Miles v. State

1954 OK CR 33, 268 P.2d 290, 1954 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 279
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 16, 1954
DocketA-11932
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1954 OK CR 33 (Miles v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miles v. State, 1954 OK CR 33, 268 P.2d 290, 1954 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 279 (Okla. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

BRETT, Judge.

Plaintiff in error W. F. Miles, defendant below, was charged in the district court of Tulsa county, Oklahoma, by information *294 with the commission of the crime of perjury, Title 21, §§ 491, 497, O.S.1951, second and subsequent offense, Title 21, § 51, O.'S. 1951. The defendant was tried by a jury, convicted, but the jury being unable to agree on the punishment, the same was -left to. the determination of the trial judge.- On thp jury’s verdict, the trial judge fixed the punishment at 10 years in the penitentiary and entered judgment accordingly, from which this appeal has been perfected.

This case has been advanced on the docket-because of its peculiar importance. Perjury corrupts and defiles the stream of justice., Every effort should be used to thwart the slightest temptation to resort to it. Adi courts should be vigilant, in their endeavors to punish perjury, and those who seek, tq make use of it as an instrument of fraud. Delay in so doing places a premium on perjury and in the eyes of the public makes a mockery of judicial administration. Let this case stand as a beacon light of expectancy to those who would resort to false swearing as a means of consummating the perfidious objectives of rascality. This court proposes to expedite the ends of jus-' tice, in such cases and see to it that per-jurors are brought to justice as rapidly as is possible, within the bounds of. due process.

The information herein alleged, in substance, that this charge grew out of a civil action tried before Honorable Elmer Adams, district judge of Tulsa county, Oklahoma, on February 19, 1952, said civil case being styled Bertie E.'Woodson v. Frank Miles, No. 82715; Frank Miles defendant therein, being the same person as the defendant W. F. Miles herein. Said civil action was filed on September 10, 1951. In that action Mrs. Woodson alleged in substance that she was the owner of certain real estate, described in the petition in said case. The petition further alleged that the defendant Frank Miles had caused to be executed on September 2, 1950 and filed on August 23, 1951 a quit claim deed from Mrs. V/oodson.to himself purporting to convey certain valuable property described as follows, to wit, East 50 feet of. the West 100 feet of Lot 5, Block 47, original townsite of the city of Tulsa, upon which was located a hotel, and Lot 8, Block 1, Fairview addition to the city of Tulsa. Said petition in the civil action further alleged that Bertie E. Woodson did not execute and deliver the quit claim deed to the defendant therein Frank Miles to the hotel property and the lot in Fairview addition and had no knowledge thereof prior to September. 8, 1951. She further alleged that no consideration was paid for said hotel and Fairview property, and that the quit claim deed was fraudulent and void, and that the same should be -cancelled, etc. Thereafter the said Bertie E. Woodson became ill, and died on October 9, 1951, and an Order of revivor was entered in said civil action. The case came on for trial on the 19th day of February 1952 while said civil action was being tried, and W. F. Miles who is known therein as Frank Miles testified for himself after being- duly sworn, as by law provided, in substance, that the said deed was executed in his office at 107½ North Greenwood in Tulsa, Oklahoma, by Bertie E. Woodson in the presence of Mrs. Effie Smith and Mrs. Viola Lewis and notarized by the latter person on September 2, 1950.

The information specifically alleged that said testimony so given was a material matter in an4 to said civil action, then on trial, and all of which testimony in relation thereto was false and known to be false when so testified to by the defendant therein Frank Miles, being the same person as W. F. Miles herein. The information . further alleged that the defendant had two prior convictions in cases of perjury, and subornation of perjury in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Oklahoma growing out of ’indictments returned thereon on March 1, 1932, for which crimes he was sentenced to 3 years in the United States Penitentiary at Leavenworth, Kansas, said sentences to run concurrently.

The state’s evidence on this charge of perjury shows that the quit claim deed was not executed and acknowledged as testified to in the civil action by the said Frank Miles or W. F. Miles, in his; office in the, presence of Mrs Lewis and Mrs. Woodson, and that .Mrs. Woodson’s acknowledgment-thereof was not taken in his office as testi *295 fied to by him, but to the contrary, the deed was presented to Mrs. Viola Lewis by the defendant in her home with the request by the defendant that Mrs. Woodson had instructed him to present the deed to Mrs. Lewis with the assurance by Mrs. Miles that Mrs. Woodson had requested Mrs. Lewis to thus take her acknowledgment.

The testimony of Mrs. Woodson in the civil case was preserved before her demise by deposition, and was read into the record of the trial of the civil action. This testimony was offered in the perjury trial herein, as limited in the trial court’s instruction No. 6, for the purpose of showing the materiality of the testimony given by Frank Miles in the civil action. The testimony of Mrs. Woodson in substance was to the effect that when she executed the quit claim deed involved in the civil action it contained the name of Dr. Burt who was supposed to have purchased a vacant lot on Peoria Street and for which the consideration was $75, and for which she was paid by Frank Miles’ check. She further testified that the name of Frank Miles did not appear in the deed, nor did the description of the hotel property as hereinbefore described, and neither did the Fairview property appear thereon. She testified she saw the quit claim deed last in 1950 in her home before she made the discovery of the fraudulent alterations and additions thereto on September 8, 1951. The quit claim deed shows on its face some descriptive matter had been stricken and the other descriptions written in on the line below and also discloses alteration by erasure where the grantee was named. On these facts in the civil action the trial court found for the plaintiff, and ordered cancellation of the void deed.

On the trial of this case on the criminal charge of perjury the defendant did not testify. He contends that 'the trial court erred in not giving his requested instruction No. 1, as follows:

“You are instructed that no acknowledgment or recording shall be necessary to the validity of any deed, mortgage or contract relating to real estate as between the parties thereto; but no deed, mortgage, contract, bond, lease or other instrument relating to real es tate other than a lease for a period not exceeding one year and accompanied by actual possession, shall be valid as against third person unless acknowledged and recorded.”

The defendant contends that in view of the fact that Mrs. Woodson admitted signing and delivering the deed to the defendant and the further fact that the trial court in the criminal case submitted the materiality of the evidence given by the defendant in the civil case, and of the further fact that the civil action was one between the grantor and grantee of the deed, the jury should have been instructed as requested. The defendant cited no authority in support of this proposition.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1954 OK CR 33, 268 P.2d 290, 1954 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miles-v-state-oklacrimapp-1954.