United States v. Tenney

11 P. 472, 2 Ariz. 127
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedJune 8, 1886
DocketCrim. Nos. 33, 34, 35
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 11 P. 472 (United States v. Tenney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona 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. Tenney, 11 P. 472, 2 Ariz. 127 (Ark. 1886).

Opinions

SHIELDS, C. J.

In 1882 the congress of the United States passed an act to amend section 5352 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, in reference to polygamy, and [130]*130for other purposes. This is the "Edmunds Law,” so called. Section 1 provides that "every person who has a husband or wife living, who, in a territory or other place over which the United States have exclusive jurisdiction, hereafter marries another, whether married or single; and any man who hereafter simultaneously, or on the same day, marries more than one woman, in a territory or other place over which the United States have exclusive jurisdiction,—is guilty of polygamy,” and shall be punished as therein stated. In section 3 of the act it is provided "that if any male person, in a territory or other place over which the United States have exclusive jurisdiction, hereafter cohabits with more than one woman, he shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor,” and, on conviction thereof, shall be punished in the manner provided.

The defendant, Ammon M. Tenney, was indicted under this law in the Third judicial district court of Arizona, at Prescott, in said territory. On trial before a jury he was convicted of the crime of polygamy. He brings the case to this court, alleging errors in the rulings and instructions of the court below, and also defects in the indictment. We will consider the objections in the order we deem most convenient.

1. As to the pleadings. The indictment consists of three counts. The first count charges that in March, 1883, in Apache county, in the Third judicial district of Arizona, the defendant, being then and there a married man, and having a wife, Anna Tenney, with whom he was then living, unlawfully married another woman, Anna Eliza Tenney. The correctness in form of this portion of the count, and so far, is not questioned. The count then further recites that the defendant, from the time of his marriage to said Ann Eliza Tenney, continued to live and cohabit with her as his wife, up to the.time of the finding of the indictment. The second count charges the defendant with having simultaneously, and on the same day, married more than one woman. As no proof was pu5 in under this count, and no question raised upon it, no further attention need be given to it. .The third count alleged a violation of section 3 of the act referred to. By it the defendant was charged with having cohabited with more than one woman [131]*131at the time named, and within the said Third judicial district. No question is made as to the sufficiency of this count. The defendant, as we have already stated, was convicted of polygamy under the first count.

Upon the trial the defendant insisted that such first count was bad, and so fatally defective that no conviction could legally be had under it, for the reason that it alleged two separate and distinct offenses, to wit, polygamy and unlawful cohabitation. The objection is without force. It is perfectly clear that the indictment charges the three offenses named in the act, and separate count was intended to be and is given to each. It is true that the first count, after alleging with particularity and preciseness the polygamous marriage, does proceed further, and state that cohabition followed such marriage. This, perhaps, was unnecessary to make out a complete statement of the crime of polygamy under this law, but it does not follow from that that the count is bad. The statement that cohabition followed such polygamous marriage was added as the result or effect of such marriage, and as part of a connected and complete description of that offense. Incidents and facts connected with and springing from the criminal act charged, although sometimes unnecessary, are very often put into an indictment so that there may be, on the face of the pleading, the complete history of the transaction that it is expected the proofs will disclose. In this case nothing more was undertaken. This is' clear from the fact that unlawful cohabitation, as a separate and distinct offense, is afterwards charged in a count by itself. If the reference made to that subject in the first count is, as claimed by counsel, wholly unnecessary to a complete description of the crime of polygamy, we should still treat such reference as mere surplusage, without force to destroy a count otherwise sufficient. We have no doubt the count is a perfectly good one.

2. Objection is next made to the mode of proof of the marriage of defendant to Ann Eliza Tenney. This marriage was proven by the admissions of the defendant, often and apparently deliberately made, that he was married to such person, in the county of Apache, at the time named in the [132]*132indictment; and also by testimony showing that the defendant thereafter openly and notoriously lived with the two women named as his wives, in Apache county, and claimed them as such. In this connection it is proper to state that it was admitted the defendant was married to his first wife, Anna, in Utah, some years previous to his claimed marriage with Ann Eliza, in Arizona. On the argument we were urged to say that the proof of marriage just referred to was not sufficient proof thereof, and that, therefore, there was no legal marriage shown to have taken place with Ann Eliza; from which, it was argued, it would follow that, the defendant was improperly convicted of polygamy. We are of the opinion that the proof given was competent and admissable evidence of a marriage to Ann Eliza Tenney, as charged. Its weight, of course, was for the jury. The jury regarded it as satisfactory proof of the marriage, and we have no doubt it was sufficient and proper evidence upon which they could find that fact.

The case of Miles v. United States, 103 U. S. 304, disposes of the questions raised here adversely to the defendant. In that case, which was a prosecution for bigamy, the trial judge charged the jury that the declarations of the accused that he was married were evidence that the jury might consider as tending to prove an actual marriage; and, further, that such marriage, the same as any other fact, might be proven by the admissions of the defendant, or by circumstantial evidence, and that it was not necessary to prove it by witnesses who were present at the ceremony. In commenting on this charge the Supreme Court of the United States in its opinion says :“We are of opinion that the district court committed no error in admitting such declarations, or in its charge to the jury concerning them.” This is directly in point here, and decisive of the questions raised; nor does proof of a second or subsequent marriage, as intimated by counsel, differ from proof of a first one. The same kind of evidence is admissable in each case. 3 Greenl. Ev. § 205.

If, in addition to these authorities, reasons were necessary to be stated in support of our decisions on this branch of the case, such are not wanting, and springing, too, from the very [133]*133nature of the question discussed. Some of these reasons have been stated by the courts. The supreme court of Utah, considering a prosecution, under the Edmunds law, says: “ It is now a part of the history of this territory that in cases of this character nearly all of the witnesses upon whom the government has to depend to make out its case are unwilling witnesses. They are generally members of the different households of the defendant, under his influence, and also sub jet to a powerful church pressure to compel them to shield the accused. ’ ’ United States v. Snow, 4 Utah, 295, 9 Pac. 686.

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Bluebook (online)
11 P. 472, 2 Ariz. 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-tenney-ariz-1886.