Difference between revisions of "Question: Were there any similar cases under Illinois adultery statute which demonstrate that Joseph was not breaking the law?"

m (It was later realized that Illinois law would probably support the practice of Latter-day Saint plural marriage, so they changed the wording of the law: bot - tag "Questions")
 
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{FairMormon}}
+
#REDIRECT[[Joseph Smith hid polygamy from the general Church membership#Were there any similar cases under Illinois adultery statute which demonstrate that Joseph was not breaking the law?]]  
<onlyinclude>
+
<!-- PLEASE DO NOT REMOVE ANYTHING BELOW THIS LINE -->
==Question: Were there any similar cases under Illinois adultery statute which demonstrate that Joseph was not breaking the law?==
 
===Two cases decided after Joseph's death demonstrate that there was nothing which would have permitted conviction===
 
 
 
Two cases decided after Joseph's death but under the same legal regime likewise demonstrate that there was nothing about Maria and Joseph's relationship (regardless of whether or not they had sexual relations) which would have permitted conviction under the Illinois adultery statute. Additionally, Stephen R. Douglas (the famed Illinois judge and later candidate for the presidency of the United States) and Thomas Ford (the governor of Illinois at the time of Joseph's murder) prosecuted adultery cases during their legal careers and both were definitive that an "open" and "notorious" aspect to the cohabitation had to be proven under the statute.<ref name="defining">{{Article:Bradshaw:Defining Adultery/Full title|pages=}}</ref>{{Rp|408-411}}
 
 
 
===If Joseph been charged by his wife Emma with adultery, this could have served as grounds for divorce under Illinois law===
 
 
 
By contrast, had Joseph been charged by his wife ''Emma'' with adultery, this could have served as grounds for divorce, and did not require the stringent requirements of being "open" or "notorious."<ref>"Compare [the strict criteria for statutory adultery] to Illinois divorce law which allowed adultery as a grounds for divorce; however, the cases that involved divorce petitions on this basis do not seemed [sic] to have followed any clear standard defining what constituted adultery, focusing rather on proving individual acts of adultery. Divorce law did not require that the conduct be "open" or "notorious." - {{Article:Bradshaw:Defining Adultery/Short|pages=407&ndash;408n21}}</ref>
 
 
 
===It was later realized that Illinois law would probably support the practice of Latter-day Saint plural marriage, so they changed the wording of the law===
 
 
 
Even Joseph's near-contemporaries would later realize that Illinois law would probably support the practice of Latter-day Saint plural marriage, perhaps even if done so openly.
 
 
 
<blockquote>
 
Recognizing the breadth of [the] state constitutional provision [for religious freedom] as it stood in 1844, Illinois adopted a new constitution in 1869 that introduced a number of changes in the clause governing religious liberty, including wording specifically intended to give the state authority to prohibit Mormon polygamy or other religiously-based practices that might be deemed offensive. Comments by certain delegates to the 1869 Illinois Constitutional Convention show taht there was a concern that the Mormon practice of plural marriage could be protected under the state constitution....
 
 
 
Several delegates expressed support for changes in the wording of the Illinois constitution in order to protect the state from what they viewed as extreme forms of worship, including Mormon polygamy. These delegates feared that the more liberal wording of the earlier constitution (in force in Joseph's day) might actually protected practices such as polygamy. One such delegate was Thomas J. Turner...[who] stated:"...Mormonism is a form of religion 'grant it, a false religion' nevertheless, it claims to be the true Christian religion...[d]o we desire that the Mormons shall return to our State, and bring with them polygamy?"<ref name="defining">{{Article:Bradshaw:Defining Adultery/Full title|pages=}}</ref>{{Rp|416, 416n45}}
 
</blockquote>
 
</onlyinclude>
 
{{endnotes sources}}
 
 
[[Category:Letter to a CES Director]]
 
[[Category:Letter to a CES Director]]
 
[[Category:MormonThink]]
 
[[Category:MormonThink]]

Latest revision as of 20:47, 17 May 2024