State v. Sparacino

114 So. 601, 164 La. 704, 1927 La. LEXIS 1806
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedOctober 31, 1927
DocketNo. 28843.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 114 So. 601 (State v. Sparacino) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Sparacino, 114 So. 601, 164 La. 704, 1927 La. LEXIS 1806 (La. 1927).

Opinion

OVERTON, J.

The district attorney filed a bill of information against defendant charging him with having willfully and feloniously married one Jeannette Rosalie Klemmer while he was legally married to Ellen Victorine Hawkins. Defendant prosecutes this appeal from a conviction and sentence on this charge.

The first bill of exception recites that Mrs. Ellen Hawkins Sparaeino, the first wife of defendant, after having been sworn as a witness for the state, testified- on direct examination that she met her husband on the night of February 3, 1927; that she drove off with him in an automobile, and while they were riding together had a private conversation with him. After defendant’s first wife had testified to the foregoing, she was asked by the district attorney to state what the conversation was. The question seeking to elicit *707 the conversation wás objected to by defendant on the ground that private conversations between husband and wife are inadmissible. The objection was overruled, and defendant excepted to the ruling.

Act 157 of 1916 defines a competent witness in civil or criminal proceedings to be a person of proper understanding, but provides, among other things, that neither husband nor wife shall be compelled to be a witness in any criminal proceeding against the other, and also provides, to quote from the act, that “private conversations between husband and wife shall be privileged.”

One of the contentions of the state is that the ruling of the trial judge should not be disturbed, because the bill does not dis- - close that the conversation Was a private one, and therefore privileged under the statute. The bill was signed by the judge without comment. It shows that the witness met her husband, the accused herein, on the night of February 3, 1927, and that he and she drove off together, and while thus driving had the conversation in question, which the bill terms a “private one,” and which it recites .was detrimental and prejudicial to the accused. The bill does not disclose that a third .person was present when the conversation was had. The entire context of the bill indicates that the conversation occurred when . the husband and wife were out driving alone. Moreover, the bill describes the conversation as a private one between husband and ■•wife, and since the judge has signed the bill without comment, his having done so is equivalent to a certificate from him that the conversation was a private,one. In these circumstances, although the bill does not show the conversation elicited, we have no seri,ous hesitancy in holding that it sufficiently discloses that the conversation was a pri- . vate one.

The state, however, suggests, rather than urges, that in a prosecution for bigamy private conversations between the accused and his first wife should be held, under the statute, to be admissible in evidence, in order to protect the wife against the outrage of a second marriage by the husband. While there may be strong reasons to hold that the statute contemplates that an exception shall be made in favor of the admission of such conversations in cases against one of the spouses involving personal injury to the other, still in cases, involving no such injury, such as bigamy cases, there is no necessity to make such an exception, and, since the statute makes none and contemplates none in such cases, we would not be justified in holding that such an exception exists.

Another contention of the state, with reference to the foregoing bill, is that the bill does not disclose the'answer of the witness to the question objected to, and hence the court is not in position to say whether the answer was injurious to the accused. Ordinarily, when an objection to a question propounded to a witness is overruled, the bill should disclose the answer of the witness to the question propounded, and the failure of the bill to do so is ordinarily fatal to it. In this instance, however, only two purposes could be served by the disclosure of the answer, which was the conversation itself. One of these is the tendency which the conversation would have within itself to show whether it was private. This fact, that is, that the conversation was a private one, we have held the bill otherwise sufficiently shows. The other purpose would be to show whether the admission of the conversation in evidence was injurious to the accused. As to this, the bill recites that the evidence, that is, that the conversation elicited, was detrimental to the accused. We think that, in the absence of anything to the contrary from the trial judge, this is a sufficient showing of injury. Entertaining the foregoing views, we feel that *709 we should' hold that the conversation was inadmissible and injurious to the accused.

During the progress of the trial defendant attempted to establish by himself, while a witness on the stand, and by another witness that, when he married the second time, he did so in the honest belief that his first wife had obtained a divorce from him and had remarried. Thus, as appears from bill No. 5, defendant, while a witness in his own behalf, testified that when he married the second time he had reason to believe that his first wife had obtained a divorce, but when asked upon what he based that belief, the evidence sought to be elicited, on objection urged by the state, -was excluded. He was also asked by his counsel, as appears from other bills, specific questions having a tendency to establish the particular facts upon which he based his belief, and also attempted to show by another witness, named Smith, that defendant was informed in the witness’ presence that his wife had obtained a divorce from him. All this evidence was ruled out by the court, on objections urged by the state, upon the grounds that it Was irrelevant, or that it merely tended to show the opinion or belief of the witness, or that the evidence was hearsay and self-serving.

The most serious of the objections presented is whether the evidence was relevant. Its relevancy depends, we think, upon whether an honest belief, based upon reasonable grounds, that the first marriage had been dissolved by a valid divorce when the second was contracted, although, in fact, it had not been dissolved, is a valid defense.

Section 800 of the Revised Statutes, relative to the crime of bigamy, reads as follows:

“If any married person shall marry, the former husband or wife being alive, the one so offending shall, on conviction, pay a fine not exceeding five hundred dollars, and be imprisoned not exceeding two years.
“The provisions of this section shall not extend to any person whose husband or wife shall absent himself or herself from the other, for the space of five years, the one not knowing the other to be living within that time; ñor to any person who shall be at the time of such marriage divorced by competent authority, nor to any person whose former marriage by sentence of competent authority, shall have been declared void.”

The first paragraph of the foregoing section is, in effect, amended, as held in State v. Cain, 106 La. 708, 31 So. 300, by Act No. 93 of 1898, so as to make the crime of bigamy punishable by imprisonment at hard labor. The act reads, omitting the repealing clause which repeals all laws in conflict with it, as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
114 So. 601, 164 La. 704, 1927 La. LEXIS 1806, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-sparacino-la-1927.