The defendant was indicted for perjury, was convicted by a jury, and from the judgment and sentence of the court following the verdict appeals. The indictment contains, among others, the following indorsement “Presented in open court to the presiding judge by the foreman of the grand jury in the presence of fifteen other members of the grand jury this 21st day of March, 1906. E. W. Long, Clerk.”
The defendant, before pleading to the indictment, objected to being put upon trial under said indictment because'the indictment shows that it Avas presented to the judge and not to the court by the foreman of the grand jury which found said indictment. Section 7152 of the Code provides that all indictments must be presented to the court by the foreman of the grand jury, in the presence of at least 11 other jurors. The provisions of this section are mandatory and must be complied with, and the above indorsement shoAvs that, in the instant case, they loere in all things complied with. The indorsement shows that it was presented in open court and. presented to him who while the court was open represented its power and its dignity — the presiding judge —without whose presence no business could have been transacted, and the only person to Avhom the indictment could legally have been presented. The proposition announced in the case of Scott v. State, 141 Ala. 39, 37 South. 366, has no applicability to the question here presented.
*145In the case of Williams v. State, 68 Ala. 551, the Supreme Court, through Brickell, C. J., said: “The indictment in this cause, on' the tidal of which the per jury is charged to have been committed, and the minute entry of the judgment rendered on the trial, were admissible evidence. If it had appeared that the final record had been made up as required by law, that ought, probably, to have been produced. But it not appearing that this record had been made up, the original indictment being of the file and the minute entry of the judgment of the records of the city court, they were competent evidence.” Because there was an absence of evidence tending to show that the indictment which was admitted in evidence had been recorded, and in this case — as was the situation in the Williams Case, supra — as the' conviction of the appellant was had in the court in which the trial was had under the indictment which was introduced in evidence, and upon which trial appellant is alleged to have committed the perjury for which he stands indicted, we are of the opinion that the trial court committed no error in permitting the state to introduce in evidence the indictment and the minute entry.
3. It appears from the evidence in this case that Jeff Vanhorn Avas indicted for the murder of one Clark while they Avere traveling together as passengers on a train between Cordova and Dora in Walker county. In that trial, the evidence for the state tended to show that Vanhorn and Clark became engaged in a difficulty in a car in Avhich there were two compartments. The rear compartment was used as a smoking room for Avhite men. The front compartment Avas used for colored passengers, and immediately in front of the compartment for colored passengers Avas the baggage car. The difficulty Avhich resulted in Clark’s death occurred while *146the train was traveling at its accustomed rate of speed. There was evidence for the state tending to show that Vanhorn first attacked Clark in said smoking compartment; that Clark, to avoid the attack, ran through the compartment for colored people out onto the platform attached to said car, with Vanhorn in pursuit of him; and that when Clark reached the platform Vanhorn struck him and knocked him from the car, causing wounds from which he died. The difficulty which resulted in Clark’s death seems to have been of very short duration. To use the expression of one of the witnesses, “It all happened right now.”
That there was a difficulty between Vanhorn and Clark, and that Clark ran from the smoking compartment through the colored compartment of the car onto the front platform of the car, there can be no doubt. Vanhorn claimed that he did not leave the smoking car, but that Clark ran through the colored compartment onto the platform and fell from the car. The state’s testimony, as we have already stated, tended to show that Vanhorn followed Clark through the colored compartment to the front platform of the car and there struck him Avith a Avhisky bottle, breaking the bottle, and 'knocking Clark off the car. Vanhorn, 'to sustain the theory of the manner in which Clark came to his death, placed the defendant on the stand as a witness, and, according to the testimony on behalf of the state in the instant case, .the defendant testified that he knew that Vanhorn did not leave the smoking compartment on which the difficulty between Vanhorn and Clark commenced and go into the colored compartment of said car; that he (defendant) was on the rear platform of the baggage car of the train on which said difficulty took place and saw Clark come out of the colored compartment onto the platform and fall from the car; that *147Vanhorn did not strike Clark with a whisky hottle and did not follow Clark through the colored compartment, but remained in the white compartment.
For the purpose of aiding the jury in ascertaining whether the above testimony of the witness was willfully and corruptly false the court permitted the state to offer evidence tending to show that the baggage car had no platform. This ivas manifestly proper. If the baggage car had no platform, then the defendant was not where he testified he was when Clark fell or was knocked from the car. In addition to this, the state was permitted, against the objection of the defendant, to prove that Vanhorn struck Clark with a whisky bottle while they were in the white compartment; that Clark ran, Avith Vanhorn behind him, to the platform and Avas there knocked by Vanhorn from the car; and that Van-horn, on returning from the platform, said that he had knocked the son of a bitch off. All the testimony shoAved conclusively that from the inception of the difficulty until the return of Vanhorn from the platform — if, in fact, he went to the platform — Avas a very short space of time. As was said by a Avitness already quoted by us, “It all happened right now,” and as the jury had a right to infer from the particulars of the difficulty between Vanhorn and Clark Avhich the court allowed to go in evidence that these particulars Avere known to the defendant if he was on the car, and that, if he did know them, such knowledge tended .to show that his testimony was willfully and corruptly false, the court committed no error in admitting in evidence the particulars of the difficulty of which the appellant complains. Evidence of any circumstance tending to show that the defendant knew that Vanhorn followed Clark from the smoking compartment onto the platform and there knocked him from the car, or that, if the defendant was in fact in the-*148car as claimed by him, he must have known it, was relevant. — Floyd v. State, 30 Ala. 511.
When a defendant is on trial charged with perjury, evidence of any fact which tends to prove the falsity or the truth of the sworn statement for which he stands indicted is relevant, and all of the evidence which the court permitted to go before the jury as to what occurred between Vanhorn and Clark immediately preceding and immediately after Clark’s disappearance from the train — taken in connection Avith the defendant’s claim that he Avas present — forming as it did a part of the res gestae of the difficulty, tended to throw light on the question as to the truth or falsity of the defendant’s evidence on the Vanhorn trial, and Avas relevant. — Underhill on Criminal Evidence, § 468.
A man is not guilty of perjury who simply swears falsely to a material matter; his testimony must not only be material and false, but willfully and corruptly false. And the circumstances detailed by the witnesses for the state — that Vanhorn pulled a bottle from his pocket, struck Clark with it, then followed him as he ran onto the platform, and again struck him, knocking him from the train, breaking the bottle, and remarking that he had knocked the son of a bitch from the train— if true, all tended to show that the evidence given by the defendant on the Vanhorn trial, and about which he was indicted in this case, Avas not only false, but willfully and corruptly false.
4. The state introduced in evidence the page of the subpoena docket which contained a list of the names of the Avitnesses summoned on behalf of the state and of the defendant, showing when the subpoenas were issued and upon what witnesses such subpoenas were served and upon what witnesses they were not served and the date of the service. In the case of Smith v. State, 103 *149Ala. 57, 15 South. 866, such a page of a subpoena docket was, under the peculiar facts shown and adverted to in that case, held to be relevant testimony. Taking into consideration the testimony of Sheriff Lacy, who swore that all of the witnesses who were sworn in the Vanhorn Case were called around and SAVorn by the clerk in a body, and the testimony of the witness Martin — that he remembered seeing the defendant “going into the Avitness room after being sworn Avith the other Avitnesses under the rule” — we are of the opinion that, under the facts in this case, the page of the subpoena docket was admissible.
5. A Avitness for the state testified that after Clark’s death he Avas with Vanhorn in jail, and that Vanhorn there wrote a letter, in the presence of the witness, to the defendant, asking him to appear as a Avitness for him on his trial, and telling him what he desired him to swear; that a few days afterwards the defendant came to the jail and told Vanhorn, in the hearing of the witness, that he would appear and testify for him and would testify to the facts indicated in the letter. Against the objection of the defendant, the witness was permitted to state the contents of the alleged letter, stating that he read it as Vanhorn Avrote it, and remembered its contents. Subsequently Vanhorn was placed upon the stand by the defendant and swore positively that he had never Avritten said letter, and that he had never had a conversation of any sort with the defendant relating to any such letter. There Avas therefore merely a question of veracity between these witnesses, and, as the defendant claimed that no such letter had ever been Avritten and was therefore not in existence, the question as to whether the court properly admitted secondary evidence of a writing — collateral to the main issues in the case — is not before us.
*150The rule is familiar that the erroneous admission of evidence, which is at the time inadmissible, is cured by the subsequent introduction of evidence which renders it admissible. — Scott v. State, 30 Ala. 503.
There were numerous other exceptions reserved by the defendant to rulings of the trial court as to the admission of evidence; but we have above discussed what we believe to be the salient questions presented by this record. The questions not discussed are regarded by us as patently without merit. We find no reversible error in the record, and the judgment of the court below is therefore affirmed.
Affirmed.