1885 United States Supreme Court case
Cannon v. United States |
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Full case name | Cannon v. United States |
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Citations | 116 U.S. 55 (more) |
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Compacts for sexual non-intercourse, easily made and easily broken, when the prior marriage relations continue to exist, with the occupation of the same house and table and the keeping up of the same family unity, is not a lawful substitute for the monogamous family which alone the statute tolerates. |
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- Chief Justice
- Morrison Waite
- Associate Justices
- Samuel F. Miller · Stephen J. Field
Joseph P. Bradley · John M. Harlan William B. Woods · Stanley Matthews Horace Gray · Samuel Blatchford
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Majority | Blatchford, joined by Waite, Bradley, Harlan, Woods, Mathews and Gray |
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Dissent | Miller, joined by Fields |
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Cannon v. United States, 116 U.S. 55 (1885), was a United States Supreme Court case in which the Court held compacts for sexual non-intercourse, easily made and easily broken, when the prior marriage relations continue to exist, with the occupation of the same house and table and the keeping up of the same family unity, is not a lawful substitute for the monogamous family which alone the statute tolerates.[1]
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