Court Opinion

ID: 6512885
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 18:23:58.577423+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:54:56.163576
License: Public Domain

STONE, C. J.
-The two defendants named above were separately tried, on warrant and complaint, for living together in adultery. [Rachel Yaughan waived a jury, and was tried by the presiding judge. Milton Brazil was tried by a *56jury. Both were convicted, and a fine of one hundred dollars assessed against each. Fine and costs not being paid by either, in each case there was sentence to hard labor for the county, for the non-payment of the fine and costs. These sentences are in all respects regular, with a single exception, which we will notice further on.
There,seems to be no controversy as to the following facts: In 1880, the defendant Milton Brazil obtained a license, and under it was formally married to Silvia Vaughan, an authorized officer performing the ceremony. It is neither shown nor pretended that Silvia has died, and we must, therefore, presume that she still lives. In 1886, and continuing up to the time of the commencement of this prosecution, the defendants, Rachel Vaughan and Milton Brazil, have lived and cohabited together, occupying the same bed, and claiming to be husband and wife. This cohabitation has been in Macon county. The testimony tends to show that the said Milton and Rachel were formally married in the State of Mississippi, in 1883.
The main defense relied on is, that before the marriage of the said Milton and Silvia in 1880, the latter — Silvia—had intermarried with one Bozeman, who was still living, and that, as a consequence, Milton’s subsequent marriage with the said Silvia was bigamous and void; that, being void, it opposed no obstacle to his later marriage to Rachel in 1883, and, as a necessary result, the cohabitation of Milton and Rachel, complained of in these prosecutions, was not adulterous, but lawful. So that the most important inquiry of fact was, whether the said Silvia had been previously married to Bozeman. On that controverted inquiry, the testimony was in conflict. Stated as the testimony is in the bills of exceptions (they are copies of each other, so far as this question is concerned), it fails to produce satisfactory conviction that Silvia and Bozeman were ever married, and hence there is a failure to establish the invalidity of Milton’s marriage with the former. That marriage not being shown to be invalid, the later cohabitation of Milton and Rachel as husband and wife was unlawful, notwithstanding they may have conformed to every requisite of a valid marriage. So, if there is nothing else in this case, the ■ conviction must stand.
"We will now treat the cases 'separately, first considering that of Rachel Vaughan. The bill of exceptions states that it contains all the evidence. The testimony shows that Mil*57ton’s marriage with Silvia was in 1880, and in Macon county, Alabama. It tends to show that his later marriage with Rachel was in 1888, and in Mississippi. There is not a semblance of proof tending to show that Rachel knew, or had ever heard of the marriage of Milton and Silvia, or that she was in a situation to raise the presumption that she must have known it. True, the women were sisters, and a strong suspicion may arise that she knew, of the marriage. Suspicion is not enough. The proof or presumption must have been strong enough to repel all reasonable doubt. If the marriage with Silvia was valid under the rules declared above, as we think the trial court was justified in finding, this necessarily invalidates the marriage with Rachel, unless the first had been dissolved by death, or some other lawful cause; but it would not render her criminally guilty of adultery, unless she is shown to have had knowledge of the first marriage; and submitted to conjugal relations after-wards. In the absence of such knowledge, she was both morally and legally guiltless of crime. The testimony did not justify Rachel’s conviction.
As to Milton Brazil’s case: The court, against defendant’s objection, allowed the prosecution to ask. him,- on' cross-examination as a witness, many questions, and to obtain answers to them, as to a mortgage made by him, and as to the quantity of cotton he had picked out, which were wholly irrelevant to the charge preferred against either defendant. We confess that we are not able to perceive clearly what influence these questions, or.-the answers to them, could have exerted in the deliberations of the jury. Possibly, their tendency .was to raise an inquiry into the fair dealing of the witness, who- was himself the defendant on trial. It is not enough, however, that we can not perceive the injury. Prima fade injury is presumed, when error is shown, It would be a hazardous precedent, to establish the doctrine of error without injury, when a criminal accusation is under review. The County Court erred in admitting this testimony.
In fixing the amount of hard labor to be performed in payment of costs, the judgment of the court was, in each case, imperfect. The - statute has declared a maximum, beyond which such punishment shall not extend. Eight months is the maximum in cases of misdemeanor. Armstrong v. State, ante, p. 45. If this, however, was the only error, we would not reverse, but would correct and affirm.
There is nothing in the other questions raised.
*58The judgment in each case is reversed, and the cause remanded.