Hourie v. State

452 A.2d 440, 53 Md. App. 62, 1982 Md. App. LEXIS 378
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 9, 1982
Docket1294, September Term, 1981
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 452 A.2d 440 (Hourie v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hourie v. State, 452 A.2d 440, 53 Md. App. 62, 1982 Md. App. LEXIS 378 (Md. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

Moylan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

A healthy legal system should strive constantly for greater harmony and should, even when it cannot always eliminate existing disharmony, avoid adding new disharmony. It is against the backdrop of that ideal that we review the convictions of the appellant, Georgeine Emilio Hourie, for welfare fraud and false swearing. She was tried by Judge Donaldson C. Cole, Jr., sitting without a jury, in the Circuit Court for Talbot County. She was convicted of nine separate charges and given concurrent sentences as to each. The nine convictions break out into two discrete categories: (1) a conviction under the sixteenth count for welfare fraud; (2) convictions under the first eight counts for violations of Md.Ann.Code Art. 88A, § 62 (a) (1979 & Supp. 1981). That section reads, in pertinent part:

"Every application for money, . .. food stamps, ... or other assistance . . . shall be in writing and signed by the applicant. Any person who in making and signing such an application makes a false or fraudulent statement with intent to obtain any such money,... food stamps,... or other assistance is guilty of perjury and upon conviction therefor is *64 subject to the penalties provided by law for perjury.”

The crime is loosely labeled "welfare perjury.”

The appellant’s first contention questions the legal sufficiency of the evidence to convict on those eight counts of welfare perjury. The challenge is twofold. The appellant first attacks the legal sufficiency of the evidence, under the ordinary test for measuring legal sufficiency, to sustain the convictions for welfare perjury. The appellant then mounts the additional and very narrow legal challenge that even granting the adequacy of the evidence under a normal standard of review, the evidence is nonetheless insufficient in the special case of perjury because of the "two-witness rule” governing perjury trials. This challenge calls upon us to examine the origins of that two-witness rule, its purpose (if any), and, consequently, its applicability to this case. There is room for such considerations of policy, for we are not bound by stare decisis. This is because we are not dealing literally with common law perjury.

Common Law Perjury

Common law perjury was and is the giving of a false oath in a judicial proceeding in regard to a material matter. R. Perkins, Criminal Law 454 (2d ed. 1969); State v. Mercer, 101 Md. 535, 61 A. 220 (1905). Its dim beginnings are to be found in the ecclesiastical courts. Its essential nature was the violation of an oath sworn before God. 1 The original perjurious oath was, moreover, not the false oath of a witness (for witnesses were a yet-unheard-of development in the trial practice of the day) but the false oath of the jury, when it was deemed to have returned a bad verdict contrary to its oath. The birth of the modern concept of perjury by a witness *65 can be traced to the statute of 11 Hen. VII, c. 21 in 1495. 4 W. Holdsworth, A History of English Law 517-518 (1924). For the next century and a half, the high misdemeanor 2 of perjury was developed almost exclusively in the prerogative court of the Star Chamber. T. Plucknett, A Concise History of the Common Law 459 (5th ed. 1956). It sought to guard society’s interest in the integrity of sworn statements in judicial proceedings. It was limited to the false testimony given under oath about a material matter and before a judicial tribunal.

When, as an integral part of the larger Seventeenth Century struggle of Cromwell versus King, of Parliamentarian versus Royalist, and of Puritan dissent versus Established Church, the common law triumphed over and virtually obliterated its rival legal system of the prerogative courts, 3 the Court of Star Chamber was abolished in 1640. 4 Much of the productive output of the Star Chamber, however, especially the development of the major misdemeanors, was recognized as worthy of preservation and was taken over by the common law courts. The misdemeanor of perjury was one of those legacies from the now-dead Civilian tradition. By the time that perjury was firmly settled in its new common law home (the early 1700’s) it was noted that it, alone among the legacies, had brought with it from its Civilian origins, the *66 procedural baggage of the "two-witness rule.” 5 By accident or by design, a defendant could not be convicted of perjury except upon the testimony of two witnesses. Of all the crimes prosecuted at the common law, perjury was unique in this special burden of production. 6

False Swearing

It was over a century after the reception of perjury into the common law, that English judges began to recognize related problems with respect to the integrity of sworn statements that came to be required in man}' matters other than judicial proceedings. The common law responded to this newly perceived need by providing a penalty for wilful and corrupt false swearing in such nonjudicial settings. The name "perjury” was not employed for the new crime. It was generally known as "false swearing.” R. Perkins, Criminal Law 454-455 (2d ed. 1969). 7 In Rex v. De Beauvoir, 7 Car. & P. 17, 173 Eng.Rep. 8 (1835), Lord Denman said of such a case, "It is not, properly speaking, perjury because the same consequences do not attach. But it is a misdemeanor in falsely taking an oath which a party is required by Parliament to take before a magistrate.” Professor Perkins defined the newer crime:

"False swearing is what would be perjury except that it is not in a judicial proceeding but in some other proceeding or matter in which an oath is required by law.” R. Perkins, supra, at 454.

We can find no evidence that the two-witness rule of per *67 jury was ever applied to prosecutions for false swearing; in candor, we find no evidence to the contrary either. The subject has simply not attracted significant attention.

The All-Embracing Maryland Statute

One thing is certain. The Maryland statute proscribing perjury now embraces both common law perjury and also those various other false oaths that would have constituted false swearing. Md.Ann.Code Art. 27, § 435 (1982) provides:

"An oath or affirmation, if made willfully and falsely in any of the following cases, shall be deemed perjury: First, in all cases where false swearing would be perjury at common law;

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Bluebook (online)
452 A.2d 440, 53 Md. App. 62, 1982 Md. App. LEXIS 378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hourie-v-state-mdctspecapp-1982.