2 Mich. N.P. 209 | Mich. Cir. Ct., 48th Cir. | 1871
Charge of the Court,
Gentlemen of the Jury:
The information filed in this case alleges that “ German Rouse, late of the township of Leighton, in the. county of Allegan, on the
The statute under which this information is filed, § 587©, O. L., is as follows:
“ All persons being within the degree of consanguinity within which marriages are -prohibited, or declared by law to be incestuous and void, who shall intermarry with each other, or who shall commit adultery or fornication with each other, shall be punished by imprisonment in the State Prison not more than fifteen years,- or in the county jail not more than one year.” This statute includes those eases where the parties sustain the rélation of uncle and niece; where the intercourse is between a man and bis brother’s daughter.
In order to warrant a conviction of the respondent, it is incumbent on the people to prove, beyond a reasonable doubt — to prove to your entire satisfaction (you giving the respondent the benefit of any an.d all reasoaable doubts :)
1. That the respondent did commit fornication with Ida Rouse.
2. That Ida Rouse is, as claimed by the prosecution, the daughter of respondent’s brother.
By fornication, is meant illicit carnal connection; unlawful sexual intercourse. This unlawful intercourse, unaccompanied by any circumstances which tend to aggravate it, is simple fornication ; and when as the result of such fornication a child is horn, it is called bastardy. If a man who is married is guilty of unlawful sexual intercourse, we call it adultery in him. When the act is between parties sustaining relations to each other within certain de_ greea of consanguinity or affiinity, we call it incest. Where the fe. male consents to unlawful intercourse through fraudulent acts, including a promise of marriage, we call it seduction. In’each case the essential fact which constitutes the crime is fornication. Wharton’s Cr. L., p. 975, § 2669, note d. So that to warrant a conviction for adultery, fornication must be proved. If in a prosecution for adultery the prosecutor fails to show the marriage, hut shows the fornication,the^aceused may be convicted of fornication. In short, every ádul
I thérefore advise you that the fact that the respondent is shown to have been a married man at the time of the alleged offence, is no bar to a conviction for fornication; and if guilty of fornication with his niece he is guilty of incest.
Counsel for the respondent contend that if the evidence in this case satisfies you that the alleged intercourse between the respondent and the eomplainiug witness was forcible and against the will of the complaining witness, the crime of the respondent would be rape and not fornication. This .question is not, perhaps, entirely free from, doubt; and I approach the consideration of the question thus presented with some misgivings. It hás been held in an indictment for fornication and bastardy that the testimony of the prosecuting witness that the accused forced her, worked himself under her and in that way foreed her, and that she did not give her consent, was not such as to merge the offence charged in the crime of rape, but that the defendant might be legally convicted of fornication. Com. vs. Parr, 5 Watts & Serg., 345. In New York, it has been held that’eon-sent is essential to the crime, and that if the connection is accomplished by force, the crime is rape and not incest. People vs. Harriden, 1 Park., 344. But there can be no such thing as rape without carnal knowledge — without a penetration of the female. It is true that the essence of the crime is not the fact of intercourse but the injury and outrage to the modesty and feelings of the woman, by means of the carnal knowledge effected by force. And still, as the carnal knowledge in such case is voluntary and unlawful on the part of the man, it would seem to come within the definition of fornication ; and it seems to me that rape is but fornication aggravated by the force employed in accomplishing the act, against the will of the person upon whom the offence is committed.