100 Iowa 22 | Iowa | 1896
In State v. Bennett, 31 Iowa, 24, it is said that this limitation “leads to the inference that the offense is rather a crime against the partner to the marital relation than against society in general. So long as the injured husband or wife suffers the wrong in silence, society, notwithstanding the injury to public morals, is without redress.” In State v. Corliss, 85 Iowa, 18 (51 N. W. Rep. 1154), it is said of this limitation: “This provision is grounded in the regard which the law has for the marital relation, and the right of the husband and wife to condone the wrongs of either towards the other.” Whether we consider adultery as an offense against the public or against the injured spouse, or against both, the limitation is, however, grounded, not in the interests of the public, but in
II. To convict, it was incumbent upon the state to show that Hilda Sophia Macomber was the wife of the complainant, A. H. Macomber, at the time of the adulterous intercourse alleged. The transcript shows that both Mr. and Mrs. Macomber were asked when they were married, and that each answered that it was in 1893, she giving the date as Decomber 28. If this is correct, the evidence fails to show that they were husband and wife, or that Mrs. Macomber was a married woman, at the time of the alleged adultery. Taking all the evidence together, it is perfectly manifest that their marriage was in 1883, instead of 1893, and that 1893 erroneously appears, either from an inadvertence on the part of the witnesses, or of the reporter. Under all the evidence, there is no room for
III. Defendant’s objections to certain questions asked the witness, Mrs. Macomber, were overruled. The objections were upon the ground that the questions were leading and suggestive. These objections were not well founded, and, like a number of others appearing in the record, are not of sufficient importance to merit further notice.
Mrs. Macomber, having testified that the defendant had sexual intercourse with her the first time June 6, 1893, further testified, over defendant’s objection, to subsequent acts of sexual intercourse, the last being about the middle of September. Acts subsequent to that of on or about June 6, were not admissible. See State v. Donovan, 61 Iowa, 278 (16 N. W. Rep. 130.)
IY. Appellant’s further contention is, that the evidence fails to support the charge of adultery, on or about June 6, 1893. True, there- is a conflict in the evidence on that subject, but we think the verdict has ample support.
Complaints are made against the instructions, grounded upon the claim that defendant, being a married man at the time complaint was made, could only be prosecuted on the complaint of his wife; also, upon the ground that it was not proven that Mrs, Macomber