State v. Coffee
This text of 75 Mo. App. 88 (State v. Coffee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
At the April term, 1897, of the Howell circuit court the grand jury returned a true bill of indictment, good in form and substance, against the defendants, charging them with open and notorious adultery. At the same term of court they were put on trial and found guilty by the verdict of a jury. After unsuccessful motions for new trial and in arrest they appealed to this court.
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No witness testified that he had ever seen any improper conduct between Coffee and his codefendant. She lived in the family, worked at times in the field with him and in the garden, and for years had resided in his family. Coffee had made no admission as to the paternity of the children for more than a year previous to the filing of the indictment. He had been advised by some of his neighbors to get rid of the McGree woman; that the authorities would get after him and break him up. His reply was that “it was worth all that it was costing him.” On another occasion he said it would be more honorable to raise and educate the children than to drive them off. No man of ordinary experience and observation could hesitate to draw more than one conclusion from this testimony. Julia McGree lived in Coffee’s family as a member of it; slept in the same room, if not in the same bed, with him; [91]*91gave -birth to five children in his house, which he admitted to be his, and all these facts were known to his neighbors. His declaration to one of his neighbors that “it was worth all that it was costing him,” shows the disposition of the man; the birth of the five children in his house is proof sufficient that he did not curb that disposition, and the recent birth was proof that he had not lost either the power or will to continue the unlawful indulgence of his passions. Stronger proof than this that these defendants were in the face of society abiding and cohabiting together in open and notorious adultery, would be very difficult to furnish in any case of this kind, and the trial court committed no error by denying defendants’ demurrer to the evidence.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
75 Mo. App. 88, 1898 Mo. App. LEXIS 389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-coffee-moctapp-1898.