We are called upon to give a legal construe tion to the St. of 1845, c. 216, upon questions reserved in a case presenting painful details of grossly immoral acts, and open violations of the divine law. Such cases are not the
We are aware of the strong and deep feeling which has pervaded this community upon this general subject, as manifested by the numerous petitions which have, from time to time, been presented to the legislature, praying for further legislation to punish the crime of seduction. We know from the journals of the legislative branches, that bills have been introduced, punishing with heavy penalties the offence of seduction. But such bills have not as yet been sanctioned by legislative adoption, so far as to have become statute enactments. Difficulties have suggested themselves in the attempt to legislate upon the subject of seduction, which have induced the legislature to postpone the enactment of such bills; and the result has been, that our legislature has gone no further than the enactment of the St. of 1845, c. 216, now the subject of consideration.
It hardly need be said, that in construing a statute creating a new criminal offence, and enacting heavy penalties by way of punishment, a strict construction should be adopted. ' The court can go no further than' the legislature have gone. If, in the use of terms defining an offence, the legislature have used language indicating a particular species of immorality
The court are of opinion, that the offence made punishable by this statute is something beyond that of merely procuring a female to leave her father’s house for the sole purpose of illicit sexual intercourse with the individual thus soliciting her to accompany him ; that she must be enticed away with the view, and for the propose, of placing her in a house of ill fame, place of assignation, or elsewhere, to become a prostitute, in the more full and exact sense of that term; that she must be placed there for common and indiscriminate sexual intercourse with men ,• or, at least, that she must be enticed away for the purpose of sexual intercourse by others than the party who thus entices her; and that a mere enticing away of a female, for a personal sexual intercourse, will not subject the offender to the penalties of this statute.
This decision, while in one respect it narrows the application of the statute, and excludes cases of mere seduction, or illicit intercourse with the individual enticing, leaves a large application of it to cases of a more aggravated character, and will embrace all of either sex who shall fraudulently entice away females for the propose of supplying brothels and houses of ill fame, or with a view to induce them to prostitute their persons for money or hire.
As the view we have taken of this statute differs from that taken at the trial, the exceptions are sustained, and the verdic t set aside.