Corvin v. Commonwealth

108 S.E. 651, 131 Va. 649, 39 A.L.R. 592, 1921 Va. LEXIS 54
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 22, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 108 S.E. 651 (Corvin v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Corvin v. Commonwealth, 108 S.E. 651, 131 Va. 649, 39 A.L.R. 592, 1921 Va. LEXIS 54 (Va. 1921).

Opinion

Prentis, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The accused has been convicted of the crime of bigamy and is here alleging that several errors were committed in the course of the trial.

The fact of his first marriage to Augusta Suit, as well as the fact of his second marriage while she was still living to Zollie Umberger Suit, the divorced wife of L. A. Suit, the brother of Augusta Suit, are both conceded. The defense is based upon the fact that the accused first obtained a decree of divorce from Augusta Suit Corvin, in Barbour county, West Virginia, and he relies upon that decree as a bar to this prosecution.

The facts leading up to the prosecution, all of which are pertinent for the consideration of the decisive question to be determined, may be thus stated: He was first married in 1903 in Wythe county, Virginia, and lived there with his wife for a number of years, but they separated on December 3, 1916. The causes of the separation were his apparent interest in and affection for one Zollie Umberger Suit (she being then the wife of L. A. Suit, his own wife’s brother), which conduct if not criminal was so notorious as to lead to a breach of intimate relations with his wife, followed by separation and ultimately by a divorce in Virginia of Zollie Umberger Suit from her husband, L. A. Suit, upon the ground of her intimacy with the accused. The uncontradicted testimony of Augusta Corvin was that she was a [653]*653good and faithful wife, that she had to leave her husband because of the relationship existing between him and Mrs. Suit, and that when she remonstrated with him, he told her that it was none of her business,.and finally that when he got certain business fixed up he and Zollie were going to leave; that he told her (his wife) that either he or she must leave, and that if she did not leave him she would not stay there very long; and that thereupon she obtained refuge at Simon Umberger’s house on December 3, 1916. It also appears in the evidence that about the time of the separation, the accused saw Simon Umberger, the father of Zollie Umberger Suit, and requested him to advise his wife, Augusta, to sue him for a divorce, and at the same time to advise Suit to sue his wife, Zollie Umberger Suit, for a divorce, so that he (the accused) and Zollie Umberger Suit might marry each other, and at about the same time he also approached Mrs. Walter Umberger, a. daughter-in-law of the same Simon Umberger, and made a proposition to give his wife certain household property and $400 in money if she would get a divorce from him, upon condition, however, that L. A. Suit should get a divorce from his wife, accompanied by the statement that he would not pay one cent of the amount unless Zollie was divorced from her husband, and these two witnesses also testify that the accused asked them at that time if they would not rather have him live in Wythe county with Zollie Umberger Suit than to take her away from there and not marry her.

Thereafter, on October 15, 1917, the accused was indicted on the charge of unlawfully, and without just cause, deserting, and wilfully neglecting and refusing to provide for the support and maintenance of his wife, Augusta Corvin, she being then in destitute and necessitous circumstances. He made his defense, on October 29th, and was found guilty as charged in the indictment, and his punishment therefor was fixed at ninety days on the State convict road force at [654]*654hard labor and a fine of $250. After the discharge of the jury the trial court, with the consent of the accused, ordered him to pay to the clerk of the court for the support of his wife the sum of $12.50 per month, payable on the first day of each month for the period of one year, and released him from custody on probation during that period, upon condition that he enter into a recognizance, with surety, in the penalty of $500 conditioned for his appearance at court whenever so ordered within the year, and also to appear on the first day of the October term, 1918.

The accused did not testify in this case, but it otherwise appears that he went to the city of Washington and worked on the street car line immediately after he left Virginia; that he there saw Zollie Umberger Suit, who was clerking in a store in that city in the fall of 1917. Thereafter, about March, 1918, he was employed as a farm laborer in Barbour county, West Virginia, by W. H. Wentz, and worked there until late in the fall of 1919; that Zollie Umberger Suit visited the Wentz place two or three times while the accused was there, and was finally employed by Wentz to go to the farm to look after his mother, and that she and the accused both boarded and slept in the Wentz home there.

On May 19, 1919, the accused instituted his suit for divorce against his wife, Augusta Corvin, alleging that he was then and for more than one year had been a resident of the State of West Virginia; that his wife had wilfully deserted him without any just or reasonable cause therefor, and twice in his bill fixes the date of such desertion as December 3, 1915, the truth being that the separation occurred a year later, on December 3, 1916. He proceeded to mature his case by order of publication, alleging that he was informed that his wife, the defendant, was a resident of the State of Virginia. He undertook to establish the facts alleged by the evidence of himself and Zollie Umberger Suit.

The West Virginia statute, West Virginia Code, section [655]*6553640, provides among other things that a divorce from the bond of matrimony may be decreed “to the party abandoned,” “where either party wilfully abandons or deserts the other for three years.”

It appears then that at the time his suit was instituted the date of separation or abandonment was misstated in the bill. We think it may be fairly inferred that this was not a mere inadvertence because of these circumstances: The date fixed for the taking of depositions was November 21, 1919, and on that day no witnesses appeared, so that the commissioner continued the proceedings until December 26, 1919, and when examined neither of the witnesses corrected the erroneous statement appearing in the bill, though they carefully refrained from expressly repeating the falsehood, and merely testified that the desertion or separation had continued for more than three years without stating when the period began. One answer of the accused was that they had “been separated three years past.” At the time his testimony was given the separation had continued three years but his lack of frankness is apparent when it is observed that he failed to give the date of the separation, which, if he had given truly, would have disclosed that at the time of institution of the suit the court was without jurisdiction to grant the relief sought. Neither in the bill nor in the testimony was the attention of the West Virginia court directed to the true cause of the separation. No allusion whatever was made to these material and significant facts, viz., that the accused had in Virginia been adjudged the party at fault, guilty of an inexcusable desertion of his wife, required to contribute to her support, that he was on probation and had been required to enter into a recognizance for his appearance before the Virginia court.

It is claimed for the accused that the divorce decree,' thus obtained in West Virginia, creates a perfect defense in this prosecution, both under the full faith and credit clause of [656]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 S.E. 651, 131 Va. 649, 39 A.L.R. 592, 1921 Va. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corvin-v-commonwealth-va-1921.