People v. Pahrman

4 P.2d 242, 117 Cal. App. 433, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 540
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 13, 1931
DocketDocket No. 2076.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 4 P.2d 242 (People v. Pahrman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Pahrman, 4 P.2d 242, 117 Cal. App. 433, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 540 (Cal. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

BISHOP, J., pro tem.

We are asked to free appellant from the effects of a conviction of perjury, because, technically expressed, the assignment of perjury was in solido and the proof failed to establish the falsity of the totality. Stated more plainly, the claim is, that because his testimony was averred to be contrary to the truth in two instances, set out conjunctively, and it developed that only in one instance had he departed from the truth, he has not been shown guilty of the offense charged. This plea does not commend itself to our minds. Appellant, in his opening brief, correctly senses the impression made by his argument when he says:-“ The layman would, perhaps, say that it was all pure technicalities.” His answer to this criticism is: “We must not break down fixed and fundamental principles of law because of the layman’s cry of technicalities.” With this we argee; but it is the part of wisdom nevertheless, when we are confronted by a rule which outrages common sense, to scrutinize it carefully to make sure that it is a fixed and fundamental principle of law, required by the administration of justice, and is not just a phrase worthy of respect on no ground other than its venerable appearance.

The indictment, under which appellant was brought to ■trial alleges that appellant was a properly sworn witness at the trial of his fellow police officer, Bost, who was charged with murdering one Sierra. The materiality of three questions (or groups of questions) was then shown: (a) was Sierra at and in the vicinity of and in the neighborhood of the intersection of Utah and Las Vegas Streets on the evening of July 4th, and on the morning of July 5th; (b) did the appellant see Sierra at said locations, or either of them, at either of said times; (c) did Bost fire a revolver at either location, at either time? Called upon to answer concerning these questions, the indictment continues, appellant falsely swore that Sierra was not, and appellant did not, on the *435 evening of July 4th, see him at or in the vicinity of or in the neighborhood of the intersection of Utah and Las Vegas; nor was Sierra, nor did appellant see him, at any of the places mentioned on the morning of July 5th; and that Post did not fire a revolver on either of said times or at either of said places. The indictment continues in these words:

“Whereas, in truth and in fact, as he, the said Fred A. Pahrman, then and there well knew, said Christobal Silvas Sierra, also called and known as Christopher Silvas ^Sierra, was, on the evening of the fourth day of July, 1929, and on the morning of the fifth day of July, 1929, present at and in the vicinity of and in the neighborhood of the intersection of Utah and Las Vegas Streets in the City of Los Angeles, state of California; and
“Whereas, in truth and in fact, the said Fred A. Pahrman, on the evening of the fourth day of July, 1929, and on the morning of the fifth day of July, did see said Sierra at and in the vicinity of and in the neighborhood of the intersection of Utah and Las Vegas Streets in the City of Los Angeles, State of California; and
“Whereas, in truth and in fact, said William J. Post did, on the evening of the fourth day of July, 1929, and on the morning of the fifth day of July, 1929, át and in the vicinity of and in the neighborhood of the intersection of Utah and Las Vegas Streets, in the City of Los Angeles, State of California, fire and discharge a gun and revolver, ...”

Appellant was tried by the court without a jury and without witnesses, except as they appeared by the stipulation that the witnesses who testified at the Post trial should be deemed to have given the same testimony again in the case under review. So adduced, the evidence, though conflicting, was sufficient on this trial, as it had been found before (see People v. Bost, (1930) 107 Cal. App. 550 [290 Pac. 513]), to warrant the conclusion that Sierra was at the corner and in the vicinity of the corner and in the neighborhood of the corner of Utah and Las Vegas Streets on the evening of July 4th, in plain sight of appellant; and that Post discharged a revolver that evening, in the vicinity and neighborhood óf the corner, while he and appellant were there on their official errand. The evidence shows, however, that the shooting occurred shortly before midnight, and Sierra was taken away in a dying condition before *436 12:01 A. M. of July 5th. So far as the indictment alleges the truth t.o be that the several events took place July 4th and July 5th, therefore, it is not supported in its entirety by the evidence. This is the discrepancy to which appellant points.

In order the better to understand his quotations from the authorities, appellant introduces his argument with the proposition that that portion of the indictment for perjury, wherein is contained the averments showing that the truth and the statements made by the defendant do not agree, is called the “assignments of perjury”. In our case this is the part of the indictment quoted above. Appellant is correct in his contention. (People v. Bradbury, (1909) 155 Cal. 808 [103 Pac. 215] ; De Bernie v. State, (1851) 19 Ala. 23; Fudge v. State, (1909) 57 Fla. 7 [17 Ann. Cas. 919, 49 South. 128]; and see Archbold’s form of indictment for perjury contained in 2 Bishop on Criminal Procedure, (1866) sec. 847.) Having established the meaning of the term “assignments of perjury”, appellant quotes from three sources in support of his main proposition. From Wharton’s Criminal Law, eleventh edition, section 1586, page 1727, he gives this quotation: “It is necessary, however, that every fact which goes to make up any particular assignment of perjury should be so disproved.” From section 1571, page 1719, of the same work this is taken: “It is necessary, at all events, for the prosecution to prove in substance the whole of what was set out in a particular assignment as what was sworn to by the defendant referable to such assignment; proving only a part is not sufficient.” A similar conclusion is quoted in these words from 48 Corpus Juris, page 890: “But if the indictment is in one assignment, failure to prove all the statements substantially as alleged is fatal to the prosecution.”

The weight of these several statements may be fairly measured by the authorities cited in support of them, as they appear to be based not on abstract reasoning, but on cases cited. Four early English cases are given in the footnote appended to the first quotation from Wharton’s work. Each of these cases deals with the rule that the falsity of the assignment must be established by two witnesses or one witness and corroborative circumstances. None of the four even tend to support the statement that “every fact . . . *437 should be . . . disproved”. The emphasis is on “so”. The second quotation from Wharton’s stands on a footnote containing two cases: Rex v. Jones, (1791) Peake N. P. Cases, p. 51 (erroneously given in the footnote as p. 37), 170 English Reprint, 75, and State v. Ah Sam, (1879) 7 Or. 477.

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Bluebook (online)
4 P.2d 242, 117 Cal. App. 433, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 540, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-pahrman-calctapp-1931.