Sikes v. State

30 Ark. 496
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 30 Ark. 496 (Sikes 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
Sikes v. State, 30 Ark. 496 (Ark. 1875).

Opinion

English, Ch. J.:

There were two counts in the indictment in this case.

The first count charged that “the defendant, J. W. Sikes, being a minister of the Gospel, in said county (of Benton), on the 10th day of March, 1875, unlawfully did solemnize a marriage contract between one Hayden Looney and Cora A. Taliaferro. She, the said Cora A. Taliaferro, then and there being a minor over the age of seventeen and under the age of eighteen, without first obtaining the consent of the parents of her the said Cora A. Taliaferro, the parents of her the said Cora A. Taliaferro then and there being residents of the State of Arkansas, against the peace,” etc.

The second count charged that “the said J. W. Sikes, in said county, on the 10th day of March, 1875, he, the said J. W. Sikes, then and there being a minister of the Gospel, unlawfully did perform a marriage ceremony between one Hayden Looney and Cora A. Taliaferro, he, the said Hayden Looney, then and there being a, male person under the age of twenty-one years and over the age of seventeen years, and the said Cora A. Taliaferro then and there being a female over the age of seventeen years and under the age of eighteen years, without first obtaining the consent in person, or in writing, of the parents of them the said Hayden Looney and Cora A. Taliaferro, against the peace,” etc.

The defendant demurred to the indictment “because the facts set forth in it do not constitute a public offense against the laws of the State,” etc.

The court, as stated in the record, overruled the demurrer, holding the indictment to be bad under section 1590, of Gantt’s Digest, as insisted by defendant, but good under section 1588, of the Digest.

The defendant was then tried upon'the plea of not guilty, convicted, fined $100, filed a motion for a new trial, and also a motion in arrest of judgment, which were overruled, and he took a bill of exceptions and appealed.

The only specific objection taken to the first count of the indictment, in the brief filed for appellant, is that the word years is omitted immediately after the word seventeen, and again after the word eighteen. The clause complained of is this: “ She, the said Cora A., etc., then and there being a minor over the age of seventeen and under the age of eighteen.” No doubt but that the clause would have been more accurate, and better composition as well as pleading, if the word years had followed both the words seventeen and eighteen, but the omission was hardly prejudicial to any substantial rights of the appellant on the merits. (Gantt’s Digest, p. 404.) He, his counsel, the court and jury, must all have understood that the omitted word was plainly implied after the words seventeen and eighteen, preceded by the words, as the one was,. “over the age of,” and the other “under the age of.”

The second count in the indictment is bad because it did not ■aver that the parties married by appellant had parents or guardians living in this State. If the parties be of the age to contract marriage, that is, if the male be of the full age of seventeen years, and the female of the full age of fourteen years, and have neither parent nor guardian, living in this State, it is no offense, for a minister, priest, or civil magistrate, to marry them without obtaining the consent of parents or guardian, but if the parents or guardian live in this State, such consent must be obtained in person or in writing.

•The second count alleges that such consent ,was not obtained, but does not aver that the parents were living in the State.

Revised statutes, ch. 94, see. 19, 20, 21; Gould’s Digest, ch. 109, secs. 20, 21, 22; Gantt’s Digest, secs. 4186-87,1590, 1592; State v. Willis, 9 Ark., (4 Eng.) 196.

On the trial, the State proved by C. D. Taliaferro that he was the father of Cora A.; that she was over the age of seventeen and under the age of eighteen years at the time of her marriage with Hayden Looney; that he had never given his consent, either in person or in writing, to the marriage, and that he resided in Benton county, etc.

Jane Taliaferro testified that she was the mother of Cora A., and that she was, on the 24th day of March, 1875, the time of the marriage, over seventeen and under eighteen years of age, and that witness had never given her consent, either in person or in writing, to the marriage.

The State proved by Mr. and Mrs. Looney that they were married by appellant, in Benton county, on the 14th March, 1875, and that Mr. Looney told appellant that they were on a runaway expedition or match.

The State introduced the marriage certificate given by appellant, in which he certified that he was an ordained minister of the gospel, of the Baptist denomination; that his credentials were recorded in the clerk’s office of Benton county on 1st May, 1866, and that he solemnized the rites of matrimony on the 24th March, 1875, between Playden Looney, age twenty-one years the 1st May, 1875, and Cora A. Taliaferro, age eighteen years the 9th November, 1874, both of Benton county. Dated 25th March, 1875.

Mrs. Looney, on behalf of appellant, testified that in the evening of the 24th of March, 1875, and before the marriage, she told appellant she was eighteen years old on the 9th of March, 1874, and offered to give him a certificate to that effect. Other witnesses testified that she made such statement to appellant.

Hayden Looney also testified that before appellant saw Cora A., he told him twice that she was eighteen years old.

The appellant asked the court to instruct the jury, “ That if they believed from the evidence that the defendant used proper diligence to ascertain the age of said Cora A. Taliaferro from the parties married before he performed the rites of matrimony between her and said Hayden Looney, they should find him not guilty.”

Which instruction the court refused.

The court, of its own motion, after stating to the jury the material allegations of the indictment, and that it was necessary for the State to prove them, instructed them that “’If the jury find from the evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defendant solemnized the rites of matrimony between Hayden Looney and Cora A. Taliaferro, in the county of Benton, within one year before the finding of this indictment, that said Cora A. was, at that time, over the age of seventeen and under the age of eighteen years; and that defendant .had not the consent, in person or in writing, of the parents or guardian, living in this State, of said Cora A., it is no excuse or justification of the act that it was without any criminal intention, or that a deception had been practiced upon defendant by a false representation that the said Cora A. was of the age of eighteen years. The violation of the statute is made a crime, regardless of the intention of the parties.”

The court also instructed the jury that if they found the defendant guilty, as charged in the indictment, they would assess his fine at not less than one hundred dollars.

The jury found the appellant guilty, and assessed his fine at one hundred dollars.

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30 Ark. 496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sikes-v-state-ark-1875.