United States v. Clark

6 Utah 120
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1889
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Utah 120 (United States v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Clark, 6 Utah 120 (Utah 1889).

Opinion

HENDERSON, J.:

The defendant was convicted of unlawful cohabitation, in the first district court, under section 3, 22 St. 31, known as the “ Edmunds Law,” and appeals to this court. The record contains an agreed statement of facts from which it appears that the defendant married Sarah Clark over thirty years ago; that she thereby became and still is his lawful wife; that in 1852 he married another woman, named Hannah Clark, and that in September, 1868, he married a third woman, named Francis Clark; that defendant has not lived with the second wife, Hannah, for some years past, but that during the time covered by the indictment he has lived and cohabited with the third wife, Francis Clark; that all of said women have resided at Provo, in the first judicial district, during all the time since their marriages, respectively, and still reside there; that they live in separate houses, the first wife, Sarah, living in one house, together with children of herself and defendant. Sarah, the lawful wife, has sworn and testified that the defendant abandoned and deserted her without her consent, about three years ago, and before the time ■covered by the indictment, and. had not lived with her since, and had only called at her house once or twice within the time covered by the indictment. The court charged the jury among other things, as follows: “The facts seem •to show that about thirty-nine years ago this defendant [123]*123married a woman in tbe Territory o£ Utab by tire name of Sarah Clark; that about 1852 or 1853 be married another woman by tbe name of Hannah Clark; that about the twenty-sixth of September, 1868, he married a third, a woman by the name of Francis Clark; that he has not lived with Hannah for some years past, — may be eight or ten years. It is here insisted by counsel for the defense that he has not lived or cohabited for the last three years with the lawful wife, Sarah, but that he has abandoned her as his wife. It appears, further, from the proof, that within the time covered by this indictment he has lived and cohabited with the third wife, Frances Clark. Now, upon this statement of facts, if you find them to be the facts and true, the Court charges you the law in so many words to be this: that, if he lived and cohabited with Sarah Clark, and at the same time lived and cohabited with Francis Clark as his wife, he would be guilty. If he lived and cohabited with Francis as his wife, and visited Sarah, the law presumes, and will not allow him to say on the trial, that these visits were not as a husband, and would be sufficient to establish cohabitation with the legal wife, Sarah. And, gentlemen of the jury, the Court is of opinion, and I also instruct you, that if the proof shall show that, in 1850, thirty-nine years ago, he married Sarah and that she from that time up to now was and is his lawful, living wife, and undivorced, and that, in that condition of things, lived and cohabited with a plural wife, Francis Clark, that he would be guilty. The Court is of opinion, and so charges you, that a man should have but one wife, and that should be his lawful wife, and that he should live and cohabit with her, and that it would be an evasion of the law to say that I have abandoned my lawful wife, and therefore I am not guilty, because I am cohabiting with one woman. The Court believes congress did not intend any such thing in the passage of the law, and instructs you that if the lawful wife, Sarah, was still living and undi-vorced, and in that condition he goes and lives and cohabits with Francis, he must be guilty, and the law will not allow him to say that he has abandoned his lawful wife, and cohabits with but one woman.”

[124]*124This instruction is alleged to be erroneous. This record presents the single question, as to whethef a polygamist whose wives, both the lawful and the plural, are living within the jurisdiction of the court, both bearing his name and known as his wives, is guilty of violating the act of congress above referred to when he lives exclusively with the plural wife, and deserts the lawful one. It is contended by the defendant that the statute only prohibits a man from cohabiting with more than one woman; that, being a penal statute, it should be strictly construed; and that, therefore, actual cohabitation must be shown both with the plural and legal wives. On the part of the government it is contended that, when' it is shown that one of' the women whom he is charged to have cohabited with is his legal wife; that she is living within the jurisdiction of the court, bearing his name, and known as his wife, —that he is conclusively presumed to cohabit with her, within the meaning of the statute; that the statute does not make it necessary and that it was not intended by it to tolerate the inquiry as to whether the party charged actually cohabited with his legal wife. This statute has been several times before the court for construction, but the precise question here presented has never been determined. In the case of U. S. v. Cannon, 116 U. S. 55, 6 Sup. Ct. Rep. 286, the defendant was charged with unlawful cohabitation with two women, both of whom were plural wives, and of course it was necessary to show actual cohabitation, within the meaning of the statute, with both. The defendant contended that cohabitation, within the meaning of the statute, meant sexual intercourse; and the Court, referring to this claim on the part of the defendant, and construing the statute, said: “ But we are of opinion that this is not the proper interpretation of the statute, and that the Court properly charged the jury that the defendant was to be found guilty if he lived in the same house with the two women, and ate at their respective tables, one-third of his time, or thereabouts, and held them out to the world by his language or conduct, or both, as his wives; and that it was not necessary it should be shown that he and the two women, or either of them, occupied the same bed, or slept [125]*125in the same room, or that be had sexual intercourse with •either of them. This interpretation, is deducible from the language of the statute throughout. It refers wholly to the relations between men and women founded •on the existence of actual marriages. * * * It is the practice of unlawful cohabitation with more than one woman that is aimed at, — a cohabitation classed with polygamy, and having its outward semblance. It is not, on the one hand, meretricious, unmarital intercourse with more than one woman. General legislation as to lewd practices is left-to the territorial government. Nor, on the •other hand, does the statute pry into the intimacies of the marriage relation, but it seeks, not only to punish bigamy •and polygamy when, direct proof of the existence of those relations can be made, but to prevent a man from flaunting in the face of the world the ostentation and opportunities of a bigamous household, with all the outward appearances of the continuance of the same relations which existed before the act was passed, and without reference to what may occur in the privacy of those relations. Compacts for sexual non-intercourse, easily made and as easily broken, when the prior marriage relations continue to exist, with the occupation of the same house and table, and the keeping up of the same family unity, is not a lawful substitute for the monogamous family, which alone the statute tolerates.”

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Related

Cannon v. United States
116 U.S. 55 (Supreme Court, 1885)
United States v. Snow
4 Utah 295 (Utah Supreme Court, 1886)
United States v. Smith
5 Utah 273 (Utah Supreme Court, 1887)
Mumford v. Dickert & Myers Sulphur Co.
5 Utah 476 (Utah Supreme Court, 1888)

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Bluebook (online)
6 Utah 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-clark-utah-1889.