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Joe Carotti et al. v. State of Mississippi

High Court of Errors and Appeals of Mississippi1868-10
42 Miss. 334

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Opinion

majority opinion

Peyton, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The record in this case shows that the plaintiffs in error were, at the July Special Term of the Circuit Court of Marshall county, indicted for living together in unlawful cohabitation, from the 1st day of March to the 1st day of July, 18.67, and that at the September Term of the said court they were tried ■and convicted; that a motion was made to set aside the verdict and grant them a new trial, which was overruled by the court. To which ruling of the court the plaintiffs in error excepted, and the court then pronounced judgment upon them. And the cause coimes here by writ of error.

The evidence on which the conviction was founded is substantially as follows: Henry Ormesby, on the part of the State, testified that from the north window of the second story of his house, distant from Carotti’s one hundred and twenty or thirty feet, he had seen, on several .occasions, the defendants engaged in sexual intercourse, during the spring and summer of 1866; and that on Sunday, the 7th or 8th of April, 1867, witness, standing in front of his house, saw defendants, in an up-stairs room on the south side of Carotti’s house, engaged in sexual intercourse.; that the window was up, and witness saw the defendants thus engaged, but not so plainly as he had done on former occasions; that witness and-Carotti were imfriendly, and had been so for some time. Witness kept a drinking-saloon in his house. The difference between witness and Carotti originated after the latter had opened a drinking-saloon in his hotel.

T. Dressier testified — That some time in the fall of the year 1866, while working upon the said Carotti’s house, he had occasion to go up-stairs in said house for some tools, where he discovered the defendants in the act of copulation.

George Chew testified — That he Was in the employment of defendant, Carotti, on one occasion, as a servant in his hotel, in the month of October, 1866, and about nine o’clock at night he went up-stairs to get a bed to make down for the bar-keeper, and passed into said Carotti’s room, where he discovered the defendants in bed together, without any light in the room.

Samuel Ellison testified —That he was a servant in the hotel of said Carotti in October, 1866, and saw defendants lying, early one morning in that month, upon the same pallet in the kitchen of said hotel, undressed and asleep, but saw nothing else.

lewis McEwen testified — That he was cook in said Carotti’s hotel for several months, and had access to all parts of the house day and night, and never saw anything improper between the defendants.

S. Davidson testified — That he saw defendants, one evening about dark, walking together in an alley in Holly Springs^ and that he accosted said Carotti jocularly about it, when Carotti replied in the same spirit, and by implication admitted that he had criminal intercourse with his co-defendant, Mary.

John McGuirk testified on the part of the defendants — That he was the lessee of the hotel, occupied by said Carotti, from the Miss. Cent. HR. Co. His business called him a great deal about said hotel. Anonymous letters of a scurrilous character had been written to the authorities of said company about Carotti, which had been referred to him, as the general agent of said road, for investigation; that he had diligently investigated the charges of illicit intercourse between the defendants; had called said Carotti’s attention to them, and Carotti told him that he would dismiss the said Mary from his employment, although she was a Very superior servant, if he, witness, said so; and witness being fully satisfied that said charges were malicious, advised said Carotti not to dismiss said Mary, knowing her to be a very superior servant; that he had been at said hotel very often by day and by night, and had never seen any improper conduct between defendants; that he knew the locality of said hotel and witness Ormesby’s house, alnd had taken position with other gentlemen in front of said Ormesby’s house, with a view to ascertain if persons in the room of the hotel, where said Ormesby testified he-had seen defendants in sexual intercourse, could be seen, and stated that it would be impossible; that from the height of the window-sills in said room, and an intervening brick wall left standing where the old hotel had been burnt, persons could not be seen from the front of said Ormesby’s house in said room; that a person standing up in said room by the window might perhaps expose to view the head and breast from said Ormesby’s house, but not the remainder of the person; that it was 138 feet from the south side of said hotel, where said room was situated, to the north front of said Ormesby’s house; that he had never been up-stairs in said Ormesby’s house; that Oarotti took possession of and opened said hotel on the 5th day of November, 1866.

II. E. Williamson testified — That he had made the same examination as the witness McGuirk about the possibility of seeing pérsons in said room in said hotel from the front of said Ormesby’s house, on the ground, and concurred with said Mc-Guirk in his conclusion.

W. H. Jones testified — That he was the city marshal, and had been to said Carotti’s hotel repeatedly, at almost all honre, by day and by night, and that he never saw anything inpproper between defendants, and does not think that persons could be seen from the front of said Ormesby’s house in said room of Oarotti.

K.. Hastings testified — That he lived near the said Ormesby’s house; that he never saw any impropriety between defendants; that he had a better view, from the front of his house, of said room of Oarotti, than said Ormesby- could liave from the front-of his; and that persons, either lyingdown or stooping in said room, could not be seen from the front of said Ormesby’s house-below, or of that of witness.

J. M. Spradly testified — That he was a police officer of the city of Holly Springs, and had been at said Oarotti’s house very often, day and night, and never saw any impropriety between defendants, and knew from what he heard said Ofmesby say, that he entertained very bad feelings towards said Oarotti.

John Botts testified — That he was at the hotel of the said Oarotti, with his family, on Sunday, the Nth or 8th of April, 1867, and that he with his family occupied the said room in said hotel, and that his wife, being indisposed, was lying down in said room the whole of said day, he passing in and out of it during the day; that he had been a great deal at said hotel, and never saw anything wrong between said defendants, and that he could not see into said room from the front of said Ormesby’s house below, owing to the height of the window-sill and the intervening wall.

Clarissa testified — That she was in the employment of said Carotti at said hotel ever since Christmas, 1866, and had been through all parts of said hotel at nearly all hours, and never saw anything improper between said defendants. And Henry Harris testified to the same effect.

J. M. Yorrell testified on the part of the State — That in March, 1867, about eleven o’clock at night, while waiting for the railroad train, he saw defendant, Mary, lying asleep in the dining-room of said hotel, with her head in said Carotti’s lap, and lights burning in said dining-room. J. J. House thought persons might be seen in said room from the front of the said Ormesby’s house, and John Dean thought that they could not, unless they were standing up. ■

The first error assigned is, that the court erred in giving the second charge on the part of the State, which is as follows: “Where criminal intercourse is once shown, it must be presumed, if the parties are still living under the same roof, that it still continues, notwithstanding those who dwell under the same roof are not prepared to depose to that fact.”

This charge, as a general legal proposition, is correct, and is-especially applicable in a civil proceeding for a divorce, where it became necessary to establish the fact of adultery. The court in such a case would certainly be authorized to draw .the same conclusions, which, everybody else would draw from the same facts;. and when it is once established that an occasional criminal intercourse has commenced between the parties, and they are found together under circumstances which would induce every unprejudiced mind to conclude their inclinations had not changed, the fair presumption would be that the same kind of intercourse still continued. But, even admitting the full force of this presumption in the ease at bar, it would not establish the offence contemplated by the statute.

It is apparent from the testimony, that Carotti took possession of the hotel at Holly Springs on the 5th of November, 1866, and opened the same on that day, and that Mary "Wilson was employed by him as a domestic servant in said hotel, at the time that the offence charged in the indictment was alleged to .have been committed by them.

Within the time the plaintiffs in error were charged in the indictment with living together in unlawful cohabitation, the testimony of Ormesby proves but one instance of sexual intercourse between them, and that was on the 7th or 8th day of April, 1867, in a room in the second story of Carotti’s house, and stated to have been seen by the witness standing in front of his own house. And he is the only witness that testifies to this fact. Botts testifies that he and his family occupied that room of the hotel on that day, and that his wife, being indisposed, was lying down in said room during the whole of said day, and that he himself was passing in and out of it throughout the day, and saw nothing wrong between the plaintiffs in error. This testimony of Botts, and that of most of the other witnesses, going to show that persons in that room could not be seen from the ground in front of said Ormesby’s house, unless they were standing up, taken in connection with the fact that Ormesby entertained an unfriendly feeling towards Carotti, and with his own admission that he did not see them as plainly as he had on former occasions, furnish a good reason to doubt the correctness of his vision on that occasion. Be this, however, as it may, taking the whole testimony together, we cannot resist the conclusion that these parties have indulged, both before and since the opening of the hotel, in occasional sexual intercourse, but not under such circumstances as would make it indictable, either under the statute or at common law.

The second error assigned is, that the court erred in refusing to charge the jury, “ that to justify a verdict of guilty, they must believe from the evidence that the defendant, Mary Wilson, yielded her person generally or habitually to her co-defendant, Carotti, for the gratification of his passions, as between husband and wife.”

To determine the propriety of this charge, it becomes necessary to ascertain the meaning of that provision of the statute under which these parties have been prosecuted, which prohibits any man and woman from living together in unlawful cohabitation, whether the same be in adultery or fornication. Rev. Code, 573, art. 8.

We are of opinion that, in order to constitute this offence, the parties must dwell together, openly and notoriously, upon terms as if the conjugal relation existed between them. It consists in the living together in the manner of husband and wife, without being lawfully married, in the open assumption of the visible forms and rights of matrimony, without the sanction of the nuptial tie, and without incurring those obligations and responsibilities which attach to the married state. The design of the statute was to prevent evil, and indecent examples tending to corrupt the public morals, and to prohibit the public scandal and disgrace of the living together of persons of opposite sexes notoriously in illicit intimacy, which, as it contemns lawful wedlock and lessens the incentive to marriage, contravenes the public policy, and which outrages public decency, and has a demoralizing and debasing influence upon society. And where, indeed, they live together in the same family and under the same roof, in the relation of master and servant, and not as husband and wife, occasional clandestine sexual intercourse surely would not constitute the offence intended by the statute, of living together in unlawful cohabitation. Searls v. The People, 13 Illinois, 597; The State v. Marvin, 12 Iowa Rep. 499; The State v. Jolly, 3 Dev. & Batt. 110; Wright v. The State, 5 Blackford, 358; and The Commonwealth v. Calef, 10 Mass. 153. "We, therefore, think the instruction was correct, and should have been given.

The third and last error assigned is, that the court erred in refusing to set aside the verdict of the jury, and grant a new trial.

It is very evident that the jury found their verdict upon a mistaken view of the law. They were, no doubt, under the impression, that, as the plaintiffs in error lived together at the same hotel, although in the relation of master and servant, occasional instances of illicit intercourse, even though clandestine, would constitute the offence for which they were indicted, and they were probably aided in arriving at this conclusion by the refusal of the court to give the instruction asked on the part of the plaintiffs. The verdict was not justified by the evidence, and the court therefore erred in refusing to set it aside and grant a new trial.

Adultery and fornication, though in England cognizable criminally under the ecclesiastical law, were not indictable at common law, and are not therefore punishable in this country, unless they are made so by statute. It is hence very competent for the legislature to prescribe not only the penalty for these offences, but to limit the circumstances under which guilty parties may be prosecuted; and no presumption arises of an intention to render any >erson liable to a prosecution, except those who are clearly within the provisions of the statute.

In the absence of statutory provisions, the common law, as the guardian of the morals of the people, and their protection against offences notoriously against pmblic decency and good manners, will take cognizance of, and punish as misdemeanors, acts of adultery or fornication, when committed openly and publicly. An act of incontineney becomes an offence, punishable at common law, only when it is combined with circumstances which, beyond the more criminality of the simple fact, were calculated to make it injurious to society, as in case of incontinency in a street or highway.

For these reasons the judgment is reversed, the verdict set aside, and the cause remanded.