People v. Ramos

424 N.W.2d 509, 430 Mich. 544
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 7, 1988
Docket76612, (Calendar No. 19)
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 424 N.W.2d 509 (People v. Ramos) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Ramos, 424 N.W.2d 509, 430 Mich. 544 (Mich. 1988).

Opinions

Levin, J.

(for reversal). Joel Ramos was con[546]*546victed of welfare fraud1 and perjury2 for filing a false application for aid to dependent children (ADC) assistance.3 Ramos was sentenced to prison terms of two to four years for the welfare fraud and ten to fifteen years for the perjury.

[547]*547Ramos asserts two grounds for reversing his perjury conviction. First, that the Social Welfare Act4 does not authorize administration of an oath —an element of perjury — to adc applicants. Second, that the requisite oath was not administered.

We hold that because administration of an oath is an element of perjury, and an oath was not administered to Ramos when he signed the application, his perjury conviction must be reversed. We therefore do not reach the question whether the Social Welfare Act authorizes the administration of an oath. We affirm the welfare fraud conviction.

i

Dealisa Husted, a Department of Social Services assistance payments caseworker, testified that she reviewed Ramos’ application during an interview with Ramos on October 29, 1980. Ramos had followed dss instructions and completed the application before the interview. Husted checked over the application with Ramos, witnessed his signature, and signed her name to indicate that she had conducted the review.

The application contained an "affidavit”5 stating that the intentional omission of information or the providing of false information could result in pros[548]*548ecution for fraud or perjury. Husted acknowledged that she neither read this affidavit to Ramos nor administered an oath to him.

Following Ramos’ conviction of welfare fraud and perjury, the Court of Appeals affirmed in an unpublished per curiam opinion.

ii

We agree with Ramos’ contention that his signing of the application does not constitute the making of an oath.

Oaths take the form of a significant and readily observable act or acts that serve to impress upon the oath taker the importance of providing accurate information, and operate as objective evidence that the oath taker understands the importance of providing accurate information and is promising, under threat of severe penalties for lying, to be truthful.6

The making of an oath is an element of perjury.7 Under Michigan law, the form of an "oath” sufficient to constitute the basis for a perjury conviction requires more than a signature following a warning of the penalty of perjury. Section 1432 of the Revised Judicature Act sets forth the mode of administering oaths and provides for the oral administration and acknowledgment of the oath, coupled with the oath taker’s raising of the right hand:

The usual mode of administering oaths now [549]*549practiced in this state, by the person who swears holding up the right hand, shall be observed in all cases in which an oath may be administered by law except in the cases herein otherwise provided. The oath should commence, "You do solemnly swear or affirm.” [MCL 600.1432; MSA 27A.1432.][8] [Emphasis supplied.]

RJA, § 1432 was applied by this Court in People v Mankin, 225 Mich 246; 196 NW 426 (1923), where Mankin was convicted of perjury for making a false statement in an affidavit for a marriage license. Mankin claimed on appeal that his conviction should be reversed because he was not administered the "usual oath” — the words "so help you God” were omitted. While the Court rejected Man-kin’s claim, it recognized that the statute was applicable and requires some form of oral admonishment, which the oath taker receives and acknowledges with an upraised right hand:

It will be observed that this statute [MCL 600.1432; MSA 27A.1432] does not require any particular form for an oath; it provides only that the party shall swear holding up the right hand. . . . We have come to regard the uplifted hand accompanied by solemn swearing as an appeal to God for the truth of what the witness is about to testify. The words "You do solemnly swear” in and of themselves import a serious appeal to God. When addressed to the taker of an oath, who stands with uplifted hand, they signify that he is bound in conscience to tell the truth. Nothing further is necessary. [Emphasis supplied. Mankin, supra, p 252.]

[550]*550RJA, § 1432 was applied by the Court of Appeals in Dawson v Secretary of State, 44 Mich App 390; 205 NW2d 299 (1973). Dawson was arrested for drunken driving and refused to take a breath test. The arresting officer filed a report noting this refusal with the Department of State, which suspended Dawson’s driver’s license for ninety days. The statute9 required that the reports be "sworn.” Dawson appealed the suspension on the basis that, even though the officer had signed the report, he had not "sworn” to it — he had not raised his right hand and orally sworn.

The Court of Appeals agreed with Dawson’s contention, holding that to constitute an "oath,” the oath taker must raise the right hand and orally swear. "[T]he statutes involved herein clearly and unequivocally require the police officer’s report to be sworn.”10 Because the officer did not fulfill the statutory requirement of raising his right hand and swearing to the report, the report had not been sworn, and the subsequent license suspension was invalid.

The United States District Court for the Western District of Michigan applied RJA, § 1432 to invalidate a chattel mortgage. In re Bennett, 223 F Supp 423, 427 (WD Mich, 1963). The statute providing for chattel mortgages required that they contain an affidavit.11 While the chattel mortgage at issue in Bennett contained a notarized affidavit, signed by Bennett, stating that he had been sworn, he had not orally acknowledged, with upraised right hand, an orally administered oath. The affidavit was therefore invalid:

It is clear that under the State law Peterson, the [551]*551notary public, was required to administer an oath to Bennett, the mortgagor, who executed the good-faith affidavit attached to the chattel mortgage, but examination of the testimony of the notary clearly shows that he did not administer any oath to the mortgagor. He merely signed the affidavit as a notary public to attest the mortgagor’s signature. [Id.]

Bennett’s signature and the notary’s attestation of the signature were insufficient to constitute an "oath.”

The State Bar of Michigan committee on the revision of the criminal code agreed that an "oath,” as presently statutorily defined, requires more than a simple signature, even if the signature is made "under the penalties of perjury.” As noted in People v Kasparis, 107 Mich App 294, 300; 309 NW2d 241 (1981), "the drafters of the proposed criminal code were of the opinion that the terms 'oath’ or 'false swearing’ as presently used in the general perjury statute do not include statements made on official forms bearing notice that answers are made under the penalties of perjury.”12

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People v. Ramos
424 N.W.2d 509 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1988)

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Bluebook (online)
424 N.W.2d 509, 430 Mich. 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-ramos-mich-1988.