The offense of cohabiting with more than one woman, created by §
3 of the Act of Congress of March 22, 1882, ch. 47, 22 Stat. 31, in
regard to polygamy in the Territory of Utah, is committed by a man
who lives in the same house with two women, and eats at their
respective tables one-third of his time, or thereabouts, and holds
them out to the world, by his language or conduct, or both, as his
wives, and it is not necessary to the commission of the offense
that he and the two women, or either of them, should occupy the
same bed or sleep in the same room or that he should have sexual
intercourse with either of them.
An indictment under that section charged a male person with
having unlawfully cohabited with more than one woman continuously
for a specified time, naming two women, but did not allege that he
was a male person, nor that he cohabited with the women as wives or
as persons held out as wives. The statute provides that "if any
male person . . . , hereafter cohabits with more than one woman, he
shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor." The defendant pleaded not
guilty
Held:
1. Under the Criminal Procedure Act of Utah of February, 22,
1878, Laws of 1878, p. 91, objections taken to the indictment after
a jury was sworn that it did not contain the allegations before
mentioned were properly overruled.
2. The word "cohabit" in the statute means "to live together as
husband and wife," and its use in the indictment includes every
element of the offense created, as above defined, and the
allegation of cohabiting with the two women as wives is not an
extrinsic fact, but is covered by the allegation of cohabiting with
them.
3. The case of
United states v. Carll, 105 U.
S. 611, distinguished.
This was a writ of error to bring up for review proceedings in
the Supreme Court of the Territory of Utah in the indictment
Page 116 U. S. 56
and conviction of the plaintiff in error for unlawfully
cohabiting with more than one woman. The facts which make the case
are stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE BLATCHFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
Angus M. Cannon was indicted by a grand jury in the District
Court of the Third Judicial District in and for the Territory of
Utah in February, 1885, for a violation of § 3 of the Act of
Congress approved March 22, 1882, c. 47, entitled "An act to amend
section fifty-three hundred and fifty-two of the Revised Statutes
of the United States in reference to bigamy, and for other
purposes." 22 Stat. 31. Section 1 of the act amends section 5352 of
the Revised Statutes, which was a reenactment of § 1 of the Act of
July 1, 1862, c. 123, 12 Stat. 501, and, in order that the
amendment may be understood, the original and new sections 5352 are
here placed one after the other, the parts in each which differ
from the other being in italic:
"
Original"
"Every person
having a husband or wife living, who
marries another, whether married or single, in a territory or other
place over which the United States have exclusive jurisdiction, is
guilty of
bigamy, and shall be punished by a fine of not
more than five hundred dollars, and by imprisonment for a term not
more than five years; but this section shall not extend to any
person by reason of any former marriage whose husband or wife by
such marriage
is absent for five successive years and is
not known to such person to be living, nor to any person by reason
of any former marriage which
has been dissolved by decree
of a competent court, nor to any person by reason of any former
marriage which
has been pronounced void by decree of a
competent court, on the ground of nullity of the marriage
contract."
"
New"
"Every person
who has a husband or wife living, who,
in a territory or other place over which the United States have
exclusive jurisdiction, hereafter marries another, whether
married or single,
and any man who hereafter simultaneously, or
on the same day, marries more than one woman in a territory or
other place over which the United States have exclusive
jurisdiction, is guilty of
polygamy, and shall be punished
by a fine of not more than five hundred dollars and by imprisonment
for a term
of not more than five years; but this section
shall not extend to any person by reason of any former marriage
whose husband or wife by such marriage
shall have been
absent for five successive years, and is not known to such person
to be living,
and is believed by such person to be dead,
nor to any person by reason of any former marriage which
shall
have been dissolved by
a valid decree of a competent
court; nor to any person by reason of any former marriage which
shall have been pronounced void by a valid decree of a competent
court, on the ground of nullity of the marriage contract."
Sections 2 to 8, inclusive, of the act of 1882 are follows:
"SEC. 2. That the foregoing provisions shall not affect the
prosecution or punishment of any offense already committed against
the section amended by the first section of this act."
"SEC. 3. That if any male person, in a territory or other place
over which the United States have exclusive jurisdiction, hereafter
cohabits with more than one woman, he shall be deemed guilty of a
misdemeanor, and on conviction thereof shall be punished by a fine
of not more than three hundred dollars, or by imprisonment for not
more than six months, or by both said punishments, in the
discretion of the court."
"SEC. 4. That counts for any or all of the offenses named in
sections one and three of this act may be joined in the same
information or indictment. "
Page 116 U. S. 58
"SEC. 5. That in any prosecution for bigamy, polygamy, or
unlawful cohabitation under any statute of the United States, it
shall be sufficient cause of challenge to any person drawn or
summoned as a juryman or talesman first that he is or has been
living in the practice of bigamy, polygamy, or unlawful
cohabitation with more than one woman, or that he is or has been
guilty of an offense punishable by either of the foregoing
sections, or by section fifty-three hundred and fifty-two of the
Revised Statutes of the United States, or the Act of July 1, 1862,
entitled"
"An Act to punish and prevent the practice of polygamy in the
territories of the United States and other places, and disapproving
and annulling certain acts of the legislative assembly of the
Territory of Utah,"
"or, second, that he believes it right for a man to have more
than one living and undivorced wife at the same time, or to live in
the practice of cohabiting with more than one woman, and any person
appearing or offered as a juror or talesman, and challenged on
either of the foregoing grounds, may be questioned on his oath as
to the existence of any such cause of challenge, and other evidence
may be introduced bearing upon the question raised by such
challenge, and this question shall be tried by the court. But as to
the first ground of challenge before mentioned, the person
challenged shall not be bound to answer if he shall say upon his
oath that he declines on the ground that his answer may tend to
criminate himself, and if he shall answer as to said first ground,
his answer shall not be given in evidence in any criminal
prosecution against him for any offense named in sections one or
three of this act; but if he declines to answer on any ground, he
shall be rejected as incompetent."
"SEC. 6. That the President is hereby authorized to grant
amnesty to such classes of offenders guilty of bigamy, polygamy, or
unlawful cohabitation before the passage of this act on such
conditions and under such limitations as he shall think proper, but
no such amnesty shall have effect unless the conditions thereof
shall be complied with."
"SEC. 7. That the issue of bigamous or polygamous marriages,
known as Mormon marriages, in cases in which such marriages
Page 116 U. S. 59
have been solemnized according to the ceremonies of the Mormon
sect, in any territory of the United States, and such issue shall
have been born before the first day of January, A.D. 1883, are
hereby legitimated."
"SEC. 8. That no polygamist, bigamist, or any person cohabiting
with more than one woman and no woman cohabiting with any of the
persons described as aforesaid in this section in any territory or
other place over which the United States have exclusive
jurisdiction shall be entitled to vote at any election held in any
such territory or other place or be eligible for election or
appointment to or to be entitled to hold any office or place of
public trust, honor, or emolument in, under, or for any such
territory or place or under the United States."
Section 9 of the act contains provisions declaring vacant
registration and election offices, and enacting that persons shall
be appointed to execute those offices by a board of five persons,
which is directed to canvass votes to be returned to it for members
of the legislative assembly, with the proviso
"that said board of five persons shall not exclude any person,
otherwise eligible to vote, from the polls on account of any
opinion such person may entertain on the subject of bigamy or
polygamy; nor shall they refuse to count any such vote on account
of the opinion of the person casting it on the subject of bigamy or
polygamy."
The indictment against Cannon was as follows:
"The grand jury of the United States of America within and for
the district aforesaid, in the territory aforesaid, being duly
impaneled and sworn, on their oaths do find and present that Angus
M. Cannon, late of said district, in the territory aforesaid,
to-wit, on the first day of June, A.D. 1882, and on divers other
days, and continuously between the said first day of June, A.D.
1882, and the first day of February, A.D. 1885 at the County of
Salt Lake and Territory of Utah, did unlawfully cohabit with more
than one woman, to-wit, one Amanda Cannon and one Clara C. Mason
sometimes known as Clara C. Cannon, against the form of the statute
of the said United
Page 116 U. S. 60
States in such case made and provided, and against the peace and
dignity of the same."
The defendant pleaded not guilty, and the case was tried in
April, 1885, resulting in a verdict of guilty, and a judgment
imposing a fine of $300, imprisonment in the penitentiary for six
months, and further imprisonment till the payment of the fine.
After the jury was impaneled and sworn and the prosecution had
called a witness, the defendant objected to the giving of any
evidence under the indictment on the ground that the indictment was
defective and did not charge any criminal offense, nor any offense
under the statutes of the United States, nor the offense described
in the statute, either in the statutory words or equivalent words,
and especially did not show that the person charged was a male
person, and was insufficient to warrant a verdict or support a
judgment of conviction. The court overruled the objection, and the
defendant excepted. The following proceedings then took place, as
shown by the bill of exceptions:
Clara C. Cannon, a witness called for the prosecution, was
sworn, when the defendant renewed the said objection to the
indictment, with a like ruling by the court and a like exception.
The witness testified as follows:
"My full name is Clara C. Cannon. I know the defendant. I have
been his wife. I was his wife. I was married to him about ten years
ago, and have since lived at 246 First South Street, Salt Lake
City. I live there now, and have lived in the same house since
shortly after I was married. The defendant has lived in the same
house part of the time, and in the same house during the past three
years. I have one living child, which is a child of that marriage,
born January 11, 1882. I have had two other children by that
marriage, both born before the living one. In this house I occupy
two rooms on the ground floor, a parlor and a dining room on the
east side. My kitchen is back, not attached to my part of the
house. I have occupied this part of the ground floor since I first
went to live in the house. There is a hall running through the
house on the ground floor, and the rooms I occupy on that floor are
on the east side of the
Page 116 U. S. 61
hall. I know Amanda Cannon. She has lived in the same house that
I live in during the past three years. She has occupied, on the
ground floor, two rooms on the west side of the hall, besides her
kitchen, which is attached to the back of the main building, and is
not the kitchen I use. I suppose Amanda Cannon is defendant's wife.
I have heard him speak of her as his wife -- as Mrs. Cannon -- and
she has lived in the house ever since I went to live there. She has
nine children, I think. During the past three years, I think, all
her children have been living there at home, but not all the time.
My little child lives with me in my part of the house -- I mean the
child of this marriage. The children of Amanda Cannon live with her
in her part of the house. During the past three years and prior to
the month of February in this year, the defendant has been in the
habit of taking his meals with me, in my part of the house, a
portion of the time -- about one-third of the time. There were
stated intervals. He took his meals with me every third day -- with
me and my children. I have a son and daughter grown up, and two
orphan children. He took his meals with me and the child of this
marriage and the other children every third day. He took his meals
with Amanda Cannon and her family one-third of the time. He took
all three of his meals with me every third day, on weekdays, and on
Sunday morning he had breakfast at my house -- that is, he took his
meals with me two days of each week, and also his breakfast Sunday
morning, which made one-third of the time. On Sunday, he took his
dinner at Sarah's and his supper at Amanda's. There are four rooms
on the second floor of the house used as bedrooms, and a hall, with
two of the rooms on either side of it. The rooms open into the
hall. During the past three years, I have occupied the bedroom in
the northeast corner and Amanda has occupied the one in the
southwest corner of the house. The defendant has occupied the
bedroom in the southeast corner. The room occupied by me as a
bedroom and the one occupied by the defendant as a bedroom are on
the same side of the hall, and there is no intervening room. The
house I speak of is in Salt Lake County, Utah Territory."
Cross-examined:
"My oldest daughter is twenty-three years old,
Page 116 U. S. 62
and my son twenty. I have a little girl, Clara Hardy, twelve
years old, and a little girl ten years old, who are orphans. Their
mother was a niece of mine, and when she died, she left them to me.
These, with my little daughter Alice, three years old past, are the
members of my family. My daughter Alice was three years old last
January. The two orphan children have lived with me for the last
five years. The two little girls and my oldest daughter and the
youngest daughter have occupied my room with me. We have two beds,
and have all slept in that room."
"Q. State whether that state of things, and that relation with
your children and the orphans, continued until February last."
Objected to by the prosecution on the ground that it is
immaterial, irrelevant, and incompetent. The objection was argued,
the prosecuting attorney announcing that the objection was on the
relevancy, materiality, and competency of the evidence offered, and
not on the ground it was not a proper subject of cross-examination
or that the offer was out of order, but that any proof tending to
show nonaccess was immaterial, and defendant's counsel admitted and
stated to the court that the evidence was offered as tending to
show, with other evidence to be given, nonaccess during the time
charged in the indictment, and as tending to disprove any
presumption of sexual intercourse which might be raised by
testimony of the witness. The court sustained the objection,
stating that the question presented by the objection had been
deemed by both parties as being properly raised by the
interrogatory objected to, and the defendant excepted.
"Q. Was Amanda Cannon married to defendant prior to the time you
was married to him?"
Counsel for the prosecution objected to the question as
irrelevant, incompetent, and immaterial. The court sustained the
objection, and defendant excepted to the ruling.
The following questions were severally propounded to the
witness, counsel stating that the sole purpose for which the
questions were asked was to establish sexual nonintercourse:
"Q. Did you hear and know of the passage of the act of
Page 116 U. S. 63
Congress, usually called the 'Edmunds Act,' about the time it
was passed?"
"Q. What had been the habit of defendant prior to that time as
to his occupation of your room and bed and the room and bed of
Amanda Cannon?"
"Q. About the time of the passage of that law, did he say
anything to you and the other members of the family in respect to
his intention to not violate that law, and what did he say?"
"Q. Did you assent to what he proposed?"
"Q. After that, did any change occur in his habit as to
occupying your room and bed, and what, if any, was the change?"
"Q. After March 22, 1882 has the defendant at any time occupied
your room or bed, or has he had any sexual intercourse with
you?"
To each of these questions the prosecuting attorney objected on
the ground that the evidence sought was irrelevant, immaterial, and
incompetent, and the objections were based solely on these grounds,
and not to the form of the questions, or time or manner of offering
the evidence. The court sustained each objection, and to the ruling
on each the defendant excepted.
George M. Cannon, a witness sworn for the prosecution,
testified:
"My father's name is Angus M. Cannon; he is the defendant here.
My mother's name is Sarah M. Cannon. I have heard my father state
he was married to Amanda Cannon."
"Q. Have you heard your father state he was married to Sarah
Cannon?"
Defendant objected to the question on the ground it is
immaterial; that Sarah Cannon is not named in the indictment, or
any marriage with her charged.
The prosecuting attorney explained that he intended to show that
Sarah and Amanda Cannon were married to defendant by the same
ceremony, and that he offered the evidence to show whom he had the
right to call as a witness. The court overruled the objection, and
allowed the evidence for this purpose, and the defendant excepted
to the ruling.
"Witness: I have heard my father say he way married to my mother
and Amanda Cannon at one and the same time."
Angus M. Cannon, Jr., sworn for the prosecution, testified:
Page 116 U. S. 64
"My father's name is Angus M. Cannon, and my mother's name is
Amanda Cannon. I have lived during the last three years in the same
house with my father and mother. My mother has nine children; eight
of them are living at home, and have during this period. I took my
meals there and slept there on my mother's side of the house. Have
taken my meals at the same table with the rest of the family. My
father has taken his meals about one-third of the time at Clara's,
one-third of the time at Sarah's, and one-third of the time with my
mother. About every third day, he takes his meals with my mother
and her children. There are four sleeping apartments in the second
story of the house, two on each side of the hallway which goes
north and south, and the rooms on each side open into the hall.
During the period mentioned, Clara C. Cannon has occupied the
northeast bedroom, my father has occupied the southeast, and my
mother the southwest bedroom."
Cross-examined:
"Clara Cannon has occupied the northeast bedroom, to my
knowledge, five or six years."
"Q. Who occupied it with her?"
Objected to as immaterial, etc. Objection sustained, and
defendant excepted.
"My father has occupied the same house with Clara and Amanda
Cannon. I have not been at home continuously for the past three or
four years. I have been away probably between five and six months,
and, with this exception, I have been there more than three
years."
"Q. Do you know where your father, during that time, passed his
nights?"
Objected to. Objection sustained, and defendant excepted to the
ruling.
The prosecution here rested.
George M. Cannon recalled for further cross-examination:
"The substance of what my father said about his marriage to
Sarah and Amanda Cannon was that he married them at the same time.
He said he married them prior to any act against polygamy, and when
he considered it legal. He perhaps stated the year, but I don't at
present recollect it. I am in my twenty-fourth year. "
Page 116 U. S. 65
Clara C. Cannon recalled by the defendant, and testified:
"I am a member of what is called the Church of Latter-day
Saints, and I have been a member for twenty-four years. The
defendant is also a member of that church. I don't know how long he
has been a member, but it is ever since I first knew him. Mrs.
Amanda Cannon is a member of the same church, and has been since I
first knew her -- that is, thirteen years."
"Q. Was Mrs. Amanda Cannon married to the defendant prior to
your marriage to him?"
Objected to by counsel for prosecution as irrelevant and
immaterial. Objection sustained, and defendant excepted to the
ruling.
Defendant's counsel then made the following offer of proofs:
"We offer to prove by this and other witnesses to be called that
Amanda Cannon was married to the defendant before the marriage of
this witness; that prior to the passage of the Edmunds law, he had
alternately occupied the sleeping room and bed of each; that each,
with her family, occupied, and still occupies, separate apartments,
including separate dining rooms and kitchens; that after the
Edmunds law had passed both houses of Congress, and before its
approval by the President, the defendant announced to witness
Amanda, and their families that he did not intend to violate that
law, but should live within it so long as it should remain a law,
and at the same time assigned his reasons for so doing, and
thereafter, and during the times alleged in the indictment, he did
not occupy the rooms or bed of, or have any sexual intercourse
with, the witness, and to this extent, by mutual agreement,
separated from the witness; that during all the time mentioned in
the indictment, the two families have taken their meals in their
respective dining rooms; that defendant has taken his meals with
the witness and her family in her dining room two or three days
each week, has provided for the support of the witness and her
family distinct from other family expenses, and allowed them to
occupy separate apartments in the same house occupied by him and
Amanda, and this is the extent of his relations with the witness,
and also that the defendant was financially unable to provide a
separate house for witness and her family
Page 116 U. S. 66
also that the witness and her family, and Amanda and her family,
are dependent on the defendant for their support. To this offer and
each paragraph thereof the prosecution objected, and the objection
was sustained by the court, and the defendant excepted to the
ruling."
The foregoing was all the evidence given in the case. The court
instructed the jury as follows:
"The indictment in this case charges that the defendant, on the
first day of June, A.D. 1882, and on divers other days,
continuously between said first day of June, 1882, and the first
day of February, 1885, did unlawfully cohabit with more than one
woman, to-wit, one Amanda Cannon and one Clara C. Mason sometimes
known as Clara C. Cannon. [If you believe from the evidence,
gentlemen of the jury, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the
defendant lived in the same house with Amanda Cannon and Clara C.
Cannon, the women named in the indictment, and ate at their
respective tables one-third of his time or thereabouts, and that he
held them out to the world, by his language or his conduct, or by
both, as his wives, you should find him guilty.] [It is not
necessary that the evidence should show that the defendant and
these women, or either of them, occupied the same bed or slept in
the same room; neither is it necessary that the evidence should
show that, within the time mentioned, he had sexual intercourse
with either of them.] I will state the law presumes the defendant
innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt; that you
are the judges of the credibility of the witnesses, the weight of
the evidence, and of the facts, and if you find the defendant
guilty, you will say in your verdict, 'We, the jury, find the
defendant guilty in manner and form as charged in the indictment,'
and if you find him not guilty, you will say, 'We, the jury, find
the defendant not guilty.'"
No further or other instructions were given to the jury.
The defendant excepted to the parts of the instructions which
are enclosed in brackets. He also submitted the following prayers
for instructions, each of which was separately refused, followed by
a separate exception:
"1. The offense charged is that defined in the third section
Page 116 U. S. 67
of the act of Congress entitled 'An act to amend section 5352 of
the Revised Statutes, in reference to bigamy, and for other
purposes,' approved March 22, 1882, commonly known as the 'Edmunds
Act.'"
"2. That section is applicable to Utah Territory, and provides
that if any male person here, since March 22, 1882, has cohabited
with more than one woman, he shall be deemed guilty of a
misdemeanor."
"3. This section does not apply to male persons who have at
successive periods cohabited with lawful wives, but only to
contemporaneous cohabitation with two women."
"4. Cohabitation includes living together as members of one
family -- a consorting in social intercourse, and eating and
lodging together. They need not occupy the same bed, but there must
be an equivalent intimacy."
"5. The word 'cohabit' in this section is to be understood in a
technical or restricted sense. It does not apply to all persons who
live with each other under one roof as members of one family, but
only to adults of different sexes who live together in the manner
that husbands and wives do, including the intimacy of occupying
continuously or for recurrent periods the same bed."
"6. [Requested if the last refused.] The word 'cohabit' in this
section is to be understood in a technical or special sense. It
does not apply to all persons of opposite sexes who live with each
other under one roof as members of one family, but only to adults
of different sexes living together in the manner that husbands and
wives do. So understood, it must include a continuous or recurrent
occupying of the same apartments, in the manner usual with persons
of opposite sex who live in sexual intimacy."
"7. No case is within this section which does not include such
association of a man with two women in their mode of living as to
make it an example of immorality, by necessarily indicating an
habitual intimacy with each of two or more women by mutual
consent."
"8. The cohabitation which is made a misdemeanor by this section
is an habitual residence or dwelling by a man with two or more
women in intimate sexual relations. "
Page 116 U. S. 68
"9. The ingredients of this offense are first, that the person
charged be a male person; second, that he has lived or dwelt with
two women, either continuously at the same time, or with each in
alternate periods of time; third, that he has so lived with each of
two or more women in such personal intimacy as to indicate that he
has had sexual intercourse with them respectively at his and their
pleasure."
"10. The court will interpret this Edmunds act by its terms, and
in view of the actual situation in this territory, of which the
court is judicially cognizant, and thus deduce that Congress
intended to apply a corrective to polygamy and the anomalous status
produced by its long practice."
"11. The act is intended to prevent any future polygamous
marriages, and to prevent the continued cohabitation of persons who
are already in polygamy. The section making cohabitation a
misdemeanor has special or primary application to a cohabitation
with a plurality of wives. This obvious intention indicates the
ingredients of the criminal cohabitation: that it is a living
together in the sexual intimacy usual between persons united in the
marital relation, immoral in example for not having the sanction of
lawful marriage, and pernicious in producing an illegitimate
offspring."
"12. This act legitimizes all children born prior to January 1,
1883. It authorizes amnesty to all offenders prior to its
enactment, and thus it is shown that the act was passed in view of
the long existence of polygamy in this territory, and the
multitudes of children born therein. It is merciful to those who
have broken the laws against polygamy, and humane and paternal to
the children born in polygamy."
"13. This act does not command polygamous fathers to abandon
their children nor to break off all communication with their
mothers. Such fathers are at liberty, and under the strongest moral
obligation, to support both. He may hold any friendly and familiar
relations, other than sexual, naturally incident to the proper
discharge of such duties. All his social familiarity with the
mothers of such families, established prior to the passage of said
act, not shown to include all the particulars of cohabitation as
the court has defined it,
Page 116 U. S. 69
should be considered by the jury, with the legal presumption of
innocence, and the failure to establish such cohabitation entitles
the defendant to acquittal."
"14. The existence at the time of the passage of the Edmunds act
of a polygamous relation between the defendant and the women
mentioned in the indictment, though an illegal relation, is not and
cannot be made by the statute evidence of any fact necessary to or
tending to a conviction for violating the third section. Any
enactment intended for such a purpose would be
ex post
facto and void."
"15. The law presumes innocence, and therefore that all persons
who were cohabiting when the Edmunds law took effect, contrary to
the provisions of that act, then ceased to do so."
"16. No fact in the conduct of the defendant subsequent to the
passage of the Edmunds act can be made more significant of guilt in
violating the section against cohabitation by reason of the
existence of the polygamous relation between him and the women
mentioned in the indictment prior to the passage of that
statute."
"17. The defendant is entitled to show his marital and parental
status at the time of the passage of the Edmunds act to explain his
subsequent conduct toward the women mentioned in the indictment and
to show an innocent and laudable motive therefor."
"18. For this purpose, he may show that he had families of
children by said women, respectively, at and prior to the passage
of said act; that such women and their children had been and were
still dependent on him for their support; that he has continued
since to support them; that he has visited them for that purpose,
and as the father of said children, and that he has not had sexual
intercourse with such women since the passage of said act. And no
inference of cohabitation can be drawn from the fact of such
relations; from the fact of furnishing support for such mothers and
children, without living with them; nor from the fact of visiting
them -- taking meals with them; nor from his living in a separate
suite of rooms in the same house, belonging to himself, as that
occupied by them,
Page 116 U. S. 70
if they occupied separate apartments and habitually lived as a
separate and distinct household; nor can such inference be drawn
from all such facts. They do not of themselves constitute
cohabitation."
"19. There is no evidence in this case tending to show this
defendant recognized Clara C. Cannon as his wife or held her out to
the world as such since the passage of the Edmunds bill and within
the dates named in the indictment, and without such proof, the jury
should acquit the defendant."
"20. If the jury find that the defendant has not held out to the
world and announced and recognized as his wife the Clara C. Cannon
named in the indictment since the passage of the Edmunds bill and
within the dates named in the indictment, then they should acquit
the defendant."
"21. Sexual intercourse is a necessary element of the crime of
cohabitation, and if the jury find the defendant has not had sexual
intercourse with both Clara C. and Amanda Cannon since the passage
of the Edmunds bill, and within the dates named in the indictment,
then they should acquit the defendant."
"22. In order to find the defendant guilty of the offense
charged, it must appear that the defendant had gone through the
forms of marriage with both of the women named in the indictment,
Amanda and Clara C. Cannon; that, it not appearing in this case
that he was ever married to Clara C. Cannon, the jury should
acquit."
"23. If the jury find that there never was the form of marriage
between Clara C. Cannon and the defendant, they should acquit."
"24. There can be no conviction under the indictment in this
case, for the reason that there is no charge that the defendant was
ever married to either Amanda or Clara C. Cannon, nor any charge
that he held out either or both as his wives."
From the judgment the defendant appealed to the supreme court of
the territory, which affirmed it, and he has brought the case to
this Court by a writ of error.
The principal question argued at the bar was the proper
Page 116 U. S. 71
construction of § 3 of the act of 1882. That question depends on
the meaning of the word "cohabit" in the section. The meaning
contended for by the defendant is indicated by his offer to show,
by Clara C. Cannon, nonaccess and facts to rebut the presumption of
sexual intercourse with her, and the actual absence of such
intercourse, and by the requests for instructions to the jury,
which are based on the view that the word "cohabit" necessarily
includes the idea of having sexual intercourse. But we are of
opinion that this is not the proper interpretation of the statute,
and that the court properly charged the jury that the defendant was
to be found guilty if he lived in the same house with the two
women, and ate at their respective tables one-third of his time or
thereabouts, and held them out to the world, by his language or
conduct or both, as his wives, and that it was not necessary it
should be shown that he and the two women, or either of them,
occupied the same bed or slept in the same room, or that he had
sexual intercourse with either of them.
This interpretation is deducible from the language of the
statute throughout. It refers wholly to the relations between men
and women founded on the existence of actual marriages, or on the
holding out of their existence. Section 1 makes it an offense for a
man or a woman, with a living wife or husband, to marry another,
and calls such offense polygamy. Section 3 singles out the man, and
makes it a misdemeanor for him to cohabit with more than one woman.
Section 4 provides that counts for any or all of the offenses named
in §§ 1 and 3 may be joined in the same information or indictment.
This certainly has no tendency to show that the cohabitation
referred to is one outside of a marital relation, actual or
ostensible. So, in § 5, bigamy, polygamy, and unlawful cohabitation
are classed together, and it is provided that in any prosecution
for anyone of such offenses, it shall be sufficient cause of
challenge to a juror that he has been living in the practice of
bigamy, polygamy, or unlawful cohabitation with more than one
woman, or has been guilty of an offense punishable by the preceding
sections, or that he believes it to be right for a man to have more
than one living and undivorced wife at the same
Page 116 U. S. 72
time, or to live in the practice of cohabiting with more than
one woman. It is the practice of unlawful cohabitation with more
than one woman that is aimed at -- a cohabitation classed with
polygamy and having its outward semblance. It is not, on the one
hand, meretricious, unmarital intercourse with more than one woman.
General legislation as to lewd practices is left to the territorial
government. Nor, on the other hand, does the statute pry into the
intimacies of the marriage relation. But it seeks not only to
punish bigamy and polygamy when direct proof of the existence of
those relations can be made, but to prevent a man from flaunting in
the face of the world the ostentation and opportunities of a
bigamous household, with all the outward appearances of the
continuance of the same relations which existed before the act was
passed, and without reference to what may occur in the privacy of
those relations. Compacts for sexual nonintercourse, easily made
and as easily broken, when the prior marriage relations continue to
exist, with the occupation of the same house and table and the
keeping up of the same family unity, is not a lawful substitute for
the monogamous family which alone the statute tolerates. In like
manner, bigamy, polygamy, and unlawful cohabitation are classed
together in §§ 6 and 8 of the act. Section 6 authorizes the
President to grant amnesty to persons guilty of bigamy, polygamy,
or unlawful cohabitation before the passage of the act. Any
unlawful cohabitation under the laws of the United States before
that time could only have been ostensibly marital cohabitation, for
the only statute on the subject was § 5352 of the Revised Statutes,
in regard to bigamy. Section 8 excludes from voting every
polygamist, bigamist, or person cohabiting with more than one
woman, and every woman cohabiting with any polygamist, bigamist, or
person cohabiting with more than one woman.
This section was considered by this Court in
Murphy v.
Ramsey, 114 U. S. 15, where
MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS, speaking for the Court, in construing the
words "bigamist" and "polygamist" in that section, says:
"In our opinion, any man is a polygamist or bigamist in the
sense of this section of the act who, having previously married one
wife, still living, and having another at the time when he
Page 116 U. S. 73
presents himself to claim registration as a voter, still
maintains that relation to a plurality of wives, although, from the
date of the passage of the Act of March 22, 1882, until the day he
offers to register and to vote, he may not in fact have cohabited
with more than one woman. Without regard to the question whether at
the time he entered into such relation it was a prohibited and
punishable offense, or whether, by reason of lapse of time since
its commission, a prosecution for it may not be barred, if he still
maintains the relation, he is a bigamist or polygamist, because
that is the status which the fixed habit and practice of his living
has established. He has a plurality of wives -- more than one woman
whom he recognizes as a wife -- of whose children he is the
acknowledged father, and whom, with their children, he maintains as
a family, of which he is the head. And this status as to several
wives may well continue to exist as a practical relation, although
for a period he may not in fact cohabit with more than one; for
that is quite consistent with the constant recognition of the same
relation to many, accompanied with a possible intention to renew
cohabitation with one or more of the others when it may be
convenient. It is not, therefore, because the person has committed
the offense of bigamy or polygamy at some previous time, in
violation of some existing statute, and as an additional punishment
for its commission, that he is disfranchised by the Act of Congress
of March 22, 1882, nor because he is guilty of the offense as
defined and punished by the terms of that act; but because, having
at some time entered into a bigamous or polygamous relation, by a
marriage with a second or third wife while the first was living, he
still maintains it, and has not dissolved it, although for the time
being the restricts actual cohabitation he restricts actual
cohabitation actual cohabitation with all, and be still as much as
ever a bigamist or a polygamist. He can only cease to be such when
he has finally and fully dissolved, in some effective manner, which
we are not called on here to point out, the very relation of
husband to several wives which constitutes the forbidden status he
has previously assumed. Cohabitation is but one of the many
incidents to the marriage relation. It is
Page 116 U. S. 74
not essential to it. One man, where such a system has been
tolerated and practiced, may have several establishments, each of
which may be the home of a separate family, none of which he
himself may dwell in or even visit. The statute makes an express
distinction between bigamists and polygamists on the one hand, and
those who cohabit with more than one woman, on the other, whereas,
if cohabitation with several wives was essential to the description
of those who are bigamists or polygamists, those words in the
statute would be superfluous and unnecessary. It follows,
therefore, that any person having several wives is a bigamist or
polygamist in the sense of the Act of March 22, 1882, although
since the date of its passage he may not have cohabited with more
than one of them."
P.
114 U. S. 41. In
the spirit of this interpretation, a man cohabits with more than
one woman in the sense of §§ 3, 5, and 8 of the act when, holding
out to the world two women as his wives, by his language or
conduct, or both, he lives in the house with them and eats at the
table of each a portion of his time, although he may not occupy the
same bed or sleep in the same room with either of them or actually
have sexual intercourse with either of them. He holds two women out
to the world as his wives by his conduct when, being the recognized
and reputed husband of each, so understood to be by the two wives,
and by the son of one of them, and by the son of the third reputed
wife, he maintains the two wives and the children of each, all in
the same house with himself and regularly eats at the table of each
and acts as the head of the two families.
This meaning of the phrase "cohabit with more than one woman" in
the statute is in consonance with a recognized definition of the
word "cohabit." In Webster, "cohabit" is defined thus: "(1) To
dwell with; to inhabit or reside in company, or in the same place
or country. (2) To dwell or live together as husband and wife." In
Worcester, it is defined thus: "(1) To dwell with another in the
same place. (2) To live together as husband and wife." The word is
never used in its first meaning in a criminal statute, and its
second meaning is that to which its use in this statute has
relation. The context
Page 116 U. S. 75
in which it is found, and the manifest evils which gave rise to
the special enactments in regard to "cohabitation," require that
the word should have the meaning which we have assigned to it.
Bigamy and polygamy might fail of proof for want of direct evidence
of any marriage, but cohabitation with more than one woman in the
sense proved in this case was susceptible of the proof here given,
and it was such offense as was here proved that section 3 of the
act was intended to reach -- the exhibition of all the indicia of a
marriage, a household, and a family, twice repeated. However, in
some divorce cases, and in reference to a question of the
condonation of adultery, the word "cohabit" may have been used in
the limited sense of sexual intercourse, or, however its meaning
may have been so limited by its context in other statutes, it has
no such meaning in the statute before us.
These views of the proper construction of section 3 show that
the evidence which the court rejected was properly excluded, and
that there was no error in the instructions given to the jury, or
in refusing to give those asked, aside from those which were proper
to have been given, but were covered by the instructions given. Nor
is the charge given open to the objection that the paragraphs in it
which follow the first are not confined to the time laid in the
indictment.
Objection is taken to the indictment because it does not allege
that the defendant was a male person, § 3 making the offense it
specifies punishable only when committed by a male person. By the
Criminal Procedure Act of the Territory of Utah, passed February
22, 1878, and which was in force from and after March 10, 1878,
Laws 1878, p. 91, it is provided as follows:
"SEC. 148. All the forms of pleading in criminal actions, and
the rules by which the sufficiency of pleadings is to be
determined, are those prescribed by this act."
"SEC. 149. The first pleading on the part of the people is the
indictment."
"SEC. 150. The indictment must contain:"
"1. The title of the action, specifying the name of the court of
which the indictment is presented, and the names of the parties.
"
Page 116 U. S. 76
"2. A clear and concise statement of the acts or omissions
constituting the offense, with such particulars of the time, place,
person, and property as will enable the defendant to understand
distinctly the character of the offense complained of, and answer
the indictment. It must be substantially in the following
form:"
" Territory of Utah"
" In the _____ Judicial District Court. The Territory of Utah
against A.B."
" A.B. is accused by the grand jury of this court, by this
indictment, of the crime of [giving its legal appellation, such as
murder, arson, or the like, or designating it as felony or
misdemeanor] committed as follows: The said A.B., on the ___ day of
____, A.D. eighteen ____, at the County of _____ [here set forth
the act or omission charged as an offense]."
"SEC. 151. It must be direct and certain as it regards:"
"1. the party charged."
"2. The offense charged."
"3. The particular circumstances of the offense."
"SEC. 156. The words used in an indictment are construed in
their usual acceptance in common language, except such words and
phrases as are defined by law, which are construed according to
their legal meaning."
"SEC. 157. Words used in a statute to define a public offense
need not be strictly pursued in the indictment, but other words
conveying the same meaning may be used."
"SEC. 158. The indictment is sufficient if it can be understood
therefrom:"
"1. That it is entitled in a court having authority to receive
it, though the name of the court be not stated."
"2. That it was found by a grand jury of the district in which
the court was held."
"3. That the defendant is named, or, if his name cannot be
discovered, that he is described by a fictitious name, with a
statement that his true name is to the jury unknown."
"4. That the offense committed was within the jurisdiction of
the court, and is triable therein. "
Page 116 U. S. 77
"5. That the offense was committed at some time prior to the
time of finding the indictment."
"6. That the act or omission charged as the offense is clearly
and distinctly set forth, without repetition and in such a manner
as to enable the court to understand what is intended and to
pronounce judgment upon a conviction according to the right of the
case."
"SEC. 190. The only pleading on the part of the defendant is
either a demurrer or a plea."
Section 192 provides that the defendant may demur to the
indictment when it appears upon the face thereof that it does not
substantially conform to the requirements of § 150, or that the
facts stated do not constitute a public offense.
Section 200 provides that when the objections mentioned in § 192
appear upon the face of the indictment, they can only be taken by
demurrer, except that the objection that the facts stated do not
constitute a public offense may be taken at the trial, under the
plea of not guilty, or, after the trial, in arrest of judgment.
"SEC. 479. Neither a departure from the form or mode prescribed
by this act in respect to any pleading or proceeding, nor an error
or mistake therein, renders it invalid unless it has actually
prejudiced the defendant or tended to his prejudice in respect to a
substantial right."
Certainly under these provisions the defendant, having pleaded
to the indictment and not demurred, must be held to have understood
distinctly that the charge was against a male person as guilty of
the offense complained of, the offense being one which only a male
person could commit, and the omission from the indictment of the
allegation that he was a male person could not have prejudiced him,
or tended to his prejudice, in respect to a substantial right.
The same statutory provisions apply to the objection that the
indictment contains merely a charge of unlawful cohabitation with
more than one woman, and does not allege a cohabitation with the
women as wives or as persons held out as wives. The defendant
having pleaded, and not demurred it must be held, under § 150, that
the statement of the acts constituting the
Page 116 U. S. 78
offense was such as to enable him to understand distinctly the
character of the offense complained of, as that offense is now
interpreted, and to answer the indictment. The objection now made
cannot be regarded as an objection that the facts do not constitute
a public offense, because the statement is in the words of the
statute, and they, as is now held, have but one meaning, and there
could not have been any prejudice to the defendant, or tendency to
prejudice in respect to a substantial right in not alleging any
more pointedly that he cohabited with the women as wives.
In connection with these statutory rules, § 3 of the act of
Congress makes the offense a misdemeanor. In
United
States v. Mills, 7 Pet. 138,
32 U. S. 142,
it was said by this Court:
"The general rule is that in indictments for misdemeanors
created by statute, it is sufficient to charge the offense in the
words of the statute. . . . But in all cases, the offense must be
set forth with clearness, and all necessary certainty to apprise
the accused of the crime with which he stands charged."
These principles were applied to a case of misdemeanor in
United States v. Britton, 107 U.
S. 655, and an indictment was held sufficient because it
embodied the language of the statute, and that language covered
every element of the crime, and thus the offense created by the
statute was set forth with sufficient certainty so as to give the
defendant clear notice of the charge he was called on to defend.
That case was distinguished by the court from
United States v.
Carll, 105 U. S. 611, as
this is distinguishable. In
Carll's Case, the statute made
it an offense to pass a forged obligation of the United States with
intent to defraud, and the punishment was a fine and imprisonment
at hard labor. The question arose on a motion in arrest of judgment
whether the indictment was sufficient, it setting forth the offense
in the language of the statute, without further alleging that the
defendant knew the instrument to be forged. This Court held that
the offense at which the statute was aimed was similar to the
common law offense of uttering a forged bill; that therefore
knowledge that the instrument was forged was essential to make out
the crime, and that the uttering, with intent to defraud, of an
instrument in fact counterfeit,
Page 116 U. S. 79
but supposed by the defendant to be genuine, though within the
words of the statute, would not be within its meaning and object.
The omitted allegation in that case -- a knowledge of the forgery
-- was a separate, extrinsic fact, not forming part of the intent
to defraud or of the uttering or of the fact of forgery, and in the
absence of that allegation, it was held that no crime was charged.
In other words, the case was of the class provided for under the
Utah statute where the facts stated do not constitute a public
offense. This, as has been shown, is not that case. The word
"cohabit" has, in the statute, a definite meaning, including every
element of the offense created, as before defined. The allegation
of cohabiting with the two women as wives is not an extrinsic fact,
but is covered by the allegation of cohabiting with them.
A strong appeal was made in argument to this Court not to uphold
the rulings of the trial court because that would require a
polygamous husband not only to cease living with his plural wives,
but also to abandon the women themselves, and this Court was asked
to indicate what the conduct of the husband toward them must be in
order to conform to the requirements of the law. It is sufficient
to say that while that was done by the defendant in this case,
after the passage of the act of Congress, was not lawful, no court
can say in advance what particular state of things will be lawful
further than this: that he must not cohabit with more than one
woman in the sense of the word "cohabit" as hereinbefore defined.
While Congress has legitimated the issue of polygamous marriages
born before January 1, 1883, and thus given to such issue claims
upon their father which the law will recognize and enforce, it has
made no enactment in respect to any right or status of a bigamous
or polygamous wife. It leaves the conduct of the man toward her to
be regulated by considerations which, outside of § 3, are not
covered by the statute, and which must be dealt with judicially
when properly presented.
Judgment affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE MILLER, with whom concurred MR. JUSTICE FIELD.
I dissent from the judgment of the court in this case.
Page 116 U. S. 80
I think that the act of Congress, when prohibiting cohabitation
with more than one woman, meant unlawful habitual sexual
intercourse.
It is, in my opinion, a strained construction of a highly penal
statute to hold that a man can be guilty, under that statute,
without the accompaniment of actual sexual connection.
I know of no instance in which the word "cohabitation" has been
used to describe a criminal offense where it did not imply sexual
intercourse.
MR. JUSTICE FIELD concurs with me.