People v. Senegram

301 P. 786, 27 Cal. App. 301, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 73
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 30, 1915
DocketCrim. No. 341.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 301 P. 786 (People v. Senegram) 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. Senegram, 301 P. 786, 27 Cal. App. 301, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 73 (Cal. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

Defendant was convicted of the crime of perjury, and appeals from the judgment and an order denying his motion for a new trial.

It appears that one S. Bauman was an employee of the Senegram Company, a corporation, of which defendant was president. Some one telephoned the company, expressing a desire to sell a lot of copper wire and designated a certain saloon in Los Angeles as the place where negotiations could be conducted for its purchase. Bauman met the party and purchased the wire, which as a matter of fact had been stolen *303 from some point in Arizona. Thereafter a complaint was filed charging Bauman with receiving stolen goods. At the preliminary hearing had thereon before a magistrate, defendant was called as a witness and, as alleged in the indictment, gave certain false and material testimony the tendency of which was to fix the crime upon Bauman and show that defendant had no part in making the purchase of the wire, whereas Bauman claimed that the telephone communication was had with Senegram, who directed the former, as such employee, to go to the place designated and make an offer of thirteen cents per pound for the wire. This testimony, covering some five or six pages of the transcript as set forth in the indictment, consisted of answers made by defendant to questions propounded, each and all of which are alleged to have been materially and knowingly and willfully falsely made.

That defendant gave such answers under oath in the case of People v. Bauman, was clearly proved by the official stenographer who reported the case, and there was sufficient evidence adduced to justify the jury in finding that the major part thereof was false. The tendency of the evidence given by this defendant before the magistrate was to prove that Bauman, unknown to defendant and of his own motion, purchased the copper knowing it to have been stolen; that defendant was at the time out of the city and did not receive a communication by ’phone pursuant to which he instructed Bauman to meet the party and, on behalf of the Senegram Company, buy the wire for thirteen cents per pound. “The matter sworn to need not be directly and immediately material. It is sufficient if it be so connected with the fact directly in issue as to have a legitimate tendency to prove or disprove such fact by giving weight or probability to the testimony of a witness testifying thereto, or otherwise.” (22 Am. & Eng. Ency of Law, p. 687.) Measured by this rule, we entertain no doubt as to the materiality of the evidence given by defendant upon one, if not the chief, issue raised in the Bauman case. See, also, People v. Barry, 63 Cal. 63; People v. Metzler, 21 Cal. App. 82, [130 Pac. 1192].

Appellant insists that the court committed prejudicial error in giving certain instructions to the jury. These instructions, which we will designate as 1 and 2, are as follows:

*304 (1) “An unqualified statement of that which one does not know to he true is equivalent to a statement of that which one knows to be false.”
(2) “The court further instructs the. jury that it is not necessary to prove or establish all of the matters alleged and set up in. the information as constituting the charge of perjury against the defendant herein. It is sufficient if you believe from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt, that the prosecution has proven that any of the matters charged in the information were so sworn to or testified to by the defendant on the occasion of his testifying as a witness as charged in the information, and that the same is proven by the prosecution, beyond a reasonable doubt, to have been false and untrue at the time the same was so sworn to, or testified to, to the then knowledge of the defendant, as charged in the information, and that the same was material.”

Instruction No. 1, embodying the provision of section 125 of the Penal Code, must be read in connection with another instruction given by the court in the language of section 118 of the Penal Code; and so considered, even conceding that it was inapplicable to the issue raised by the facts pleaded, nevertheless could not have been prejudicial to defendant. (People v. Von Tiedeman, 120 Cal. 128, [52 Pac. 155].)

The other instruction, No. 2, is attacked upon several grounds. Appellant insists that it is erroneous by reason of the fact that the court submitted to the jury the determination of the question as to whether or not any testimony given by defendant was material. The court erred in so directing the jury. “The question of the materiality of evidence, no matter when or how it may arise, is always one of law for the court, and not of fact for the jury.” (People v. Lem You, 97 Cal. 224, [32 Pac. 11].) Nevertheless, defendant could not have been prejudiced by such erroneous instruction for the reason that elsewhere the court, by an instruction which we will designate No. 3, properly instructed the jury that all of “the said testimony . . . was a material matter and was material evidence and testimony in the said preliminary examination and proceeding.” Hence, since by No. 3 the court declared all of the charges of false testimony averred in the indictment to be material, the instruction No. 2 under which the jury might have found some of the testimony which they believed to have been falsely given, immaterial, must be *305 deemed favorable rather than prejudicial to the substantial rights of defendant. (People v. Lem You, 97 Cal. 224, [32 Pac. 11].) It is likewise obvious that, conceding the two instructions respecting the question of materiality of the evidence to be inconsistent, such fact could in no wise have been prejudicial to defendant.

Appellant insists that instruction No. 2 is also erroneous in that it instructs the jury that it was not necessary to a conviction that they find all of the testimony alleged in the indictment to have been given by defendant, false, but that if any of the matters and things so sworn to were proven false such fact would justify them in finding defendant guilty of the charge of perjury. The alleged error in the instruction is based upon the contention that the offense is assigned upon all of the testimony given, instead of predicating the charge upon a particular answer. In 30 Cyc. 1452, the rule is stated thus: “If, however, thé indictment is in one assignment, failure to prove all the statements substantially as alleged is fatal to the prosecution.” To the same effect is Brown v. State, 40 Tex. Crim. 49, [48 S. W. 170], where it is said: “But here the assignment is in solido, and contains in combination several statements, all of which together are alleged to be material, and the falsity of all is charged. We cannot dissever these allegations, but must consider all together, and that together they present a material issue, and as alleged it was incumbent on the state to prove that appellant swore to all the statements substantially as alleged.” The indictment sets forth upwards of thirty answers to as many questions propounded to defendant in the Bauman case, “each and all and every of them so made . . .

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Bluebook (online)
301 P. 786, 27 Cal. App. 301, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-senegram-calctapp-1915.