54 So. 1 | Miss. | 1910
Appellants were convicted of unlawful cohabitation in the circuit court of Harrison county, Miss., and from that conviction and sentence they áppeal to this court.
We will first give a few of the leading facts as disclosed by the record. Mrs. Evans was living in the1 country with her husband. On account of domestic troubles, she left her "husband the latter part of June, 1909, and went to her mother’s home in Gulfport. Her mother was keeping a boarding house. Mrs. Evans stayed with her mother, working in a laundry and a store. While in Gulf-port, the testimony shows that Marvin Spikes was in her company quite often, and visited her occasionally at her mother’s boarding house. On one occasion he was seen to give her some money. While she was in Gulfport, no acts of sexual intercourse or undue intimacy between her and Spikes were shown. About the middle of December, 1909, she went out in the country to a friend’s, a Mr. Carver’s, and remained there about three or four weeks. While there, Spikes came out two or three times, and they seemed pleased to be in each other’s company. ' On the morning of January 26, 1910, Mrs. Carver ‘and husband claimed to have seen defendants under such circumstances that strongly suggested that they had had, or were about to have, sexual intercourse with each other. On the following night they were watched by B. B. Evans, husband of appellant, Mrs. B. B. Evans, and by two other parties. These parties claim to have seen them indulging in sexual intercourse. A few moments after this occurrence these appellants were arrested by the deputy sheriff, by warrant based upon affidavit sworn to by her husband. It seems the deputy sheriff had this warrant in his possession during that entire day. What was done with the legal proceedings the records does not disclose. However, at the next term of the Harrison county circuit court, the defendants were indicted for unlawful cohabitation, under
This section of the Code has been thoroughly considered in the case of Granberry v. State, 61 Miss. 440, and the construction then given it this court has uniformly followed, and will do so in the consideration of this case. The court in that case said, among other things: “It is probably sufficiently accurate to say that it condemns the state of concubinage in which the parties, whether dwelling together or not, habitually indulge in sexual intercourse. It is not necessary that they shall dwell together, nor that they publicly avow the relationship which exists between them. It is sufficient to show that condition or relation, whether it be avowed or concealed which if publicly known would lead men to characterize the woman as the mistress of the man. It is habitual concubinage or lying together which constitute the cohabitation meant by the statute. Where a cohabitation, using the word in its usual sense, is shown, one or more acts of sexual intercourse clearly proved, or circumstances from which the fact of such intercourse would necessarily be inferred, as that the parties slept in the same bed, would uphold a verdict of guilty; but in the absence of evidence of such cohabitation or living together it is not sufficient to prove occasional acts of sexual intercourse. It is necessary to prove such intercourse so often repeated as to become habitual, or circumstances indicating that it is habitual. ’ ’
Testing the facts of this case, as disclosed by the whole, record, by the above statute and the construction of same
We think the case should he reversed and remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
Per Curiam. The above opinion is adopted as the opinion of the court, .and, for the reasons therein given by the commissioner, the case is reversed and remanded.