l. On an indictment for bigamy, the first marriage may be proved
by the admissions of the prisoner, and it is for the jury to
determine whether what he said was an admission that he was
actually and legally married according to the laws of the country
where the marriage was solemnized.
2. As long as the fact of his first marriage is contested, the
second wife is an incompetent witness. Where it has by other
evidence been duly established to the satisfaction of the court,
she may be admitted to prove her marriage with him.
3. On the trial of such an indictment, the United States
challenged a juror for "actual bias." Three triers, appointed by
the court conformable to the law of Utah, where the indictment was
found, tried the challenge, and declared it to be true.
Held that their decision being by that law final, he was
properly excluded from the panel.
4. Against the objection of the prisoner, jurors were
interrogated by the United States as to their belief that the
practice of polygamy is in obedience to the divine will and
command.
Held that the objection was properly
overruled.
5. This court cannot reexamine questions of fact upon a writ of
error.
6. In a criminal case, the evidence upon which the jury are
justified in finding a verdict of guilty must be sufficient to
satisfy them of the prisoner's guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
Held that the instruction by the court of original
jurisdiction upon this point (
infra, p.
103 U. S. 309)
furnishes him no just ground of exception.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
Page 103 U. S. 305
MR. JUSTICE WOODS delivered the opinion of the Court.
Sec. 5352 of the Revised Statutes of the United States
declares:
"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 has 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."
The plaintiff in error was indicted under this section in the
Third District Court of Utah, at Salt Lake City. He was convicted.
He appealed to the supreme court of the territory, where the
judgment of the district court was affirmed.
That judgment is now brought to this Court for review upon writ
of error.
The indictment charged that the plaintiff in error, John Miles,
did, on Oct. 24, 1878, at Salt Lake County, in the Territory of
Utah, marry one Emily Spencer, and that afterwards, and while he
was so married to Emily Spencer and while she was still living,
did, on the same day and at the same county, marry one Caroline
Owens, the said Emily Spencer, his former wife, being still living
and at that time his legal wife.
The criminal procedure of Utah is regulated by an act of the
territorial legislature passed Feb. 22, 1878. The following are the
sections pertinent to this case, which prescribe the rules for the
empanelling of juries:
"SEC. 241. A particular cause of challenge is:"
"1. For such a bias as, when the existence of the facts is
ascertained, in judgment of law, disqualifies the juror, and which
is known in this act as implied bias."
"2. For the existence of a state of mind on the part of the
juror which leads to a just inference in reference to the case that
he will not act with entire impartiality, which is known in this
act as actual bias. "
Page 103 U. S. 306
"SEC. 246. If the facts are denied, the challenge must be tried
as follows: 1. if it be for implied bias, by the court; 2. if it be
for actual bias, by triers."
"SEC. 247. The triers are three impartial persons, not on the
jury panel, appointed by the court. All challenges for actual bias
must be tried by three triers thus appointed, a majority of whom
may decide."
"SEC. 249. Upon the trial of a challenge to an individual juror,
the juror challenged may be examined as a witness to prove or
disprove the challenge, and must answer every question pertinent to
the inquiry."
"SEC. 250. Other witnesses may also be examined on either side,
and the rules of evidence applicable to the trial of other issues
govern the admission or exclusion of evidence on the trial of the
challenge."
"SEC. 252. On the trial of a challenge for actual bias, when the
evidence is concluded, the court must instruct the triers that it
is their duty to find the challenge true if, in their opinion, the
evidence warrants the conclusion that the juror has such a bias
against the party challenging him as to render him not impartial,
and that if from the evidence they believe him free from such bias,
they must find the challenge not true; that a hypothetical opinion
unaccompanied with malice or ill will, founded on hearsay or
information supposed to be true, is of itself no evidence of bias
sufficient to disqualify a juror. The court can give no other
instruction."
"SEC. 253. The triers must thereupon find the challenge either
true or not true, and their decision is final. If they find it
true, the juror must be excluded."
Upon the trial of the case in the district court of the
territory, Oscar Dunn and Robert Patrick were called as jurors.
They were challenged for actual bias, and sworn upon their
voire dire. Three triers were appointed by the court to
pass upon the challenges to the jurors. Dunn, in answer to
questions propounded to him, testified that he believed polygamy to
be right, that it was ordained of God, and that the revelations
concerning it were revelations from God, and that those revelations
should be obeyed, and that he who acted on them should not be
convicted by the law of the land.
The juror was challenged by the prosecution
"for actual bias for the existence of a state of mind on his
part which led
Page 103 U. S. 307
to a just inference that he would not act with entire
impartiality."
The triers found the challenge true, and the juror was
rejected.
Robert Patrick was examined on his
voire dire and
testified that he believed that the revelation given to Joseph
Smith touching polygamy came from God, that it was one of God's
laws to his people, and that he who practiced polygamy,
conscientiously believing that revelation to be from God, was doing
God's will. He also testified that in his opinion, the law of
Congress was in conflict with that law of God, that Congress had
the right to pass such a law, and that on the trial of a person who
was in the practice of polygamy charged with bigamy, he would
consider it his duty, if satisfied by the evidence, to find the
defendant guilty, and that he would do so.
The juror was challenged for actual bias, and the triers found
the challenge true and the juror was excused. A large number of
other jurors were examined and challenged and excused on the same
grounds.
Upon the trial, evidence was given tending to show that a short
time before the date laid in the indictment, Oct. 24, 1874, the
plaintiff in error was in treaty for marrying, at or about the same
time, three young women, namely, Emily Spencer, Caroline Owens, and
Julia Spencer, and that there was a discussion between them on the
question which should be the first wife, and that upon appeal to
John Taylor, President of the Mormon Church, the plaintiff in error
and the three women being present, it was decided by him that Emily
Spencer, being the eldest, should be the first wife, Caroline
Owens, being the next younger, the second, and Julia Spencer, being
the youngest, the third wife -- that being according to the rules
of the church.
It appeared further that marriages of persons belonging to the
Mormon Church usually take place at what is called the Endowment
House; that the ceremony is performed in secret, and the person who
officiates is under a sacred obligation not to disclose the names
of the parties to it.
It further appeared that on Oct. 24, 1878, the plaintiff in
error was married to the said Caroline Owens, and that on the
Page 103 U. S. 308
night of that day he gave a wedding supper at the house of one
Cannon at which were present Emily Spencer, Caroline Owens, and
others. Evidence tending to establish these facts having been given
to the jury, the court permitted to be given in evidence the
declarations made by the plaintiff in error on that night, in
presence of the company assembled, and on subsequent occasions, to
the effect that Emily Spencer was his first wife.
Sec. 1604 of the Compiled Laws of Utah declares: "A husband
shall not be a witness for or against his wife, nor a wife a
witness for or against her husband."
Upon the trial, and after the evidence above recited had been
given, tending, as the prosecution claimed, to prove the marriage
of the plaintiff in error to Emily Spencer just before his marriage
to Caroline Owens, the latter was offered as a witness against him
to prove the same fact.
Thereupon the defendant admitted in open court the charge of the
indictment that he had been married to Caroline Owens, and even
offered testimony to prove it, but this was ruled out by the
court.
The defendant therefore objected to the introduction of Caroline
Owens as a witness against him, the objection being based on the
statute just quoted.
The court overruled the objection and admitted her as witness,
and she gave testimony tending to prove the marriage of the
plaintiff in error to Emily Spencer previous to his marriage with
the witness.
It appeared from the evidence that the name of Caroline Owens'
father was Maile, but that she had been adopted by an uncle and
aunt named Owens and had taken their name, by which she was called
and known, but that, when she was baptized in the Mormon Church,
she was required to be baptized in her father's name, and was
married to Miles under that name.
The court, among other things, charged the jury as follows:
"If you find from all the facts and circumstances proven in this
case, and from the admissions of the defendant, or from either,
that the defendant Miles married Emily Spencer, and
Page 103 U. S. 309
while she was yet living and his wife he married Caroline Owens,
as charged in the indictment, your verdict should be guilty."
"A legal wife cannot, but when it appears in a case that the
witness is not a legal wife, but a bigamous or plural wife, then
she may testify against the bigamous husband, and her testimony
should have just as much weight with the jury as any other witness
if the jury believe her statements to be true. And her evidence may
be taken like the evidence of any other witness to prove either the
first or second marriage. And so, in this case you, are at liberty
to consider the testimony of Miss Caroline Owens if you find from
all the evidence in the case that she is a second and plural wife,
and give it all the weight you think it entitled to, and may use it
to prove the first marriage alleged, to-wit, the marriage of
defendant and Emily Spencer, or any other fact which in your
opinion is proven by the testimony, if you believe it, as you do
the testimony of any witness to prove any fact about which she has
testified."
"The prisoner's guilt must be established beyond reasonable
doubt. Proof beyond a reasonable doubt is such as will produce an
abiding conviction in the mind to a moral certainty that the fact
exists that is claimed to exist, so that you feel certain that it
exists. A balance of proof is not sufficient. A juror in a criminal
case ought not to condemn unless the evidence excludes from his
mind all reasonable doubt; unless he be so convinced by the
evidence, no matter what the class of the evidence, of the
defendant's guilt that a prudent man would feel safe to act upon
that conviction in matters of the highest concern and importance to
his own dearest personal interests."
The plaintiff in error alleges as ground of error the exclusion
from the jury of Oscar Dunn, Robert Patrick, and others of the
Mormon faith. He claims that the examination of the proposed jurors
and the rulings of the court show that it was the deliberate
purpose of the court to exclude from the jury every one who was of
the Mormon faith. He insists that neither the court nor counsel had
the right to inquire into the religious belief of the juror.
Page 103 U. S. 310
There is no complaint that the jury was not a fair and impartial
one or that any juror empanelled was disqualified.
Whether the exclusion of qualified jurors from the panel is a
ground for setting aside the verdict and judgment on error we do
not find it necessary to decide.
It is insisted on behalf of the defendant in error that the
excluded jurors were not qualified to sit in the case. In
empanelling the jury, the court was bound to follow the law of the
territory on that subject.
Clinton v.
Englebrecht, 13 Wall. 434;
Reynolds v. United
States, 98 U. S. 145.
The jurors excluded were objected to by the prosecution as
disqualified from serving for actual bias.
The challenge for actual bias was tried by the triers appointed
by the court in accordance with the law of the territory. The
triers found the challenge true. By the same law, their decision is
declared to be final, and thereupon the jurors challenged must be
excluded. The law was carefully followed. The jurors were found
disqualified, and were therefore, as required by the law, excluded
from the panel.
It is evident from the examination of the jurors on their
voire dire, that they believed that polygamy was ordained
of God and that the practice of polygamy was obedience to the will
of God. At common law, this would have been ground for principal
challenge of jurors of the same faith. 3 Bla.Com. 303. It needs no
argument to show that a jury composed of men entertaining such a
belief could not have been free from bias or prejudice on the trial
for bigamy of a person who entertained the same belief, and whose
offense consisted in the act of living in polygamy. But whether the
evidence of bias was sufficient or not, it was so found by the
triers, and that was conclusive.
Whether or not that bias was founded on the religious belief of
the juror is entirely immaterial if the bias existed. It has been
held by this Court, that on an indictment for bigamy it was no
defense that the doctrines and practice of polygamy were a part of
the religion of the accused.
Reynolds v. United States,
supra.
It could not therefore be an invasion of the constitutional or
other rights of the juror called to try a party charged with bigamy
to inquire whether he himself was living in polygamy
Page 103 U. S. 311
and whether he believed it to be in accordance with the divine
will and command.
If the jurors themselves had no ground of complaint, it is clear
the defendant had none.
We find nothing in the record in relation to the impaneling of
the jury which would have required the supreme court of the
territory to set aside the verdict and the judgment of the district
court.
It is next assigned for error that the court admitted the
declarations and admissions of the plaintiff in error to prove the
fact of his first marriage, and the charge of the court that the
declarations of the accused were evidence proper to be considered
by the jury as tending to prove an actual marriage, and that such
marriage might be proven like any other fact, by the admissions of
the defendant or by circumstantial evidence, and that it was not
necessary to prove it by witnesses who were present at the
ceremony.
To hold that on an indictment for bigamy the first marriage can
only be proven by eyewitnesses of the ceremony is to apply to this
offense a rule of evidence not applicable to any other.
The great weight of authority is adverse to the position of the
plaintiff in error.
In
Regina v. Simmonsto, 1 Car. & Kir. 164, it was
held that on an indictment for bigamy, the first marriage may be
proved by the admissions of the prisoner, and it is for the jury to
determine whether what he said was an admission that he had been
legally married according to the laws of the country where the
marriage was solemnized.
The same view is sustained by the following cases:
Regina v.
Upton, cited in 1 Russell, Crimes (Greaves's ed.) 218;
Duchess of Kingston's Case, 20 How.State Trials, 355;
Truman's Case, 1 East P.C. 470;
Cayford's Case, 7
Me. 57;
Ham's Case, 11
id. 391;
State v.
Libby, 44
id. 469;
State v. Hilton, 3 Rich.
(S.C.) 434;
State v. Britton, 4 McCord (S.C.), 256; Warner
v. Commonwealth, 2 Va. Cas. 595; Norwood's Case, 1 East P.C. 470;
Commonwealth v. Murtagh, 1 Ashm. (Pa.) 272;
Regina v.
Newton, 2 Moo. & R. 503;
State v. McDonald, 25
Miss. 176;
Wolverton v. State, 16 Ohio, 173;
State v.
Seals,
Page 103 U. S. 312
16 Ind. 352;
Quin v. State, 46
id. 725;
Arnold v. State, 53 Ga. 574;
Cameron v. State, 14
Ala. 546;
Brown v. State, 52
id. 338;
Williams v. State, 44
id. 24;
Commonwealth v.
Jackson, 11 Bush (Ky.) 679.
The declarations of the plaintiff in error touching his marriage
with Emily Spencer, admitted in evidence against him, appear to
have been deliberately and repeatedly made, and under such
circumstances as tended to show that they had reference to a formal
marriage contract between him and her.
We are of opinion that the district court committed no error in
admitting such declarations, or in its charge to the jury
concerning them.
The charge of the court defining what is meant by the phrase
"reasonable doubt" is assigned as ground of error.
The evidence upon which a jury is justified in returning a
verdict of guilty must be sufficient to produce a conviction of
guilt, to the exclusion of all reasonable doubt. Attempts to
explain the term "reasonable doubt" do not usually result in making
it any clearer to the minds of the jury. The language used in this
case, however, was certainly very favorable to the accused, and is
sustained by respectable authority.
Commonwealth v.
Webster, 5 Cush. (Mass.) 295;
Arnold v. State, 23
Ind. 170;
State v. Nash, 7 Ia. 347;
State v.
Ostrander, 18
id. 435;
Donnelly v. State, 2
Dutch. (N.J.) 601;
Winter v. State, 20 Ala. 39;
Giles
v. State, 6 Ga. 276.
We think there was no error in the charge of which the plaintiff
in error can justly complain.
The plaintiff in error next alleges that the description of the
woman named in the indictment as the person with whom the crime of
bigamy was committed, was not sufficiently specific, and that on
the trial she turned out to be not Caroline Owens, but Caroline
Maile.
The designation of Caroline Owens as the person with whom the
second marriage was contracted is clearly sufficient. If it were
not, it is too late after verdict to object. As to the fact, the
jury has found that the person whom the plaintiff in error was
charged to have married while his first wife was living, and still
his legal wife, was Caroline Owens and not Caroline Maile, and that
question is therefore conclusively settled by the verdict.
Page 103 U. S. 313
This court cannot reexamine questions of fact upon writ of
error. Rev.Stat. sec. 1011.
The plaintiff in error lastly claims that the court erred in
allowing Caroline Owens, the second wife, to give evidence against
him touching his marriage with Emily Spencer, the alleged first
wife; and in charging the jury that they might consider her
testimony, if they found from all the evidence in the case that she
was a second and plural wife.
This assignment of error, we think, is well founded.
The law of Utah declares that a husband shall not be a witness
for or against his wife nor a wife for or against her husband.
The marriage of the plaintiff in error with Caroline Owens was
charged in the indictment and admitted by him upon the trial. The
fact of his previous marriage with Emily Spencer was therefore the
only issue in the case, and that was contested to the end of the
trial. Until the fact of the marriage of Emily Spencer with the
plaintiff in error was established, Caroline Owens was
prima
facie his wife, and she could not be used as a witness against
him.
The ground upon which a second wife is admitted as a witness
against her husband in a prosecution for bigamy is that she is
shown not to be a real wife by proof of the fact that the accused
had previously married another wife, who was still living and still
his lawful wife. It is only in cases where the first marriage is
not controverted or has been duly established by other evidence
that the second wife is allowed to testify, and she can then be a
witness to the second marriage, and not to the first.
The testimony of the second wife to prove the only controverted
issue in the case -- namely the first marriage -- cannot be given
to the jury on the pretext that its purpose is to establish her
competency. As her competency depends on proof of the first
marriage, and that is the issue upon which the case turns, that
issue must be established by other witnesses before the second wife
is competent for any purpose. Even then she is not competent to
prove the first marriage, for she cannot be admitted to prove a
fact to the jury which must be established before she can testify
at all.
Page 103 U. S. 314
Witnesses who are
prima facie competent but whose
competency is disputed are allowed to give evidence on their
voire dire to the court upon some collateral issue on
which their competency depends, but the testimony of a witness who
is
prima facie incompetent cannot be given to the jury
upon the very issue in the case in order to establish his
competency and at the same time prove the issue.
The authorities sustain these views.
Upon a prosecution for bigamy under the statute of 1 Jac., c.
11, it was said by Lord Chief Justice Hale:
"The first and true wife is not allowed to be a witness against
her husband, but I think in clear the second may be admitted to
prove the second marriage, for she is not his wife, contrary to a
sudden opinion delivered in July, 1664, at the Assizes in Surrey,
in
Arthur Armstrong's Case, for she is not so much as his
wife
de facto."
1 Hale P.C. 693.
So in East's Pleas of the Crown the rule is thus laid down:
"The first and true wife cannot be a witness against her
husband, nor vice versa; but the second may be admitted to prove
the second marriage, for the first being proved she is not so much
as wife de facto, but that must be first established."
1 East P.C. 469. The text of East is supported by the following
citation of authorities: 1 Hale P.C. 693; 2 M.S.Sum. 331;
Ann
Cheney's Case, O.B.May 1730, Sergt. Foster's Manuscript.
In Peake's Evidence (Norris) 248, it is said:
"It is clearly settled that a woman who was never legally the
wife of a man, though she has been in fact married to him, may be a
witness against him; as in an indictment for bigamy, the first
marriage being proved by other witnesses, the second wife may be
examined to prove the marriage with her, for she is not de jure his
wife."
Mr. Greenleaf, in his work of Evidence, vol. iii., sec. 206,
says:
"If the first marriage is clearly proved and not controverted,
then the person with whom the second marriage was had may be
admitted as a witness to prove the second marriage, as well as to
other facts not tending to defeat the first or legalize the second.
There it is conceived she would not be admitted to prove a fact
showing that the first marriage was void -- such
Page 103 U. S. 315
as relationship within the degrees or the like -- nor that the
first wife was dead at the time of the second marriage, nor ought
she to be admitted at all if the first marriage is in
controversy."
The result of the authorities is that as long as the fact of the
first marriage is contested, the second wife cannot be admitted to
prove it. When the first marriage is duly established by other
evidence to the satisfaction of the court, she may be admitted to
prove the second marriage, but not the first, and the jury should
have been so instructed.
In this case, the injunction of the law of Utah that the wife
should not be a witness for or against her husband was practically
ignored by the court. After some evidence tending to show the
marriage of plaintiff in error with Emily Spencer, but that fact
being still in controversy, Caroline Owens, the second wife, was
put upon the stand and allowed to testify to the first marriage,
and the jury were in effect told by the court that if, from her
evidence and that of other witnesses in the case, they were
satisfied of the fact of the first marriage, then they might
consider the evidence of Caroline Owens to prove the first
marriage.
In other words, the evidence of a witness,
prima facie
incompetent, and whose competency could only be shown by proof of a
fact which was the one contested issue in the case, was allowed to
go to the jury to prove that issue and at the same time to
establish the competency of the witness.
In this we think the court erred.
It is made clear by the record that polygamous marriages are so
celebrated in Utah as to make the proof of polygamy very difficult.
They are conducted in secret, and the persons by whom they are
solemnized are under such obligations of secrecy that it is almost
impossible to extract the facts from them when placed upon the
witness stand. If both wives are excluded from testifying to the
first marriage, as we think they should be under the existing rules
of evidence, testimony sufficient to convict in a prosecution for
polygamy in the Territory of Utah is hardly attainable. But this is
not a consideration by which we can be influenced. We must
administer the law as we find it. The remedy is with Congress by
enacting such a change
Page 103 U. S. 316
in the law of evidence in the Territory of Utah as to make both
wives witnesses on indictments for bigamy.
For the error indicated, the judgment of the Supreme Court of
the Territory of Utah must be reversed and the cause remanded to
that court to be by it remanded to the district court with
directions to set and award a
venire facias de novo.
So ordered.