other debts and various other sums of money, alleged to be due to her by the said Flake Barber.’ The indictment then alleges that $1,000 of this indebtedness was evidenced by a note for that amount dated June 26, 1907, and executed by defendant to Mrs. Nona Shannon (Perry), and was to become due on June 26, 1909. The indictment then sets out a sort of receipt to him from her of $1,000 ‘to apply on note dated June 26, 1907, due June 26, 1909/ The indictment also shows that defendant in said suit set up ‘in his answer thereto, among other defenses, that he held against the said Mrs. Nona Perry, formerly Mrs. Nona Shannon, a receipt for the sum of on^ thousand dollars against the said note for a like sum herein above mentioned, which receipt is in substance as follows/ etc. Then follows a quotation of the receipt. Thus it will be seen that there are full allegations in the indictment showing the materiality of the testimony on the above six matters, as well as stating in so many words that they were material to that suit.

“The indictment is, therefore, amply sufficient. This covers the 1st, 2d, and 3d assignments of error in appellant’s brief. The fourth assignment of error by appellant in his brief is that the receipt standing alone is meaningless, and, therefore, is not either an obligation nor the discharge of an obligation, standing alone. This is not a case of forgery, and hence an innuendo explaining this instrument to be one creating or discharging an obligation is unnecessary. In perjury, if one offers an instrument in evidence that is totally worthless, yet, if *100 the offerer, believing- it to be apparently valid as a defense, swears it was executed by the other party at a time of a payment of the money referred to in it, this is perjury if the other party did not in fact execute it, although it is and always was totally void. A mistake of law in this line will hardly excuse. Besides, if at the time of a payment, any writing is made concerning the payment or the obligation discharged, even though the writing be void, it is part of the res gestae of the payment, no matter how worthless it is. How if the allegations of the indictment show any such a situation as this, then it is sufficient.

“It alleges, as above set forth, that this instrument was pleaded by defendant as defense in the civil suit, that he pleaded in that suit its execution by Mrs. Perry and offered it in evidence, and testified to the six things concerning it as are set forth heretofore herein. It was material, because it was an instrument which, with his oral explanations, was part of the res gestae of payment, and a receipt for said sum of $1,000. Hone of this was true, it was all negatived in the indictment, and was disproved by the State in the trial below of the case at bar.

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Bluebook (online)
142 S.W. 577, 64 Tex. Crim. 96, 1911 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barber-v-state-texcrimapp-1911.