Giving false evidence or information while under oath Personal Auto Policy Insurance policy issued to individuals covering risks arising out of the ownership or operation of a licensed automobile Personal Effects Floater A policy covering personal effects usually carried by tourists Can be all risk or specified peril form Covers worldwide but excludes coverage at the insured's residence Personal Injury Liability Injury other than bodily injury arising out of defined causes which usually include false arrest or detention, malicious prosecution, wrongful entry or eviction, libel or slander or violation of a person's right to privacy other than in the course of advertising, broadcasting, television, publishing
If someone who is giving evidence in a court of law commits perjury, they lie. This witness has committed perjury and no reliance can be placed on her evidence. the crime of telling a lie after promising to tell the truth in a court of law, or a lie told in this way. In law, act or crime of knowingly making a false statement while under oath. The statement must be material to the issue of inquiry. Perjuries that have the effect of obstructing the adjudication of a case may be given increased punishment for that reason. A person who makes a false statement and later corrects it is usually not considered to have committed perjury
The act of testifying falsely under oath An intentional lie as to a matter of fact, belief, opinion, or knowledge, given while under oath or in a sworn affidavit The legal offense of deliberately testifying falsely under oath about a material fact
1 The criminal offense of making false statements under oath In common law, only a willful and corrupt sworn statement made without sincere belief in it truth, and made in a judicial proceeding regarding a material matter, was perjury Today, statutes have broadened the offense so that in some jurisdictions any false swearing in a legal instrument or legal setting is perjury
In criminal law, the willful assertion as to a matter of fact, opinion, belief, or knowledge, made by a witness in a judicial proceeding as part of his evidence, either upon or in any form allowed by law to be substituted for an oath, or in a affidavit, or otherwise, such assertion being material to the issue or point of inquiry and known to such witness to be false