State v. Sager

Decision Date20 July 1906
Docket Number14,866 - (211)
Citation108 N.W. 812,99 Minn. 54
PartiesSTATE v. EDWIN N. SAGER
CourtMinnesota Supreme Court

Defendant was indicted in the district court for Martin county, under section 6529, G.S. 1894, for the crime of abduction. A demurrer to the indictment was overruled by Quinn, J., who certified to the supreme court for its determination the questions set forth in the opinion. Order overruling demurrer affirmed.

SYLLABUS

Abduction -- Indictment.

An indictment under section 6529, G.S. 1894, charging the defendant with feloniously taking for the purpose of marriage a named child of the age of fifteen years from the custody of its parents without their consent, is held to be valid notwithstanding the following objections, for the following reasons, respectively, namely:

1. That this section is inapplicable to females who have the right to marry when they attain the age of fifteen years under section 4769, G.S. 1894, because the gist of the offense is the taking from the custody of the legal guardians and not the marrying of the child.

2. That the indictment did not show to whom it was intended that the child should be married, because it was sufficient to allege the taking for the illegal purpose in the language of the statute which was sufficiently clear and definite.

3. That it did not charge defendant's intent that the child should be married before arriving at the age of sixteen years, because of the same reasons.

4. That it did not show that her parents had legal charge of her person, because the inference of legal custody follows as a matter of law from the fact of relationship, notwithstanding the presumption of innocence.

Edward T. Young, Attorney General, C. S. Jelley, Assistant Attorney General, J. E. Palmer, County Attorney, and E. C. Dean, for the State.

Albert R. Allen and DeForrest Ward, for defendant.

OPINION

JAGGARD, J.

The defendant was indicted of the crime of abduction, committed as follows:

The said Edwin N. Sager, on the thirtieth day of January, 1906, at the city of Fairmont, in the county of Martin and state of Minnesota, did wilfully, unlawfully, and feloniously, and for the purpose of marriage, take one Bertha Anderson, an unmarried female child under the age of sixteen years, to wit of the age of fifteen years, from the custody and possession of Louis Anderson, and Mary Anderson, the father and mother of said Bertha Anderson, without the consent of said Louis Anderson and Mary Anderson, or either of them; contrary to the form of the statute in such case made and provided, and against the peace and dignity of the state of Minnesota.

To this indictment the defendant demurred. The court overruled the demurrer, and certified the questions hereafter set forth to this court.

1. One of the points certified was that section 4769, G.S. 1894, is in conflict with section 6529 under which this indictment was drawn, and that section 6529 is inapplicable to females who have attained the full age of fifteen years. Section 4769 reads as follows:

Every male person who has attained the full age of eighteen years, and every female who has attained the age of fifteen years, is capable in law of contracting marriage, if otherwise competent.

The material part of section 6529 is as follows:

A person who takes a female under the age of sixteen years * * * without the consent of her father, mother, guardian, or other person having legal charge of her person, for the purpose of marriage, * * * is guilty of abduction.

It appears upon the face of this indictment that the female child was of the age of fifteen years, and it is conceded that it would have been no penal offense to have married her. The argument for defendant is that it was not a crime to take her, with her own consent, for the purpose of a lawful marriage. The penal statute quoted, however, is not directed to the wrong done the child by marrying her in her immature years, alike whether under or over fifteen. Its punishment is not imposed for marriage at all; conviction under section 6529 could be had, although there had been no marriage. The wrong defined by the statute is the violation of the legal rights of the persons lawfully entitled to the custody of the child. The gravamen of the offense is the taking, not the marrying. See State v. Jamison, 38 Minn. 21, 35 N.W. 712. The consent of the child is immaterial and irrelevant. She was capable, when of the age of fifteen years, or more, of consenting to marry, but she has not the power of consenting on the part of the guardian of her person, legal or natural, to the act of taking her away for the purpose of marriage. On the contrary, one certain and immediate purpose of the penal statute is to throw around females of tender years the forethought and judgment involved in their control by their guardians as a protection against premature marriages, whose significance and perils are unrealized, and whose lack of wisdom has so often been pitifully demonstrated. A time comes when a female child can exercise her own will in leaving that control and marrying whom she chooses; then her consent legally sanctions all she may do in this regard; but until then, to take her away from the legal guardians of her person for the purpose of marriage, is punishable under the statute. The consent of the child is no defense to an indictment for abduction. 1 Cyc. 146, subd. "e"; Id. 148, subd. III; 1 Am. & Eng. Enc. (2d Ed.) 178. And see 1 Cent. Dig. cols. 384, 385, § 12.

2. Another objection of defendant certified, was that the indictment does not show to whom it was intended, on the part of defendant, that the child named in the indictment was to be married. The indictment is not void for insufficiency in this respect. An indictment which embodies the statutory language is not necessarily sufficient. If the statute does not set forth all of the elements necessary to constitute the offense intended to be punished, the indictment must allege the particular facts necessary to bring the case within the intent and meaning of the statute. State v. Howard, 66 Minn. 309, 68 N.W. 1096, 34 L.R.A. 178, 61 Am. St. 403; Cochran v. People, 175 Ill. 28, 51 N.E. 845. But, as a general rule, a charge in an indictment may be made in the words of the statute without a particular statement of facts and circumstances when by using those words the act in which an offense consists is directly and expressly alleged without uncertainty and ambiguity. Com. v. Welsh, 7 Gray, 324; Gilfillan, C.J., in State v. Comfort, 22 Minn. 271; State v. Shenton, 22 Minn. 311; State v. Abrisch, 41 Minn. 41, 42...

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