Court Opinion

ID: 8175336
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 22:20:26.602597+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:39:55.537080
License: Public Domain

Dent, Judge:
Mrs. Mamie Jones, wife of Festus, complains because the intermediate court of Marion County found her guilty of keeping a house of ill fame, and adjudged her to' pay a fine of $100.00 and to rest in prison in'the county jail for thirty days. The circuit court would afford her no relief, and so she presents her objections to this Court. The first is that the indictment is insufficient. It is as follows:
“State of West Virginia, Marion County, to wit: In the circuit court of the said county, November term, 1900. The grand jurors of the State of West Virginia, in and for the body of the county of Marion, and now attending the circuit court of said county, upon the oaths present that Mamie Jones to wit, on the-day of October, 1900, and on divers other days and times thereafter, at the said county of Marion, unlawfully did keep and maintain a certain house of ill fame, resorted to during all that time, and now resorted to, by divers and dissolute persons, both men and women, (to the jurors aforesaid unknown), for the purpose of prostitution and lewdness, against the peace and dignity of the State. G. M. Alexander, prosecuting attorney for the said county of Marion.”
It follows the statute, except it contains some unnecessary surplusage. State v. Eblan, 44 W. Va. 522, 525, 528. The date charged is immaterial, so it is not impossible, or after the finding of the indictment, or subject to the bar of the statute of limitations. It is not necessary to allege any act of lewdness or prostitution, as the words “keeping a house of ill fame” *615implies'all this under our statute. It is not necessary to charge that the house was in a public place, or in any wise affected the public. To keep it in a private place is forbidden by the statute, and houses of ill fame are recognized as injurious to public morals wherever kept. The indictment jn the case of the State v. McGahan, 48 W. Va. 438, (37 S. E. Rep. 573), was for keeping a disorderly house, and not a house of ill fame. The motion to quash the indictment was properly overruled. The second and third objections are that the court erred in refusing to grant her a continuance. This is a matter of sound discretion, which will not be disturbed, unless it is plainly erroneous. The court had a right to examine her as to what she intended to or could prove by the absent witness so as to ascertain the sincerity of her motion. To this question she gave no intelligible or sufficient answer, but her conduct and evidence shows that her only object was delay. The continuance was properly refused. State v. Madison, 49 W. Va. 96; State v. Lane, 44 W. Va. 731; State v. Harrison, 36 W. Va., 729. The fourth, fifth and sixth objections are founded-on the fact that she was a married woman living with her husband and presumed to be under his coercion. In a charge of keeping a house of ill fame the ordinary rule of coercion does not apply, “for this is an offense as to the government of the house in which the wife has a principal share, and also such an offense as may generally be presumed to be managed by the intrigues of her sex.” 1 Hawk P. C. C. section 12. Ho one could imagine for a moment that any woman could be coerced by her husband into keeping a house of ill fame, nor that any pure wife, free from blame would remain at such a house kept without her consent and connivance. This is one instance in which man, poor man, is not wholly to blame, and it is only the most vicious and depraved men and women that keep, abide in and frequent such abominable institutions, the open jaws of man’s eternal destruction. While man’s depravity creates the demand for such unhallowed resorts, it is woman’s depravity that keeps up the supply. Their prostitution is equally reprehensible and cor ruptible of and injurious to public morals.
In the eyes of the law the husband and wife are equally err i-inal in keeping or permitting a house of ill fame in property resided in and mutually controlled by them. 9 Am. & En. En. *616Law, (2d Ed.) 531. Mame cannot blame Eestús, nor Eestus Mame, but both are equally guilty and should suffer punishment alike.
The judgmentof the circuit bourt is plainly right, and is-Therefore áteme <1.

Affirmed.