Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
This cause comes here by appeal from the decree of the Circuit Court of the Eastern District of Louisiana, where the bill was dismissed.
The complainant sues as the only legitimate child of the late Daniel Clark, who died in the city of New Orleans the 13th of August, 1813. No account is prayed against Daniel Clark’s executors; but the complainant seeks to recover the property sold by them, consisting of lands and slaves, on the ground that her father could not deprive her, as his legitimate child, of more than one fifth part of his estate by a last will, according to the laws of Louisiana as they stood in 1813. And she maintains that.the sales made by Chew and Relf, were made without any orders of court to authorize them, and that therefore they are void; the laws of Louisiana requiring such orders before a valid sale could be made.
The respondents claim under a will made by Daniel Clark in 1811, by which he devised all his property* real and personal, to his mother, Mary Clark, and appointed Richard Relf and Beverly . Chew, his executors ; and to whom Mary Clark made a power to sell Daniel Clark’s estate for the purpose of raising money to pay his;debts. Chew and Relf, acting as executors of Daniel Clark and also as attorneys of Mary Clark, did sell the property in controversy for .the purpose of paying the debts of the tés
On the 10th day of June, 1844, the mother of the complainant, styling herself Madame Marie Zulime Carriére, and widow of the late Daniel Clark, by her notarial act, made in the eity of • New Orleans, accepted, without benefit of inventory, the community of acquests and gains of one moiety, which it is alleged existed between her and her late husband Daniel Clark, according to the laws in such cases provided. And on the 2d of July, 1844, the then complainants, Gaines and wife, among other amendments to their bill, filed the following: “Your oratrix alleges that she is entitled to the one moiety of the estate of which the said Daniel Clark died possessed, by reason of' a conveyance thereof, made to her by M. Z. Gardette, the widow of the said Clark, and the mother cf your oratrix, on the 7th day of May, 1836, and which is hereunto annexed, marked A. B. and prayed to be taken as part hereof; and the mother of your oratrix did thereafter, on the 20th June, 1844, further convey to her all her interest in said estate, as appears by her act, a copy of which is herewith exhibited, marked C.; the whole of said estate having been acquired during the coverture, of said Clark and wife.”
The exhibits in these particulars correspond, to the allegations. It follows, therefore, that the complainant claims one half of Daniel Clark’s estate by a conveyance from her mother,
The first and most important of the issues presented is that of the legitimacy of the complainant. It is raised, by the following pleadings:
She alleges that her'father; Daniel Clark, was married to Zulime Née Carriere, in the city of Philadelphia, in the year 1802 or 1803; and that she is the legitimate, and the only legitimate offspring of that marriage.
The defendants deny that Daniel Clark was married to said Zülimé at the time and place alleged, or at any other time or place. And they further aver, that at the time said marriage is alleged to have taken place, the said Zulime was the lawful wife of one Jerome Desgrange.
If the mother of. the complainant was the lawful wife of Jerome Desgrange at the time said Zulime is alleged to have intermarried with Daniel Clarkj then the marriage with Clark is merely void; and it is immaterial whether it did of did not take
A formal record of the marriage between Desgrange and Marie Julia Carriére, obtained from the cathedral catholic church at New Orleans, is before us. That it is a true record •of said marriage is not controverted. Marie Julia is designated Zulime, by a soubriquet or nickname, which is proved to have been a common custom in Louisiana at that time. The .marriage was solemnized in due form on the 2d day of December, 1794. This is admitted on part of the complainant. The parties cohabited together as man and wife for seven or eight years. This is also conceded by both sides. To rebut and overcome the established fact of this marriage, it is alleged that previous to Desgrange’s marriage with Zulime he had lawfully married another woman, who was living when he' married Zulime, and was still his wife; and that therefore, the second marriage was void. And this issue we are called on to try.
The marriage with Desgrange having been proved, it was established as primd facie true, that Zulime was not the lawful •wife of Clark, and the onus of proving that Desgrange had a former wife living when he married Zulime was imposed on the complainant; she was bound to prove the affirmative fact that Desgrange committed bigamy. To establish such previous marriage and the consequent bigamy by marrying a second time, much evidence was introduced and relied on by the complainant. The first witness whose testimony will be referred to was Madame Despau, sister of Zulime.. Her testimony has been taken three times ; first in 1839, then in 1845, and again in 1849.
In 1839 she says, “ I was well acquainted with the late Daniel Clark, of New Orleans. He was married in Philadelphia in 1803, by a catholic priest. I was present at this marriage. One child was born of that marriage, to wit: Myra Clark, who married William Wallace Whitney. I was present at her birth and knew that Mr. Clark claimed -and acknowledged her to be his child. She was born in 1806. I neither knew nor had any reason to believe, that-any other child, besides Myra, was born of that marriage. The circumstances of her marriage with Daniel Clark were these: Several years after her marriage with Desgrange, she heard he had a living wife; our family charged him with the crime of bigamy in marrying said Zulime; he at first denied it, but afterwards admitted it, and fled from the country. These circumstances became public, and Mr. Clark made proposals of marriage to my sister, with the knowledge of all our family. It was considered essential first to obtain re
In regard to the children, born of thé marriage of Zulime and Desgrange, this witness further' states in another deposition, that before the detection of Desgran ge’s bigamy, said Zulimehad a son, who died, and a daughter called Caroline, which bore his name. Since the death of Mr. Daniel Clark, Mr. Daniel W. Coxe and Mr. Hulings, of Philadelphia, gave her the name of Caroline Clark, and took her to Mr. Clark’s mother, and introduced her as the daughter of her son. She of course believed their story, which induced her in her will to leave a portion of her property to Caroline. Caroline was born in 1801.
I never heard Mr. Clark acknowledge his having any natural children; but have only heard him acknowledge one child, and that a lawful one, to wit, said Myra.
Her other depositions substantially correspond with the foregoing statement so far as they bear on the question of Desgrange’s bigamy.
The next most important witness is Madame Caillavet, another sister of Zulime. She was also three times examined. Her first deposition was taken at New Orleans, in May, 1835, in which she states: That sometime after the marriage of her sis*
In the next deposition she states:
“ I have already stated all I knew about Mr. Clark’s marriage ■with Zulime, and of her marriage with Mr. Desgrange. By this marriage áhe had two children, a boy and a girl; the boy is dead, the girl is still living; her name is Caroline, and is married to Dr. Barnes.”
The second and third depositions of Madame Caillavet correspond, but as the third one is more full, it is, given. In this one she states as follows:
“ I did reside in the city of New Orleans, abou-f the year 1800, and for many years previous ; my residence continued there until I'went to France, about the year 1807.
“ I was acquainted with Daniel Clark, late of the city of New Orleans, deceased; my acquaintance with him commenced about the year seventeen hundred and ninety-seven; my intimacy with him, growing out of his marriage with my sister, continued during my residence in New Orleans.
“ I was not present at the marriage of Zulime Née Carriére (who is my sister,) with Mr. Clark; but it is within my knowledge, both from information derived from my sisters at the time, and from the statement^ of Mr. Clark, made to me during his lifetime, that a marriage was solemnized between them. It is to my personal knowledge that Mr. Clark, about the year eighteen hundred and two, or three, made proposals of marriage with‘my sister Zulime, with the knowledge of all our family. These proposals were discussed, and the preliminaries of the marriage arranged by my husband, at his house, in my presence. But my*511 sister, having been previously married to one Jerome Desgrange, who was found to have had a lawful wife living, at the time of his (Desgrange’s) marriage with her, the marriage with Mr. Clark could not take place until proofs of the invalidity of her mar-, riage with Desgrange were obtained, To procure these proofs from public records, my sisters Zulime, and Madame Despau, went to the .north of the United States, where Desgrange’s prior marriage was said to have taken place. While there, my sister Zulime wrote to me' that she and Mr. Clark were, married. There was .born of this marriage one, and only one child, a fe- • male, named Myra, who was. put by Mr. Clark, while an infant, under the charge of Mrs. Samuel B. Davis, in whose family she was brought up and educated. Having suffered from hired nurses, she was nursed, through kindness, for some time after her birth, by Mrs. Harriet Harper, wife of William Harper, .the nephew of Col. Samuel B. Davis. Mr. Clark stated to riie, frequently, that Myra was his lawful and only child. This child is' the same person who was married to William Wallace Whitney ; and who is now, the wife of General Edmund P. Gaines, of the United States army. I have always understood that the marriage between my sister and Mr. Clark was a private one, and that it was not promulgated by Mr. Clark, in his lifetime, unless he did so in a last will, made a short time-previous to his death. .1 have heard that such a last will was.made, but.it was believed to have been suppressed or destroyed after his death.
“ I was acquainted with Mr. Jerome Desgrange, for the first time, in New .Orleans, about the year seventeen hundred and ninety-five. ‘ He passed for an unmarried man, and as such imposed himself on my sister Zulime. Some years after this marriage, it became known in New Orleans, that ■ he • had a prior lawful wife living. My sister immediately separated from him, and came to reside with heir family. At a later period, Mr. Desgrange was prosecuted, found guilty of bigamy, in having married.my sister Zulime, and cast into prison. He escaped from prison, as it was reported at the time, by the Spanish governor’s connivance. I understood that Mr. LeBreton D’Orgenois aided him to escape from the country. This happened some timé before the transfer of the government of Louisiana to the Americans. The flight of Desgrange from New Orleans is the last X know. of him. I did not myself know the first wife of Desgrange, but it is within my knowledge that she came to New Orleans, and while there, fully established her pretensions as his lawful wife.”
' Another deposition of this witness is found in the. record, taken October 16, 1849; but as it. does not differ from the foregoing depositions on the question of bigamy, it is not further noticed.
Joseph D. D. Bellechasse, in his deposition, taken in 1834, states:
“ I think it my duty now; to declare, what I know to be a fact, that- said Desgrange was condemned for bigamy in marrying Miss Carriére (subsequently the mother of Myra,) several years prior to the birth of said Myra. The prosecution and condemnation of said Desgrange for said crime of bigamy, took place at New Orleans towards the close of the Spanish domination in Louisiana; his first and lawful wife, whom he had married previous to his coming to Louisiana, (as it was proved,) coming to New Orleans in pursuit of him. "When said Desgrange practised the infamous deception of marrying Miss Carriére, it was' the current opinion in New Orleans, that he was a bachelor, or a single man.”
Madame Bengueril, in her deposition taken in 1836, makes the following statement:
“ Mi. Jerome Desgrange married the said Zulime, which proved on his part bigamy, for, after his marriage with the said Zulime, the lawful wife of said Desgrange, whom he had married previous to his marrying the said Zulime, came to New Orleans, and he was thrown into prison, from which he escaped, and fled from Louisiana; this was in the year 1802- or 1803; since that period I have never seen the said Desgrange, and do no/t believe that he ever returned to Louisiana.
“ The said lawful wife of the said Desgrange brought with h.er to New Orleans proofs of her marriage with the said Desgrange. The exposure, at that time, of the said Desgrange’s bigamy in marrying the said Zulime, was notoriously known in New Orleans.
i¿ My husband and'myself were, very intimate with the said Desgrange, and when we reproached him for his baseness in imposing upon the said Zulime, he endeavored to excuse himself by saying that, at the time of his marrying the said Zulime, he had abandoned his said lawful wife, and never intended to see her again.”
This is the material evidence on which the complainant relies to prove Desgrange’s bigamy, when he married, Zulime Née Carriére. • What other évidence we may incidentally refer to, will be stated by the reporter.
To meet and rebut this evidence, the defendants introduced
“ THE YEAR 1802.
“ T. M. T.
“ No. 141.
“ Criminal proceedings instituted against Gerónimo Desgrange for bigamy.
- “ The vicar-general and governor of the bishoprick, judge.
“ Fran’co Bermudez, Notary.”
“ Decree. In the city of New Orleans, the 4th day of September, 1802, Thomas Hasset, canonical presbytary of this holy cathedral ,church, provisor, vicar-general, and governor of the bishoprick of this province:
“ Says, that it- has been publicly stated in this city, that Gerónimo Desgrange, who was married in the year 1794, to Maria Julia Carriére, was at that time married, and is so even now, before the church, to Barbara Jeanbelle, who has just arrived; and also that the said Desgrange, having arrived from France a few months since, he caused another woman to come here, whose name will be obtained. It is reported in all - the city, publicly and notoriously, that the said Gerónimo Desgrange has three wives, and not being able to keep secret such an act, as scandalous as it is opposed to the precepts of our holy mother church, his excellency has ordered, that. in order to proceed in the investigation, and to the corresponding penalty, testimony be produced to substantiate his being a single man, which the said- Desgrange presented, in order to consummate .his marriage with said Carriere; that all persons shall appear who can give any information in this matter, and also Desgrange, with Celestin Lavergne and Antonio Fromantin, interpreters; they, the interpreters, first accepting the nomination, and swearing to act as such faithfully. And also, as it has been ascertained that the said Desgrange is about to leave with the last of these three wives, let him be placed in the public prison, during these proceedings, with the aid of one of the alcades: this decree serving as an order, which his excellency has approved, and as such it is signed by me, notary.
“ Signed, Thomas Hassett, Before me,
“ Fran’co Bermudez.”
“ New Orleans, in the same day it was passed to the Capitular*514 House, and audience hall of Don Fran’co Cais,ergues, alcade of this city, and in his jurisdiction, and I notified to his worship the preceding decree, and of which I have taken note.
“ Signed, Fran’co Bermudez.”
“ New Orleans, 4th September, 1802.
“ Let the request of the govérnor of the bishoprick be complied with. Signed, Fran’co Caisergues. Before-me,
“ Signed, Fran’co Bermudez.
“ In New Orleans on ihe same day, I, the notary, notified Celestin Lavergne of his appointment as interpreter, and he said that he accepted it; and swore by God and the Cross, that he would act well and faithfully in the premises, and he herewith signs his name.
“ Signed, C’tino Lavergne. Fran’co Bermudez.
“ On the same day I notified Antonio Fromantin of his appointment as interpreter, who accepted of it, and who swore by God and the Cross, that he would act well and -faithfully in the premises, and he herewith signs his name.
“ Signed, Antonio Fromantin. Fran’co Bermudez.”
Next comes the church record filed as evidence in the cause establishing the marriage of Desgrange to Maria Julia Nee Garriere, which need not be further stated.
The material parts of the subsequent proceeding, are the following:
“ Citation. In New Orleans, on the same day, I, the undersigned notary, inquired at sundry places' for the residence of Dona Barbara Jeanbelle, and I was informed she lived in Mr. Bernard Marigny’s house, where I then went, and there gave notice that, on Monday, the 6th instant, at seven o’clock in the morning, she must present herself before the tribunal, as per order of his excellency.
“ Signed, Bermudez;
“ On the same day, I notified the minister of justice, Jose Campos, of the preceding decree.
“ Signed, Bermudez.”
“ Testimony. Testimony of Dona Barbara Jeanbelle. In the city of New Orleans, on the 6th of September, 1802, appeared before Mr. Thomas Hassett, presbytary canon of this holy cathedral church, provisor, vicar-general, and governor of the bishoprick of this province and the Floridas, Dona Barbara Margarita Jeanbelle de Orsy, who was sworn to tell the truth, and the following questions were then propounded to her:
*515 1st. If she knows Gerónimo Desgrange; how long, and where did she know him ?
Answers: That she has known him forsixt'een years, and that she was acquainted with him in New York.
2d. Being asked whether it is true that she was married to the aforesaid Desgrange, in wjiat place, in what church, how long ago, in what parish, by what clergyman, and who were the witnesses ?
Answers: No, although it was her intention to marry the aforesaid Desgrange; but as the latter was going away, she changed her mind; nevertheless, she obtained the permission of her father to go to Philadelphia for that purpose, and that while there Desgrange begged of her to come to this city to consummate the marriage, to which she did not consent; this took place about eleven years and a half ago.
. Being asked whether she was acquainted with Desgrange in France, after the period above stated, and if she has ever spoken to. him on.the subject?
Answers: That last year she saw him in Bordeaux, and that -she did not again speak to him of the marriage, because they, were both of them married.
Being asked that, if she says she is married, with whom is she married, how long since, in what place, by what clergyman, and who were the witnesses ?
Answers: That she is married to Don Jfian Santiago Soumeylliat, about ten years ago, in the city of Philadelphia,-by a catholic priest, and that Mr. Bernardy and his wife were witnesses.
Being-asked if she has any document to prove it?
Answers: That she has no document to prove' it.
Being asked if she has not heard' it said that Desgrange is married to three wives, say to whom, and if it is not public and notorious?
Answers: That she never heard any thing of what is asked her until last night, when she was told that it was said she was one of-his wives, and she says that what she has declared is the truth; and the testimony having been read to her, which was interpreted by Don Celestino Lavergne, and Don Antonio Fromantin, she declared it was what she had said, and she now ratifies it; that she is thirty-four years old.
“ Signed, B. M. Zambell De Orsi, Hasset,
“ C’tino Lavergne, Antonio Fromentin.
s< Before me, Fran’co Bermudez.”
“ Testimony of Maria Yrlar. In the city of New Orleans, on the same day, month, and year, appeared before his excel*516 leney, Maria YHar, who, being sworn to tell the truth, the following questions were propounded to her:
Being asked whether she is married or not, how long it is since she arrived in this city, and with what object:
Answers: That she is the widow of Juan Dupor, alias Poulé, who died two years- ago, to whom she was married about-years; that she has never had any other husband, neither before nor since; that she arrived here two days ago, and that her object was to gain a livelihood, having been informed it was a good country for seariistresses.
Being asked if she knows Gerónimo Desgrange, how long, and if she was invited or told by him to come to this city, and with what object:
Answers: That she knew Gerónimo Desgrange in France about eight months ago, and it was he who told her to come to this city, where she could gain a better livelihood than in her own country.
Being asked whether she was promised marriage to the said Gerónimo Desgrange, or if she has entered into any private contract with reference to matrimony, or any other contract with him:
Answers: That she has not had any contract of the kind with the said Desgrange, because she knew, before her departure from France, that he was married in. Louisiana; and that her coming here was only with the object that she has already stated.-
Being asked [if] she had promised the said Desgrange to accompany him in the voyage he is going to make to France:
Answers: That fax from accompanying Desgrange during his voyage, she thinks of remaining in the house of Cornelius Ploy, alias Flamand, to whom she has been recommended by the said Desgrange, for the purpose of gaining her livelihood by sewing, as the said Flamand is a tailor by trade.
Being asked if she has heard it publicly said that Desgrange has been married to two women before or since her arrival in this city.
Answers : ■ That before her arrival she had heard nothing of the matter; but since she has been here she has heard it said publicly that Desgrange has been married three times; she swears that what she has said is the truth, and that she is twenty-five years old; she does not sign, not knowing how to write.
“ Signed, Hasset, Antonio Fromentin, C’tino Lavergne.
“ Before me, Franco. Bermudez.”
“ Testimony of Maria Julia Garriere. Then appeared be*517 fore his excellency Maria Julia Carriére, who, through the interpreters, was duly sworn to tell the truth, and the following questions were propounded to her.
Being asked whether she was married or single:
Answers : That she is married to Gerónimo Desgrange, since the 4th of December, 1794.
Being asked whether she héard, before or since her marriage, that her said husband was married to another woman:
Answers: That about a year since she heard it stated, in this city, that her husband was married in the north, and, in consequence, she wished to ascertain whether it was true or not, and she left this city for Philadelphia and New York, where she used every exertion to ascertain the truth of the report, and she learned only that he had courted a woman, whose father not consenting to the match, it did not take place, and she married another man shortly afterwards.
Being asked whether she had recently heard that her husband was married to three women, if she believed it, or does believe it, or has any doubt about the matter which renders her unquiet or unhappy:
Answers : That although she has heard so in public, she has not believed it, and the report has caused her no uneasiness, as she is satisfied that it is not true; she also swears that she is twenty-two years old.
Signed, Marie Zulime Carriére Desgrange, Hasset, his mark, C’tino Lavergne, Antonio Fromentin.
Before me, Franco. Bermudez.”
“ Testimony of Gerónimo Desgrange. In the city of New Orleans, on the 7th day of September, 1802, Thomas Hasset, presbyter canon of this holy cathedral church, provisor vicar-general, and governor of this bish'oprick of this province, caused to come before him and in presence of the interpreters, Gerónimo Desgrange, who was duly sworn to tell the truth, replied to the following interrogatories:
Being asked whether he knows Barbara Tanbel de Orsi, how long, and in what place:
Answers : That he first knew her in New York, about eleven years ago, and afterwards in Philadelphia.
Being asked that, if he was married to her, to state in what place, before what clergyman, how long ago, and who were the witnesses:
Answers: That he never was married to her, although he wished to do so, and had asked the consent of her father, but'he refused it, as deponent was poor.
*518 Being asked whether, after leaving her in Philadelphia, he has known her in any other place, and with what intentions :
Answers: That he has seen the said Dona Barbara in Bordeaux by mere accident; for deponent being sick, Mr. Soumeylatt, her husband, was sent for, and after he got well the said Soumeyllat invited him to dine with him at his. house, where he saw her, and was much astonished; and he afterwards continued visiting the house, with no other feeling than that of friendship, and with the knowledge of her husband.
Being asked if he knows Maria YUar, to state how long he has known her, in what place, and with what motives:
Answers: That in the month of December, of last year, he knew her when she was in a boarding-house where she was em-* ployed as a servant, in Bordeaux, where the respondent lived.
Being asked if he made any arrangements with the aforesaid to accompany him to this city, to state what that arrangement was, and what object she had in coming here :
Answers: That he made no arrangement nor agreement with the aforesaid; and the reason she is here is, that having asked him whether this country held out better inducements than Bordeaux, in order to gain a livelihood by sewing, he advised her to come, as it would prove more advantageous to her.
Being asked whether his intention is to take her with him on the voyage he intends making, and if he has asked her to do so:
■ Answers: That he has not thought of it, as she came here to gain her livelihood, and for no other purpose.
Being asked why Maria Julia Carriére, his wife, went to the north last year.
Answers : That the principal reason was, that a report had circulated in this city that he was married to another woman; she wished to ascertain whether it was true, and she went.
Being asked if he has ever, been examined by any ecclesiastical judge in relation to this affair :
Answers: No
Being asked whether it is true, that in order to satisfy his wife and the public, he offered to bring with him or to procure documents tq prove his innocence in this matter, and that if he have them, to show them:
Answers: That taking it for granted that this charge would naturally fall, his wife being satisfied of his innocence, and no judge having required the shewing of such documents, he has used no exertions to obtain them ; and that he is forty-two years old.
■ Signed, J. Desgrange, Hassét, his mark, Antonio Fromentin, C’tnio Lavergne.
Before me, Francisco Bermudez.”
*519 “Decree. Not being able to prove the public report, which is contained in the original decree of these proceedings, and'having-no more proofs for the present, let all proceedings be suspended, with power to prosecute them hereafter, if necessary, and let the person of Gerónimo Desgrange be set at liberty, he paying the costs;
Signed, Thomas Hasset. •
Don Thomas Hasset, presbyter canon of this holy cathedral church, vicar-general and governor of the bishoprick of this province of Louisiana and the two Floridas, has approved and signed the preceding decree, in New Orleans, this 7th September, 1802;
Signed, Francisco Bermudez.
In New Orleans, on the same day, notified Gerónimo Des grange of the preceding decree, and visited him in prison fq that purpose.
Signed, Bermudez.
On the same day, notified said decree to Joseph Puche, the keeper of the prison.
Signed, Bermudez.”
Bishop Blanc proves that the records of the catholic bishop-rick of Louisiana are in his charge; that he searched for the record of prosecution against Desgrange for bigamy, and found it; that it is a complete record of the whole proceeding; and that, Thomas Hasset, .being first canon of the diocese, represented the bishop, and acted as vicar-general, the see being vacant at that time. Isodore A. Quemper also proves that he is_the official keeper of the records of the cathedral church of St. Louis, at New Orleans, and the paper is án exact and literal copy of the original. .
The signatures of Lávergne and Fromentin, who took the depositions,- and that of Bermudez, the notary, are proved by witnesses who had seen- them write; and the signature of Des grange and Zulime were proved by experts, on comparison ( hands with authentic signatures of theirs. Such proof is a lowable in Louisiana, according to the civil code and the code of practice; and this mode of proof has not been objected to in this case.
Respondents also introduced the following evidence:
On the 26th of March, 1801, Madame Caillavet, Madame Lasabe, and Madame Despau joined in a power of attorney, authorizing Jerome Desgrange, their brother in law, to proceed
And, at the same time, Desgrange made a general power of attorney to his wife, Donna Marie Zulime, to act for him in all his affairs in his absence. She acted under the power, and sold several slaves, and did other acts, which appear in notarial records. In each of these acts she styles herself “ the legitimate wife and general attorney of Don Gerónimo Desgrange.”
In July, 1801, Desgrange wrote to Clark the following letter:
“ Bordeaux, July, 1801.
“ My dear Sjr and Friend, — Although uncertain whether you are at New Orleans, I hasten to seize the • opportunity of the sailing of the Natchez to furnish you with some news. I hope my letter will find you in good health. When -one has such a friend as you, we cannot ,feel' too deep an interest in him.
“ I have received here a great deal of politeness from Mr. John Bernard, merchant, a friend of Mr. Chew, who is doing a very great business now. He spoke a great deal of Mr. Chew to me, and his politeness to him while at Bordeaux; He was introduced to me by Mr. Cox.
“ There has been many arrivals of American vessels in this port since I was here last. Colonial goods are selling very well. I think if your friend from Philadelphia were to make a visit here he could make a profitable speculation on his return voyage.
“ Do me the ldndness, my dear sir, to write to me. It will afford me much pleasure to hear from you. Several American vessels are about to leave, to come directly here.
“ Present my compliments to Mr. Chew, and beg him, whenever he writes to Mr. Bernard, to speak of me. I have taken the liberty to inclose under your cover a package for my wife, which I beg you to remit to her.- Permit me, my dear friend to reiterate my acceptance of the kind offer you made me before I- left, • and should my wife find herself embarrassed in any respect, you will truly oblige me by aiding her with your kind advice.' I expect to leave in a few days, to join my family. I hope to return to Bordeaux in two or three months, to terminate my affairs here, and to make preparations tp ■ meet you. I have been some days engaged in a lawsuit, for' the purpose of recovering an estate belonging-to my wife’s family. I shall place this affair in Mr. Chicou St.. Brie’s care during my absence.. I fear thát I shall have to expend a great deal in this affair. I*521 have charged Mr. Bernard with the care of other business. I have not yet heard from my wife, which renders me very uneasy as to going to Provence before I hear from hen It is said that peace will be declared by the end of the year; but I have my fears whether we shall enjoy that happiness. Hoping to have the pleasure of hearing from you soon,
“ I am, most truly, your friend,
“ Desgrange.
“ Write me to the care of Mr. Jean Bernard, merchant, at Chartron, Bordeaux.”
The respondents introduced the- deposition of Daniel W. Coxe, of Philadelphia. He had been the partner in trade of Daniel Clark, in their New Orleans house, from the time Clark set out as a commission and shipping merchant. They were nearly of the same age; both proud, intelligent, and ambitious of success ; equals in rank, and intimate in their social relations, as a common interest and constant intercourse could make them. This abundantly appears by their correspondence, introduced in the record before us. Coxe states that, in 1802, Madame Desgrange presented herself to him in Philadelphia, with a confidential letter of introduction to him from Daniel Clark, which stated that the bearer was pregnant, and would soon be delivered of a child; and that he, Clark, was the fathér of it; and the letter requested Coxe to put her under. the care of a respectable physician, and to furnish her with money during her confinement and stay in Philadelphia. That Coxe, accordingly, employed the late Doctor William Shippen to attend, her at her aecouehment. That he, Coxe, procured a nurse for her; and removed the child, on the day of its birth, to the residence of the nurse; that this child was Caroline Barnes, who, before her marriage,' always went by the name of Caroline Clark. The first nurse was Mrs. Stevens; afterwards, the. child was placed, at Clark’s request, with Mr. and Mrs.. James Alexander, of Trenton, New Jersey, and continued there until 1814 or 1815. After this, (her father being dead,) she was placed at Mrs. Baisley’s school in Philadelphia. She remained with Mrs. Baisléy several years, and acted during part of the time as a teacher, and, Coxe thinks, continued there until she was married. She was under Coxe’s supervision all the time, from her birth until her marriage; and was supported, at the expense of Clark until his death. She was at all times, during his life, recognized by Clark as his child, and caressed as such when he was at Philadelphia.
. Coxe further states that Madame Desgrange left Philadelphia for New Orleans as soon as it was prudent for. her to travel,
A record of a suit brought by Zulime C. Desgrange against her husband, Jerome Desgrange, in November, 1805, for alimony, was also introduced by respondents. It will be further noticed hereafter.
This is substantially the evidence on both sides, on wmch the question depends, whether Desgrange was, or was not, guilty of bigamy in marfying Maria Julia Née Carriére, in 1794.
Objections are taken to several portions of this evidence ; and especially as respects the record of the suit against Desgrange for bigamy in the ecclesiastical court.
First, it is objected that the record is not duly proved, the signatures of the witnesses not being established as having been signed to their depositions.
The answer to this objection rests on well-settled principles. AIT that is required in cases of this kind, is to producé a sworn copy of the record, the witnesses also proving that it was taken at the proper office, and produced by the lawful keeper of the records. In Phillips on Ev. by Cowen (vol. 1, 432, vol. 2,133, 134) will be found the cases in support of this mode of proof.
Here the official keeper of the records and the bishop- of the diocese, under whose charge they were, produced both the original and the copy; the copy was filed in this cause by stipulation of the parties; and each of the witnesses proved all the law requires to make it primd facie evidence'.
On the argument at the bar, and especially in the printed one presented to us as coming from New Orleans, it is earnestly insisted that the origin of this record is reóent, and that it had been fabricated for the purposes of this cause. We do not perceive any ground for entertaining such an apprehension.
If the allegation of fraud and forgery insisted on had any-' foundation, Bishop Blanc must of necessity be directly involved in that charge; and, furthermore, of swearing to that which he must have known to be false. This assumption is not only gratuitous, but the witness is fully supported by the facts above stated; and the further fact, that, neither in his cross-examination, nor by any o.ther evidence, is his integrity assailed, by the complainant.
The next objection is, that the record decided nothing, there being no sentence concluding any one; and if there had been such sentence, it would be of no value, as it was a proceeding against Desgrange, to which neither Clark nor Zulime was á party, and therefore the record was incompetent to affect the rights of those claiming under them.
The competency of this evidence depends on other considerations.
For the purpose of establishing the bigamy of Desgrange, the complainant proved by her witnesses that he was arrested on a charge of bigamy, at the instance of his first wife; “ that the said-lawful wife of the said Desgrange brought with her to New Orleans proofs of her marriage with said Desgrange; ” that the first wife appeared as a-witness, and proved the bigamy; that. Desgrange had confessed it; that he was convicted on his trial; and that he was imprisoned, and in execution, under sentence of the court; that this occurred in 1802 or 1803; that Desgrange escaped from prison by connivance of the public officers, or some of them, and fled the country, and never returned.
On this evidence, standing unopposed and uncontradicted, the complainant had a decree in her favor in the Circuit Court at New Orleans, establishing the bigamy of Desgrange; and in this court, ih the case of Patterson v. Gaines, decided in 1848.
For the purpose of letting in this secondary evidence, the complainant introduced the deposition of C. W. Dreschler, made April 24, 1840, which is as follows:
“ That at the request of General Edmund P. Gaines, I have been engaged for several days, assisted by a gentleman who understands the Spanish and French languages well, in making very extensive and most diligent search at all offices, &c., in the different parts of this city, where.records are kept and could be*524 looked for, for the purpose of obtaining a copy of a prosecution against one Jerome Desgrange, convicted for the crime of bigamy, in the year 1802 or 1803, when Louisiana was under the Spanish government, and Cassaacalvo, the governor, by whose order the said Desgrange was arrested, imprisoned, &c., in this city; but that I have not been able to find the Spanish records of the aforesaid criminal proceedings, because almost all the Spanish documents, up to the 20th December, 1803, when Governor Claiborne issued his first proclamation, were taken away by the Spanish authorities, sent to Spain, and to the island of Cuba; and the few papers left in this city are in a loose or bad condition; as also, because many books and papers having been destroyed by fire, and lost by removing them on account cf fire, during two occurrences of that kind.
“ I am informed that Governor Claiborne made several ineffectual applications to the Spanish government to return the papers taken away, to New Orleans; that persons have had to go to Havana for documents, titles to land, &c.”
On this, and other proof that no record of the proceeding could be found, parol evidence of what occurred on the trial against Desgrange was let in, and the bigamv found on the secondary evidence in Patterson’s case.
Here the same proof that the record of the proceedings was lost, was introduced; and what took place on that trial of Desgrange was again proved by depositions, which were filed in the Circuit Court before the record of Desgrange’s trial was filed by the respondents. The object of its introduction bythe respondents was, to rebut, contradict, and overthrow the evidence of the .complainant’s witnesses, by showing,
1st. That no previous wife appeared against Desgrange on his prosecution.
2d. That no documents cf a former marriage were produced against him.
3d. That his wife Zulime did not then charge him with being guilty of bigamy, denied all belief in the charge, and gave her reasons for it; which correspond with the statement made by the supposed first wife, Barbara Jeanbelle, and with Desgrange’s own statement made on oath.
4th. That. Desgrange was not convicted, but discharged by order of the court. •
5th. That he did not flee the country, nor had any occasion to do so. And,
6th. That so far from admitting his bigamy, he denied it on oath, lawfully administered ; thus solemnly declaring that he never had been married previous to his marriage with said Zulime. Whereas, complainant’s witnesses swear he made such copfessipnp.
Madame Caillavet says Desgrange and Barbara Jeanbelle came together, or that Jeanbelle came immediately after him; and that she immediately wrote to her sisters to return.
It appears that in the spring of 1801, Desgrange went to Prance, to recover property coming by succession to his wife Zulime, and her sisters, from their -parents, and lying at Bordeaux, of in that neighborhood; and that he had not returned when Zulime and Madame Despau left New Orleans for New York.
The ecclesiastical record states that he had been at home about two months before he was arrested; which was September 4, 1802. He was therefore absent from his wife Zulime about fifteen months.
Daniel W. Coxe proves, that Madame Desgrange brought him a letter of introduction from Clark, stating, that she was then far gone in pregnancy, and requesting Coxe’s attention to her wants; that he furnished a house and money, and employed a nurse, and Dr. Shippen to attend her accouchement; that Clark’s letter stated the child was his; and we must assume that the mother by delivering the letter, impliedly admitted the fact. She was delivered; and Coxe had the child, on the same day, put with Mrs. Stevens to nurse. All this time, Madame Despau was with Madame Desgrange. Coxe superintended the, child’s nurture and education, in and near to Philadelphia, • until Clark’s death in 1813, and afterwards. This was Caroline,' who when grown up married Dr. Barnes; and who these witnesses swear without hesitation was the child of Desgrange; and who, Madame Despau swears, was born in 1801. Nor does either witness intimate that she was. born in Philadelphia; or that their sister went there to conceal her adultery, and hide' its offspring.
It is true beyond question that these witnesses did know that their sister Desgrange went north to hide her adultery; that she did delude her absent husband,, that she did impose on him the méndacious tale that her sole business north was to clear up doubts that disturbed her mind, about his having another wife. These facts they carefully conceal in their depositions; and on th§ contrary swear that she went north to get evidence of her husband’s bigamy and imposition on her.
When they swore positively that Caroline was the child of Desgrange, they did know that he had been in France, and his wife in New Orleans, and they had not seen each other for more than a year before the child was bórn; and Madame Despau could not be ignorant that Clark claimed it as his, and that the mother admitted the fact to Coxe.
These witnesses swear that Zulime had separated from Desgrange on discovering his bigamy, and gone to her own family. That this occurred before the family arrangement was madé that Clark should marry her, and before Madame Desgrange and Madame Despau went north, to ascertain the bigamy. They also swear that Zulime returned to New Orleans about the time Desgrange was arrested and imprisoned in September, 1802, and was then the wife of Clark. There is no proof in this record tending to show that before Desgrange went to France he was suspected of bigamy, nor that his wife had separated from him; but there is evidence to the contrary- '
' When Desgrange went to France in the spring of 1801, he appointed his wife attorney in fact by -notarial act, with full power to transact all his business in his absence. Under this power she acted and sold his property, paid debts, &c., and declared herself his lawful wife in every transaction.
Desgrange went to France with a full power to transact business for his wife and her three sisters, in which the latter style, him their brother-in-law. This was his sole business in France so far as this record shows ; and when there, he wrote to Clark, in July, 1801, to assist his, Desgrange’s wife; expressing his sympathies, forwarding a package for her, and regretting that he had not heard from her. He also expressed the sincerest gratitude
■In support of the consistency of these witnesses, stress is laid on the fact that so strong was the rumor of Desgrange’s having two other wives besides Zulime, that he was arrested, imprisoned, and tried on the rumor. . This is certainly true; the record of his prosecution establishes the fact: But what circumstances are brought forth to show that there was any plausible ground for such rumor and such prosecution ? ..Desgrange was a man somewhat advanced in life.; he kept.an humble shop for selling liquors and confectiotiary; this seems to have been his sole business.- • His wife Zulime, was about/- twenty-two years old, and uncommonly handsome. He-seems to have been a lone man in New Orleans, and his Mends were his wife and her relations. In the face of these facts it is assumed that he brought from France with him an additional wife, and that another followed him; with both of whom, and his third wife, Zulime, he was confronted before the authorities of the church.
The early times, and the unintelligent condition of much of the population of New Orleans at that day, must account for this absurd public ¿pinion, and the proceedings founded on it.
It is palpable that the witnesses Despau and Caillavet, swear to a plausible-tale of fiction, leaving out the circumstances of gross reality. These originated, beyond question, in profligacy of a highly dangerous and criminal character; that of a wife having committed adultery, and been delivered of an illegitimate child, in the absence of her husband; not only on .his lawful business, but on her’s, and at her instance.
This child, with the knowledge of both of these witnesses, and certainly with the aid of one of them, if not both, was concealed in a foreign country, where the mother went and was delivered; and then she returned h'om'e to New Orleans and presented herself to society as an innocent and injured woman, and public indignation was turned on'her husband for a supposed crime committed against her. This is the reality these witnesses conceal; roundly swearing that they knew this child to be Desgrange’s.
They also swear that Clark arranged with Zulime’s family before he went to Philadelphia, and had the assent of her family to marry her; they having previously discovered Desgrange’s bigamy. But, according to their account, so scrupulous and delicate was this injured woman, that she refused to marry
We have thus far spoken of the witnesses Despau and Caillavet in connection, because they acted in concert with their sister Desgrange and Clark, in secreting their intercourse, and in hiding the child that came of that, intercourse: all the secrets involved were obviously known to the three sisters, whose confidential relation in the matter could hardly have been more close, as'appears by their statements throughout.
Madame Despau is further discredited by Daniel W. Coxe’s evidence. She swears as follows:
“ Mr. Clark became a member of the United States Congress in eighteen hundred and six. While he was in Congress, my sister heard that he was courting a Miss C., of Baltimore. She was distressed, though she could not believe the report, knowing herself to be his wife. Still, his strange conduct in deferring to promulgate his marriage with her had alarmed her, and she and I sailed to Philadelphia to get the proof of his marriage with my sister. We could find no record of the marriage, and were told that the priest who married her and Mr. Clark was gone to Ireland. My sister then sent for Mr. Daniel W. Coxe, and mentioned to him the rumor above stated. He answered that he knew it to be true that Mi'. Clark was engaged to the lady in question. My sister replied that it could not be so, He then told her that she would not be able to establish her marriage with Mr. Clark, if he were disposed to contest it. He advised her to take the advice of legal counsel, and said he would send one. A Mr; Smith came, and, after telling my sister that she could not legally establish her marriage with Mr. Clark, pretended to read to her a letter in English, (a language then unknown to my sister,) from Mi'. Clark to Mr. Coxe, stating that he was about to marry Miss C. And afterwards, she married Mr. Gardette.”
The following is Coxe’s account of the interview:
“ I also think it proper to state, that in the year 1808, after Madame Desgrange had returned to Philadelphia from New Orleans, and when lodging in Walnut street,.she sent for me, and during a private interview with her, at Mrs. Rowan’s, where she lodged, she stated that she had heard Mr. Clark was going to be*529 married to Miss C., of Baltimore, which, she said, was a violation of his promise to marry her, and added that she now considered herself at liberty to connect herself in marriage with another person; alluding, doubtless, to Dr. Gardette, who, at the moment of this disclosure, entered the room, when after a few words of general conversation I withdrew, and her marriage to Mr. Gardette was announced a few days after.”
These contradictory statements rifi.se a question of integrity between the witnesses. If they were > equally entitled to credit, still Coxe’s statement has several advantages. First; Madame Desgrange disavowed in the strongest terms that she was the wife of Clark by marrying Gardette; Secondly; so important a communication as Madame Despau declares her sister made to Mr. Coxe; so ruinous to Clark’s matrimonial prospects, and so deeply disgraceful to him, must have been remembered by Coxe if such communication had been made.
Thirdly; Madame Despau swears that she and her sister Desgrange went to Philadelphia to obtain evidence of Clark’s marriage with Zulime; that they could find no record of the marriage, and were told the priest who performed the ceremony had gone to Ireland. What occasion could there be for further proof? Madame Despau swears that Clark had proposed, and family arrangements had been made with him at New Orleans, to marry Zulime; that these proposals .were made with the full knowledge of all Zulime’s family; that Clark follbwed the witness and Zulime north to fulfil the- engagement; that he met them, and the marriage took place; that she, Madame Despau, was .present; that Mr. Dozier, a wealthy planter of New Orleans, and an Irish gentleman of New York,' were also present.
Zulime’s family consisted of three sisters and their husbands. Madame Cavaillet swears that Clark conversed with .her as his-sister-in-law, and admitted the marriage openly to her. Than this, no further proof of it could be required, if time.
The next evidence bearing on the question of Desgrange’s bigamy is the record of a suit, brought by Madame Desgrange against her husband in 1805, for alimony, already referred to; and the deposition of Zulime found in the record of the ecclesiastical proceeding, taken in connection with the first named record. In her deposition Zulime spoke of Desgrange in language admitting of no doubt that she then recognized him as her husband; and that no evidence of his bigamy existed so far as she knew or believed.
' The deposition is objected to as.not being evidence against the complainant. We have already declared that what appeared of record in the proceeding against Desgrange, was competent to rebut evidence introduced by .the complainant tending to
The competency of this.deposition, taken as a confession, is objected to, on the ground that her signature to it was not legally proved, as this was done by comparison of hands, according to the statute law of Louisiana. The steps taken in the Circuit Court are conclusive of the objection.
On the 16th of January, 1850, the complainant’s counsel gave notice .to those of the respondents, that on Monday, the 21st, a motion would be made to suppress certain pieces of evidence; and among them the exhibit, obtained at the cathedral church of St. Louis, known as the “ Ecclesiastical Record.” The cause came on for hearing January 22d, and was heard on that and the seventeen succeeding days; but no motion to suppress evidence was made; and if there had been, this, exhibit could have been proved at the hearing, by Zulime herself, if no one else had been found to do so; as the record shows that complainant’s counsel ad .nitted that Zulime was within the jurisdiction of the court, on the day the trial commenced. No objection having been made on the hearing below to this deposition, none can be raised here. To what extent it can be used, will appear from the following facts.
By an amendment to her bill, July 2d, 1844, the complainant states:
“ Your oratrix alleges that she is entitled to the one moiety of the estate, of which the said Daniel Clark died possessed, by reason of a conveyance thereof, made to her by M. Z. Gardette, the widow of the said Clark, and the mother of your oratrix, on the 7th day of May, 1836, and which is hereunto annexed, marked A. B., and prayed to be' taken as part hereof; and the mother of your oratrix did thereafter, on the 20th June, 1844, further convey to her ah her interest in said estate, as appears by her act, a copy of which is herewith exhibited, marked C.; the whole of said estate having been acquired during the coverture of said Clark and wife.
The evidence corresponds with this allegation, and on it the complainant asks to have a decree for one half of the estate of Daniel Clark, as derived from her mother. Madame Despau and Madame Caillavet depose, that Clark married Zulime shortly before her return to New Orleans, from Philadelphia, and before the trial of Desgrange took place, and when she must have been the wife of Clark, if ever she was. If Zulime was now before the court claiming her marital interest in Clark’s estate, her de
In the suit of 1805, the petitioner alleges that the County Court of Orleans has jurisdiction óñ application of wives against their husbands, to grant alimony on the husband deserting his wife for' one year, and in cases of cruel treatment; and the petitioner declares that her husband, Jerome Desgrange, had cruelly treated her; and likewise, that she had been deserted by him from the 2d day of September, 1802, until that time; that he had returned to New Orleans, from France, in the previous month of October, and was then in the city; and she prays, that said'Jerome Desgrange, your-petitioner’s husband, be condemned to pay her a sum of five hundred dollars per annum,” &c. Desgrange. was served with' notice December 6, 1805, and finai judgment entered against him, as prayed for by his wife, December 24,1805.
We are called on here to try an issue on facts, as a jury would be bound to do, and find on them-the issue between Clark’s devisee and executors, and the purchasers claiming under them, on the one side; and the complainant claiming under her mother on the other, whether that mother was the lawful widow of Daniel Clark when she conveyed to the complainant.
This alleged widow swore.before the authorities of the church in. September, 1802, that she was the wife, of Desgrange, and there spoke of him as her lawful husband; nothing to the contrary was then pretended. The presence before which she deposed, and the solemn manner in which it was done, give additional weight, in our judgment, to what she so deliberately declared on that occasion.
With the full knowledge this woman had of all the circumstances connected with the charge of bigamy against Desgrange, our judgment is convinced that she stated what was true, and that she was Desgrange’s lawful wife at the time it is alleged she married Clark.
The claim, therefore, of the complainant, derived from her mother, must be rejected, as it stands condemned by the state- ' ments and acts of that mother herself.
The complicated and curious circumstances that surrounded this charge of bigamy against Desgrange in the Patterson case, and which were then so difficult to deal with, are easily enough understood now. A clew is furnished to unravel the mystery, why it was, that • an humble shopkeeper should be of sufficient consequence to excite public indignation, be. the object of general and gross reproach, and for his name afterwards to appear in the columns of the only newspaper then published in New Orleans, an extract from which the complainant has given in evidence. There an account was given of Desgrange’s alleged crime of bigamy, and the enormity of his conduct in marrying Zulime Née Carriére, whose artless innocfence he so basely imposed upon. The mystery is explained by the fact now presented, that in Desgrange’s absence to France, his wife formed a connection with- Clark, and the child Caroline came of that illicit Connection. On Desgrange’s return home, Madam Caillavet notified her sisters to return in haste, as Desgrange’s first wife was at New Orleans. Mesdames Despau and Desgrange forthwith returned, and at this time it was that Desgrange was so fiercely assailed by public opinion, and very soon after arrested on general rumor and tried for bigamy. The reports, to which these witnesses swear, obviously originated with, and were relied on by Madame Desgrange, her sisters and friends, to harass and drive Desgrange from the country, so that his wife might'indulge herself in the society of Clark, unincumbered and unannoyed by the presence of an humble and deserted husband. And this was in fact accomplished, for Desgrange did leave the country soon after he was tried for bigamy, and Clark did set up Desgrange’s wife in a handsome establishment,-where their intercourse was unrestrained.
In 1805, when Desgrange again came to New Orleans, his wife immediately sued him for alimony, as above stated; speedily got judgment against him for five hundred dollars' per
Bellechasse and Madame Benguerel swear that .Desgrange married Zulime, and that he was afterwards condemned for the crime of bigamy; his first and lawful wife coming in pursuit of him to Louisiana, and appearing against him, and producing th&'documents of her marriage. That this happened in 1802 or 1803, and that Desgrange fled. Their statements are substantially the same in this respect. . .
They are so obviously founded on common report, as to be of no value in themselves; certainly no decree could be founded on them. But when contrasted with the record of Desgrange’s prosecution, they turn out to be entirely contrary to the truth; as no first wife appeared against Desgrange; no documents of a former marriage were produced; and no conviction took place; nor did he flee from the country. These aged persons swore as to what common rumor and public clamor were forty years before, and nothing more.
Madame Benguerel also swears, that she and her husband were intimate with Desgrange, and when they reproached him for his baseness in marrying Zulime, he endeavored to excuse himself by saying “ that, at the time of his marrying said Zulime, he had abandoned his said lawful wife, and never intended to see her again.” As already stated, this must have happened after Desgrange returned from France, for there is no evidence that before he went there any such report existed. Zulime proved, on the prosecution for bigamy,’ that she had first heard the report about a year before she was examined.
We deem it extremely improbable, that a man-should openly confess to the friends of Zulime, who reproached him with having committed a foul and high crime, that he was guilty;. and this, too, on the eve of his apprehension and examination, on which he was compelled to give evidence against himself, when he swore that there was no truth whatever in the charge, and in which he was supported by this, supposed first wife, who was then examined, and also by Zulime herself.
On the admissibility of Desgrange’s confession, that he committed bigamy when he married Zulime, the question arises whether this confession (if made) could be given in evidence against the defendants ? They do not claim under Desgrange'; he was not interested in this controversy when it originated, and was competent to give evidence in this cause at any time, if living, to prove, or disprove, that a previous marriage took place, and was in full force, when he married Zulime. Phillips, in his Treatise on Evidence, (vol. 3, 287, Cowen’s ed.) lays down the rule with accuracy, and cites the authorities in its
If Desgrange could overthrow his marriage with Zulime by confessions, at one time, so. he could at any other time; and on this assumption, his confession of a. previous marriage could, have been admitted at any time, before the trial, or at the trial, when he stood by, and might be examined as a witness.
The great basis . of- human -society throughout the civilized world is founded on marriages and legitimate offspring;, and to hold that either of the parties could, by- a mere declaration, establish the fact that a marriage was void, would, be an alarming doctrine.
This admission was not one tending to establish pedigree, where hearsay of parents and others is admissible; it went to the specific fact of bigamy; and, according to the language of the Supreme Court of Louisiana, in Harmar v. McLeland, (16 Louis. Rep. 28,) “ in such serious mutters, the law requires more than the simple confession of one of the parties-to dissolve forever the bonds of matrimony between them.” -That was' a cáse seeking a divorce on a written confession of the husband, who had married a -second wife; but the principle declared in that case, and the one governing the present, is the same. . It upholds a great policy, on which society is founded..-.
The letter of Desgrange to Clark, of July, 1801, from Bordeaux, is objected to, as incompetent. "We think it is competent to prove the state of feeling, affection, and sympathy of Desgrange towards his wife, when he wrote the letter; and also, the date is evidence-to prove -where the writer was, and the time .when he wrote. There is - no ground to suppose that the letter was written collusively. .It appears to have been ingenuous, and honésñy intended. The doctriné, why such a letter is admitted, is laid down accurately in 1 Phillips’a Ev. by Cowen, 189,190.
In addition to the foregoing evidence to prove the bigamy of Desgrange, a certificate in thé Latin language was introduced, on part of the complainant, purporting to -be that of William Y. O’Brien, dated September 11,1806, declaring that he had, (July ■6,1790,) as pastor of St. Peter’s church, in the city of New York, married, in that church, Jacobus Desgrange, to Barbara M. Orsi.
It is proved that this priest had charge of St. Peter’s church in 1790, and in 1806; that the certificate was in his handwrit
The true name of Desgrange is not in the certificate. It was Gerónimo, not Jacobus. Nor was the woman’s name given so as to correspond with that of the alleged first wife of Desgrange. Her name was Barbara Jeanbelle. De Orsi is an affix, describing a place to which the party belongs, or has belonged. The woman’s name is given as Barbara M. Orsi, and we suppose Uo catholic priest thus describes a person he has married, in his marriage register. No identity of person is proved. No cohabitation as man and wife, between Desgrange and Bafbara'Jeanbelle, is proved.
But waiving all thfese objections, and still we think this certificate mere hearsay evidence, and that of a very dangerous character, and this for several reasons.- It was given sixteen years after the marriage purports to have taken place, and might just as well have been given, had the priest been alive, forty years after the marriage, and on the eve of the trial. .
In England, by the statute law, copies from parish registers are received to prove marriages; but the paper produced mast be a sworn copy of the parish register, and not a certificate of the officiating clergyman; nor will a copy of a foreign register be received in evidence, on proof that it is a true copy.
If it were allowable in this country to give such certificate in evidence, where every clergyman of all denominations can perform the ceremony of marriage, and where it is performed by . justices of the peace in many of the States, it would open a door to frauds that could not.be guarded against.
And then again, certificates of marriage might be produced by those coming to this country from Europe: For no reason exists why a priest in any part of the world should not have.accorded to his certificate all the credence that ought to be given to the one here produced, as Louisiana and New York were foreign to each other in 1790.
The respondents introduced the copy of a mutilated record, to which objection was made on behalf of complainant, but which comes up in this record, and is now relied on, for the complainant, to prove the bigamy of Desgrange, If purports to be a suit of Zulime Carriére against Jerome Desgrange, commenced in 1806,
.All we find further, is a copy of the docket entries which the clerk was bound to keep by the act of April 10, 1805, sec. 11, for the inspection of the public. The docket entry is as follows: “ Petition filed June 24, 1806. Debt or damages $100. Plea filed July 1, 1806. Answer filed July 24, 1806. Set for trial 24 July.” The witnesses are stated and the costs given; and then follows: “ Judgment for plaintiff, damages $100, July 24, 1806.”
This proceeding is relied on as in itself establishing the fact, that the marriage between Jerome Desgrange and Marie Julia Née Garriere, was thereby declared null.
To give the record this effect, it must appear that the plaintiff did set out in her petition the fact that said marriage was null by reason of the bigamy of Desgrange, and that she prayed to have its nullity adjudged by a judicial decree, and that such decree was' made on the issue. Nothing of the kind appears here. We have no evidence what the cause of action was, nor can any inference be drawn from the memoranda made by the clerk that the suit was to establish the bigamy. All that appears from these memoranda is, that debt or damages to the amount of $100 was claimed by the plaintiff, and that $100 in damages was recovered. Nor does the demurrer contradict this assumption. This mutilated record, theíeforé, proves nothing in this cause.
In regard to this record, the answer of Beverly Chew and Richard Relf avers, “ that on or about the 24th of June, 1806, the aforesaid Zulime Née Garriere, wife of the said Jerome Desgrange, did present another petition to the competent judicial tribunal of the city of New Orleans, therein representing herself as the lawful wife of, and having intermarried with the said Jerome Desgrange, and praying for a divorce and a dissolution of the bonds of matrimony existing between her and the said Jerome Desgrange*, and which was subsequently decreed : to wit, subsequent to the birth of said Myra.” If it was true, that as lawful wife, Zulime Née Garriere sued, and did admit by this proceeding that she was the lawful wife of Desgrange; yet it could
On the 20th January, 1849, Gaines and wife filed their supplemental bill against all of the defendants, and among other matters set forth the decree made in their behalf by this court, in the case of C. Patterson v. Gaines and wife, at December term, 1847; and complainants set up that decree as having adjudged and decided against all the defendants to this suit, that Myra Clark Gaines was the legitimate child and forced heiress of Daniel Clark, and that she was legally and' equitably entitled to receive of Relf and Chew, and all persons holding under them, all and singular the estates and property claimed by the original bill; and that although neither of them were nominal'parties to said decree, yet each of them is bound and concluded thereby; they and each of them holding the same relation to. your oratrix as the said .Charles Patterson did, and they and each of them having joined in the interrogatories propounded to the witnesses upon whose testimony said decree was rendered, and propounded cross-interrogatories to said witnesses.
The defendants admit that such a decree was rendered, but deny that it is conclusive on them, or that it ought to affect their right; and that if the decree could do so, yet it ought not to have this effect in the present instance, because they aver and set forth and plead the same as a matter of defence; that said decree was brought about, and procured by imposition, combination, and fraud, between said complainants and Charles Pat-' terson, and that therefore, it should not be regarded in a court of justice for any purpose whatever: That said decree was designed as no honest exposition of the merits of the case; but was brought about, allowed and consented to, for the purpose of pleading the same as res judicata upon points in litigation not honestly contested.
Charles Patterson was Called on by respondents to give evidence on their behalf, to establish the fact, that his suit with Gaines and wife was not honestly defended by him.; and he was required by interrogatories to depose whether he had lost any thing by the decree against him. He answered that he caused the proofs from the court of probate in New Orleans to be given in evidence in the cause ; that this was done by consent of General and Mrs. Gaines, who told him to get all the evidence possible, the stronger the better; that it would be more glorious to have it as strong as possible.
..He furthermore deposed that General Gaines and his wife gave him a writing under their hands that they would not take any property from him, and that they would make his title
He further stated that he was particularly requested by General and Mrs. Gaines, to. use his best*exertions, with the aid of the best counsel he could employ to make every defence in his power to the suit, and qf which it was susceptible, and that he did so.
The suit was for Patterson’s residence in New Orleans, and he admits that he has never been disturbed in his possession, by the decree against him, nor does he expect that he ever will be.
That this proceeding on the part of Patterson and General and Mrs. Gaines was amicable, and that no earnest litigation was had is too manifest for controversy. They agreed to go to trial at once on the depositions found in the probate court; and as Patterson was to lose nothing by the event, he was of course indifferent as to what evidence might be introduced on the hearing.
It also appears by his evidence that when a decree was obtained in the Circuit Court against him-, his name was used to carry up an appeal to this court; but it was. in fact brought up by- General and Mrs. Gaines. Patterson employed counsel here, who of course had to táke the record as they found it, and make the best of it they could; and it is conceded on all hands, they did so; and made the best exertions for- Patterson they could do on the record brought up by him, as they supposed. Nevertheless, an affirmance of, the decree was had in this court. It could hardly be otherwise in a case managed as this was; the object of the complainants below, being to obtain a favorable opinion and decree, on the law and facts of a case, made up at their own discretion.
But the. cause before us presents an aspect altogéther different'; the. proceeding against Besgrange before the vicar-general, introduced here by the respondents, from the archives of the cathedral church of St. Louis, at New Orleans, is in our opinion sufficient in .itself .to produce a different decree from that given in Patterson’s case..
That record; the power of attorney from Besgrange to his wife; and the one from his.wife and her sisters to Mm, to pursue and recover their property in France; Ms letter to Clark of July, 1801; the proof of. his absence from Ms wife for more, than a year, before Caroline was bom; the record of the suit for ali
The following is the result of our conclusions:
1st. That the complainant’s two principal witnesses, Madame Despau and Madame Caillavet, are not worthy of credit.
2d. That the depositions of Bellechasse and Madame Benguerel obviously state hearsay and rumor, and are worth nothing, in so far as mere hearsay and rumor is detailed by them.
3d. That the naked confession of Desgrange, that he had been guilty of bigamy, made to Madame Benguerele and her husband, is incompetent evidence, and inadmissible as against these respondents ; even admitting that such confession had been made, as stated by the witness.
4th. That the certificate of William V. O’Brien is inadmissible, and must be disregarded.
5th. That .the record of the suit of Zulime Garriere'against Jerome Desgrange, prosecuted in 1806 in the County Court of Orleans, proves nothiüg, and is incompetent.
6th. That the decree of this court in Charles Patterson’s case does not affect these defendants for two reasons : 1st. Because they were no parties to it; and 2d. Because it was no earnest controversy; And
7th. That the record of Desgrang'e’s prosecution for bigamy, overthrows the feeble, and the discredited evidence, introduced by complainant to prove the bigamy of Desgrange, by marrying Marie Julia Née Carriere in 1794; and establishes the fact that Desgrange was her lawful husband, in 1802 or 1803, when complainant alleges Daniel Clark married her mother; and that therefore, complainant is not the lawful heir of Daniel Clark, and can inherit nothing from him: And consequently that the complainant can take no interest under her mother, by the conveyance set forth in the amended bill, she not being the widow of Daniel Clark.
The question decided, concludes this controversy; nor shall we go further into it.
The harshness of judicial duty requires that we should deal with witnesses and evidences, and with men’s rights, as we find them; and it is done so here. But we sincerely regret that it could not be satisfactorily done, without making exposures that would most willingly have beén avoided.
It is ordered that the decree of the Circuit Court be affirmed, and the’ bill dismissed.
No. 150 of Myra Clark Gaines v. F. D. de la Croix, Richard Relf and Beverly Chew; and No. 151 of the same complainant
Dissenting Opinion
delivered the following dissenting opinion.
I dissent from the judgment just given, and will give my reasons for doing so as briefly as I can. But it will necessarily occupy some time.
I believe that the case of the complainant has been proved beyond a reasonable doubt, as the law requires it to be done; I say. as the law requires it to be done, without meaning, to imply any doubt of the fact, but that the fact has been proved according to those rules which experience' has shown to be necessary and sufficient, to guard conjugal and other-domestic relations from capricious and unregulated judgments. Those rules are to be found in adjudicated cases of our own and of the English, courts, and in the conclusions of the civil and canon law applicable to cases of this kind.
I think it has been proved, that Myra Clark Gaines is the only child of her father, Daniel Clark, by his marriage with her mother, Zuíime Garriere. That when the marriage- took place, ithe parties were willing to contract, able to contract, and that they did contract marriage in Pennsylvania according to the laws of that State, in the year eighteen hundred and two. I also think that there was nothing then or now in the laws of Louisiana which lessens in any way the validity of that -marriage. The proofs of these declarations, shall hereafter be pointed out, with the law in support of them.
My first object is to state the evidence relied upon by the parties to this suit, and in what way it should have been examined' and appreciated by this court, before its judgment was given. In other words. I mean to say, that a judgment has been given against the complainant upon testimony introduced into the record of the case against the protest of her counsel, which is altogether inadmissible under the rules for the admission of testimony in courts of justice, and which have hitherto been observed and enjoined by this court in its judgments. And further, that admissions and averments in the answer of the defendants in respect to ceTtain portions of testimony offered by them, have been overlooked, by which the complainant has been deprived of proofs, which time out of mind in chancery have been considered conclusive: of the fact affirmed in an answer, whether or not the same makes against a defendant or for a complainant.
The defendants deny the marriage between the complainant’s father and mother; and if there was a marriage, they contest its validity on account of her mother having then another husband alive. It is admitted that a marriage had been solemnized between her and Jerome Desgrange, but the complainant shows by competent testimony sufficient to establish the fact that Desgrange was a married man, with a wife alive when he married her mother. That such being the fact, their marriage was void ab initio, and that she was at liberty to marry with another as if no such connection had eyer existed between Desgrange and herself. In other words, that such a connection, though entered into according to the forms of marriage, makes no im-pediment by the civil, the canon, or common law, in the way of a second marriage by the party imposed upon. .The defendants rejoin, saying, even though the marriage -with Desgrange was void on account of his bigamy, that she could not contract marriage again, before she had obtained a sentence of nullity of her marriage with Desgrange. It is also urged by the defendants, if there was a marriage between the father and mother of' the complainant, that it was void on account of what the canon law terms its clandestinity. That according to that law, as it then prevailed in Louisiana, the issue of such a marriage was illegitimate and that it has no civil effect to give rights of property or inheritance to the issue of such a marriage. To this the complainant replies that the marriage of her father and mother was solemnized in the State of Pennsylvania according to the law of that State. That the lex loci contractus give® to the issue the status of legitimacy for all purposes in Louisiana and elsewhere, whether the issue was born there or out of its jurisdiction; and further, that marriages which have been clandestinely solemnized, that is, by not observing the solemnities of the church, though they are condemned by the canon law, as it existed in Louisiana, are not made void — cap. quod nobes. tit, quefilii sunt legis. To the objection that there had not been a sentence of the nullity of the marriage with Desgrange, the.complainant answers, that when a marriage by the canon law and
The defendants, to maintain, their denial of the marriage between the father and mother of the complainant, attempt tq discredit her witnesses who were examined to prove it. For that purpose they examined persons as to the character of the witnesses. They attempt to show contradictions in the testimony of two of them taken at different times, and allege concealment of facts which it is said they were bound to disclose in their examination ; and they were also permitted to put in evidence certain papers relating co the marriage with Desgrange, and its continuance after the alleged marriage of Zulime with Clark. Those papers are, 1st, one termed an ecclesiastical prosecution of Desgraiige for bigamy in 1802; 2d, The proceedings of a court in Louisiana in 1805 at the instance of Zulime against Desgrange. for alimony; 3d; Another for a like purpose at the instance- of Mr. Davis, to whose care the complainant was confided by her father in her infancy, in which she is called a natu-. ral child of her father; 4., An imperfect record of a suit brought by the complainant’s mother in 1806 in her maiden name against the name of Desgrange, for a divorce or a sentence of nullity of their marriage, in which there was a judgment against him, or in her favor.
The last record stands in this suit upon a different footing from the ecclesiastical proceedings, inasmuch as it is properly authenticated to make it evidence as a judicial record, and the other is not so. Also, because the defendants introduce it and déclare it in their answers to be a petition by the complainant’s
Having stated the positions taken by the parties in respect to the- marriage between Clark and Zulime, between her and Desgrange, and her subsequent connection with Gardette without a divorce from Clark, when he had abandoned her, and the legal points raised and replied to by both' parties, I will now proceed to state the kind of testimony upon which they respectively rely, the use which has been made of it, indicating at the same time what I believe to be the law upon each point of the complainant’s case", and also upon all of those made by the defendants.
1st. As to the marriage, between the father and mother of Mrs. Gaines: It is proved by one witness, Madame Despau, her aunt, who was present at the marriage when it took place in Philadelphia. By another witness,' Madame Caillavet, also her aunt, who swears that Clark made proposals of marriage for Zulime to her familyj after her withdrawal from Desgrange, which was caused by her having heard that he was the husband of another-woman then alive. She also swears that Clark, after his marriage with Zulime, admitted it to her, and that so did Zulime;. They also rely upon Clark’s acknowledgment of his marriage to three other witnesses, Mrs. Harper, Bellechasse, and Boisfontaine, to each of whom he repeatedly said that Myra
The witness, Madame Despau, says she was at the marriage of Zulime and Mr. Clark, in 1803 or 1802, that it took place in Philadelphia, and the ceremony was performed by a Catholic priest, in-the presence .of other witnesses as well as herself. She states that she was present when her sister gave birth to Mrs. Gaines, that Clark claimed and' acknowledged her to be his child, that she was born in 1806. That the circumstances of her marriage with Daniel Clark were these: Several years after her marriage with Desgrange she heard he had a living wife. Our family charged him with the crime of bigamy in marrying Zulime. He at first denied, but afterwards admitted it and fled from the country. These circumstances became public, and Mr. Clark made proposals of marriage to my sister, with the knowledge of all of our family. It was considered essential, first, to obtain record proof that Desgrange had a living wife at the time he married my sister, to obtain which from the Catholic church in New York, where Mr. Desgrange’s prior marriage was celebrated, we sailed for that city. On our arrival there we found that the registry of marriages had been destroyed. Mr. Clark arrived after us. We heard that a Mr. Gardette, then living in Philadelphia, was one of the witnesses of Mr. Desgrange’s prior marriage. We proceeded to that city and found Mr. Gardette. He answered that he had been present at the prior marriage of Desgrange, and he afterwards knew Desgrange and his wife by that marriage. That • this wife had sailed for France. Mr. Clark then said, “ You have reason no longer to refuse being married to me. It will be necessary, however, to keep our mar
The testimony of this witness has been given in her own words, in her answers to questions put on both sides. The cross-interrogatories were filed by distinguished counsel, having before them at the time the direct interrogatories to be put to the witness. It often happens, in the investigation of causes, that the capacity of the advocate has an influence upon our conclusions in respect to testimony. It is right, also, in this remarkable suit, that those who have been professionally connected, with it, for or against the complainant, should be mentioned. In this instance it will show that the cause was conducted by lawyers of ability and experience, and that they made a searching scrutiny into the veracity of the witness, by all of those- ingenious and pressing inquiries which the rules of evidence permit to be asked, and which the case itself and the testimony of the witness suggested. The cross-interrogatories answered by Madame Despau were filed by L. C. Duncan, J. J. Mercier, Z. M. Shepard, John Slidell, Julien Seghers, P. A. Zost, H. Lockett, and Isaac T. Preston, Esquires.
It is w athy of notice, too, that the testimony of Madame Despau was taken three times, at long intervals. It is admitted that she does not contradict herself in any thing she said in her first examination, and that she did not afterward testify to more or less than she did at first. It was. urged, however, against her credit, that the subsequent examinations were ,so frequently.in the language of the first, that she must have had copies of the latter and merely repeated them, from which it might be inferred that she had been tampered with. But it was not intimated by whom, as a better discretion, in the absence of all proof of it, restrained counsel from giving personality to the insinuation, either as to the counsel of the complainant or herself. I have carefully compared the depositions in connection with the interrogatories and cross-interrogatories put to the witness, without having been able to find such an identity in her answers, as might not very well have occurred from the sameness of the interrogatories, in each instance to a witness who is asked for a narrative of the same facts. Besides, her testimony was not orally given in court. It was taken by commission each time, long enough before the trial in the court below, for the considerate examination of cotmsel, who could have obviated what is now complained of, by a mo'tion to the court for an oral examination of the witness in court, which the judges would have granted if they had seen in the depositions any foundation for the charge; or from any thing in them, the slightest indication that the witness had been corrupted, or that the commissioners,
Before, however, a witness (as Madame Despau,) will be discredited by an omission to state a fact of the kind mentioned, it is necessary to. look at the interrogatories put to her by counsel on both sides of-a cause, to determine if they called for such an answer either directly or indirectly and that it had been purposely withheld. Or that the fact was in issue between the parties, and that a question to elicit it had been reluctantly answered by the witness. I have more than carefully examined the interrogatories, which both Madame Despau and Madame Caillavet were' asked to answer, without finding in any one of them any thing relating to the point, that Zulime left New Orleans to be confined.at the north. And if there had been such a question, it would have been suppressed by the court 'on account of its irrelevancy, to the issues between the parties as they are made by the bill and answers of the defendants. The fact of Zulime’s confinement in Philadelphia, is not in any way alluded to in either the bill or the answers,- and though disclosed in the testimony of .Mr. Coxe in the way it is, it cannot be: .used to discredit the witness, or to bear- upon the • subsequent marriage between Clark and Zulime, which is the point at issue, or have any other effect, if it ■ should have any at all, than to show-that Clark, according to the religious faith in which he was bornvand according to the new laws of Louisiana, en
■ By what principle, then, is it, I ask, or by what cases for authority to do so, is it, that the unsworn declarations of Clark, now repeated by Mr. Coxe, have been used to discredit Madame Despau’s sworn evidence concerning a transaction in which Coxe discloses Clark to have been the criminal transgressor, and Madame Despau'at most, only as the attendant of a frail sister to aid her in her travail,.and to shelter her &nd her family from disgrace. There are those whom the weak, the unfortunate, and the wicked have natural claims upon, not disallowed by the law, and the discharge of which, without a. violation of law, it does not even reproach. This is putting the narrative of Mr,
The next objection to Madame Despau’s credit is made, on account of her- alleged want of character. It is said she was unchaste, and the defendants were allowed to put in proof a paper or record of a separation between herself and her husband upon his prosecution for a. divorce upon which a judgment was given in his-favor, which cut her off on account of his charges of her infidelity, from any interest in the property which he had, to a part of which she would otherwise have been entitled. ' 1 confess my inability to see, even supposing it to have been altogether regular, as an adjudication in a competent tribunal, which it is not, how this paper was received as evidence in this case, either against the witness or against the complainant. I have expressed myself too moderately with respect to the character of this paper, but in vindicating what I believe to be the rule of evidence, I am anxious not- to offend any one, and to keep myself within the" strictest limits of judicial forbearance. I will not say one word by way of inference concerning it, but will appeal to the paper itself for the correctness of what I shall say. It cannot be used as evidence in this suit because it is res inter alios acta. It does not in any way affect the truthfulness of Madame Despau, and cannot be used to affect her character, except so far as every wife may be degraded in the public estimation, when she is charged by her husband, truly or not, with infidelity to her marriage vow. This paper itself discloses in terms, and not inferentially, every fact which I am about.to state. It seems that Madame Despau and her husband lived unhappily and had agreed to a divorce. Whilst the proceedings for it were pending, for the distribution of property, but after a decree had been made, her husband advertised the property foi sale. She, by an application to the court, enjoined the sale, claiming that community in it to which she was entitled by the laws of Louisiana. The husband’s answer asks the court to permit the property to be sold and that he may be allowed to give bond to deposit the proceeds with a responsible person. The court allowed him to do so. In a year after this, the husband filed a petition in which Madame Despau is charged with having left Louisiana for “ some place in North America,” without the consent of her husband, and that she is living in adultery. Supplemental affidavits were filed, declaring that Madame Despau had left the territory, and an affidavit in which it is said “ her conduct had not been regular, and that her husband had reason to complain of her.” In what respect is not stated.
But besides this paper, the defendants called witnesses to impeach the character of Madame Despau. I regret too, that there was in this particular a disregard of all of those rules in respect to the impeachment of the credit or character of a witness. I do not remember a more marked departure from them. Before being more particular in this matter, I will state my judicial convictions of the manner of impeaching the character of a witness for- veracity or for want of moral character, annexing judicial decisions, that it may be seen how far my views are sustained by authorities, and how much they were violated in this instance.
I understand that the credit of a witness may be impeached, 1st, by the results of a cross-examination. 2d, By witnesses called to disprove such of the facts stated by the witness whether in his direct or cross examination, as arc material to the issue. 3d, By evidence reflecting upon the character of the witness for veracity. .Under this the evidence must be confined to general reputation, and particular facts will not be permitted, for the law presumes every one to be capable of supporting the one, and that it is not likely that a witness, without notice,'will be prepared to answer the other. B. N. P. 296, 297; Rex. v. Lookwood, 13 How. St. Tr. 210, Sir Thomas Trevor, Att. Gen. argu. Rex v. Layer, 16 How. St. Tr. 285, per Pratt, C. J.; Rex v. Lookwood, 13 How. St. Tr. 211, per Lord Holt, who says the mischief of raising collateral issues would itself be a sufficient rea&o& for the adoption of this rule. The regular mode of examining into the character of the person in question, is to ask the witness Whether he knows his general reputation among his neighbors — what that-reputation is, and whether from such knowledge he would believe him upon his oath. Rex v. Watson, 32 How. St. Tr. 495, 496; Rex v. Delamotte, 21. How. St. Tr. 811, per Buller, J.; Mawson v. Hartsink, 4 Esp. 103, 104,
It is' scarcely necessary for me to say that when the general reputation of a witness has been impeached, that his credit may be established by cross-examining the witnesses who have spoken against him, as to their means of knowledge and the grounds of their opinion, or as to their own character and conduct, or by calling other witnesses to support the character of the first witness, or to attack in their turn the general reputation of the impeaching witnesses. 4 Esp. 103, 104 ; 2 Ph. Ev. 433. But no further witnesses can be called to attack the character of the last. In other words, a discrediting witness may himself be discredited by other witnesses, but there the recrimination must end. Lord Stafford’s trial, 7 How. St. Tr. 1484. In this instance the character of Madame Despair' was most signally supported. I only now mention that-another mode of impeaching a witness is by proof that .other statements were made out of court contrary to what has been testified in court. No such attempt was made in respect to Madame Despau’s statements. It will be seen directly that my particular statement of the rules for discrediting a witness is appropriate to the case. I now proceed to state what was said by those who were called to im-'
In the different examinations of this witness, there were long intervals between them, vidthout any variation in any particular but-one. That is, that in her last examination she stated that there were circumstances which made her think the marriage between Clark and Zulime had taken place in 1802 ; and that she had previously said it took place in 1803. Such a difference might have been decisive against her veracity, had it. been connected with any thing else .in her testimony which made it probable that it was an alteration with an untruthful intention.
Hitherto my object has been to show that Madame Despau cannot be discredited by any thing contradictory in her evidence, or by any thing offered exterior from it, or by any contradiction of her by any other witness. It is admitted by all of my brethren that there is no contradiction of herself in all of her examinations. No witness disproves any fact stated by her, her character for veracity rose above the attempt to assail her general reputation. It is not shown that she ever made statements out of court contrary to her testimony at the trial, and it is shown that the scandals against .her, as they are reported by the witnesses of the defendant, are made more than improbable,'by an exemplary life sustained there, and carried by her through forty years into a respected old age. I think that her testimony, corroborated as it is, in' its most material particular, by four othe witnesses, who are not impeached at all by circumstances in th
■And now it may well be asked, upon what rule of evidence it is, that the testimony of Mr. Coxe, standing as he does in this case in the same legal relation as a witness, with Madame Despau, can be used to discredit both her and her sister Madame Caillavet. There is no contradiction by him of any fact stated by them or either of them. No conflict between them in any one point, unless it be, the differences between himself and Madame Despau, as to the time of the birth of Caroline, and the time of Mr. Clark’s being in Philadelphia in the last of 1801, until April, 1802, in which Madame Despau is confirmed by Mr. Clark’s correspondence with Mr. Coxe, furnished by the latter for the defence in this case. Indeed, the witnesses, though speaking of the same persons, are testifying to different transactions in their history*. Mr. Coxe to a connection between Mr. Clark and Zulime, founded upon Mr. Clark’s declarations of it to him, and Zulime’s acknowledgment by her delivery to him of Mr. Clark’s letter, his assistance to her in consequence of it, his preparations for her delivery and the birth of Caroline, 'and Clark’s subsequent recognition of that child, as his ; and Madamo Despau, of a fact of marriage happening afterwards, Madame'
Having concluded in my own mind that the evidence establishes the marriage between the father and mother of Mrs. Gaines and that-she is the child of their union, I proceed to the next most interesting point in the cause'.
It is that neither their marriage' nor her birth will be available to estabüsh the claim' of Mrs. Gaines, because at the time when Clark married her mother she had then another husband alive. That marriage being admitted, and that Desgrange was aUve when the marriage with Clark was solemnized, the objection wiU be sufficient, unless it can be removed. Upon the part of Mrs. Gaines, it is said, and I think is proved as the law requires it to be done, that her mother’s marriage with Desgrange is as void on account of his having been a married man when he married her, as if there never had been such a relation between them.
The attitude of the parties in the cause is then this, that each charges a bigamy in support of their respective rights — with this difference that the defendants do so for the twofold purpose of estabUshing the fact upon the mother of Mrs. Gaines, and from the nature of the testimony upon which they rely, to show that it also disproves the marriage between her and Clark. I will examine both, and fearing that I may omit something, I will state the proofs upon which each party relies, after having stated the land of proof which the law permits to be given in a civil suit, where bigamy is the point to be determined.
A charge of bigamy in a criminal prosecution, cannot be proved by any reputation of marriage; there must be proof, of actual marriage before the accused can be convicted. But in a civil suit the confession of the bigamist will be sufficient when
The first of them is what they term an ecclesiastical record of a prosecution of Desgrange for bigamy, and a declaration in it imputed to the complainant’s mother. The second paper is her suit against Desgrange for alimony as late as the year 1805. The third is a suit brought by her guardian, Mr. Davis, in her infancy, against the executors of her father for aliment, and' the fourth is a record of a court, properly authenticated, of a suit brought by Zulime in her maiden ñame against the name of Desgrange. This last was introduced by the defendants to show, as late as 1806, that the marriage with Desgrange had not been legally dissolved. And until it was, it is urged that there was
It has been said that the invalidity of a marriage in a civil suit, on account of those causes which make it void ab initio¡ particularly in the case of one void on account of the bigamy of one of the parties, may be proved by the admission of the fact by that party. It so-happens in this case that Desgrange’s admission of his bigamy, excluding his admission of it to Zulime’s family for the present, is proved by a witness whose testimony has not been assailed and cannot be. Madame Benguerel has no connection with the family of the complainant, and her standing and character are such that the defendants' could not impeach her credit on account of the want of either. She was subjected, too, to their cross-interrogation, and it brought out neither difference or contradiction of -herself, nor any thing in the way in which she' gave her testimony to subject her to any suspicion of friendship to the complainant or of any want of memory or une rtainty of her narrative, Madame Benguerel says, “ My husband and myself were very intimate with Desgrange, and when we reproached him for his baseness in imposing upon Zulime, he endeavored to excuse himself by saying that at the time he married her, he had abandoned his lawful wife and never intended to see her again. ” In her answer to a cross-interrogatory put upon this point, she answers, I am not -related to the defendants nor with either of them, nor with the mother of Myra, nor am I at all interested in this suit. It was in New Orleans where I obtained my information.' It will be seen by my answers how I know the facts —-1 was well acquainted with Desgrange, and I knew the lawful wife of Desgrange whom he had married before imposing himself in marriage upon Zulime. Now let this evidence be taken in connection with the arrival of Barbara D’Qrci,‘in New Orleans from France, contemporary with the return of Desgrange and at his instance, and the antecedent connection between them as that is represented by both, and that there is in the record a certificate of a marriage between one Jacobus Desgrange and one Barbara Née D’Orci, in every other particular corresponding with the relation which these persons had been in, to each other in the year 1790, excepting in this that Desgrange was afterwards known as Jerome and not as Jacobus, and it will be admitted that the facts just recited’, with Madame Benguerél’s evidence, are sufficient to estáblish the bigamy of Desgrange when he married the complainant’s mother. Against this confession, what is urged? Nothing but the misapplication of the case of Harman v. McClelland, 16 Louis. 26,
But sufficient as such proof is to establish bigamy in a civil suit, the complainant adds it to record evidence of the fact of Desgrange having been a married man when he imposed himself upon her mother in marriage. The record and judgment óf a court, of competent jurisdiction, was introduced by the defendants as "a part of their proofs to show that there was a legal impediment in the way of Clark’s marriage with Zulime when it occurred, and that continued up to 1806, when they allege that they were divorced. It Was used for that purpose and much relied upon, and it was not until it was shown that the judgment in that case had relation back to the marriage making it absolutely void ab initio, that it was urged that the record was of no account because a part of it was wanting. Here it is necessary to be particular.- I cite from their answers their averments concerning that record. Upon page 58 of the record the defendants introduce it in the following terms, “ That afterwards, on or about the 24th of June, 1806, Zulime Née Carriére, wife of the said Desgrange, did present another petition to the competent judicial tribunal of the city of New Orleans, therein representing herself as the wife and of having intermarried with Jerome Desgrange, and praying for a divorce and a dissolution of the bond of matrimony existing between her and the said Jerome Desgrange, and which was subsequently decreed, subsequent to the birth of the complainant, Myra; and for further answer, say that in the city of Philadelphia, on or about the 2d day of August, 1808,' Mrs. Desgrange having obtained a divorce from her husband, Jerome Desgrange, and having resumed her maiden name, did enter into a contract - of matrimony with and did intermarry with James Gardette. ” The preceding extract shows that the defendants not only use it to establish the fact of a divorce, but for the purpose of sustaining the rightfulness of Zulime’S marriage with Gardette. Now if the record, imperfect though it may be, shows that the divorce could only have been decreed on account of the legal invalidity of the marriage with Desgrange, at the time of its occurrence, then unless it can be shown that the law interposed an impedi
The deficiency in the record of divorce is the want of the petition. In every other particular it is perfect. So much so that it discloses the object- of the petition, or the cause for which the suit was brought, and for which the judgment of the court was given.
It was-introduced by the defendants, who allege that it was a decree, of divorce, annulling the bonds of matrimony between Desgrange and Zulime, by a competent tribunal in New Orleans ; record 58, 59 ; 216, and was so pleaded in their answers. When so introduced by them and admitted by the court as admissible evidence, the complainants proved the loss of the petition, and the short manner of entering judgments in the court of which it was a record. 1206. I must here, remark, though so brought forward by the defendants, that the majority of this court has rejected it from having any such effect.
At this point, then, my inquiries begin in opposition to the .court’s conclusion, as it has been announced by my learned brother. The points axe, can we learn what is the- effect of judgment without the petition? Can we ascertain the cause for which the judgment was rendered without the petition ?
What is the effect of the (judgment? It is one of a court of record having jurisdiction of the subject and over the parties to the suit. It annuls the, bonds of matrimony — as the act of a competent tribunal the judgment must be presumed to have been rightfully rendered, until the contrary appears. This rule applies as well to every judgment or decree rendered in the' various stages of a cause, from initiation of a suit to the final adjudication, affirming that the plaintiff either has or has not a right of action;
What but divorce, as contradistinguished from separation a
But the cause assigned in the petition for the divorce may be satisfactorily made out, from the law of Louisiana as it then was, and from the rest of the record. Between 1803 and 1807, the United States Territorial Government of New Orleans, passed no law upon the subject of marriage and divorce. This judgment then in Zulime’s suit could not have been founded upon any statutory enactment after the transfer of Louisiana to the United States. In the discussion of this point, in order that I may be better understood, that must be kept in mind. Then I say, that the laws of Spain as they were in the provincial condition of Louisiana, concerning marriage and divorce, and in every other respect, by the laws of nations, and by the Act of Congress of 3804, organizing a government for New Orleans, remained in force there until legislatively repealed. Now,, we learn from those laws, that they provided for sentences of the nullity of marriages and for divorces. From the same law, we learn that marriage could not take place, if there existed any canonical or civil impediment. 1 White, Recop. 44; Johnson’s Civil Laws of Spain, 50. There are fourteen canonical impediments for which divorces were granted a vinevlo matrimonii. In 1 M. & C. S. Partidas, 460, it is said there are fifteen, but upon the examination of the recital of them, it will be found there are substantially only fourteen, the last mentioned being only a prohibition subjecting the party to the discipline of the church, not extending to the dissolution of the marriage.
Canonical doctors express the fourteen impediments as I shall state them, which for all the purposes of this case, and for understanding them, will be found explained, though not in their order in the Partidas.
Error, conditio, votum, cognatio, crimen, Cnltus, disparitas, vis, ordo, ligamen, honestas Si sis affinis, si forte coire nequibus Si parochi et duplicis desit, presentía testis Eaptare sit mulier, nee parti reddita tutse.
The civil impediments are those which proceed from want of understanding, &e. &c., and from previous marriage, the wife or husband of the party contracting a second marriage being alive. For such causes as have just been stated, divorces could be granted a vinculo matrimonii. Such was the law of marriage and divorce of the Catholic church, so it is still, and it was the [aw of Louisiana before its transfer to the United States, and afterward until it was legislatively repealed, and by it the judg
.With then'the law in view, we are prepared to ask for what cause was the divorce sought by Zulime in her petition? We see, from the statement which has been made of the law, that it could not have been for a supervenient cause, and .that it must have been for one antecedent to the marriage, which made it absolutely void from its beginning,-notwithstanding all the forms of marriage had been observed. And what this cause alleged in the petition must have been, cannot be more conclusively shown than it is by the evidence in this case, and by the record of divorce, excluding all other enumerated causes of divorce a vinculo, excepting that of the bigamy of Desgrange. I shall state the evidence hereafter, keeping myself now to the' point of the jurisdiction of the court in rendering a judgment of divorce. It having been shown that the provincial law of Louisiana was in force when the judgment upon Zulime’s petition was given, it follows, as the County Court of New Orleans was constituted with a civil jurisdiction, comprehending also what had been before exclusively ecclesiastical, that the court could only grant divorces a vinculo, for the same causes for which they could have been given by the ecclesiastical courts. Fortunately, ■the position just stated is that of the- highest tribunals of this country, and in those of Louisiana expressly, when they have been called upon to decide what portion of the jurisdiction of the consistory courts for enforcing the canon law, appertained to our tribunals organized with civil jurisdiction. It follows then that the judgment of the County Court upon Zulime’s petition, defectively as that judgment is expressed, could only have been given upon a petition for. a sentence of the nullity of the marriage between the petitioner and Desgrange. Thus with the guide of a settled principle in respect to the law of a country transferred from one dominion to another, until that law has been repealed, the purpose and object of the lost petition in Zulime’s application for a sentence of the nullity of her marriage with Desgrange, is made out with as much certainty as if the petition had not been lost.
I think these results have been shown in respect to the judgment of the County Court upon Zulime’s petition for a sentence of the nullity of her marriage with Desgrange.
1. That the territorial government had not, when the County Court gave the judgment, any statutes concerning marriage and
I consider, then, that the complainant has established by such proof as the law requires, that Desgrange committed the offence of bigamy when .he married her mother; that she could legally disregard the connection and marry another person ■; that she did marry Clark, that the complainant is the only offspring of their union, and is entitled to her legitime in her father’s estáte.
I will here take another view of the record to show that there is in it, complete, and satisfactory secondary evidence of the object and purpose of the lost petition. The plea put in by. the counsel of Desgrange affords a clew, not of itself entirely sufficient, but which, united with the other proceedings, make up what the law terms good secondary evidence of the contents of the petition. It is admitted or cannot be denied, that secondary evidence may be given to supply the loss. The plea denies the jurisdiction of the court over divorce cases, and then urges that the court could not consider the question of damages, until the. validity of the marriage between the defendant and Zulime had been ascertained and declared, — validity of the marriage, it must be remembered. Can any thing show more plainly that its invalidity was the cause assigned in the petition. Again, the evidence in the record ,of the County Court shows that Desgrange’s bigamy in marrying the complainant’s mother was the subject of her petition and of the court’s inquiry. I take from the record of the County Court a part of what, upon the trial of the case, the defendant introduces as his testimony, which thé defendants in this suit have made theirs by the introduction of it. The witnesses speak of imputed bigamy to Desgrange, his flight on account of it, and his confession. In the County Court, not one of them answers,, to any thing else than to the inquiry, whether or not Desgrange had been married, and whether or not that wife was not alive when he married Zulime. One of the witnesses, and the most conclusive that could be in such a case,
My' views having, been given upon th'é- credit of Madame Despau and upon the testimony relating to • the bigamy of Desgrange, I turn to that upon which the defendants rely to - disprove it. Their first paper is termed the ecclesiastical proceedings in a prosecution against Desgrange, in 1802, for bigamy.
It is not used to show that he was not a bigamist, for the paper contains only an interlocutory order, suspensive of further action, until the inquiry shall be resumed. But it is used, because it is said there is in this paper a declaration by Zulime of her disbelief of the charge against Desgrange, and that she was then his wife.
It is the misfortune of the complainant, that her case has been considered by.the court with the rejection of the judicial proof of the bigamy of Desgrange, which is admitted to be admissible in evidence, and with the allowance against her of another paper, to which her counsel objected in the court below and here also, which in the' way it was offered is not admissible. Two questions arise upon this paper: Is it an official register or record of a court, authenticated as it should be to make it testimony ? What is its effect as testimony ?
It has no other authentication of its genuineness' than the declarations of Bishop'Blanc and Father Kemper. The latter says, he is the keeper of the records of the Catholic church at New Orleans, and that the copy in the record is an exact. copy of a paper found there, Rec. 577. The bishop says, he has the charge of such records of the bishopric as exists, and he finds among them a paper which is truly copied, Rec. 694.
Under these certificates this paper has been used by the court to rebut the parol proofs of the bigamy of - Desgrange. The intention cannot be objected to, but rebutting testimony must have legal -admissibility before it can be received in evidence. In this instance it is altogether wanting.
Public writings consist of the acts of public functionaries in the executive, legislative, and judicial departments of government, including under such general head the transactions which official persons are required to enter into books or registers, or to file, where books are not kept, in the course of their public duties, and which occur within the circle of their own personal knowledge and observation. To this class may be referred the acts of, foreign states and the judgments of foreign courts.
. Now this ecclesiastical record, as it is called, is either a transaction which official persons are required to keep, or it is the judgment of a foreign court. Whether one or the other, the certificates of the bishop and Father Kemper are not sufficient to make it testimony.
If it shall be said to be the first, before it can he received as an official register, it must be shown by the party offering it, to be one which the law reauired to be kept for the public benefit
I have thus shown what the rule of evidence is in respect to public or official writings, from adjudicated cases. The same rule prevails in the courts of all of the States of this Union, and has hitherto done so in the courts of the United States. In England we have just seen, that the statute of 3 & 4 Viet, confirms it; by the provision which it makes in respect to the registers of dissenting chapels. In Louisiana the rule is substantially the same as it is in the courts of the other States — the only difference being that it is better guarded and has been put, in its application to cases there, upon a broader or more precise comprehension of the philosophy of evidence. This paper, under the decisions of the courts of that State, would not have been permitted to be evidence in the cause. Each State may regulate for itself the admission of such writings in evidence. Until it shall be done, the general rule must be in all of them as it has been, and it is binding in the courts of the United States.
It matters not that this paper is termed an ecclesiastical record. Such a designation gives it no authority over any other official register. It has the same force and no more than any other paper of the same kind would have from any other church or sect of Christians in our country. It stands upon the same footing as such a paper would, coming from the bishop and rector of an Episcopal church, or from any other denomination of Christians. All of them under our constitutions — State and national — being separately, according to the faith of each, upon an equality and having the same legal protection from all tortious interference and disturbance. The rule for which I have been contending, induced me, in the consideration of this case, to reject the certificate of the marriage of Desgraiige with Barbara D’Orci, introduced by the complainant. It is not sufficiently authenticated to ■ make it evidence any more than the ecclesiastical paper is — but it is as much go. And I -should not have mentioned it at all, had it not been that this court, in making its decision, has used her declarations in that paper to show that Barbara and Desgrange were not married, though both admit they were engaged to be married, and that she left her father’s house with that intention.
But I have not yet done with tnis paper. Fatiguing as it is to me to state all of the legal objections to its admissibility in evidence, I yield my own convenience to the importance' of the rule for which I am contending, in some hope that what I write may. attract professional attention, arid prevent the disregard of it again.
Indeed, I do not know a rule of evidence which has been more uniformly adhered to than this has been, I regret that it should have been overlooked in this case, for I know it will be mischievously used, though I may not be able to anticipate, the extent of mischief it may do. I take the rule to be this; that such registers must be promptly made, at least without such delay as to impair their credibility, and that they must be made by the person whose duty it is to make them, and in the mode required by law, if any has been prescribed. Doe v. Bray, 8 B. C. 813; Walter v. Wingfield, 18 Ves. 443. This .ecclesiastical paper, now so much relied upon and so fatally used against the complainant, has no one of the requisites to make it evidence. It has a date, but how it got among the records of the church, or when, or by whom it was put there, no one knows. I remember a case where the record of a baptism made by a minister before he had any connection with the parish, with the private memorandum of the clerk who was present at the ceremony, was rejected. It was not contemporaneous with the occurrence; but the clerk’s memorandum was not'enough. How far short ibis ecclesiastical paper is from having such proof to sustain it! I will now proceed to apply the rules of evidence as they have been .stated, because it will show that more formidable objections exist to the use of this ecclesiastical paper than merely legal insufficiency of its authenticity.
It purports to contain the action .of public authorities having á criminal jurisdiction, before Louisiana was ceded to the United States. The presumption is that it and other documents lilre it had a regular official depository. The defendants invoke it as such. It should then have been placed upon the transfer of the public papers of Louisiana, with the authorities of the
The Catholic church in Spain, and the Spanish ecclesiastical authorities in New Orleans, had a political character, and did exercise an undefined jurisdiction in criminal matters of a certain description. And records may have been kept of its transactions.
. But, since the cession of Louisiana to the United States, the Catholic society in New Orleans has not had any political connection with that institution. There has not been any regular association or hierarchy of Catholic Christians there, since the change of government. The cathedral church, formerly a part of that institution, became private upon the transfer of the Province to the United States, whatever may be its voluntary ecclesiastical subordination to the church of which it was once a political part. This separation suggests at once the inquiry, what portion of the records and papers of the original Spanish hierarchy, were transferred to the' private and unrecognized body ■of American Catholics in New Orleans? Also what measures were taken by them in their new relation to our government to preserve them from mutilation or from additions ? Have there been in the cathedral of New Orleans regular keepers of these papers from the beginning of the political change in the condition of that church ? None of these inquiries can be judicially assumed. Courts cannot recognize any private association of persons or sect of Christians as legitimately the successors of the political authorities of Spain, for the custody of documents of a ■ public nature. If these records had been handed over by the bishop to his successor, or were considered as any part of those public archives which were to be transferred to the United States, proofs of such connection should have been made before the paper in question could be received as evidence.. There is no proof of any such connection, or that any thing of the kind was done. All that is proved about it is that the present bishop has the charge of such papers as are to be found in the cathedral, without any proof that they were regularly transmitted to
I speak with a proper sense of the sacred characters which they fill, but I cannot'judicially recognize them to be the successors of the public authorities of Spain in Louisiana for the custody of papers forming a part of its provincial judicial documents.
If the paper in question had been handed over officially to the predecessors of the bishop, or had been allowed inadvertently .to continue among the archives of the cathedral, the bishop should have been called upon to prove all that he knew about it, before this paper was made evidence in this case. And so' of any other' that- may be in the archives of the cathedral, and which may be hereafter offered as evidence in any other case. For all that appears this paper may have found its way irregularly and fraudulently into the archives of the church. No one- proves that it formed a part of them at any time preceding the commencement of this suit. It had been repeatedly sought for without success. When found- by the defendants — or for them — it was under circumstances which show that the papers of the cathedral have not been kept with care or regularity, or with any knowledge of what they were. What they now are as a whole - is not known. They have neither been collated nor catalogued. What they were when the ecclesiastical authorities of Spain ceased to- have a political existence in Louisiana no one knows. The bishop speaks of them as being only a part of what once existed.
In this deficient condition of the archives of the cathedral, without knowing how it has happened, I cannot say that any paper has been abstracted or fraudulently added, to serve such a purpose as this paper has done. But I can say, from the proofs ia this cause, that the archives of the cathedral have been too negligently kept, for any paper in them of provincial date, to be received as evidence, without the most cautious scrutiny into its authenticity. The rules for the admission of public papers as
I proceed now to show the misuse which' has been made of it and its worthlessness as testimony.
It does not disprove Desgrange’s admission that, be was a married man when he married Zulime. It positively leaves him under a criminal prosecution for bigamy. The order given' in it is not an acquittal. It suspends proceedings only for further investigation, and releases Desgrange from jail, because, up to that time,- his guilt had not been proved. In other words,, the evidence was thought sufficient to subject him to another trial, and not enough for a final judgment against or for' him. Such is the paper. It cannot, then, be used for any other or 'larger purpose. The depositions which it contains cannot be made evidence in any case between other parties. The whole of the paper is an unfinished suit in which nothing was determined. It stands upon the same footing as other unconcluded prosecutions, where there has' been a judgment of discontinuance, non-suit, nolle prosequi, or the ignoramus of a bill by a grand jury. All of us know that the proofs' taken in either of these cases cannot be used as evidence in another inquiry into the truth of facts at issue. They are excluded, as well by the practice in Louisiana, as they are by the other State courts, and by those of England. Indeed, the rule excluding such proofs includes the exclusion of such as are annexed to judgments in a criminal prosecution. Such a judgment cannot be given in evidence in a civil action to establish the truth of the facts on which it was
rendered, any more than a judgment in a civil action could be given for the same purpose in a criminal prosecution. I cite the cases, Smith v. Rummens, 1 Camp. 9; Hathaway v. Barrow, 1 Camp. 151; 2 C. M. & R. 139; Jones v. White, 1 Str. 68, B. N. P. 233; Hillyard v. Grantham, cited by Lord Hardwicke in Brownsword v. Edwards, 2 Ves. Sen. 246; Gibson v. McCarthy, Cas. Temp. Hardw. 311; Wilkinson v. Gordon,
The rule is, that depositions taken in one cause may be used in another trial between the same parties, involving the same issues, if the witnesses are dead or absent. They have never been permitted, when the witness was alive and within the jurisdiction of the court. No case can be found in which it has been done before it was allowed in this, and this will never be cited as an authority for a different rule. The rule is the same everywhere. ■ In no courts has it been more clearly affirmed than it has been in the courts- of Louisiana. In Hennen v. Munro, 4 N. S. 449, it is said that a deposition of a witness taken in a former suit is admissible if he be dead or absent.
Here the fact in dispute wa's the bigamy of Desgrange. For that he was arraigned, and in fact tried. Among other depositions found in the proceedings, is one which it is said was made by Zulime. The object of the defendants was to use it, to show that she had admitted herself to be the wife of Desgrange, and. had expressed her disbelief of his bigamy, after it is said she had married Clark. ■ They were permitted to do so, though it was known to the court and to the parties, that Zulime was alive, and then within the jurisdiction of the court. Indeed, the defendants had joined in a commission to take her testimony. "Why it was not executed does not satisfactorily appear. But that she was within the court’s jurisdiction when this case was tried, and that it was known to the court and to the defendants, the record proves. The defendants then had no legal right to use a deposition which they ascribed to her, as haying been made in a criminal proceeding more than forty years before. If her testimony was wanted for their defence, they ought to have made her a witness. They could have- done so. There was nothing .in her relation to the parties in this suit to prevent it. Had she been made a witness, and in her examination had made a different representation of facts from those attributed to her in the deposition, then would .have occurred the question, whether the latter could be used to contradict and impeach her. The use of such depositions, is what is termed secondary evidence. In order to make, them substitutes for the viva voce testimony of the deponents, it is- essential that they be regularly taken' under legal proceedings duly pending, on an occasion sanctioned by law; and unless the case'be provided for by statute, or by a rule of court, it-must further appear that the witness cannot- be personally produced. I give the rule as it is, without meaning that the courts of the United States could make any such' exception by a rule of court. But the rule, as I
But I pass on, as hastily as I can, to another objection to the use of this deposition, and one more interesting than those which have been already stated.
It is, that by the law of Louisiana, as it then was and still is, Zulime could • not be a witness in the criminal prosecution against Desgrange, supposing her to be his wife, as the defendants assert her to have been. A husband may not be a witness for his wife, or the wife for the husband,'in a criminal proceeding. A wife may impeach marriage to obtain a sentence of nullity; she may be a witness to certain facts in relation, to those impediments deemed by law sufficient to annul the marriage. But neither by the civil nor canon law, or by the common law, can she be a witness for or against, her husband, when he is prosecuted for any offence which the law punishes in his person. Nor can she be a witness in a prosecution of him for-bigamy with herself, until after the relation, of husband and wife has been proved not to be legal, on account of direct and positive proof of the husband’s first marriage; then she may be a witness to prove the second marriage. I read from 1 Greenl. sect. 339, p. 409, this sentence: “ Upon a trial for bigamy, the first marriage being proved and not controverted, the woman with whom the second marriage was had, is a competent witness, for the second marriage is void. But if the, proof of the first marriage were doubtful, and the fact is controverted, .it is conceded she would not be admitted. It is said in Cowen’s Phillips, vol. 1, p. 79, ed. of 1849: on an indictment for a second marriage, though the first wife cannot be a witness, yet the second wife may, after proof of the first marriage; after such proof she would be • competent to give evidence for as well as against the prisoner. Such was the law of Louisiana when Desgrange was prosecuted for bigamy, and when Zulime was forced into it as a witness. I know of but three exceptions to the incompetency of a wife to testify against a husband in a' criminal case; they give to her ample security against his abuse. She is a competent witness in an inquiry against her husband, upon a charge which.affects her liberty or person. Such, for
But im another view this deposition is good for nothing. It places Zulime in an inconsistent position with herself, and it is opposed by all the other proofs in this cause. Its utmost weight, in respect to her, is to diminish the force of her declaration, in respect to the filiation and legitimacy of her-child, and that very remotely. Her acts and conduct are at variance with the deposition ; the last was taken when she had been for some time separated from Desgrange, avowedly for his bigamy in marrying her. She had not lived with him for more than a year, and did not at any time afterwurds live with him. When the prosecution of Desgrange began she was living with her family. When Desgrange was released from prison no steps were taken by either for a reunion. He left New Orleans immediately upon his release from jail, and did not return to it until after the Vicar-General’s power to resume the prosecution against him had ceased, by the transfer of Louisiana to the United States. He is charged in the prosecution with an intention to leave New Orleans to avoid it. He- did so instantly upon his release from
I will now briefly notice two other papers which the defendants were permitted to use as evidence in this cause in violation of every rule for its admission. One of them is the record of a suit for alimony, which,-it is said, was brought by the mother of the complainant, against Desgrange, in 1805. The other is a proceeding by Mr. Davis, the guardian of the complainant.
The petition in the first is in the usual formula to get such a case before the court, but the facts averred in it are not sworn to. It is signed by counsel in behalf of the petitioner, but without more to show that she had directed it, or that she was in any way informed of its contents. It is dated about the time of the complainant’s birth. The object of the defendants in introducing this paper is to show that the mother of the complainant admitted herself in the petition to be the wife of Des grange, three years after her alleged marriage with Clark. This cannot be done. Such a paper would not be admissible in a suit against Zulime herself. It cannot, then, be so in any other suit between other parties. The petition, in such a case, is not admissible in another suit against the petitioner, because, not being sworn to, its language is regarded as merely the suggestion of counsel, made for the purpose of bringing in a defendant to answer. .An answer in chancery, put in under oath, is receivable against the party who swears to it; but that the narrative part of a bill in equity, or a declaration at common law can be used in another suit against the plaintiff in the first, has never been decided. The reverse has repeatedly been. It would certainly not do in the artificial and technical modes., in which rights are prosecuted in courts of justice to make us answerable for the manner in which they are described or averred by counsel. If, then, the mother of Zulime would not be bound in another suit by what is stated in the petition of the paper in question, it must be admitted that the paper was erroneously used'as evidence, to effect the. rights of her child in this suit.
It is only necessary to say concerning the statement in the proceeding brought by Davis, that he denies upon oath that he authorized his counsel to say, that the complainant was the natural child of Clark.
I have now noticed every paper, which has been brought into this suit as evidence. My views of each of them are sustained by cited authorities. They show that the ecclesiastical record, and every paper in connection with it, and the records for alimony, have been forced into this case as evidence for the defendants contrary to law.
Besides these papers, the defendants have no other evidence, to gainsay the proofs which the complainant has given of her father’s marriage with her mother, her right to marry him when she did so, on account of the bigamy of Desgrange. There is nothing in the record, making it doubtful that her father and mother repeatedly acknowledged that she was their legitimate child. One witness, and one only, was called by the defendants
There was but one way to get rid of the force of the com-plainant’s evidence in support of her legitimacy. It was to assail the integrity of her witnesses. The way in which that' was attempted, I have shown in respect to Mesdames Despau and Caillavet. It has succeeded with the majority of the judges who have Med this cause with me. But I feel authorized to say, that in all of my experience in the profession, I have never heard of witnesses so assailed before and upon such illegal testimony ; not insufficient, but inadmissibly introduced into this cause for that purpose. My brother Daniel thinks as I do, and will express himself accordingly. Besides, these witnesses have been said to be unworthy of credit, when in the most important particulars of their testimony, concerning Clark’s marriage with the mother of the complainant, and of her legitimacy, they are confirmed by other disinterested witnesses to whom Clark admitted both; not once, but several times on different occasions. These persons are strangers to the parties in this suit,
“ Court of Probate.
William Wallace Whitney, and Myra, his wife, v. E. O’Bearne, and others.
Interrogatories to be propounded to witnesses on behalf of the complainants in this cause:
1st. Were you acquainted with the late Daniel Clark, deceased, of New Orleans ; if so, were you. at any time on terms of intimacy with him ?
2d. Did the said Daniel Clark leave, at his death, any child acknowledged by him as his own ? If so, state the name of such child; whether said child is still living; and, if living, what name it now bears ; as also state when and where and at what times said acknowledgment of said child was made.
. 3d. Have you any knowledge of a will said to have been executed by said Clark, shortly before his decease ; did you- ever read or see the said will, or did Daniel Clark ever tell you that he was making said will, or had made said will 1 If so, at what time and place; and if more than once; state how often and when and where.
4th. If you answer the last question' affirmatively, state whether the said Daniel Clark ever declared to you, or to any one in your presence, the contents of the said will; and if so, state the whole of said declarations; and the time, place, and manner, in which they were made, before whom, and all the circumstances which occurred, when such declaration was made.
5th. Slate how long before his death you saw the said Daniel
6th. State whether you ever heard any one say he had read the said will; if so, state whom, what was said, and whether the said person is now living or not.
(Signed.) Wm. W. Worthington,
For Plaintiff.
Cross-Examined.
1st. Bach .witness examined and answering any'one of the foregoing interrogatories, is desired to state his name, age, residence, and employment; and whether he is in any manner connected with or related to any of the parties to the suit, or has any interest in the event of the same.
2d. How long did you know Daniel Clark, and under what circumstances ? And if you presume to state that Daniel Clark left any child at his decease, state who was the mother of said child, and who was the husband of that mother. State all the circumstances fully and in detail, and whether said Clark was ever married; and if so, to whom, when and where.
3d. If said Clark ever acknowledged to you that he supposed himself to be the father of a child, state when and where he made such an acknowledgment, and all the circumstances of the recognition of such a child or children, and whether the act was public or private.
.-4th. Did said Clark consider you as an intimate..friend, to whom he might confide communications so confidentialas those relating to his will ? If aye, state what you know of your own personal knowledge of the contents of said will, and be careful to distinguish between what you state of your own knowledge, and what from hearsay.
The defendants propound the foregoing interrogatories with a full reservation of all legal exceptions to the interrogatories in chief, the same not being pertinent to the issue, and the last of said interrogatories being calculated merely to draw from the witnesses'hearsay declarations.-
(Signed.) L. C. Duncan,
For Defendants.
Ifi pursuance pf the annexed commission, dirécted to Yne, the undersigned, justice of the peace, personally appeared Pierre Baron Boisfontaine, who, being duly sworn to declare the truth, on the questions put to him in this cause, in answer to “the foregoing interrogatories, says:
1st. In reply to the first interrogatory, he answers :
■ -I was acquainted with the late Daniel Clark, of New Orleans, and was many years intimate with him.
Mr. Clark left at his death a daughter, named Myra, whom he acknowledged as his own, before and after her birth, and as long as he lived. In my presence he spoke of the necessary preparation for her birth; in my presence asked my brother’s wife to be present at her birth; and in my presence proposed to my sister and brother-in-law, Mr. S. B. Davis, that they should take care of her after her birth. After her birth he acknowledged her to me as his own, constantly, and at various places. He was very fond of her, and seemed to take pleasure in talking to me about her. When he communicated to me that he was making his last will, he told me he should acknowledge her in it as his legitimate daughter. The' day before he died, he spoke to me about her with great affection, and as being left his estate in his last will. The day he died he spoke of her with the interest of a dying parent, as heir of his estate in- his last will. She is still living, and is now the wife of William Wallace Whitney.
3d. In reply to the third interrogatory, he answers:
About fifteen days before Mr. Clark’s death, I was present at his house, when he handed to Chevalier De la Croix a sealed packet, and told him that his last will was finished,- and was in that sealed packet. About ten days before this, he had told me that it was done. Previous to this, commencing about four months before his death, he had often told me he was making his last -will. He said this in conversations to me on the plantation, and at his house; and I heard him mention this subject at Judge Pitot’s. I frequently dined at Judge Pitot’s, with Mr. Clark, on Sundays. The day before he died, he told me that his last will was below in his office-room, in his little black case. The day he died, he mentioned his last wall to me.
4th. In reply to the fourth interrogatory, he answers:
I was present at Mr. Clark’s house, about fifteen days' before his death, when he took from a small black case, a sealed packet, handed it to Chevalier De la Croix, and said-, my last will is finished; it is in this sealed packet with valuable' papers; as you consented, I havé made you in it, tutor to my. daughter. If any misfortune happens to me, will you do for her all you promised me ; will you take her at once from Mr. Davis ? I'have given her all my estate in my will, an annuity to my mother, and some legacies to friends; you, Pitot and Beileehasse, are the executors. About ten days before this, Mr. Clark, talking of Myra, said that his will was done. Previous to this, he often told me, commencing about four months before his death, that he was making his last will. In these conversations, he' told me that in his will he should acknowledge his daughter Myra
5th. In reply to -the fifth interrogatory, he answers:
I was with Mr. Clark when he died; I was by him constantly for the last two days of his life. About two hours before he died, he spoke of his last will and his daughter Myra in connection and almost his last words were about her, and that this will must be taken care of on her account.
6th. In reply to the sixth'interrogatory he answers :
When, after Mr. Clark’s death, the disappearance of his last
In reply to the first cross-interrogatory, he answers:
My name is Pierre -Baron Boisfontaine; my age about fifty-eight ; I have been some time in Madisonville; ■ the place of my family abode is near New Orleans, opposite side of. the river; I was eight years in the British army; I was several years agent for M. Clark’s plantations; since his death have been engaged in various' objects; I now possess a house and lots, and derive my revenue from my slaves, cows, &c. I am in no manner connected with, or related to, any of the parties of this suit; I have no interest in this suit.
In reply to the second cross-interrogatory, he answers :
I knew Daniel Clark between nine and ten years; I knew him as the father of Myra Clark; she was born in my house, and was put by Mr. Clark, when a few days old, with my sister and brother-in-law, Samuel B. Davis. I was Mr. Clark’s agent for his various plantations — first the Sligo and the Desert, then the Houmas, the Havana Point, and when he died of the one he Írarchased of Stephen Henderson. He respected our misfortunes, mowing that our family was rich and of the highest standing in St. Domingo before the revolution. The mother of Myra Clark was a lady of the Carriére family. Not being present at any-marriage, I can only declare it as my belief, Mr. Clark was her husband. To answer this question in detail as is demanded, it is necessary that I state what was communicated to me. It •was represented to me that .this lady married Mr. Désgrange in good faith; but it was found out some time afterwards that he already had- a living wife, when lady Née Camére, separated from him. Mr. Clark, some time after this, married her at the North. When the time arrived for it to be ma’de public, interested
In reply to the third cross-interrogatory, he answers :
Mr. Clark made no question on this subject before .and after her birth, and as long as he lived he exercised the authority of a parent over her destiny. He was a very fond parent; lie sustained the house of Mr. Davis and Mr. Harper, because my sister had her in care, and Mrs. Harper suckled her. He sustained Harper as long as he lived, and conferred great benefits on my brother-in-law. He spoke of her mother with great respect, and frequently told me after her marriage with Mr. Gardette, that he would have made his marriage with her public if that barrier had not been made, and frequently lamented to me that this barrier had been made, but that she was blameless. He said he never would give Myra a step-mother. "When, in 1813, he communicated to me that he was making his last will for her, he showed great sensibility as to her being declared legitimate in it. While I was with him at his death-sickness, and even at the moment he expired, he was in perfect possession of his senses; and no parent could have manifested greater affection than he did for her in that period. Nearly his last words were about her, and that his will must be taken care of on her account. She, the said Myra, is the only child Mr. Clark ever acknowledged to me to be his.. She was born in July, 1805.
In reply to the fourth cross-interrogatory, he answers:
I was a friend of that confidential character, from the time of said Myra’s birth. Mr. Clark treated me as a confidential friend in matters relating to her and his affairs generally.
In reply to the fourth cross-interrogatory:
I have stated what I knew concerning Mr. Clark’s last will. My recollection of these facts is distinct. The circumstances connected with them were of such a character that my recollection of them could not easily be impaired.
(Signed) P. Baron Boisfontaine.
Which answers being reduced to writing were sworn to and signed by the said witness -in my presence; in testimony whereof
(Signed) David B. • Morgan,
Justice of the Peace, [l. s.]
A true copy' of the commission for interrogatories, (and answers thereto,) propounded to Pierre Baron Boisfontaine, on file in court of probates, in and for the parish and city of New Orleans.
W. F. C. Duplessis,
New Orleans, 20th April, 1840. Register of Wills.”
Bellechassé*s testimony confirms that of Boisfontaine, as to Clark’s frequent acknowledgments that Myra was his legitimate daughter. Mrs. Smyth, formerly Mrs. Harper, who nursed- her, does the same. Each of them also speak with positiveness concerning the will of 1813. With three such witnesses■ to sustain them, I believe that Mesdames Despau and Caillavet have spoken the truth' concerning. Clark’s marriage with Zulime. If they did not, the testimony of Bellechasse, Boisfontaine, and Mrs. Smyth, is the most remarkable coincidence of truth with falsehood that has ever happened, and it can only be resisted by imputing to all of them, a combination to perjure themselves for the same purpose. That no one has said or can believe. Bellechasse and Boisfontaine were brought into this case as witnesses, with characters of their own to command belief and respect. Neither of them can be doubted, for the defendant’s witnesses- who were brought to assail them, could only answer that both had always been honorable men. Mrs. Smyth’s veracity has not been questioned in any way. I cannot then but believe, that the paternity and legitimacy of Myra Clark Gaines has been fully established, as the law requires it to be done. There is nothing in the case opposed to it, but those doubts and suspicions which will sometimes bear down truth, in its relation to the extraordinary realities of life. The history of Mrs. Gaines is one of them. It has been made more so by the result of her case in this court.
I will now notice two other points which were urged in the argument of this case.
It was said, the complainant could not recover, even if it had been proved or was admitted that her • father and mother were married, because there had not been, before that marriage took place, a sentence of the nullity of the marriage with Desgrange.
The other was, supposing Zulime to have been then free to marry and that she did marry Clark, it was a clandestine
Án inaccurate translation of the 4th Law, of the 20 th Tit., of the 8th Book, of the Nueva Recopilación, was cited in support of the first. It shall be given at length, followed by the original, and with what I believe to be a correct translation. Without doing so, .the inapplieation of the law to this case, would not be seen.
The 8th Book, Tit. 20, Law 4, Nueva Recopilación, as translated, and cited reads, thus: “ Should a woman, either married, or even only publicly betrothed, before-Our Holy Mother the Church, commit adultery, although she should allege and show that her marriage is null and void, either on account of near relationship by consanguinity, or affinity within the 4th degree, or BECAUSE ONE OF TH1J SPOUSES WAS PREVIOUSLY BOUND BY ANOTHER marriage, or had made a vow of chastity, or was about entering a religious community, or had some other reason — yet for all this she is not to be allowed to do what is forbidden and she cannot prevent her husband from bringing a suit for adultery, both against her and the adulterer, as if the marriage was not a true one. We decree against such persons -WHOM WE CONSIDER AS HAVING COMMITTED ADULTERY, (que habernos por adúlteros,) the law of the fuero be strictly followed, which treats about adulterers, and is the first law of this title. ” See Nueva Rec., Book 8, Tit. 20, Law 4'.
The original is as follows :
Ley lili. .Que la desposada que comete adulterio, no se escusa por dezir que el matrimonio fue ninguno y no valió.
Si alguno muger estando con alguno casada, o desposada por palabras de presente en haz de la sancto madre Iglesia cometiere adulterio, que aungue se diga y prueue p0r algunas causas v razones q’el dicho maf . ■ s ■ i • , . s i , tnmonio me ninguno, hora por ser parientes en cósanguinidad, o afinidad^ dentro del quaYto grado, hora porque qualquiera dellos sea obligado antes a otro matrimonio, o aya. facho voto de estidad o de entrar en religion, o por otra cosa alguna, pues ya por ellos no q’ do de fazer lo q’ no deuia, qJ por esto no se escusen a que el marido pueda acusar de adulterio, asi ala muger como al adultero, como si el matrimonio fuesse verdadero. Y mandamos, q’ enestas tales q’ assi auemos por adu teros, y en sus bienes, se execute lo contenido en la ley del fuero de las leyes, que fabla de los que cometen delicto de adulterior, que es la orimera deste titulo.
[Don Fernando, y doña juana en las dichas ley es de toto. Cap. 3i.]
Law IV. That the married woman who commits adultery cannot excuse herself by saying that the matrimony was null and void.
If any woman being married to a man, or engaged by wora de prcesenti, in the face of the holy mother church, shall commit adultery, and shall say and prove by certain causes and reasons, that the said matrimony was null, either because the contracting parties were related by consanguinity or affinity within the fourth degree, or because either of them may have before contracted the obligation to marry another person, or may have made vow of chastity, or to enter into any religious order, or for some other reason, on which account they were not willing to do what they ought not to do, nevertheless these reasons are not such as to prevent the husband from accusing as well the wife as the adulterous man, the same as if the marriage had been valid. And we order that, with regard to these persons,, whom we hold to be adulterers, and likewise with regard to their goods, there shall be executed what is prescribed in the law fuero de las leyes ; which relates to those who commit the crime of adultery.
Recopilación de las leyes; Libro VIH, Titulo XX., de las adulterios, incestos y esturpros.
I write diffidently upon such subjects, but not without due care. The result of my examination is, that the law just given has no bearing upon this case.
It has not so, in the first place, because the penalties to be imposed by-it can only be applied to one who has- been charged and convicted of adultery, upon an ..authorized accusation. By that is meant, such as the laws of Spain permit to be made against an adulterer or adulteress, only by certain persons, and within fixed times. The Spanish law for such a purpose is as fixed as is the punishment of the offence. It does not permit the charge to be made by any or every one. Certain persons are named who may make it, and another can only do so when the scandal has become notoriously offensive to public purity and morals.
I shall cite from the Institutes of Asa Y. Maniel, illustrated, by Palaccos, having the original work and Johnson’s translation before me. And I do so because I find the translation introduced into "White’s Recopilación is frequently cited in 'Louisiana, and is so by one of the learned judges who sat in this case in the Circuit Court.
“ While the marriage is not dissolved by the sentence of the church, the father, the adulteress, her brother, paternal and maternal uncles were legitimate accusers of the adulterer, and for sixty days after a dissolution, either of them may accuse.
If the husband dies, the accusation may be made in six months after, computing from the day when the crime was committed.
So, whilst the married persons were united, five" months were allowed for an accusation, unless force was used, and then the ravisher might be charged at any time within thirty years.
An accusation made after the times stated might be avoided by the accused by such an exception. .■ It was another available exception if the wife could prove she had committed the offence with the consent of her husband: so if knowing the adultery he continues to cohabit with his wife. Nor could he accuse after having said before the judge that he did not wish to accuse his wife. After accusation and an acquittal for want of proofs, the prosecution could not be renewed. A husband of bad habits and dissolute character could not accuse.” I do not notice the note by Palacios to the text, from which the citation has- just been made, because it does not particularly bear upon the point in question. Palacios mo recula ilus lix da; Tomo Segundo; Sep. Ed., 150.
I have, however, been more particular in citing the law for such accusations, that it may be seen, as the mother of the complainant was never accused of adultery according to law, that she cannot be charged now with being an adulteress, to bring upon herself or her child any of the consequences which might have resulted tci both, if she had been convicted under the 4th Law* in Title 20, of the 8th Book, of Nueva Recopilación. But had she been so, the law fuero de las leyesj by which she. would have been punished, does not declare a child that she may have had, illegitimate. That can only be done in another proceeding, in which it shall be proved that such child was the conception of an adulterous connection.
Further, a brief analysis of the law will show that it has no relation to the purpose for which it was cited.
It provides for five specific causes of canonical impediments for which a marriage may be invalidated or pronounced null, with a general provision for others of a like kind, without mentioning any civil disability for which a marriage is null and void, and declares that a married woman, for such causes of canonical impediment, even though her marriage on account of them was not valid, should not prevent the husband of that invalid marriage from accusing her of ad..fiery, and the person also with whom she may have offended. And pronounces them adulterers “upon whom shall be executed what is prescribed in the
I mention the impediments in the order that they are in the case. Consanguinity or affinity within the 4th degree, a contract to marry another person, a vow of chastity, or one to enter into any religious order.
The error of the first translation is a misapprehension of the original in respect to the contract to marry another person. The words in the original are, “Hora porque qualquiera dellos sea obligado antes a otro matrimonio.” They are rendered, “ or because one of the spouses was previously bound by ánother marriage.” They should have been, “ or because either of them may have before contracted the obligation to marry another person.”
The difference between the two is, that the mistranslation substitutes for a contract or obligation to marry, which does not excuse the woman from the charge of adultery, though it'may make her marriage invalid, an actual marriage-disregarded by her from her marriage with another, which is bigamy, and which being imputed to the complainant’s mother, is said to make her illegitimate, because, when she married Clark, there had not b.een a sentence of the nullity of the marriage with Desgrange.
The law of which we are speaking is one' which declares that certain criminal impediments to marriage, mentioning only some of them, shall not excuse a woman from being an adulteress, when she has been either “ married or betrothed before the holy mother, the church.” But bigamy is not an impediment in the sense in which that word is used canonically in respect to marriage. It is a civil objection, because one already married, and that marriage not being dissolved -by death or the operation of law, neither of the parties to it can contract marriage with another without being guilty of the offence of bigamy, which is punished by the Spanish law as an offence, differently from what adultery is, and with the severest penalties. Had it been intended that a marriage with a bigamist should make a woman an adulteress, if, upon finding out the imposition upon her, she shall abandon the impostor and marry another, it would have been so declared. But that is not done, and therefore the 4th law of the 20th title of the 8th book of the Nueva Recopilación cannot be applied in this,.case.
But there'was in the argument a.further misapprehension of the ecclesiastical law of Spain in respect to the' eases of marriage for which sentence of nullity were necessary, before the marriage Avas considered as legally dissolved or only partially so for separation a mensd et thoro. Such sentences were so, only in cases of canonical impediments, whether they were such as
In such cases, the marriage being void from its beginning, on account of the bigamy, it is not necessary that there should be a declaratory sentence of nullity to reinstate the party imposed upon in all the rights of a single person, or unmarried condition. Where there is bigamy there is never a complete marriage, it being only an abuse of the forms of marriage in violation of the ecclesiastical and civil law, which declares “that marriage is null where either of the parties stand already married to another person, for as one cannot be married to two persons at once, the marriage to the first being valid, the other must be void.”
It is true, in such cases, the ecclesiastical court may be resorted to by the party imposed upon, to get a declaration from it that the marriage is void, but not on account of its being a matrimonial cause exclusively of ecclesiastical cognizance, because, as Palacios says, that. the. causes or trials of those who contract a second marriage during the life of the first wife are by a royal circular of the 5th February, 1770, L. 10, tit. 28, lib. 12, Neu. Recop., declared exclusively of royal or lay and military jurisdictions, according to the persons who may offend; but that by the royal decree-of the 10th December, 1781, (which, however, does not appear in the Neu. Rec.) the ecclesiastical jurisdiction may also take cognizance of the mode, and for the reason expressed by the same decree. White, Rec. 1, 46, note 28. But it is optional to the party to make such an application to the ecclesiastial court, and if it be- done, the' question of the validity of the marriage will be raised, and whatever sentence the court may give will be binding. But if convinced of the bigamy, the victim of it may voluntarily withdraw from cohabitation with the bigamist. . For doing so, no penalty, ecclesiastical or otherwise, is incurred, nor any for marrying agE in without a sentence of the nullity of such vicious marriage.
It has, however, been suggested if in a marriage void for bigamy, a party shall be allowed to withdraw from it, without a sentence of nullity being obtained, that the obligation of- marriage will be impaired. The answer is, that experience shows the contrary, as the suit,which is allowed in such cases for .the restitution of conjugal rights, at the instance of the party who has
In conclusion upon this point, the law dedares that bigamy makes a marriage void as if it never had been, replaces the parties as they personally were before such a connection, and though it may be expedient to have a sentence of - its nullity declared for the purpose of restoring rights of property, it is not necessary to enable the party imposed upon to many again. Every thing' concerning p :operty or marital rights, when such a sentence has been given, returns hiñe inde to its former condition. But the sentence in such cases is not a divorce or dissolution of the marriage, for that cannot be dissolved which was never contracted, but it is a declaration that it was null and void from the beginning, and that the party is free from any bond of marriage, and had and hath the liberty and freedom of marrying with another person. Not that as a consequence of the sentence the party has a right to marry another person, but had a right before the sentence of nullity was announced, on account of the- marriage having been void from the beginning. Duchess of Cleveland’s case against Fielding, in the Arches Court of Canterbury.
Such is the fixed form in ecclesiastical proceedings for a sen-. tence of the nullity of a marriage on account of bigamy.
It now only remains for me to notice the’ other objection against the right of the complainant to recover! It is that as the marriage of Clark with her mother was clandestine, that it illegitimates her for the purposes of inheritance. I shall not spéak of the general or particular consequences of clandestine marriages under the Spanish law, as the facts of the case do not seem to me to make it pertinent. All that may have been said upon this point as to the effect of such a marriage’in Louisiana, upon the parties and upon children can have no influence upon the children of marriages validly contracted in another political sovereignty.
The objection assumes that the marriage of Clark and 2ulime
The right of persons to marry in every country where they may happen to be, is not denied, if there be no impediment there or in the condition of the parties in respect to the law of their domicil to prevent them from contracting marriage. Before, then, the validity of the marriage of the complainant’s father with her mother in Philadelphia, can be denied, it must be shown that they could not contract it on account-of a legal disability either there or in Louisiana. The first is'-not pretended. The only objection to it is that she was previously married to Desgrange. That cannot prevail, for I think it has been shown that Zulime’s marriage was void on account of his bigamy in marrying her, and that she had the right, without any sentence of its nullity, to marry another, either in Louisiana or elsewhere. It is certain that in such a case of bigamy, she could marry again in Pennsylvania. Their offspring there would be legitimate. It cannot be made otherwise, because their child happened to be born in Louisiana, Legitimacy is the lawful consequence of lawful marriage and it cannot be taken -away by any subsequent misconduct of parents in respect to the marriage. itself. Heirship, or the right of legitimate children to inherit from, deceased parents, depends upon the law of the place where the property may be. Parents cannot change it except as they may do só according to law. This being so, their misconduct cannot affect the right of a child to inherit or its legitimacy for such a purpose, though it may, in many particulars, affect their own rights as to each other and as to their property. Concealment, in Louisiana, of a marriage elsewhere by persons domiciled there, might very well affect such rights, or the parties to it as relate to property parted with by either whilst they mutually concealed their, marriage. But it would not do so because there was no marriage between them, but from their not holding themselves out to the community as man and wife. It is their duty to do that by the ordinary indicia of the relation. If they do not, they must bear the consequences in respect to property and other matters which may concern them, from their misconduct. But as regards their children, as they axe legitimate according to the lex loci.oí the marriage for all purposes and to inherit that portion which the law gives them of the
The case of Le Breton v. Nouges,
Until' it can be shown that there is a law of Louisiana excepting the child of a lawful marriage in Pennsylvania from the rights of heirship in the first, on account of the domicil of the parents at the time of such marriage, the child’s right'of inheritance cannot be denied.
I have searched in vain all of the codes of Spain and of Louisiana for such a law. I have earnestly sought in judgments of the courts both of Spain and Louisiana for such an one. Nothing can be found in either concerning such a proposition. I think, then, that I run no judicial risk in saying that there is nothing in the way of law to be found interfering with the right of Myra Clark Gaines to the heirship of such portion of her father’s estate as the law of Louisiana gives to an only legitimate child.
Something was said that her right to recover was barred by the statutes of prescription of Louisiana. If her right under them shall be measured by the proofs of the time of her birth, she is not barred. If from the time of the illegal disposition or sale of her father’s estate by his executors, she is not so.. If from the character in which she sues to establish a right of inheritance, there is no statute of prescription to bar her rights.
Those of us who have borne our part in the case will pass
The case itself presents thought for our philosophy, in its contemplation of all the business and domestic relations of life.
It'shows the hollowness of those friendships formed between persons in the greediness of gain, seeking its gratification in a disregard of all those laws by which commerce can only be honestly and respectably pursued.
It shows how carelessness in business and secret partnerships to conduct it with others who are willing to run the risk of unlawful adventures, may give to the latter its spoils and impoverish those whose capital alone gave consequence to the concern.
It shows how a mistaken confidence given to others by a man who dies rich, may be the cause of diverting his estate into an imputed insolvency, depriving every member of his family of any part of their inheritance.
We learn from it that long-continued favors may not be followed by any sympathy from those who receive them, for those who are dearest to our affections.
It shows if the ruffian takes life for the purse which he robs, that a dying man’s agonies soothed only by tears and prayers for the happiness of a child, may not arrest a fraudulent attempt to filch from her, her name and fortune.
We can learn from it, too, that there is a kindred between-virtue and lasting respectability in life, and that transgressions of its proprieties or irregulaj yieldings to our passions in forming the most interesting relation between human creatures, are most likely to make them miserable and to bring ruin upon children.
I do not know from my own reasoning that the sins of parents are visited upon children, but my reason does not tell me that it may not be so. But I do know, from one of those rays shot from Sinai, that it is said for the offence of idolatry, “ I, the Lord God, am a jealous God, and visit the sins of the fathers upon the children unto the third and fourth generation of them that hate me, and show mercy unto thousands-of those who lov me' and keep my commandments.” It may be so for other fences. If it be, let the victim submissively recognize him wi inflicts the chastisement, and it may be the beginning of a .com munion with our Maker, to raise the hope of a richer inheritance than this world can give or take away.
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record from the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Louisiana, and was argued by counsel. On consideration whereof, it is now here ordered, adjudged, and decreed, by this court, that the decree of the said Circuit Court, in this cause be, and the same is hereby, affirmed with costs.
