It is said, in
McKinnon
v.
Morrison,
The first prayer for instructions is legally correct. The State having given evidence of an offence committed in Moore County, any evidence tending to show fornication and adultery between the parties prior to the bar of the statute of limitations, or in another county, would be merely corroborative.
State
v.
Guest,
We concur with his Honor in the instruction given in lieu of the second prayer for instruction. Whether, defendants were married or not was a matter peculiarly within their knowledge. If married, they could have easily shown that fact and at once have put an end to the proceeding. They were themselves competent witnesses. To call upon the State to prove a negative of this character would virtually repeal the statute. Parties might come to this State from other States or foreign countries, or, indeed, from distant counties in this State. The State could not possibly prove, in many cases, that the parties had at no time and in no place ever been married. This construction would license concubinage. On the other hand, it is no hardship on the defendants, when so charged with a scandalous offence, to prove that they live in honorable wedlock. A similar rule, and for the same reason, prevails in indictments for retailing without license. If the retailing is shown, the burden is on the defendant to show that he has license so to do.
State
v.
Morrison,
“ The (State need not prove that the defendants are unmarried. It will be presumed such is the case till defendants offer proof to the contrary.” 8 Am. & Eng. Law, 563; Bishop Statutory Crimes, section 693.
Two other reasons are also to be given for this rule. In a recent case in New Jersey for this offence it is said: “The single state is natural, and during early life, the only possible one, nor is there any period at which it is necessarily terminated. or merged in marriage. In the absence, therefore, of testimony tending to the contrary, the presumption is that the celibacy which exists in youth continues. Therefore, until drawn in question, no affirmative testimony on this point was required from the prosecution.”
State
v.
*889
Gaunt,
50 N. J. L., 491 (1888);
People
v.
Colton,
In civil cases the party who claims property, legitimacy or benefit under and by virtue of a marriage, has the burden of proving it. The objection is urged that the adoption of the same rule in criminal cases would enable grand juries to indict any married couple in the State. This is to presume that grand juries and Solicitors are corrupt, or actuated by malice. In practice it will be found, as has been the experience in regard to retailing without license, that those who are dealing legitimately have no motive for concealment, and that grand juries and Solicitors will respect the limitations of their duty. Indictments will not be found except in those cases in which an investigation is demanded by the surrounding circumstances, and in those very rare cases in which it will be found that the indicted parties were, in fact, married, it is better that they should show their status as married people, a fact which is best known to themselves, than that justice should fail in numberless cases by the State being burdened, not with proving the res gestee of the offence, but with tracing the previous lives of the parties to show non-marriage, which would often be utterly impracticable. The experience of the lower Courts is that, in ordinary cases, the marriage of the defendants is, in fact, scarcely ever relied on, but the defence is that the parties do not cohabit, the burden of proving which lies upon the State.
*890
The defendants except here, for the first time, to the evidence of the witness who testified that he was the husband of the
ferns
defendant, and rely upon
State
v.
Ballard,
Shepherd, J., dubitante. Affirmed.
