49 Ala. 6 | Ala. | 1873
— This is a prosecution by indictment for bigamy. The defendant was found guilty in the court below, and sentenced to the penitentiary for two years. From this judgment and conviction she appeals, and here objects in error to the accuracy of the charges of the court below. The indictment is in the form prescribed by the Code' (p. 810), and all the evidence adduced on the trial is set out in the bill of exceptions.
The offence of bigamy, in this' State, is defined as follows : 44 If any person, having a former wife or husband living, marries another, or continues to cohabit with such second husband or wife, in this State, he or she must, on conviction, be imprisoned in the penitentiary, or sentenced to hard labor for the county, for not less than two nor more than five years.” Revised Code, § 3599. There are some exceptions to this statute, but they do not affect this case, and they need not be noticed. Revised Code, § 3600.
The Ordinance of the Convention adopted on the 30th day of November, 1867, entitled 44 An ordinance relative to marriages between freedmen and freedwomen,” by its first section declares, 44 That all such freedmen and women, who shall now be living together as man and wife, shall be regarded in law as man and wife; and that the children of such connection, whether they be black or of mixed color, shall be and are hereby declared to be, entitled to all the rights, benefits, and immunities of children of any other class under the laws of. Alabama; ” and the second section declares, 44 That all prosecutions for bigamy, adultery, and fornication, instituted against any person or persons who have, by mutual consent, dissolved such connection, and afterwards married another person, shall
It is very evident that this ordinance had only tbe effect to legalize tbe marriages existing between freedmen and freed-women before emancipation. It was not designed to dissolve, nor to permit these marriages to be dissolved by tbe parties themselves. Tbe evidence in tbis case does not show that tbe defendant is a freedwoman, nor that her former or her second husband is of tbis class of our citizens. If they are not, then tbis ordinance does not in any wise apply to them. But I doubt not that tbis was tbe case; otherwise, tbe second part of tbe charge of tbe court below, construing tbis ordinance, would be without meaning. From tbe defence attempted to be set up by tbe defendant in the court below, doubtless she honestly believed that she was authorized by tbis ordinance to do what she has done. That tbe learned counsel who defends her act in tbis court was of tbe same opinion, is very strong ground on which to urge an interposition of tbe pardoning power of tbe executive; but it cannot excuse her, as a plea, before tbe judicial tribunals. That she was ignorant of tbe law, is insufficient as a defence to tbe indictment. 1 Bishop’s Criminal Law, § 376. Tbe evidence shows, also, that tbe marriage to Hartwell, which preceded that to Jenkins, for which tbe defendant is indicted, was not a marriage by cohabitation and tbe force of tbe ordinance above quoted, but was a regular marriage, solemnized by a justice of tbe peace, under license from tbe probate judge of tbe county. Such a marriage can only be dissolved by divorce, or by tbe death of one of the parties, whatever may be their condition, color, or former social and political status. Constitution of Ala. Art. IV. § 30; Revised Code, § 2351. Tbe contract of marriage, in this State, is indissoluble by agreement of tbe parties, and can only be dissolved by divorce, for causes set down in tbe statute, or, possibly, for tbe exceptions named in section 3600 of tbe Revised Code, in favor of tbe parties charged with tbe offence of bigamy.
The judgment of tbe court below is affirmed, and its sentence will be carried into execution, unless, in tbe mean time, tbe defendant should be pardoned by tbe governor, if tbe facts be found such as to justify tbe executive interference.