Online Encyclopedia

ADULTERY (from Lat. adulterium)

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Originally appearing in Volume V01, Page 234 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ADULTERY (from
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Lat. adulterium)
  , the sexual intercourse of a married person with another than the offender's
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husband or wife . Among the Greeks, and in the earlier period of
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Roman law, it was not adultery unless a married woman was the offender . The foundation of the later Roman law with regard to adultery was the lex Julia de adulteriis coercendis passed by Augustus about 17 B.C . (See Dig . 48 . 5; Paull . Rec . Sent. ii . 26; Brisson, Ad Leg . Jul. de Adult.) In
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Great Britain it was reckoned a spiritual offence, that is, cognizable by the spiritual courts only . The
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common law took no further
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notice of it than to allow the party aggrieved an
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action of damages . In England, however, the action for " criminal conversation," as it was called, was nominally abolished by the Matrimonial Causes Act r857; but by the 33rd section of the same act, the husband may claim damages from one who has committed adultery with his wife in a petition for dissolution of the
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marriage, or for judicial separation .

In

Ireland the action for criminal conversation is still retained . In Scotland damages may be recovered against an adulterer in an ordinary action of damages in the
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civil court, and the latter may be found liable for the expenses of an action of
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divorce if joined with the guilty spouse as a co-defender . Adultery on the
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part of the wife is, by the law of England, a ground for divorce, but on the part of the husband must be either incestuous or bigamous, or coupled with cruelty qr
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desertion for two or more years . In the
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United States adultery is everywhere ground of divorce, and there is commonly no prohibition against marrying the paramour or other re-marriage by the guilty party . Even if there be such a prohibition, it would be unavailing outof the state in which the divorce was granted; marriage being a contract which, if valid where executed, is generally treated as valid everywhere . Adultery gives a cause of action for damages to the wronged husband . It is in some states a criminal offence on the part of each party to the act, for which imprisonment in the penitentiary or state prison for a
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term of years may be awarded . In England, a
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complete divorce or dissolution of the marriage could, until the creation of the Court of
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Probate and Divorce, be obtained only by an act of parliament . This procedure is still pursued in the case of Irish divorces . In Scotland a complete divorce may be effected by proceedings in the Court of Session, as succeeding to the old ecclesiastical jurisdiction of the commissioners . A person divorced for adultery is, by the law of Scot-
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land, prohibited from intermarrying with the paramour . In France, Germany, Austria and other countries in
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Europe, as well as in some of the states of the United States, adultery is a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment or
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fine .

End of Article: ADULTERY (from Lat. adulterium)
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