1. An indictment charging the defendant "with the offense of adultery; for that the said accused, being then and there a married woman, on the first day of June, in the year 1939, in the county aforesaid, did then and there unlawfully and with force and arms live together in a state of adultery with and did and there cohabit and have sexual intercourse with one Jake Underwood, who was then and there a married man," though inapt and perhaps inaccurate, sufficiently charged the defendant (a married woman) with the offense of adultery in the two ways specified by law, to wit: by living in a state of adultery, and by perpetrating a single act of criminal intercourse with a married man who was not her husband.
2. The evidence amply authorized the verdict of guilty of adultery by one of the ways specified, to wit: by perpetrating a single act of criminal intercourse with a married man who was not her husband.
The Code, § 26-5801, declares: "Any man and woman who shall live together in a state of adultery or fornication, or of adultery and fornication, or who shall otherwise commit adultery or fornication, *Page 851
or adultery and fornication, shall be severally indicted, and shall be severally punished as for a misdemeanor; but it shall, at any time, be within the power of the parties to prevent or suspend the prosecution and punishment by marriage, if such marriage can be legally solemnized." Under this law "there are three distinct kinds of indictable sexual intercourse, viz., adultery, fornication, and adultery and fornication, the offense in each instance being a joint one. If both the parties to its commission are married, each is guilty of adultery; if both are single, each is guilty of fornication; if one is married and the other single, each is guilty of adultery and fornication."Kendrick v. State,
The defendant further contends, that, "omitting the language in regard to living in a state of adultery, every allegation of the special presentment could be admitted without the accused admitting guilt of any criminal offense under the penal statutes of the State of Georgia. This is true because there is no allegation that the accused and Jake Underwood were not legally intermarried, and the fact that these parties were not married to each other, should certainly not be read into the special presentment by inference or implication." Her case rests upon sheer technicality. Gorman v. Commonwealth,
Judgment affirmed. Broyles, C. J., and Guerry, J., concur. *Page 853
