Halbrook v. State

34 Ark. 511
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 34 Ark. 511 (Halbrook v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Halbrook v. State, 34 Ark. 511 (Ark. 1879).

Opinion

English, C. J.

It appears from the transcript in this case, that, on the first day of the October term, 1875, (eleventh of October), of the circuit court of Conway county, a grand jury was impanneled, and retired to consider of their duties.

Then follows an indictment against Jeremiah H. Hal-brook for bigamy, indorsed by the clerk: “ Filed in open court, this sixteenth day of October, 1875,” but no record entry is copied in the transcript, showing that the indictment was presented in court by the grand jury.

Supposing there was such an entry, as there should have been, and that the clerk had failed to transcribe it, a certiorari was ordered, upon which the clerk has returned that no entry showing that the indictment was presented in court by the grand jury, appears of record.

The indictment charges, in substance, that on the second of November, 1866, the defendant was married, in Conway county, to Jane Honeycutt, and that, on the twenty-sixth of July, 1875, when she was living, and still his wife, he feloniously married Mary Mahan, in said county.

He was tried at the September term, 1879, found guilty, and the jury fixed bis punishment at imprisonment for three years in the penitentiary; a new trial was refused, he was sentenced, took a bill of exceptions, and prayed an appeal, which was allowed by one of the judges of this court.

It appears from the bill of exceptions that, on the trial, the state proved by the record of marriages of Conway county, that appellant was married to Jane Honeycutt, on the second of November, 1866, in Conway county, by a justice of the peace of said county, he then being forty-three years of age, and Jane seventeen.

The state also proved, by the same record of marriages, that defendant was married, under a license, on the twenty-seventh of July, 1875, to Mary Mahan (seventeen years of by a minister of the gospel.

The state then proved, by two witnesses, that they were present and saw defendant married to Jane Honeycutt, on the second of November, 1866, and were present, subsequently, and witnessed a marriage, on the twenty-seventh of July, 1875, in Conway county, between defendant and Mary Mahan, and that Jane Honeycutt was still living in Conway county at the time defendant was martiedto Mary Mahan.

The court excluded all of the evidence offered by appellant, as shown below.

I. The first ground of the motion for a new trial is that the verdict was not warranted by the evidence.

The statute provides that: “Every person, having a wife or husband living, who shall marry any other person, whether married or single, except in the cases specified in the next section, shall be adjudged guilty of bigamy. Gantt’s Digest, section 1312.

The next section makes five exceptions, which are matters of defense. 1 Greenleaf Evidence, sec. 208.

The indictment' (says Mr. Greenleae) states the first and second marriages, and alleges that, at the time of the second marriage, the former husband or wife was alive. The proof of these three facts, therefore, will make out the case on the part of the prosecution. In regard to the first marriage, it is sufficient to proye that a marriage, in fact, was celebrated according to tbe laws of the country in which it took place ; and this, even though it were voidable; provided it were not absolutely void. This may be shown by the evidence of persons present at the marriage, with proof of the official character of the celebrator; or, by documents legally admissible — such as a copy of the register, where registration is required, by law, with proof of the identity of the person; or, by the deliberate admission of the prisoner himself.

In proof of the second marriage (he continues) the same kind of evidence is admissible as in proof of the first. But it must distinctly appear that it was a marriage in all respects legal, except that the first husband or wife was then alive; that it was celebrated within the 'county, etc. Proof of the second marriage, by reputation alone, is not sufficient. 1 Greenleaf Ev., secs. 204, 205.

The state proved both the first and second marriage, alleged in the indictment, by the record of marriages, which our statute makes evidence (Gantt’s Digest, sec. 4140), and by witnesses present at the marriages.

The case -was well made out on the part of the state.

II. After the state had closed, appellant introduced Miles Price and Thomas Halbrook, who stated, after being sworn as witnesses in the case, that they had been acquainted with the appellant for many years; that he was married when about nineteen years old to one Margaret Halbrook, in Perry county, Tennessee; that he was now (time of the trial)fifty-seven years of age; that they were not present at such marriage, but, by reputation, such marriage occurred within ten miles of where they^ resided, and that, within a few day^s thereafter, appellant brought his wife into the immediate neighborhood of witness Price, and there they remained together as husband and wife for two or three months, and that appellant and his said wife, Margaret, lived and cohabited together as husband and wife, in the state of Tennessee, and later in the states of Arkansas and Missouri, for many years, and had born to them, and reared by them, a large family of children; that some of said children now reside in the neighborhood of witness, and that witness had, within the last three months, seen letters from Margaret, wife of appellant, who, by reputation, still lives in Green county, Missouri, but witness had not seen her since 1863.

But the court ruled that such evidence was irrelevant and incompetent, and excluded the same from the jury; to which ruling appellant excepted.

Appellant then'offered in evidence a certified transcript of the record of a decree, rendered in the circuit court of Phillips county, in the state of Missouri, on the twenty-eighth of November, 1866, in a suit for divorce by Margaret J. Halbrook against Jeremiah IT. Halbrook, dissolving the bonds of matrimony theretofore contracted between them, and giving her the care of their infant children, and alimony to be chai’ged upon certain real estate of the defendant in that suit. The decree shows that the defendant therein had notice by publication, and that there had been a previous default entered against him, but does not show when the bill was filed, nor when the marriage dissolved by the decree had been entered into by the parties to the suit.

The court refused to permit appellant to read in evidence the transcript of the record of the decree, and he excepted.

Appellant offered no other evidence.

The appellant asked the court to give the jury seven instructions. The court gave the first, which defined the crime of bigamy (having given a similar instruction on the part of the state), and refused the others.

{a) The court having excluded all of the evidence offered by appellant, there was nothing on which the instructions refused could be based. They were mere abstract propositions of law.

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34 Ark. 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/halbrook-v-state-ark-1879.