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John Fraser - Crime of Adultery:

 

John Fraser, Writer in Edinburgh, for Adultery.
1673

 Counsel for the Prosecutor, Sir George MacKenzie.

Counsel for the Prisoner, Sir George Lockhart, &c.

The prisoner was tried capitally for the crime of adultery, at the instance of his wife, and of Sir John Nisbet of Dirleton, his Majesty's Advocate.  The fact libelled against him was simply, that, in absence of the private prosecutor, he had married another woman.

The prisoner's counsel urged in his behalf, that although the private prosecutor had a right of action to annull the second marriage, and to compel the adherence of the prisoner*; yet she had no title to prosecute him criminally, ad vindictam pulicam, in a suit, in which if she prevailed, the husband whom she claimed must be berest of his life.  That if any irregularity, or offence, has been committed by the prisoner, it was owing allenarly to the snares laid for him by his wife, the insidiousness of whose malice could only be parallelled by the effrontery of her prostitution.  The prosecutor having been equally public and promiscuous in her debaucheries, the prisoner had several years before been obliged to sue, before the Commissaries of Edinburgh, for a divorce from her; but, conscious of guilt and infamy, she had embarked on board a ship destined to carry felon's to Virginia, and the prosecution was suffered to drop.  After having been absent for a considerable time, a report of her death was circulated and believed, and what was at first rumour, became afterwards evidence; the shipmaster, one of the seamen, and a passenger on board the ship, in which the prosecutor embarked, having given a testificate on oath, of her having died in Virginia.  This testificate was laid before the Presbytery of Edinburgh; and the clerk of the Kirk-session was ordered to examine into the same.  Having done so, he was satisfied by the granters, that the certificate was true, as well as authentic.  This report being laid before the presbytery, they authorised the proclamation of banns, which was regularly performed; yet no interruption was made to, no question brought of the marriage, for upwards of four years.   And, at the end of this period, the prosecutor starts up as from the dead, with a halter in her hand, menacing the prisoner.

It now appears that she had lurked for great part of that time in Aberdeen, Dundee, &c. under the name of Mrs Gerard; that she had circulated the report of her own death:  That, since her assumption of a feigned name, her life had been as prosligate as before her embarking for Virginia.  And that she had brought forth three adulterous children, the unequivocal testimony of her shame and guilt; one of them, not six months preceding this very trial, which she has brought in order to get her husband hanged on a charge of adultery.  It was argued, that the prosecutor's infidelity to the marriage vows had given occasion to the suit of divorce, which the prisoner had brought against her before the Commissaries; and authorised the process of recrimination before this Court, which the prisoner was immediately to institute:  That this infidelity would exclude the civil effects of a divorce, and much more ought to debar his wife from prosecuting the husband capitally for the very offence she had committed against him.  That she had laid a snare for him, by propagating rumours of her own death, and by lurking under a feigned name.  Besides these defences, it was argued for the prisoner, that adultery could not be committed without consciousness, 'nam voluntas et propositum distinguant malesicia.'  And the probable rumour, nay the direct certificate of the prosecutor's death, exempts from the suspicion of consciousness, and consequently from the crime of adultery, according to the cafe in the civil law, 'Mulier cum audisset absentum virum defunctum** 'effe, alii fe junxit, et falsis rumoribus inducta, et quia verifimile est eam deceptam fuisse, nihil vindicta dignum videri potest.'

It was answered for the prosecutor, That he is an adulterer who lies with another woman while his wife lives; and, as rumour could not dissolve marriage, so neither could it defend against adultery; otherwise it were easy for any man who grew weary of his wife, to propogate reports of her death, and then to take advantage of the rumours he himself had fabricated.  That even, if rumours were sufficient; yet these ought to be constant and universal; whereas, in this cafe, there was but one certificate, and it bore only, that Margaret Haitly died in Virginia, not that Margaret Haitly, wife of John Fraser, died in Virginia;  That it was not probable, but invincible ignorance alone could be excusable;  That the prisoner had not made sufficient inquiry concerning his wife at her relations, and his ignorance was affected;  That a long lapse of time must intervene; whereas here, there was but an absence of three years;  That the prisoner ought to have executed a summons of adhearence against his wife, which would have entitled him to a divorce:  That the Presbytery of Edinburgh had not a jurisdiction competent to the dissolution of marriage; consequently their warrant was altogether insignificant.

To this sophisticated reasoning the Court gave the sanction of its judgment, repelling the argument urged in behalf of the prisoner.

Nothing now remained but to lead a proof of the fact.  The proof amounted solely to the prisoner's having married Helen Guthrie his second wife, and lived under the same roof with her as married persons.  Even the consummation of the marriage is not proved, but is only matter of presumption.  The jury by plurality of voices, viz. nine to six, found the prisoner guilty.

Margaret Haitly,  for adultery.  [Click on link (her name) to go to her trial.]
Record of Just. 17th Nov. 1673.  12th Jan., 20th July 1674.

**  Digest. L. II.  12. de adulteriis.

 

 

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