State v. Papalos

103 A.2d 511, 150 Me. 46, 1954 Me. LEXIS 10
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 10, 1954
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 103 A.2d 511 (State v. Papalos) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Papalos, 103 A.2d 511, 150 Me. 46, 1954 Me. LEXIS 10 (Me. 1954).

Opinion

Tirrell, J.

This case comes before this court on respondent’s exception to decision of the Presiding Justice below which overruled respondent’s demurrer to the indictment.

Respondent was indicted at the October 1952 term by the Grand Jury of the County of Kennebec. The indictment [48]*48purports to charge perjury by the respondent allegedly committed before the Grand Jury itself. The indictment is as follows:

“State of Maine
Kennebec, ss.
At the SUPERIOR COURT, begun and hold-en at Augusta within and for the County of Kennebec, on the first Tuesday of October in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and fifty-two.
THE JURORS FOR SAID STATE upon their oath present that NICHOLAS POPOLOS, also known as NICK POPOLOS, of Portland in the County of Cumberland and State of Maine, on the 15th day of October, in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and fifty-two, at Augusta in said County of Kennebec, appeared as a witness before the Grand Jury of said County of Kennebec, the said Grand Jury being then and there a competent court and tribunal of competent jurisdiction, and being then and there engaged in hearing testimony relative to the commission of crime in said County of Kennebec and the said Nick Popolos having been then and there sworn according to law, and being required to tell the truth on oath lawfully administered did then and there commit the crime of perjury by testifying as follows; to wit: That at the time he, the said Nick Popolos, was away from the state the Supreme Wine Company would include in their check to his brother, Fred, the amount due him, the said Nick Popolos, and pay it to his brother Fred, who would give to said Nick Popolos his check for the amount due Nick Popolos from Supreme Wine Company. That a check of $133.33 given by Fred Popolos to said Nick Popolos was for commission due Nick Popolos from Supreme Wine Company, that a check of $282.47 given by Fred Popolos to said Nick Popolos was for commissions due said Nick Popolos from Supreme Wine Company, when in truth and in fact said testimony was false and un[49]*49true, all of which the said Nick Popolos then and there well knew to be false and untrue, which said testimony was material to the issue and inquiry then and there pending before said Grand Jury, against the peace of said State, and contrary to the form of the statute in such case made and provided.
A true Bill.
William Niehoff
Special Assistant Attorney General
Donald F. Beeck Foreman”

The language of the indictment which is brought into question in the present case reads as follows:

“That Nicholas Popolos . . . appeared as a witness before the Grand Jury of said County of Kennebec, the said Grand Jury being then and there a competent court and tribunal of competent jurisdiction, and being then and there engaged in hearing testimony relative to the commission of crime in said County of Kennebec . . .”

This is the only language in the indictment which purports to indicate to the respondent, in any manner, the issue, inquiry or subject pending before the Grand Jury to which his allegedly false testimony is claimed to be material;

For this reason, on the 17th day of October 1952 term the respondent filed a demurrer to the indictment. At the time the written demurrer was filed, and on the same page thereof, the respondent expressly reserved the right to plead over in the event the demurrer should be overruled. The Presiding Justice overruled the demurrer and explicitly granted the respondent leave to plead over. As to demurrers in criminal cases see State v. Rogers, 149 Me. 32, 98 A. (2nd) 655; State v. Schumacher, 149 Me. 298, 101 A. (2nd) 196.

[50]*50The respondent excepted to the decision of the Presiding Justice overruling his demurrer and now prosecutes his exception before this court. The respondent’s contention is that an indictment for prejury is defective when it does no more, to designate the proceeding in which allegedly false testimony has been presented, than to state that the testimony was given

“before the Grand Jury of said County of Kennebec . . . then and there engaged in hearing testimony relative to the commission of crime in said County of Kennebec.”

This indictment is defective at common law as an indictment for perjury. In State v. Corson, 59 Me. 137 (1871) this court said:

“The respondent demurs to the indictment against him for perjury. It is very clear that the indictment is bad in many particulars, if considered under the old rules of the common law, or of our former practice and decisions. Indeed, the criminal pleader found great difficulty in so framing an indictment for perjury, that it could stand the searching examination and technical objections thereupon raised by astute counsel. And the records in all the States show that it had become extremely difficult to pursue a perjurer to final judgment and sentence, however clear his guilt, or however atrocious his crime.”

The present indictment must rely, for its salvation, on the provisions of R. S., 1944, Chap. 122, Sec. 4, which sanctions, the streamlining of perjury indictments provided that certain fundamentals are substantially observed.

The essentials of an indictment for perjury in this State are set forth in a prescribed form by the legislature. But such a form is subject to constitutional restrictions and must be in compliance therewith. The statutes prescribing forms of indictment have removed many of the niceties of [51]*51technical pleading and the indictment is made little more than a simple statement of the offense couched in ordinary-language and with due regard for. the rights of the accused. But they cannot change the requirements that the indictment must, as at common law, contain every averment that is necessary to inform the defendant of the particular circumstances of the charge against him.

However, the statute, as specifically worded, is not applicable to a grand jury proceeding because of the secrecy of such proceeding. In its literal form the statute contemplátes a proceeding which is adversary in nature — in which party is arrayed against party. The statute says:

“appeared as a witness in a proceeding in which C.D. and E.F. were parties, then and there being heard before a tribunal of competent jurisdiction . . .” (italics ours)

The real issue of the present case thus emerges as follows. Where an indictment purporting to allege perjury, committed before a grand jury, undertakes to substitute the language,

“before the grand jury of said County of Kennebec . . . then and there engaged in hearing testimony relative to the commission of crime in said County of Kennebec.”

for the literal statutory language, “in a proceeding in which C.D. and E.F. were parties,” is such adaptation sufficient to accomplish “substantially” the same kind of specification intended by the naming of parties which is required in situations involving adversary proceedings?

We turn, therefore, to discern the purpose of the language of the statute “in a proceeding in which C.D. and E.F.

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Related

State v. Cameron
456 A.2d 8 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1983)
State v. Brasslett
451 A.2d 890 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1982)
State v. Michaud
114 A.2d 352 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1955)
State v. Popolos
103 A.2d 511 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1954)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 A.2d 511, 150 Me. 46, 1954 Me. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-papalos-me-1954.