Dumas v. State

14 Tex. Ct. App. 464, 1883 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 200
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 20, 1883
DocketNo. 2753
StatusPublished

This text of 14 Tex. Ct. App. 464 (Dumas v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dumas v. State, 14 Tex. Ct. App. 464, 1883 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 200 (Tex. Ct. App. 1883).

Opinion

White, Presiding Judge.

Our statute provides that “if any person who has a former husband or wife living shall marry another in this State, such person shall be punished by imprisonment in the penitentiary for a term not exceeding three years.” (Penal Code, Art. 324.)

[468]*468Again, it is provided that in trials for offenses constituting unlawful marriage, “ proof of marriage by mere reputation shall not be sufficient.” (Penal Code, Art. 328.)

In prosecutions for bigamy or unlawful marriage the prior marriage, according to the authorities, is in fact the corpus delicti, and the pressure in point of evidence generally relates to the first marriage. In Hull v. The State, 7 Texas Court of Appeals, 594, this court said, “ a prosecution for unlawful marriage can be sustained only by allegation and proof of a prior valid marriage, and a subsequent marriage, the legal husband or wife being still alive.”

As to what evidence is admissible, and what evidence is sufficient, to establish a prior valid marriage, there seems to exist a contrariety of opinion and decision in the books, and it is a question which has never been directly adjudicated in this State. A valid marriage must be proven, and our statute says “mere reputation” is not sufficient proof of the fact. Hot that reputation is not admissible as evidence to be taken in connection with other proofs to establish the fact, but that, in and of itself alone and without other evidence, it is insufficient to establish the fact.

In civil actions for divorce the character and sufficiency of the evidence of former marriage has been before our Supreme Court on more than one occasion. Where a suit for divorce originated at an early day, and occurring on a state of facts at a time when the common law was not the' rule of action as part of the law of the country, it was held that “cohabitation and common repute, as establishing a former marriage in countries governed by the common law, cannot be admitted as evidence in the courts of Texas to annul a subsequent marriage contracted here while Texas was a part of Mexico, and solemnized according to the laws which then governed this country.” And in such case it was further held that “ the production of a certified copy from the office of a county recorder in the State of Missouri of a certificate under the sign manual of a justice of the peace that he had solemnized such former marriage according to law, cannot be admitted as competent evidence to establish such foreign marriage to the exclusion of the domestic marriage, without due proof of the laws of that State relating to the subject matter.” (Smith v. Smith, 1 Texas, 621; Rice v. Rice, 31 Texas, 174.)

After the common law became the rule of action, it was held [469]*469that “proof of general reputation, cohabitation of parties, and general reception as man and wife, was competent evidence in a suit for divorce.” (Wright v. Wright, 6 Texas, 3.)

Our civil statutes provide for the celebration of the rites of matrimony in this State, requiring, also, a license therefor to be issued, the rites to be performed under the license by the parties only authorized in the statute, and the return and record of the license in the office of the clerk of the County Court. (Rev. Stats., Arts., 2838 et seq.) Proof of a domestic marriage, or one thus solemnized, may unquestionably be made by the record, or by a certified copy thereof. (Rev. Stats., Art. 2252.) This, however, is nowhere declared the only, or even the best, mode of making the proof in domestic marriages, or those which have taken place in our State. It is believed that even, in such cases, without the introduction of the record at all, the fact may be fully and completely established by the testimony of eye-witnesses who were present when the rites were solemnized. Where no rule of proof is expressly prescribed by statute, the marriage may be proven by parol.

Mr. Wharton says: “It may happen that the lex loci contractus may prescribe that no marriage shall be valid unless solemnized and recorded in a particular way, and it may happen, also, that the lex fori may prescribe that, in this respect, the lex loci contractus must have been shown to have been satisfied, to prove a marriage. Except in such cases, which are not likely to occur, a marriage may be proved by parol, and this is a rule of international law. This parol proof may be resolved into several ingredients. It may consist of the testimony of witnesses present at the ceremony. It may consist of proof of cohabitation and admissions.” (Whart. Crim. Ev., 8 ed., sec. 170.)

Mr. Bishop says: “The common course of proof is to present the record evidence, and, with it, evidence to identify the parties, and these are prima facie sufficient. The testimony of persons present at the marriage is good evidence without the record, though the absence of the record may, under some circumstances, create suspicion.” (Bish. on Statutory Crimes, sec. 610.)

Where the time and place of the first marriage are known, the rules thus announced clearly indicate the character and sufficiency of the evidence to be adduced. But in prosecutions for bigamy it happens, in a majority of instances perhaps, especially where the first marriage took place, as is generally the [470]*470case with bigamists, in some other State or country, that the prosecuting officer must be wholly ignorant of, and that it is impossible for him to find out, the time and place of the prisoner’s first marriage, or the names and residences of those present at its consummation. Such avenues of information are generally endeavored to be concealed by the guilty party. Where they are thus concealed, and the prosecution has been unable to find, open up and produce them, what evidence aliunde must and can be produced to supply their places? We find, in a note to the case of Taylor v. The State (52 Miss., 84, reproduced in 2 Hawley’s American Criminal Reports), the following apt observations on this subject by the editor. He says: “In some States it has been held, where, in a criminal case, it was found necessary to prove a marriage in order to convict a defendant of the crime with which he was charged, that all the essentials to a valid marriage must be strictly proved, as well as the law of the State or country where the marriage was celebrated; and, also, that the admissions of the defendant’s cohabitation and reputation were not sufficient evidence of such marriage. But experience has proven that such a rule in the United States amounts, in a large number of cases, to a denial of justice. Our people are migratory in their habits, and very many of our foreign bom citizens were married in the countries where they were born. To prove, in Missouri, a marriage which was celebrated in Bavaria, or even in Canada, within the rule adopted in some cases, is oftentimes an impossible task. Doubtless, on account of this difficulty, the rule has been modified, and the better doctrine now is that cohabitation, reputation and admissions are sufficient evidence of a legal marriage to submit to a jury.” (Amer. Crim. Repts., Hawley, 2 vol., 17.) The doctrine and the opposing and conflicting authorities are all fully noted by the editor in his note.

Mr. Bishop says: “ Record evidence and evidence of witnesses present at the ceremony will be required where these can be had.

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Related

Smith v. Smith
1 Tex. 621 (Texas Supreme Court, 1846)
Wright v. Wright
6 Tex. 3 (Texas Supreme Court, 1851)
Rice v. Rice
31 Tex. 174 (Texas Supreme Court, 1868)
People v. Humphrey
7 Johns. 314 (New York Supreme Court, 1810)
Cook v. State
11 Ga. 53 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1852)
Cameron v. State
14 Ala. 546 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1848)
State v. Roswell
6 Conn. 446 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1827)
State v. Bennett
31 Iowa 24 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1870)
State v. Sloan
7 N.W. 516 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1880)
State v. Hughes
58 Iowa 165 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1882)
Taylor v. State
52 Miss. 84 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1876)
Commonwealth v. Littlejohn
15 Mass. 163 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1818)

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Bluebook (online)
14 Tex. Ct. App. 464, 1883 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dumas-v-state-texapp-1883.