State v. Goonan
Decision Date | 06 December 1938 |
Citation | 3 A.2d 105 |
Parties | STATE v. GOONAN. |
Court | New Hampshire Supreme Court |
Exceptions from Superior Court, Rockingham County; Connor, Judge.
James F. Goonan was convicted of bigamy, and he brings exceptions.
Exceptions overruled.
Indictment, for bigamy. Trial by jury and verdict of guilty. The defendant was married in 1929. He and his wife lived together for about five months and then separated. They were never divorced. In 1938 the defendant married again. At the trial he offered to prove that he filed a libel for divorce against his first wife in 1934, that she did not contest the action, that she told him she was not going to contest it, and that he reasonably believed because it was not contested that he had obtained a divorce by default. This evidence was excluded subject to the defendant's exception. His bill of exceptions was allowed by Connor, J.
Stephen M. Wheeler, Co. Sol., of Exeter, for the State.
John W. Perkins, of Exeter, for defendant.
The statutory provisions here involved (Pub.Laws, c. 386, §§ 5, 6) are as follows:
Although there is some conflict on the subject, the weight of authority favors the view" that it is no defence to an indictment for bigamy that the defendant at the time of his alleged bigamous marriage believed in good faith and on reasonable grounds that he had been legally divorced from his first wife, when in truth no valid decree of divorce had ever been granted. 2 Wharton, Crim.Law (12th Ed.) § 2077; 10 C.J.S. Bigamy, 367, 368, § 7; Annotation, 57 A.L.R. 792.
While it may be true, as Bishop asserts, that in the interpretation of criminal statutes one of the "common forms of blundering" is to assume that if a statute "says nothing of mistake of fact, the courts cannot except a case of such mistake out of its operation" (1 Bishop, Crim.Law, 9th Ed., § 304), it by no means follows that a particular statute, by reason of its language and general purpose (State v. Downes, 79 N.H. 505, 112 A. 246), may not be fairly interpreted as making an act a crime without making a guilty knowledge one of the essential ingredients of the crime. State v. Cornish, 66 N.H. 329, 330, 21 A. 180, 11 L.R.A. 191.
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"In many statutes * * * the intent is indicated by the use of such words as 'maliciousl...
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