Commonwealth v. Bobanic

62 Pa. Super. 40, 1916 Pa. Super. LEXIS 349
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 1, 1916
DocketAppeal, No. 40
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 62 Pa. Super. 40 (Commonwealth v. Bobanic) 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. Bobanic, 62 Pa. Super. 40, 1916 Pa. Super. LEXIS 349 (Pa. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Opinion bv

Henderson, J.,

The charge of perjury against the appellant arose out of a controversy between Mrs. Violet Boliver and Fedor Tode in regard to a lease for certain premises in the City of Pittsburgh. Mrs. Boliver caused a judgment to be entered against Tode on a lease containing a warrant of attorney for the confession of judgment. Tode, denying that he executed the lease, made application to the Court of Common Pleas to open the judgment, on which application a rule to show cause was granted. The appellant was called as a witness in behalf of the defendant in the judgment and testified among other things that Mrs. Boliver showed him a lease from her to Tode some time in the year, 1911, and that it was not signed by Tode. This was about two years after the date of the lease on which the judgment was entered. In answer to an inquiry whether the witness Mad an opportunity to see all the papers that Tode had there he answered, “Of course, we lived together six years me and Mrs. Boliver, nearly six years from 1905 to 1911.” The first, fourth, eighth, ninth and tenth assignments of error re[43]*43late to the admission of this evidence and the submission of it to the jury in the manner set forth in the eighth and ninth assignments. It is contended the evidence was immaterial in the issue pending between Mrs. Boliver and Tode, which was the validity of the lease on which the judgment was entered. It may be conceded the testimony was not directly pertinent to that inquiry. The defendant had testified he did not execute the lease and that no one was authorized to do so for him. The appellant was called to support this defense and to prove that what Mrs. Boliver claimed to be a lease executed in 1909 was not signed by the defendant when the paper was shown to the witness by Mrs. Boliver in 1911. This testimony would have greater or less weight according to its reasonableness and the circumstances surrounding the transaction. If the appellant were a stranger to Mrs. Boliver there would be less probability that she had exhibited to him a paper of this character and explained to him her reason for having it than if they were well acquainted and on such terms of familiarity as would make it probable the appellant had knowledge of her business transactions and that she talked to him with reference thereto. The examination to ascertain the opportunity which the witness had to know about Mrs. Boliver’s business was relevant therefore, and would aid the jury in passing on the credibility of the witness. If he were so well acquainted with her that she consulted him with reference to her business affairs or informed him about them the statement of the witness as to the absence of Tode’s signature on the lease would be more probable and would impress the jury more favorably than if he had been a stranger to her. Where testimony tends, although indirectly, to corroborate or discredit the witness or the testimony of another witness it may be material and may become the basis of a prosecution for perjury. There is no fixed limit within which the question of materiality may be distinctly confined. Whatever tends to establish [44]*44or overthrow the question in issue, or through some secondary issue to support or discredit the evidence introduced, is material although its materiality may be of greater or less degree. While, therefore, the testimony assigned for perjury must be with reference to a matter material to the issue it is not necessary that it bear directly on such issue, but may relate to another fact bearing on the issue. Perjury may be committed in swearing falsely to a collateral matter with intent to prop the testimony -in some other point: 2 Whar. Crim. Law 1694; Com. v. DeCost, 35 Pa. Superior Ct. 88. The appellant’s testimony supports the conclusion that he lived with Mrs Boliver during a considerable part of 1911 and at the time within which he alleged' the unsigned lease was shown him by her. The decree of intimacy thus disclosed by the appellant strengthened the probability of his story and gave plausibility to his' account of the conversation with Mrs. Boliver in which she explained her reason for having the paper and stated she could have it signed at any time by Tode to be used in case he became financially involved. That part of the cross-examination contained in the fourth assignment was suggested by the terms in which the appellant described his relation with Mrs. Boliver and the time fixed by him when the lease was shown to him. It was proper to ascertain whether he had lived with her as a boarder in her hotel, as an employee, or in some other relation and whether such relationship as existed between them continued during the year in which he saw the lease; this, for the purpose of informing the jury whether he had such familiarity with her as would make it probable that she would discuss her business transactions with him, and whether this relation existed at the time he saw the lease. The construction put on the testimony of the witness by the court in submitting to the jury the inquiry whether the defendant swore falsely in testifying that he lived with Mrs. Boliver was warranted by the defendant’s testimony. As explained [45]*45by Mm on cross-examination and as disclosed by other evidence in the case no other construction could well be given it. No effort was made by the defendant to explain his language in any sense inconsistent with or contradictory of the meaning of it which the court expressed and it is not contended in the argument that it had any different meaning as explained by the defendant. This construction was not given “as a rule of law” but as a conclusion of the court from the obvious meaning of the defendant.

In the fifth, sixth and seventh assignments exception is taken to that part of the charge in which instruction was given as to the sufficiency of the corroborating evidence to support the principal witness. On this point the trial judge said, “I may explain to you now that in perjury a defendant cannot be convicted of that offense unless the testimony of the Commonwealth ig sworn to positively by one witness and is corroborated by other substantial facts”; and at another place in the charge in answer to a verbal request of the defendant’s counsel: “I repeat that it is your duty to find the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, and I have defined to you what a reasonable doubt is, of every material allegation in this indictment by the evidence, not only of one witness, but of substantial corroborating circumstances.” It is contended for the appellant that this is an erroneous statement of the law; that the obligation of the Conn monwealth is to make out a case by the testimony of at least two witnesses or by one witness and such other evidence or circumstance as amounts to a second witness. At an early date the rule contended for prevailed in England and in some of the states in this country, but it has for a long time been modified and can no longer be regarded as in force where the testimony of a single witness is so far corroborated in a material matter as to satisfy the jury beyond reasonable doubt of the guilt of the accused. The rule is thus expressed in Wigmore on Evidence, No. 2042, “As to the nature of the corrobora[46]*46tion no detailed rule seems to have been laid down nor ought to be laid down. The jury should be instructed not to convict unless the testimony of the principal witness has been so corroborated that they believed it to be true beyond a reasonable doubt.” To the same effect is 1 Phillips Ev. 115. The rule is thus stated in 30 Cyc.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 Pa. Super. 40, 1916 Pa. Super. LEXIS 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-bobanic-pasuperct-1916.