State v. . Cutshall

14 S.E. 107, 109 N.C. 764
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 5, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 14 S.E. 107 (State v. . Cutshall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. . Cutshall, 14 S.E. 107, 109 N.C. 764 (N.C. 1891).

Opinions

MERRIMON, C. J., dissenting. The defendant alone was on trial.

Before the plea of not guilty was entered, the defendant moved that court refuse to take cognizance of the criminal action, on the (765) ground that the defendant W. T. Cutshall was brought here from the State of Tennessee upon a requisition for bigamy, issued by the Governor of North Carolina upon the Governor of Tennessee, for the execution of which one C. W. Rivenbark was appointed agent for this State. That in proof of said allegation it was shown that said State agent went to Tennessee with said requisition; that upon the arrival of said C. W. Rivenbark at Knoxville, Tenn., he found the defendant under arrest and in the custody of the deputy sheriff, who had arrested him upon a telegram upon the said charge of bigamy; that said Rivenbark appealed to the defendant not to require him to apply to the Governor of Tennessee to get an indorsement of said requisition from the Governor of Tennessee, as it would only operate as a delay in taking the defendant; and requested the defendant to come to North Carolina upon the requisition as it stood, on the ground that the grandson of the said Rivenbark had died in North Carolina, and he, Rivenbark was anxious to return to North Carolina as soon as possible; that Cutshall agreed to and did come with said C. W. Rivenbark to North Carolina. *Page 551

This motion was overruled by the court and the case ordered to proceed, to which ruling the defendant excepted.

Upon the plea of not guilty, the jury rendered the following special verdict:

"That before 9 February, 1890, the defendant Cutshall represented to one Susan E. Pickard that he was a single man, and she being a single woman induced her thereby to enter into a marriage with him, she, the said Susan, fully believing him, the said Cutshall, at the time of the making of said representations and when the marriage was entered into, to be a single man. That the defendant Cutshall and the said Susan E. Pickard were married in York County, S.C., on said day, the ceremony being performed by a regularly ordained minister of the Gospel; that after the said marriage was celebrated, the defendant and said Susan E. Pickard cohabited for some time as man and wife in the county of Mecklenburg and State of North Carolina, (766) and before the finding of this bill; that at the time they so cohabited, and whilst cohabiting, the said Susan E. Pickard honestly believed that the defendant was her lawful husband, and the jury find that she would not have so cohabited with defendant but for such belief; the jury further find that the defendant, when he and said Susan E. Pickard were married, and whilst they cohabited together, was a married man, and that said Susan E. Pickard immediately upon ascertaining that fact dissolved the connection.

"Upon the foregoing facts, the jury are ignorant as to whether the defendant be guilty or not guilty of the offense charged against him, and thereupon pray the advice of the court thereon. And for their verdict they do say that if upon the whole matter the court shall be of opinion that the defendant is guilty, they so find; otherwise, they find him not guilty."

The court upon the foregoing special verdict, instructed the jury that the facts so found constituted the offense as charged in the bill of indictment, as to the defendant W. T. Cutshall, and thereupon the jury rendered a verdict of guilty as to said W. T. Cutshall, in manner and form as charged in the bill of indictment.

There was a judgment upon the verdict, from which the defendant appealed. The special verdict finds that the defendant not being legally married to his codefendant (who was not on trial), lived with her for years as man and wife. The interesting question is not now *Page 552 before us, whether he is not also guilty of bigamy when he has gone through the ceremony of marriage with her in another State, (767) having at the time a lawful wife living. The State has chosen to prosecute him for fornication and adultery, the court below adjudged him guilty on the special verdict, and the appeal presents the correctness of that ruling for review.

It is true that fornication and adultery is a joint act. It must be shown that two persons, a male and a female, have habitually indulged in unlawful sexual intercourse. But it is not essential to show that both parties had a guilty intent. It is sufficient if both parties participated in the unlawful sexual intercourse. This is demonstrated frequently in practice by placing one defendant on trial when nothing need be proven as to the other defendant, who is not on trial, beyond the incidental fact that it is shown as against the party on trial that the unlawful and habitual sexual intercourse existed between them. Nor can it make any difference that here it affirmatively appears that the party not on trial had no guilty intent, for if the guilty intent of both parties is essential to the conviction of the party on trial, the burden would always be on the State to prove it. But in truth, all that is necessary to be shown (when only one is on trial), is that there was illicit and habitual sexual intercourse by the party on trial with the person of the opposite sex, charged in the indictment. There is nothing in this which conflicts with the authority of S. v. Mainor, 28 N.C. 340 (though even that is somewhat questioned in S. v. Rinehart, 106 N.C. 787), which holds that if one is put on trial and acquitted, the other cannot be convicted. The reason there given for this (if valid) is that the verdict of acquittal establishes against the State that there was no illicit sexual intercourse between the parties, or, in the words of the decision, "that there has been no joint act." But there may, without countervailing that authority, well be, as in this case, an unlawful sexual intercourse wherein one party has a guilty intent, and the other through ignorance of the facts, not have such intent. The intercourse may be illicit as to both, but perhaps criminal as to one only. It (768) would be strange, indeed, if the defendant, who has violated the law flagrantly and intentionally for years, by living as man and wife with a woman he knew was not his wife, should not be guilty of the offense of fornication and adultery, because he added to his offense the fraud of making a good woman falsely believe that she was his wife. This case also differs from S. v. Mainor, supra, in that here neither were both parties on trial, nor had one been previously tried and acquitted.

In Alonzo v. The State, 15 Tex. App., 378, it is said: "While it is true that to constitute adultery there must be a joint physical act, it is *Page 553 certainly not true that there must be a joint criminal intent. The bodies must concur in the act, but the minds may not. While the criminal intent may exist in the mind of one of the parties to the physical act, there may be no such intent in the mind of the other party. One may be guilty, the other innocent, and yet the joint physical act necessary to constitute adultery was complete. Thus, if one of the parties was, at the time of committing the physical act, insane, certainly such party has committed no crime; but it certainly cannot be contended that the other party, who was sane, has committed no crime. So, if one of the parties was mistaken as to a matter of fact, after exercising due care to ascertain the truth in relation to such fact, which fact, had it been true, would have rendered the alleged criminal act legal and innocent, the party so acting under such mistake of fact would be innocent of crime.

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Bluebook (online)
14 S.E. 107, 109 N.C. 764, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cutshall-nc-1891.