Richardson v. State

63 A. 317, 103 Md. 112, 1906 Md. LEXIS 108
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 13, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 63 A. 317 (Richardson v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richardson v. State, 63 A. 317, 103 Md. 112, 1906 Md. LEXIS 108 (Md. 1906).

Opinion

Burke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The traverser, Charles H- Richardson, was indicted in the Criminal Court of Baltimore for the crime of bigamy. He pleaded not guilty, and was tried by a jury in that Court, and convicted, and was sentenced to be confined in the Maryla nd *113 Penitentiary for the period of eighteen months. From this judgment he appealed.

The indictment contained two counts. The first count charged that on the 30th day of March, in the year of our Lord, 1898, in the city of Baltimore, the traverser, being then married to and then the husband of a certain woman named Mollie K- Cole, feloniously did then and there marry and take to wife a certain other woman named Carrie E. Seipel, his first wife the said Mollie K. Cole being then alive and still his wife. The second count charged that the traverser on the sixteenth day of November, 1888, in the-State of Maryland did marry one Mollie K. Cole, and her the said Mollie K. Cole then, and there-had for a wife, and that he thereafter on the 13th. day of March, 1898, in Baltimore City and State of Maryland,, being then and there the husband of the said Mollie K. Cole,, feloniously did marry and take to wife a certain other woman-named Carrie E. Seipel, his said wife, the said Mollie K. Cole, being then alive and still his wife. In order to maintain the indictment, it was necessary for the State to prove beyond a reasonable doubt the following facts, first, that the traverser had married Carrie E. Seipel in the city of Baltimore as charged, and second, that another woman to whom he had been lawfully married, towit, Mollie K. Cole, was then living. The jury before whom he elected to be tried was under the Constitution of the State the judges of the law and facts of the case. It was the duty of the Court to determine all questions as to the admissibility of the evidence offered by the State to support the charge, but the question as to the weight and sufficiency in fact of the evidence to prove the allegations of the indictment was committed by the law to the exclusive judgment of the jury, subject, however to the power of the Court for sufficient reasons to set aside the verdict of guilty. The record shows that a motion for a new trial was-made, and that the motion was overruled.

In proof of the charge contained in the indictment the State produced a witness, Mary Richardson, who testified that she was a resident of Washington, D. C., and that she had been *114 married to the defendant, Charles H. Richardson, for more than eight years, and that she had a son who was living with the defendant, and who was about seventeen years old. She further testified that she was married to the defendant in the city of Washington. She then testified she had nothing to do with the prosecution of the traverser, and that she had been brought from Washington City as a witness. The State then called Carrie Seipel, the prosecuting witness, who testitified that she married the defendant, Charles H. Richardson, in March, 1898, and that she was married at night at the rectory of St. Paul’s church on Saratoga street by Rev. Dr. Hodges; that she had never heard of the previous marriage ■of Richardson until sbout five months prior to the time of testifying; that the defendant .had told her that he was a widower, and had showed her an undertaker’s bill which he claimed was for burying his first wife. The witness was asked whether she had ever lived at the corner of High and Addison streets with Samuel Shed, to which she replied she had not, and that she had not lived with the defendant at No. 325 North Calvert street before their marriage. Dr. Hodges, rector of St. Paul’s Episcopal church, Charles street, testified that he is, and was on March 30th, 1898, a minister of the gospel, and that the records of his church showed that Carrie Seipel and Charles H. Richardson were married by him at the parsonage of said church on March 30th, 1898.

The defendant on his own behalf testified that he was engaged in a patent medicine business at numbers 9 and 11 North Gay street, Baltimore City, in the year 1898; that sometime in March, 1898, the defendant was introduced to the prosecuting witness, Carrie Seipel, by a man by the name of Howard Sloman, who was employed in the business by the defendant, aud that said Carrie Seipel had been hanging around his place for some days before he made her acquaintance. That at the time he is alleged to have married Carrie Seipel, and for some days previous thereto, he had been on a protracted spree, and was unfit for business, and his business ■was being conducted by Howard Sloman, who collected his *115 money, paid his bills, and kept his accounts. That a few days prior to the 30th day of March the defendant got on a spree at the room 325 North Calvert street. That on the Tuesday morning preceding the day of the alleged marriage the defendant got on a severe spree of drunkenness, and remembers nothing whatever from that time until the Friday following that Tuesday, when he found himself in.the room No. 325 North Calvert street recovering from the effects of a severe drunk. When he came to himself he asked the prosecuting witness, Carrie Seipel, how long he had been in the house, and she said to him you have been here since Tuesday morning. He then asked her if any money had been sent him from the store, and she replied eight dollars. The defendant then said that is strange, because there ought. to have been taken in between sixteen and eighteen dollars a day to which Carrie Seipel replied that they had only brought eight dollars. The defendant then said he would go down to the store and see what had happened, and why no more money had been sent him. That he did go to the store, and found that sixty-eight dollars had been sent up to him. He then returned to the room where the Seipel woman was, and told her that she had sixty-eight dollars of his money, and that he wanted it. Whereupon she put her hand under the table cover on a table in the room, and produced a paper which she said was a marriage certificate, and that he had married her on Wednesday following the day on which he had gone on a severe spree, and that he must now support her and take care of her, and if he did not do so she would prosecute him for bigamy, and send him to .jail where he belonged. That he knew nothing of the license or marriage. That he told her then and there that she put up the job on him while he was drunk, and that he knew nothing about the marriage, and that she tricked him into it vhile he was in a drunken condition. That Carrie Seipel replied, “Well, that is the way I do business.” That finding himself tricked into the alleged marriage with Carrie Seipel, he packed a large quantity of his medicine, which he shipped to Cumberland, and to Wheeling, West Virginia, and shortly thereafter left the State.

*116 He further testified that he never lived with Carrie Seipel after said marriage, except for a short time, under threats of prosecution, and that he had endeavored for nearly six years to keep out of her way altogether, and refused to live with' her or have anything to do with her, and never lived with her for a moment after he had found he had been tricked into the marriage, except for short intervals, when she would hunt him down and threaten him with prosecution.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 A. 317, 103 Md. 112, 1906 Md. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richardson-v-state-md-1906.