State v. Barefoot

31 S.C.L. 209
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 15, 1845
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 31 S.C.L. 209 (State v. Barefoot) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Barefoot, 31 S.C.L. 209 (S.C. Ct. App. 1845).

Opinion

Curia, per Richardson, J.

This case depends upon the statute of 1 James 1, c. 11, 2 Stat. 508, to make it a felony to marry a second husband or wife, until the former be dead.

The commission of the felony, (bigamy,) as a fact, is not disputed. Scion Barefoot, the defendant, first intermarried, seven years ago, with Zilpha Futel, a widow. Both the parties were of lawful age, he about 22 years of age, and Zilpha much older.

In June last, while Zilpha was still living, Barefoot again intermarried with Elizabeth Odum, a single woman, also of lawful age. The ceremony and rite of marriage was administered in both instances by clergymen, the first by the Rev. John A. Russel of the reformed Methodist Church, the second by the Rev. Jacob .Higgins of the Baptist Church. Both the marriages were solemnized in Richland district in due form, and in presence of witnesses.

Thus, then, there was a second woman taken to wife, while the first wife yet lived. This second marriage of the defendant consummated the crime of bigamy, unless the defence, now to be considered, can exempt him from punishment. It turns mainly upon what is the proper construction of the Stat. 32 Henry 8, 2 Stat. 475. The defence of Barefoot consists in this. Zilpha Futel, the first wife, was his aunt, by consanguinity, that is, his [221]*221mother’s sister. And although cohabitation with his mother’s sister constitutes the sin of incest, in morality and revealed religion, yet that high offence against good morals so operates as to render the first marriage utterly void, and of no effect. That is to say, makes it no more than a mere vicious cohabitation between the defendant and his aunt. Or the argument may be thus stated — as in England the Ecclesiastical Court might set aside the first marriage, this court ought to assume such a divorce, because we have no Ecclesiastical Court to enforce the statute. And thus the first marriage being merely ostensible, it is argued that the defendant intermarried lawfully with Elizabeth Odum, and she, not Zilpha, is his true wife; or assuming such a divorce, the defendant is equally guiltless of bigamy. Such is the defence.

And true it is, if the first marriage had been thus absolutely void in Jaw, as if a boy under 14 and a girl under 12 years of age had passed through the form and ceremony of marriage, such would be the inconsequential operation and effect, and the second marriage of either, when of lawful age, and to another person, would not constitute bigamy.

But the proposition, that the marriage of Barefoot to his aunt was this legal nullity, is an assumption of the very point and pivot of his whole defence. Once make such a postulate good, and he goes clear of bigamy.

But if the argument and law fail to prove that the first marriage was void, then, it is equally plain that the defendant has been properly and lawfully convicted, and he cannot escape legal punishment, by the fact that his first marriage was incestuous. Now, then, laying aside the striking inconsistency of a man offering to’ defend himself by insisting that the first marriage was intrinsically immoral and sinful, and therefore a nullity, in order to arrest the criminal consequences and. legal punishment of bigamy — laying this inconsistency aside, let us see how the laws of the country stand in relation to the marriage of a nephew with his aunt.

Is it a marriage binding by law on the husband and wife, so as to make their offspring legitimate children, and [222]*222prevent their contracting a second marriage during the ' joint lives of such husband and wife ? Such is the question.

By the common law, single-men and women, being of the lawful age, that is, men of 14 and women of 12 years of age, are left free to enter into the contract of marriage at their own discretion.

“Our law,” says Blackstone, 1 Com. 432, “considers marriage in no other light than as a civil contract.” “The law treats it,” hescontinues, “as it does all other contracts, allowing it to be good and valid in ail cases where the parties at the time of making it were, in the first place, willing to contract; secondly, able to contract; and lastly, did contract, in the proper forms and solemnities required by law.”

All the common law writers on marriage lay down the same law, and in almost the same terms. See 2 Steph. Com. 279; Shelford on marriage and divorce, and Poynter on the same.

These writers are named for examples of the rest, and as jurists who have collected the cases, and digested the laws of marriage, and I know of no essential difference in those writers upon the right to marry, or of the permanence of the contract,.or of its consequence in utterly excluding a second marriage during the joint lives of the husband and wife.

But the authorities will be more particularly named, and subjoined at the end of this decision.

I need not consider the right of divorce, or the few exceptions to this general right of men and women to intermarry, and to be bound for life in vinculo matrimonii; it is a chain, so far as being bound to rational happiness at home, and regard for human order everywhere, can be so called. Its necessity and usefulness constitute its chain, continuity and durability.

Only one exception is presented, by the case before the court, namely,. does the proximity of blood between a nephew and his aunt render their marriage a nullity by our laws, so as to let in the second marriage of Barefoot to Miss Odum, and render it a legal contract of marriage 1 [223]*223This would protect him from the charge of bigamy, by making him the lawful husband of Elizabeth in place of Zilpha.

I will not enter upon all the views, considerations and policy presented by the defendant’s counsel, in his earnest argument, that the law ought to hold an incestuous marriage as a mere meretricious sexual cohabitation, and utterly void as a marriage contract. And it may be well deplored that a legislative Act has not been passed to reform the common law in this respect, as has been lately done in Great Britain, and such incestuous marriages declared to be utterly null and void, if contracted after the statute.

But what is asked of this court ? It is to do more, as I apprehend, than the Legislature could do — impair the obligations of past contracts — and more than the English ■ Parliament has done, by the statute referred to ; — the court is to declare null and void a marriage' already solemnized and binding at common law. And that, too, is to be done in order to shield the guilty. It will be seen at once that any such judicial act would be retrospective, and annul past marriages, and consequently would be attended by the bastardizing of the children of such marriages, and would at the same time take from such husbands their only legitimate children.

Reflect for a moment upon such consequences, of this court’s undertaking to set aside such marriages as null and void. The father would lose all right to his only offspring, which in law can be no other than the children of his wife, and the children would equally lose their father, and become filii nullius or bastards.

Have not the unborn children, and the public too, their rights in every marriage.? Children are plainly a third party to marriages, and demand its permanency.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 S.C.L. 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-barefoot-scctapp-1845.