Statement of the Case.
MONROE, J.The bill of information under which defendant was prosecuted, after-setting forth that one Ed. Smith was in due course of law being tried in the district court under an indictment for murder, and that defendant appeared as a witness in his behalf and was duly sworn, proceeds as follows, to wit:
“Whereupon it became a material inquiry on. the trial of said issue whether she, the said Bettie Smith, had not, on the second day after the killing, in the sheriff’s office in the courthouse at Lake Charles, La., in the presence of Mr. C. B. Perkins and H. Kyle Ramsey, told the sheriff, D. J. Reid, that the Saturday night of the killing Gus Pugh came to the house of Ed. Smith, alias Bama Smith, and he and the said Ed. Smith asked her, the said Bettie Smith, if Gus Pugh had paid his board bill, and she answered, ‘No;’ that Gus Pugh had told her. that Mr. Denas, his boss, had gone to Welsh, and he had not gotten his money, and that Ed. Smith said: ‘That is not so. 1 saw Mr. Denas in Roanoke to-day.’ • And Gus Pugh said: ‘Tes; he has gone to Welsh.’ And Ed. Smith replied: ‘You are a damn liar,’ and immediately shot him, Gus Pugh. And the said *137Bettie Smith, being so sworn as aforesaid, wickedly contriving and intending to cause the said Ed. Smith to be acquitted of the said felony, • did then and there knowingly, falsely, corruptly, willfully, and wickedly say, depose, and give in evidence to the jurors of the jury, then and there duly taken and sworn ■ between the said state and the said Ed. Smith before the judge aforesaid, that she had made the foregoing statement to the sheriff, D. J. Reid, in the presence of H. Kyle Ramsey and O. B. Perkins, as detailed, but that she had done so because the sheriff, Mr. Reid, had told her then and there that, if she did not state the facts as Jack Vaughan had stated them, he would whip her, whereas, in truth and in fact, the said D. J. Reid, sheriff, had not told the said witness, Bettie Smith, that, if she did not state the facts as stated by Jack Vaughan he would whip her, all of which said statement made by said Bettie Smith the said Bettie Smith well .knew to be false, so the said Bettie Smith at the court aforesaid before the said judge and the said jury, the said M. D. Andrews, deputy clerk aforesaid, having sufficient and competent power to administer the said oath to the said Bettie Smith, did commit willful and corrupt perjury, contrary to the form of the statute,” etc.
On the trial defendant objected to the introduction of evidence, on the grounds, in substance, that the information charges no offense, since it is not alleged- that the testimony said to have been false was material to the issue or matter of inquiry, and no facts are alleged from which such materiality appears. The objections were overruled, and defendant, having been convicted, renewed them in a motion in arrest of judgment, which was sustained. The state has aiJpealed.
Opinion.
It will be observed that the bill of information alleges that it became a material inquiry whether defendant had not made certain statements to the sheriff, and that she testified that she had made the statements—
“but that she had done so because the sheriff * * * had told her * * . * that, if she did not state the facts as Jack Vaughan had stated them, he would whip her, whereas, in truth and in fact, the said * * * sheriff had not told the said witness * * * that, if she did not state the facts as stated by Jack Vaughan, he would whip her, all of which statement, made by the said Bettie Smith, the said Bettie Smith well knew to he false, so the said Bettie Smith did commit willful and corrupt perjury,” etc.
The specific allegation of materiality is therefore confined to the statement made by the witness to the sheriff; and the truth of her admission that she made those statements is not intended to be questioned. On the other hand, her testimony as to what the sheriff said to her, though alleged to be false and to constitute the perjury charged, is not in terms alleged to be material. It is, however, well settled, and is conceded by defendant’s counsel, that the indictment or information may show the materiality of the alleged false testimony, either by direct allegation that it was material, or by the allegation of facts from which its materiality will appear. And it seems to be the accepted doctrine that:
“False testimony is deemed material not only when directly pertinent to the main issue, hut also when it has a legitimate tendency to prove or disprove any material fact in the chain of evidence. * * * Perjury may he assigned upon testimony going to the credit of a material witness in a cause, although such evidence he legally inadmissible and ought not to be received. So, also, perjury may he predicated on a false answer of a witness that he had never been convicted of a felony, as such answer affects his credibility, and is therefore material to the issue, provided the evidence of conviction is not too remote.” 80 Cyc. pp. 1418, 1820, 1421.
The rule as thus stated Is applied in a case where a witness has given testimony material to the issue, and in answer to the question as to whether he had not previously made a different statement denies having done so, it being held that his answer affects his credibility, and that a charge of perjury may be founded thereon. 30 Cyc. p. 1420, note, citing Williams v. State, 68 Ala. 551; Robertson v. State, 54 Ark. 604, 16 S. W. 582; People v. Barry, 63 Cal. 62; State v. Mooney, 65 Mo. 494; Hanscom v. State, 93 Wis. 273, 67 N. W. 419; The question, then, is whether the bill of information on which the defendant now before the court is being prosecuted sets forth facts sufficient to show the materiality of her testimony to the effect that *139the sheriff said that he would whip her unless she made a statement in accordance with that made by Jack Vaughan. And that question, we think, must be answered in the negative, for the reasons that it nowhere appears that on the trial of Smith she made any statement at variance with that made to the sheriff, or, in fact, that she gave any testimony whatever save that which has been hereinabove recited, to wit, that she made the statement to the sheriff concerning which she was interrogated, “but that she had done so because the sheriff * * * had fold her * * * that, if she did not state the facts as Jack Vaughan had stated them, he, the „ * * * sheriff, would whip her.” Unless, however, she had, as a witness in the murder trial, given testimony at variance with her statement to the sheriff, it was wholly immaterial and irrelevant to the issue there presented what that statement was, or why she made it.
The judgment appealed from is accordingly affirmed.