Colorado
18-6-501 - Adultery. "Any sexual
intercourse by a married person
other than with that person's spouse
is adultery, which is prohibited."
California
"Sexual intercourse by a married
woman with a man other than her
husband [is] regarded as an offense
against public morals, not merely as
a breach of the obligation of
marriage" West's California Digest.
Washington, DC
https://laws.findlaw.com/DC/975333a.html &
https://laws.findlaw.com/US/509/688.html
if the crime of adultery with which
he was charged was included in the
crime of unlawful cohabitation for
which he was convicted and punished,
that question is now to be
considered," 131 U.S., at 185
(emphasis added)), from its legal
analysis, id., at 186-189, and from
its repeated observations that
cohabitation required proof of
adultery, id., at 187, 189.
DOD
https://laws.findlaw.com/9th/2/909/375.html
Adultery is illegal[ in many
states; the Department Defense does
not subject the class of adulterers
automatically to expanded security
procedures.
Georgia
https://laws.findlaw.com/US/478/186.html
State might conclude that adultery
is likely to injure third persons,
in particular, spouses and children
of persons who engage in
extramarital affairs. With respect
to incest, a court might well agree
with respondent that the nature of
familial relationships renders true
consent to incestuous activity
sufficiently problematical that a
blanket prohibition of such activity
[478
U.S. 186, 210] is
warranted. See Tr. of Oral Arg.
21-22. & https://laws.findlaw.com/US/292/216.html Section
966 (D.C. Code 1929, T. 14, 63)
provides: 'A divorce from the bond
of marriage may be granted only
where one of the parties has
committed adultery during the
marriage: Provided, That in such
case the [292 U.S. 216, 222]
innocent party only may remarry, but
nothing herein contained shall
prevent the remarriage of the
divorced parties to each other. ...'
AND ... a statute of the [292 U.S.
216, 226] District provides for
forfeiture of dower in case of the
wife's adultery during marriage,
none denies dower to a widow because
she had been guilty of adultery
prior to the marriage with her late
husband.
Utah https://laws.findlaw.com/US/131/176.html That
whoever commits adultery shall be
punished by imprisonment in the
penitentiary not exceeding three
years; and, when the act is
committed between a married woman
and a man who is unmarried, both
parties to such act shall be deemed
guilty of adultery; and when such
act is committed between a married
man and a woman who is unmarried,
the man shall be deemed guilty of
adultery.' 24 St. 635. said
defendant, Hans Nielsen, having been
duly convicted in this court of the
crime of adultery, it is therefore
ordered, adjudged, and decreed that
the said Hans Nielsen be imprisoned
in the penitentiary of the territory
of Utah, at the county of Salt Lake,
for the term of one hundred and
twenty-five days.
https://laws.findlaw.com/10th/964191.html
The Ten Commandments are undeniably
a sacred text in the Jewish and
Christian faiths, and no legislative
recitation of a supposed secular
purpose can blind us to that fact.
The Commandments do not confine
themselves to arguably secular
matters, such as honoring one's
parents, killing or murder,
adultery, stealing, false witness,
and covetousness. . . .
South Dakota https://laws.findlaw.com/US/241/602.html This
is a prosecution for adultery
committed on one of the Sioux Indian
Reservations in the state of South
Dakota. Both participants in the act
were Indians belonging to that
reservation. The statute upon which
the prosecution is founded was
originally adopted as part of the
act of March 3, 1887 (chap. 397, 24
Stat. at L. 635), and is now 316 of
the Penal Code [35 Stat. at L. 1149,
chap. 321, Comp. Stat. 1913,
10,489]. The section makes no
mention of Indians, and the question
for decision is whether it embraces
adultery committed by one Indian
with another Indian, on an Indian
reservation. The district court
answered the question in the
negative.
Alabama https://laws.findlaw.com/US/106/583.html Section
4184 of the Code of Alabama provides
that 'if any man and woman live
together in adultery or fornication,
each of them must, on the first
conviction of the offense, be fined
not less than $100, and may also be
imprisoned in the county jail or
sentenced to hard labor for the
county for not more than six months.
On the second conviction for the
offense, with the same person, the
offender must be fined not less than
$300, and may be imprisoned in the
county jail, or sentenced to hard
labor for the county, for not more
than 12 months; and for a third or
any subsequent conviction with the
same person, must be imprisoned in
the penitentiary or sentenced to
hard labor for the county for two
years." and
https://laws.findlaw.com/US/471/222.html
The predecessor to 182 was Art.
VIII, 3, of the Alabama Constitution
of 1875, which denied persons
"convicted of treason, embezzlement
of public funds, malfeasance in
office, larceny, bribery, or other
crime punishable by imprisonment in
the penitentiary" the right to
register, vote or hold public
office. These offenses were largely,
if not entirely, felonies. The
drafters of 182, which was adopted
by the 1901 convention, expanded the
list of enumerated crimes
substantially to include the
following: "treason, murder, arson,
embezzlement, malfeasance in office,
larceny, receiving stolen property,
obtaining property or money under
false pretenses, perjury,
subornation of perjury, robbery,
assault with intent to rob,
burglary, forgery, bribery, assault
and battery on the wife, bigamy,
living in adultery, sodomy, incest,
rape, miscegenation, [and] crime
against nature."
Oklahoma https://laws.findlaw.com/US/241/582.html Adultery
is an offense against the marriage
relation, and belongs to the class
of subjects which each state
controls in its own way. It is a
punishable offense only where the
common or statute law of the state
makes it such; and where punishable,
it is cognizable only in the courts
of the state.
New York https://laws.findlaw.com/US/360/684.html Under
provisions of the New York Education
Law which were construed by the
Court of Appeals of New York as
requiring the denial of a license to
show a motion picture when "its
subject matter is adultery presented
as being right and desirable for
certain people under certain
circumstances,"
Florida
https://laws.findlaw.com/US/379/184.html The
challenged statute is a part of
chapter 798 entitled "Adultery and
Fornication."1 Section 798.01
forbids living in adultery and
798.02 proscribes lewd cohabitation.
Both sections are of general
application, both require proof of
intercourse to sustain a conviction,
and both authorize imprisonment up
to two years.2 Section 798.03, [379
U.S. 184, 186] also of general
application, proscribes fornication3
and authorizes a three-month jail
sentence.
https://laws.findlaw.com/US/424/448.html (Section
61.08, Florida Statutes), a wife
found guilty of adultery could not
be awarded alimony.
Pennsylvania
https://laws.findlaw.com/US/352/1.html
Mazzei pleaded guilty to charges of
adultery and bastardy in a
Pennsylvania state court.
(Adultery law repealed in
Pennsylvania) https://laws.findlaw.com/US/439/1052.html Pennsylvania
repealed its law prohibiting
adultery and fornication in 1972.
1972 Pa.Laws, Act No. 334, 5
New York https://laws.findlaw.com/US/160/531.html wherein
she alleged that the defend- [160
U.S. 531, 533] ant, whose legal
residence was still in the city of
Elizabeth, had committed adultery
with several persons on different
occasions in the city of New York,
South Carolina https://laws.findlaw.com/US/372/53.html respondent
filed his answer to the complaint
neither admitting nor denying the
allegations of adultery
West Virginia https://laws.findlaw.com/US/232/619.html The
plaintiff (the defendant in error)
at that time was the wife of a
citizen of West Virginia, but, in
consequence of his adultery, as she
alleged, had separated from him and
had gone to Virginia.
New York https://laws.findlaw.com/US/181/175.html against
Frederick A. Bell, for a divorce
from the bond of matrimony, for his
adultery at Buffalo, in the county
of Erie, in April and May, 1890, and
for alimony. [181 U.S. 175, 176]
Illinois https://laws.findlaw.com/US/236/140.html Congress
had no power to punish immorality,
and certainly did not intend by this
act of June 25, 1910 (36 Stat. at L.
825, chap. 395, Comp. Stat. 1913,
8812), to make fornication or
adultery, which was a state
misdemeanor, a Federal felony,
punishable able by $5,000 fine and
five years' imprisonment.
https://laws.findlaw.com/7th/952053.html
Their unmarried parents are
"fornicators"; some are adulterers;
fornication and adultery remain on
the books of many states as crimes.
Hawaii
https://laws.findlaw.com/US/188/291.html 'That
under and by virtue of the Hawaiian
law in force at the time said decree
of divorce was granted and now in
force, it is provided: 'When a
divorce is decreed for the adultery
or other offense amounting thereto,
of the wife, the husband shall hold
her personal estate forever, and he
shall hold her real estate so long
as they shall live; and if he shall
survive her, and there shall be
issue of the marriage born alive, he
shall hold her real estate for the
term of his own life, as a tenant by
the curtsey; provided that the court
may make such reasonable provision
for the divorced wife out of any
real estate that may have belonged
to her, as it may deem proper.'
Federal Law Against
Adultery https://laws.findlaw.com/US/327/711.html sections
of the Federal Criminal Code apply
to the reservation, including not
only the Assimilative Crimes Act,
but also those making penal the
offenses of rape, 4 assault with
intent to [327 U.S. 711, 714] commit
rape,5 having carnal knowledge of a
girl,6 adultery7 and fornication.
8 years; ... and when such act is
committed between a married man
and a woman who is unmarried, the
man shall be deemed guilty of
adultery.' Criminal Code, 316,
35 Stat. 1149, 18 U.S.C. 516, 18
U.S.C.A. 516. [Footnote 8] 'If any
unmarried man or woman commits
fornication, each shall be fined not
more than $100, or imprisoned not
more than six months.' Criminal
Code, 318, 35 Stat. 1149, 18 U.S.C.
518, 18 U.S.C.A. 518. Adultery:
(1887) 24 Stat. 635, in connection
with the amendment of bigamy
statutes; (1909) 35 Stat. 1149.
Arizona https://laws.findlaw.com/US/327/711.html
1975 Case
https://laws.findlaw.com/US/420/770.html
"When to the idea of an offense
plurality of agents is logically
necessary, conspiracy, which assumes
the voluntary accession of a person
to a crime of such a character that
it is aggravated by a plurality of
agents, cannot be maintained. . . .
In other words, when the law says,
`a combination between two persons
to effect a particular end shall be
called, if the end be effected, by a
certain name,' it is not lawful for
the prosecution to call it by some
other name; and when the law says,
such an offense - e. g., adultery -
shall have a certain punishment, it
is not lawful for the prosecution to
evade this limitation by indicting
the offense as conspiracy." 2 F.
Wharton, Criminal Law 1604, p. 1862
(12th ed. 1932).5[420
U.S. 770, 774] The Rule
has been applied by numerous courts,
state and federal alike.
Wyoming
https://laws.findlaw.com/US/161/65.html
Sections 1 and 2 relate to testimony
in prosecutions for bigamy,
polygamy, or unlawful cohabitation.
Sections 3-5 define and punish the
offenses of adultery, incest, and
fornication.
Minnesota
https://laws.findlaw.com/US/296/1.html
Mason's Minnesota Statutes 1927,
8601-8604. The court is empowered
upon divorce for any cause, except
that of the wife's adultery, to
decree to the wife 'such part of the
personal and real estate of the
husband, not exceeding in value
one-third thereof, as it deems just
and reasonable, having regard to the
ability of the husband, the
character and situation of the
parties, and all other circumstances
of the case.'
Ohio
https://laws.findlaw.com/US/432/161.html
In Nielsen, conviction for adultery
required proof that the defendant
had sexual intercourse with one
woman while married to another.
Puerto Rico
https://laws.findlaw.com/US/204/64.html
It was, moreover, specially alleged
that, as the divorce had been
decreed against the wife on account
of her adultery, she had forfeited
all her interest in the community if
any community property existed. &
the Code of 1889 provided that, in
case of a divorce for adultery, the
guilty spouse should forfeit or
lose, not his or her interest in the
community, but 'all that may have
been given or promised him or her by
the innocent one, or by any other
person, in consideration for the
latter.'
Spain
https://laws.findlaw.com/US/204/64.html
by the law of Spain, prior to the
adoption of the Spanish Civil Code,
the wife against whom a judgment of
divorce for adultery was decreed
forfeited all right to her share in
the community existing between
herself and husband.
Uniform Code of Military Justice
(UCMJ)
https://laws.findlaw.com/9th/3/34/1469.html
Prohibited conduct includes
adultery, indecent assault, wrongful
co-habitation, fraternization,
indecent language, indecent acts
with another, pandering and
prostitution, sodomy and bigamy.
Articles 120, 125, 134, Uniform Code
of Military Justice, 10 U.S.C. 920,
925, 934 (Supp. 1994).
https://laws.findlaw.com/8th/953913pv2.html
Further Research:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adultery Adultery
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emotional_affair Emotional Affairs
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