Jacobs v. State

61 Ala. 448
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 61 Ala. 448 (Jacobs v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jacobs v. State, 61 Ala. 448 (Ala. 1878).

Opinion

BE.ICKELL, C. J.

1. Justices of the peace have jurisdiction of actions of detinue, dependent on the value of the property in controversy. When an action of detinue is instituted in the circuit court, the plaintiff on making affidavit that the property sued for belongs to him, and the execur tion of a bond with surety, for the payment of all such costs and damages as the defendant may sustain from the wrongful suit, can obtain an order directing the officer executing the summons, to take possession of the property. — Code of 1876, § 2942. Statutory provisions regulating civil suits in the circuit court, so lar as applicable, are declared in full force as to the rights of parties and to suits before justices of the peace. The purposes of the statute — the security and preservation of the property, pending the suit for its recovery, so that it may be forthcoming to answer the judgment, or the successful party indemnified against injury from its conversion or loss, extend with like force to an action of detinue before a justice, as to the action when commenced in the circuit court. While some of its provisions may seem to [452]*452indicate that it was designed to be limited to suits in the circuit court, yet it is capable of a just application to suits before justices, and such application, renders the jurisdiction of the justice more beneficial to suitors. We, therefore,, regard it as a regulation of suit, falling within the operation of section d662 of the Code.

2. The affidavit, the plaintiff in an action of detinue is required to make, serves its purpose, when the order of seizure is made. It is purely cautionary — a pledge of good faith in the commencement of the suit, inquired to prevent an abuse of the extraordinary power to disturb and displace the possession of the defendant, before he has had the opportunity of being heard in defense of it, and before judgment pronouncing it wrongful. When the order is made, the force of the affidavit is exhausted, and it is not evidence in any subsequent stage of the suit. To constitute indictable perjury, the matter or thing sworn to, must be material to the-issue, or to the point of inquiry. The materiality is not, as is argued by the counsel for the appellant, confined, when the oath is taken in a judicial proceeding, to matters which are involved in the issues of fact formed during the course of the proceeding. Nor is it essential that the affidavit should be capable of being used as evidence on the trial of such issues. It is enough, that the matter falsely sworn to, is material to the point of inquiry, at the time it was made. Oaths are of frequent necessity at the commencement, or during the progress of judicial proceedings, which are matters of evidence only to procure the exercise of some particular power from the court, or from some officer charged with the exercise of power, and which can exert no influence-on the final judgment, or in any subsequent stage of the proceeding. Thus, formerly an affidavit to hold a defendant in a civil case to bail, may have been false, and may have been made at the commencement, or pending the suit; or bail may falsely swear, or others may fakely swear as to their sufficiency; or an affidavit may be falsely made to procure a writ of arrest, or as foundation for proceedings to compel another to keep the peace. The force of the false oath, as matter of' evidence, is exhausted, when the point of inquiry is determined. Yet in each case, the essential quality of indictable perjury, materiality to the point of inquiry, exists. — Hawkins, book 1, chapter 69; Pratt v. Price, 11 Wend. 127; State v. Johnson, 7 Blackf. 49; White v. State, 1 S. & M. 149. All such false oaths tend to the abuse of the administration of justice, and are indictable perjuries, though not affecting the [453]*453principal judgment to be rendered in the cause. A plaintiff in an action of detinue, who is without right or title which will support the action, and who wilfully and corruptly swears falsely to an affidavit of ownership, thereby procuring an order of seizure from the officer issuing the summons,— an order the officer can not withhold, if the plaintiff also executes a proper bond, is guilty of legal perjury.

3. It is said by Mr. Chitty, that “ in former times, indictments for perjury were exceedingly prolix and dangerous.” And it seems certain that at common law, it was deemed necessary the indictment should with great particularity set forth the proceeding in which the oath was taken, and the character and jurisdiction of the court or officer administering it. Prosecutions for the offense were embarrassed by this particularity, and as is recited in the preamble to the act of 23 Geo. 2, c. 11, § 3, sometimes thereby the guilty, were enabled to escape unpunished. — 2 Puss. Cr. 621; 2 Bish. Cr. Pr. § 901. The evil, it was the purpose of that act to remove; and it dispensed with the necessity of setting out in the indictment the pleadings, or any part of the record or proceedings, or the commission or authority of the court or person before whom the perjury was committed; declaring it sufficient to set forth the substance of the offense charged upon the defendant, and by what court, or before whom the oath or affirmation was taken, averring such court or such person or persons had competent authority to administer the same, with proper averments to falsify the matter or matters wherein perjury was assigned. This act was adopted in terms by the territorial legislature in 1807, (Aik. Dig. 118, § 22;) and it was part of the Penal Code of 1841, (Clay’s Dig. 445, § 35.) The present statute is not materially variant, and reads: “In an indictment for perjury, or subornation of perjury, it is not necessary to set forth the pleadings, record, or proceedings, with which the false oath is connected, nor the commission or authority of the court or person before whom the perjury was committed; it is sufficient to state the substance oí the proceedings, the name of the court or officer before whom the oath was taken, and that such court or officer had authority to administer it, with the necessary allegations of the falsity of the matter on which the perjury is assigned.” — Code of 1876, § 4813. It is said by Judge Gaston, the principal effect of the act of 23 Geo. 2, “ was to substitute in the indictment the general averment of a competent authority to administer the oath, in the place ■of a specific averment of the facts, showing such authority, [454]*454and to make the question, whether the oath was or was not taken before a competent jurisdiction, a compound question of fact and law, to be decided by the petit jury under the advice of the court.” — State v. Gallimore, 2 Ired. 375-6. Under the present statute, a general averment of authority to administer the oath is sufficient. In addition to this general averment, the indictment must set forth the substance of the proceedings, that it may distinctly appear the oath was not extra-judicial — that it was taken on an occasion, in reference to a fact material, and before a court or officer having authority to administer it; when if false, it is the subject of legal perjury. An indictment not setting out enough of the proceedings to disclose these facts, is not sufficient under the statute. Or if it sets out the proceedings, and does not disclose the oath was lawfully administered, it is insufficient.

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Bluebook (online)
61 Ala. 448, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacobs-v-state-ala-1878.