State v. Joseph

95 N.E.2d 771, 90 Ohio App. 427, 58 Ohio Law. Abs. 174
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 14, 1950
Docket4392
StatusPublished

This text of 95 N.E.2d 771 (State v. Joseph) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Joseph, 95 N.E.2d 771, 90 Ohio App. 427, 58 Ohio Law. Abs. 174 (Ohio Ct. App. 1950).

Opinions

The defendant was charged with subornation of perjury in an indictment containing fourteen counts. At the conclusion of the evidence, five of the counts were dismissed. The defendant was tried on the other nine counts, acquitted on six of them, and convicted on three, namely, the 9th, 10th, and 14th. A motion for a new trial having been submitted and overruled, defendant was sentenced to pay the costs of the prosecution and to be imprisoned in the Ohio Penitentiary until discharged according to law, the "three counts to be served consecutively."

Fourteen errors are assigned, all of which we have carefully considered. We are satisfied to say, without discussion, that no one of them, unless it be No. 4 or 8, is supported by the record. Assignments of error Nos. 4 and 8 require elucidation. No. 4 is:

"There was not any evidence to support the verdict of the jury of guilty upon the three counts of the indictment upon which the jury found the defendant-appellant guilty."

The three counts under consideration in this appeal are the 9th, 10th, and 14th. The 9th count of the indictment relates to the divorce case of Pearl Wehr v. Crumbley Wehr and, so far as is pertinent to the inquiry here, charges, that "the defendant did * * * suborn said Pearl Wehr to commit perjury by testifying on oath lawfully administered as follows: That said Pearl Wehr was and had been for at least thirty days immediately preceding the filing of the petition in said cause aforesaid a bona fide resident of the said Franklin county, Ohio, said testimony being material to said cause and being false in the following respects: that said Pearl Wehr had not resided in Franklin county, Ohio, during any of the time so testified * * *." *Page 429

The charges in the 10th count, involving the divorce case ofCharles Wm. Bash v. Leanette Hazel Bash, and in the 14th count, involving the divorce case of Robert W. Mehl, Jr., v. Lillian B.Mehl, are identical with that in the Wehr case except for the interposition of the name of Charles Wm. Bash in the 10th count and of Robert W. Mehl, Jr., in the 14th count.

Pearl Wehr, Charles Wm. Bash and Robert W. Mehl, Jr., all testified that they were not, at the time of their divorce trials, and had not been at any time prior thereto, residents of Franklin county. They testified also to facts from which it could be inferred that the defendant, when he filed their petitions and at the time of their trials, knew they were not then and had not theretofore been residents of Franklin county, and knew what had been done to present an indicia of bona fide residence in that county, as required by the divorce statute.

Upon the specific charge in the indictment, Pearl Wehr said that in her divorce action she "swore in the presence of Mr. Joseph that she had been a bona fide resident in Franklin county for 30 days preceding June 18," the petition being filed on June 21, 1948, and that "30 days before filing the petition she had a residence in Franklin County." This, in our judgment, was sufficient to establish that she had testified falsely in a material matter in her divorce action and in the particulars set out in the 9th count of the indictment.

The testimony in support of the Bash and Mehl counts is not specific on the material question of residence. Bash said that in his divorce case he was asked how long he lived in Franklin county, and made the reply, "thirty days." Manifestly this did not support the charge. He did not say when he lived in Franklin county for 30 days as related to the time of the filing of his petition. As a matter of fact he did *Page 430 not define any given 30 days when he lived in the county. Of course, Bash said nothing about his true residence at the time of the divorce hearing because, upon the theory of the state, it was his purpose and that of his counsel, the defendant, that the trial judge be misled into believing that he was a bona fide resident of Franklin county. If there was any testimony in the Bash divorce action to the effect that he had been a resident of Franklin county for 30 days immediately preceding the filing of the petition it is not established by the record in this case.

The same infirmity is found in the testimony of Robert W. Mehl, Jr. In his divorce case he testified that he had lived at the address given in his petition, but he did not state when he moved there or how long he had lived there, nor did he relate his residence to any period of time immediately prior to the date of the filing of his petition. In both the Bash and Mehl counts, the evidence essential to establish the specific charges respecting the testimony as to residence of these parties was not forthcoming.

Section 11980, General Code, provides in part:

"* * * Actions for divorce * * * shall be brought in the county of which the plaintiff is and has been for at least thirty days immediately preceding the filing of the petition, a bona fide resident * * *."

Both of these requisites, namely, that the plaintiff (1) is and (2) has been for at least thirty days a bona fide resident, relate to the time of the filing of the petition. The first requires that the plaintiff shall be a bona fide resident when the petition is filed and the second that he shall have been a bona fide resident for at least 30 days immediately preceding the filing of the petition. A mere statement that a party at the time of the hearing lived in the county where the action was brought, or that he had lived there for a certain length of time which could not be fixed as 30 days *Page 431 immediately preceding the filing of the petition, is not probative of the material requirements as to residence essential to venue in a divorce action.

To constitute perjury in a trial the subject matter falsely testified to must be in respect to a matter material upon that trial. Section 12842, General Code; McCaffrey v. State, 105 Ohio St. 508,138 N.E. 61. The state properly selected the language in the indictment which set forth the material matter which it claimed had been falsely sworn to, but it failed to produce the proof to support the charges. The trial judge properly instructed the jury that it must find that Bash and Mehl "made or testified to the statements alleged" in the indictment.

The court said in McCaffrey v. State, supra:

"Under the constitutional provision and this statute, it is quite clear that there must be an averment of the false testimony McCaffrey gave upon the McGannon trial; that such testimony was in respect to a matter material upon that trial."

It is likewise quite clear that the averment of the false testimony having been set forth, the proof must conform to the charge. It requires no extensive citation of authority to support the proposition that the state must prove every essential element of the offense charged. It was a requisite of proof that it appear that the testimony was given in the divorce cases, if not exactly, at least substantially, as set out in the indictment. If this was not sworn to, the corpus delicti, i. e., the falsity of the matter assigned, could not be established.State v. Courtright, 66 Ohio St. 35, 63 N.E. 590.

We do not ground our conclusion upon the proposition that the testimony of Bash and Mehl, as shown to have been given in their divorce cases, could not have been the proper basis for a charge of perjury in *Page 432

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
95 N.E.2d 771, 90 Ohio App. 427, 58 Ohio Law. Abs. 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-joseph-ohioctapp-1950.