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John Guthrie - Crime of Adultery:

 

John Guthrie  for Notour,  i.e., Notorious Adultery.
1617

 Adultery was first made capital in Scotland by Act of Parliament 1563. chap. 74.

The thunder of the law in the statute immediately preceding, had been hurled against witchcraft; and an act passed in the present century, 'ratifies and revives all former laws and acts against drunkenness, Sabbath-breaking, swearing, fornication, adultery, and all manner of uncleaness;' and it specially and expressly revives * the Act above mentioned against adultery.  Notorious, or notour adultery, is, Imo, When children are procreated between adulterers; 2do, When they are publicly known to sleep with each other; or, 3tio, When being suspected of adultery, and admonished by the Kirk to refrain from the vice, and to do penance for the scandal; yet refusing obedience, they are excommunicated for the same.  James VI. Parl. 7. chap. 105.

John Guthrie was prosecuted for the crime of notorious adultery.  He was accused of having married a wife in the Shire of Forfar, and deserted her **; of having afterwards come to Leith; of having laid aside the name of Laird, which he bore in Forfar, and assumed that of Guthrie, and there marrying another wife, with whom he cohabited for several years; and also, of committing adultery with another woman.  These facts he acknowledged before the Kirk-session of Kirkliston, and did penance in sackcloth for his impurities.

Being thus detected and stigmatized by the Church, the secular arm was next stretched forth against him.  A Warrant under the Royal Sign Manual, dated at Whitehall, 26th of January 1617, was directed to the Lord Justice General, and the other Justices.  It set forth, that the King's Advocate, by His Majesty's express command, was about to prosecute the prisoner for the crime of notorious adultery, and required the Justices instantly, on his conviction, to condemn him to death.  The Court had the humanity not to enter this warrant upon record till about a month after the prisoner's conviction, when it sentenced him to be taken to the Cross of Edinburgh, and hanged on a gibbet till he be dead; and he appears to have been carried to immediate execution.

Two other persons, Alexander Thomson and Janet Cuthbert, were also, by Royal Warrant, tried for adultery on the same day with the prisoner, and were convicted.  But the King was pleased to direct, that out of his princely clemency, they should not be put to death, but banished.

William, Parl. I. Ses. 8. c. II.  It is a fortunate maxim in our jurisprudence, that statute law prescribes.

**  Rec. of Just. 14th March, 16th April 1617.

 

 

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