Parham v. State

60 S.E. 123, 3 Ga. App. 468, 1908 Ga. App. LEXIS 341
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 27, 1908
Docket919
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 60 S.E. 123 (Parham v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parham v. State, 60 S.E. 123, 3 Ga. App. 468, 1908 Ga. App. LEXIS 341 (Ga. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Hill, C. J.

John Parham brought suit in the superior court of Chattooga county for personal injuries, against the Central of •Georgia Kailway Company. On the trial of the case, at the March term, 1906, in support of his suit for damages, he testified in substance as follows: that in June, July, and August, 1904, he was •employed by the defendant company; that on or about August 13, 1904, while he was working with extra gang number 1, in charge •of a train of the defendant company, and in pursuance of his work, he was sitting on cross-ties which were loaded upon a fiat car, a part of the train, and was going to Summerville, Ga.; that the train was going at a very high rate of speed, to wit, at the rate of ■thirty or forty miles per hour, which was a higher rate of speed than its schedule required, and that on passing a curve, approaching a switch, the brakes were suddenly thrown on to stop the train, .and this gave the car upon which he was riding such a jerk that he was thrown off the car, with the cross-ties; that he had no place to sit on the car, except on the cross-ties, and these were not properly braced or laid on the car; and that as they began sliding off the car, he had no way of holding on, as the ties were sliding under him, and he was thus thrown off the car; that as a result of the fall, he received severe and permanent injuries; that his left leg was practically rendered useless for the remainder of the year; ■that he was ruptured, and his kidneys, bladder, and urinary organs were injured; that his intestines were forced through his anus and also thrown down into his scrotum or sac, and he was compelled to wear a truss, and his testicles were injured; that on account of such injuries he suffered great physical pain and-was permanently damaged at least one half of his capacity to labor; that the tibia or large bone in his right leg was fractured, and that broken bones had been taken out of his leg on account of it. He further testified that he had never had gonorrhea or syphilis, and that the condition of his leg was not the result of any venereal disease, but was the result of the injuries received by him in being thrown from «aid car on the occasion referred to, and that he had never taken .any medicine for gonorrhea or for any other venereal disease.

[470]*470Subsequently to the trial of the suit for damages, which resulted in a verdict for the defendant, John Parham was indicted by the grand jury of the superior court of Chattooga county for the crime of perjury, the indictment being predicated upon the testimony above set forth. The indictment is in- five counts, and in each count a portion of this testimony is set out. The jury, under the charge of the court, returned a verdict of guilty on the first, second, and fifth counts of the indictment, ignored the third count, and returned a verdict of not guilty on the fourth. A motion for a. new trial, based on the general grounds, was overruled; and the question before this court is whether the verdict is supported by any legal evidence. It is especially insisted that there was no sufficient corroboration of the testimony of the one witness in chief against the defendant. This makes it necessary to consider the specific allegations of each one of the counts in the indictment on which the defendant was found guilty, and the evidence applicable thereto.

The first count in the indictment charges, that the defendant-committed perjury in his testimony given on the trial of his suit for dámages against the railroad company, in swearing that the train upon which' he was riding and from which he was thrown was then running at the rate of thirty or forty miles per hour; that the brakes were then applied suddenly, throwing him off the cars with the cross-ties, and that he was then and thereby injured and wounded on and in the front part of his right leg, between the ankle and the knee, and that his leg swelled and was full of pus and blood, and a bone an inch and a half long was taken therefrom, and that two more pieces of bone came out lower down on his leg; that one of the ties struck his left side and back and knocked his entrails down into his bag and out of his anus, and that his left testicle was painfully injured. The second count charges that the following part of the defendant’s testimony which he gave in his suit for damages was perjury, to wit: “When I was thrown from said car I hit the ground and didn’t know anything at all. I didn’t know when they put me on the train. I didn’t know when they picked me up, until I afterwards got to Lavender,” meaning a station on .the Central of Georgia Eailway in the county of Floyd. The fifth count charges that the following testimony given by the defendant on the trial of his suit for-[471]*471■damages against the railroad company constituted perjury, to wit: that he had never taken medicine for gonorrhea, gleet, or clap, or other venereal disease; that he had never had-any such disease, and that the condition of his leg, at that time and prior thereto, to wit, the swelling thereof and accumulation of pus and blood therein, the ejection of pieces of bone therefrom and other condition thereof, were not the results of such disease, but were the results of said injuries inflicted by the railroad company. The foregoing constitute the material allegations set out in the three separate counts.

The chief witness against the defendant was one Tussey, who was in charge of the train on the occasion when the defendant, in his suit for damages, swore that he was injured as therein set forth. This witness in chief swears, in support of the charge of perjury, that he never ran but one train; that no such accident as testified to by John Parham in his suit for damages ever occurred. The defendant, John Parham, in his suit for damages having sworn that it did occur by the running of said train in the charge of Tussey, and that he was then injured as described, these are what may be called the substantive facts, true or false, around which the entire case and the evidence therein, pro and con, revolve; and on these substantive facts the testimony of these two witnesses is in direct and irreconcilable conflict. The pertinent question therefore is _ whether the testimony of this chief witness, Tussey, against the defendant is sufficiently corroborated by that of another witness, or by circumstances, on the material questions in issue, to support the verdict of guilty on any one of- the three counts in the indictment. Even if the jury believed the testimony of Tussey to be the truth, and that of the defendant, Par-ham, to be false, they would not be justified in convicting the-defendant of perjury; for it is well settled by the statutes of this State, codified from the common law, that while the testimony of a single witness is generally sufficient to establish a fact, this is not so as to the crime of perjury, but that to establish this offense-there must be two witnesses or circumstances corroborating the one witness whose testimony contradicting that of the defendant makes the direct and positive issue of truth or falsity. There is no other witness in this ease whose testimony directly corroborates that of the witness Tussey on the issues between him and the de[472]*472fondant as to the fact of the accident and its results, given by him in his suit for damages, and set out in the first and second counts of the indictment; and such corroboration, if any exists, must be found in the proved circumstances or facts material to the issues.

There can be no rule laid down by the law as to what facts 01 circumstances amount to corroboration. This is exclusively a question for the determination of the jury in the particular case.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 S.E. 123, 3 Ga. App. 468, 1908 Ga. App. LEXIS 341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parham-v-state-gactapp-1908.