15 S.E. 5 | N.C. | 1892
There are several exceptions to the evidence, as well as exceptions for failure to give the prayers for special instructions. But the point raised by all the exceptions is, in effect, that the first marriage, which was alleged to have taken place in England, could not be shown by the admissions of the defendant, nor by proof of cohabitation and the admissions, but that the proof must be by an eye-witness of the ceremony, or a certified copy of the registration of the marriage, with proof that the minister officiating was authorized by the laws of England to administer the sacraments and solemnize marriage.
The court charged that the admissions of the defendant, standing alone, would not be sufficient evidence of marriage; but that such admissions, together with proof offered in this case of the parties (501) starting to chapel with the avowed purpose of being married, their return, saying they had been, and their subsequent open and continued cohabitation as man and wife, and would be sufficient evidence, if believed by the jury, to establish marriage. While some authority may be found in other states to sustain the charge of the court, we think it more favorable to the defendant than by the best precedents he was entitled to have. But of this the defendant cannot complain.
Proof by an eye-witness of the ceremony, with proof of the authority of the minister, under the laws of the place, to solemnize it, which the defendant contends is requisite, would be certainly plenary proof. It is not, however, the only proof. The circumstances in proof here of the parties starting off to be married, their return as from a marriage, and subsequent open cohabitation as man and wife, were certainly strongly corroborative of the admissions of the defendant, but are not *353
indispensable. We think the true rule is laid down in Miles v. UnitedStates,
In Regina v. Newton, 2 Moo. Rob., 503, Wightman, J., held that the prisoner's admissions, deliberately made, of a prior marriage in a foreign country, are sufficient evidence of such marriage, without proving it to have been celebrated according to the law of the county where it is stated to have taken place. 1 Roscoe Cr. Ev. (8 Am. Ed.), 454.
The rule is consonant with reason as well as with the great weight of authority, ut supra, that in indictments for bigamy "marriage can be proven, like any other fact, by admissions of the party or by circumstantial evidence," and no reason is shown why this should not be so. The weight to be given the admissions is properly a matter for the jury, not for the court.
The affidavit for leave to appeal in forma pauperis is fatally defective under The Code, sec. 1235, in that it does not state that the application is in good faith. This has been often held. S. v. Tow,
Appeal dismissed.
Cited: Vann v. Lawrence,