Commonwealth v. Billingsley

50 A.2d 703, 160 Pa. Super. 140, 1947 Pa. Super. LEXIS 246
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 9, 1946
DocketAppeal, 97
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 50 A.2d 703 (Commonwealth v. Billingsley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Billingsley, 50 A.2d 703, 160 Pa. Super. 140, 1947 Pa. Super. LEXIS 246 (Pa. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

Opinion by

Arnold, J.,

Defendant appeals from a conviction on an indictment charging him with the attempt “to . . . suborn one Leroy C. House to commit . . . perjury, as a witness, in a . . . civil proceeding [an action of trespass for personal injuries, fully identified] ... in the Court of Common Pleas in and for Allegheny County, . . In the action of trespass, the judicial proceeding in *142 volved, the plaintiff alleged that she was a business invitee in the restaurant of the defendant on April 3, 1941, and that something on the floor caused her foot to slip, whereby she fell and was injured.

The appellant was an investigator and had been requested to inquire whether any other persons had seen the plaintiff’s accident. He was a patron of the restaurant in question, learned that House had been an employe thereof, and requested him to come to Billingsley’s office in midtown Pittsburgh. They had an interview and House then reported to the plaintiff’s attorney that he would testify to various facts concerning the accident. On the same day House was accordingly called as a witness for the plaintiff, and in part testified that he was an employe in the defendant’s restaurant on April 3, 1941; that a customer had called his attention to chocolate syrup on the floor and suggested its removal, but that he neglected to do this; and some thirty minutes later he turned his head and saw a woman, apparently injured, being assisted to a chair by the manager.

The day and hour of the occurrences related by House were the day and hour of plaintiff’s accident. The evidence of House was material to the inquiry as proof that the cause of the accident was a dangerous condition of which the owner had constructive notice. This testimony was given by him in the afternoon of the trial of the civil action. That night representatives of the defendant showed him payroll records which demonstrated that he was not an employe of the defendant on April 3, 1941, but had commenced to work for it some two weeks later. House admitted this, claiming that he had confused the dates. Upon learning this, plaintiff’s attorney had Billingsley bring the witness to court the next morning. He was put on the stand and testified that he had got the dates confused and did not see anything transpiring in the defendant’s restau *143 rant on April 3,1941, and therefore did not see the accident. The court, on motion, struck from the record all of his first day’s testimony. It was recognized that plaintiff’s attorney was entirely blameless. House thus withdrew and corrected his former testimony, rendering it harmless; and when stricken from the record it became immaterial. These facts were not seriously questioned, and the appellant only disputed that he had done anything toward procuring, persuading or attempting to suborn the witness, House, to commit perjury.

In the present case House testified for the Commonwealth that Billingsley had made up the whole story concerning which he previously testified; that Billingsley had fixed the date, arranged the recital about the chocolate syrup on the floor and about House seeing the events surrounding the accident on April 3, 1941. House admitted that the original testimony which he gave in the civil case was false, and stated that it was given in accordance with the arrangement with Billingsley, who had instigated him so to testify; that both he and Billingsley knew that it was false; and that his evidence on the second day as to “confusion of dates” was given to protect Billingsley.

As to the fact that Billingsley had procured and instigated him to testify falsely, House was the only witness and was uncorroborated except as to the meeting with Billingsley, which the latter admitted. Appellant therefore alleges that in both perjury and subornation of perjury no conviction can be had upon the testimony of one witness. This is too broad a statement of the rule. The word “perjury” is frequently used as synonymous with “false testimony”. But the crime of perjury has a number of elements: (a) An oath to tell the truth must be taken by the accused, and (b) administered by legal authority, (c) in a judicial proceeding *144 (or statutory affidavit), (d) The accused must have testified in such proceeding, and (e) his testimony must be material to the judicial proceeding, (f) The testimony assigned as perjury must be false, and (g) must be given wilfully, and corruptly, and with knowledge of its falsity (or given recklessly), and for the purpose of having it believed. As to none of these elements is there a requirement as to the quantity of proof except as to the falsity of the testimony, i. e., the assignment of perjury. As to the falsity and as to it alone, is there a rule that conviction may not be had upon the testimony of one witness. 1 The falsity of House’s testimony in the civil trial was fully established not only by testimony of House himself, but by other witnesses and many corroborating circumstances. The remaining elements were susceptible of proof by the testimony of one witness.

Subornation of perjury consists of all the elements enumerated in the crime of perjury (committed by the witness alleged to be suborned), and one additional element: that the accused induced, persuaded and in *145 stigated the suborned witness to commit the crime of perjury. This additional fact (procurement of the witness) does not require proof by more than one witness: State v. Ruskin (Ohio), 159 N. E. 568.

The attempt to suborn a prospective witness to commit perjury (the instant indictment) is a common law crime separate and distinct from subornation of perjury. Appellant is correct in stating that in subornation of perjury there must be proof of actual perjury committed by the suborned witness. But as to attempts to suborn one to commit perjury it is unnecessary that the person suborned did testify falsely, or. indeed did testify at all. The offense is made out whenever the accused instigates and procures the agreement of the prospective witness to testify falsely. This is true even if thereafter the prospective witness fails to go through with the bargain and refuses to give evidence. It is, of course, a necessary element of the crime that both the accused and the person to be suborned knew that the testimony sought was false, material, and to be used in actual or prospective litigation: 2 Wharton’s Criminal Law (12th ed.) §1598; 48 C. J., Perjury, 196; 41 Am. Jur., Perjury, §74. Therefore the fact that House’s original testimony was nullified, and stricken from the record, or that House only attempted to commit perjury, does not constitute a defense to the indictment charging Billingsley with the attempt to suborn House to commit perjury.

Appellant argues that his conviction cannot stand because the only evidence of his attempted subornation of House, i.e., his procurement for purposes of perjury, rests on the uncorroborated testimony of an accomplice, to wit, House. There are two answers to this contention. By the weight of authority, while the suborned and the suborner are accomplices as to the actual perjury, they are not accomplices as to the procurement or suborning

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 A.2d 703, 160 Pa. Super. 140, 1947 Pa. Super. LEXIS 246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-billingsley-pasuperct-1946.