The evidence of the marriage was sufficient. The legislature, in requiring marriages to be recorded by the town clerk, intended the record should be evidence *517of the fact. 8 Greenl. 75, Wedgewood's case. There must be some evidence, in addition, of identity. That was furnished, in this case, by the testimony that Huidah Vittum " was formerly known as Huidah Wallace, and that she and Amasa C. Vittum had cohabited as husband and wife for several years.
The testimony respecting improper familiarities, prior to the act of adultery proved, was admissible, being in support and confirmation of the direct evidence. It had a tendency to render it more probable that the act charged in the indictment was committed, showing as it did an approach towards the commission of the offence ; and of course it had a tendency to prove the fact. Illustrations will at once occur. If a defendant is indicted for breaking open a store, or stealing a horse, evidence that he was seen lurking about the store, or stable, a short time previous, would have a tendency to show him guilty, and would therefore be admissible with other evidence. The Commonwealth vs. Merriam, 14 Pick. 518, is an authority on this point, except that in that case there was an attempt to impeach the witness, who gave more direct evidence of the act of adultery. But the admissibility of the testimony does not depend upon the attempt to impeach the witness who gives direct evidence, but upon its tendency to establish the fact itself. 2 &Hark. Ev. 440 ; 2 Yeates 466.
Nor is the respondent entitled to an acquittal, upon the ground that he is an unmarried man. Adultery is commuted whenever there is an intercourse from which spurious issue may arise ; and it is very clear that by our laws both parties to such intercourse are guilty of that crime. There is not only no reason for any distinction between a married and single man, where the intercourse is with a married woman, but the statutes prior to 1829 would have left such intercourse, on the part of an unmarried man, unpunishable, criminally, except perhaps as an assault, if it was not deemed adultery. This certainly was never intended. The pro*518vincial statute of 1701, for the punishment of the crime, did not define adultery. Its language is, “ if any man shall commit adultery, the man and woman that shall be convicted,” &c. Prov. Laws 10. Nor did the statute of February 15, 1791, define the offence. “ Any man or woman who shall commit adultery,” &c. N. H. Laws (ed. 1815) 335.
Another provincial statute, of 1701, enacted, that “ if any man commit fornication with any single woman, upon due conviction thereof they shall both be fined,” &c. Prov. Laws 17. The language of the act of February 16, 1791, upon this subject, is, “ if any man shall commit fornication with any single woman, and be thereof convicted, every person so offending shall be fined,” &c., “provided, always, that in this case the oath of the woman only shall not be considered as sufficient evidence to convict the man.” These were the only statutes upon the subject prior to 1829 ; and the intercourse of a single man with a married woman was clearly not within the second class. There can be no doubt, therefore, that it was deemed to be within the first.
It was held that the statute of February 16, 1791, provided no punishment for the unmarried female, and that she could not, therefore, maintain an action for an aspersion of her character in that particular, without showing special damage. 3 N. H. R. 194, Woodbury vs. Thompson. It was for this reason, perhaps, as much as any other, that the statute of January 2, 1829, provided for the punishment of fornication in general terms, rendering both parties to it liable to conviction.
In civil actions by the husband, also, it is said there must be proof of the “adultery,” and no distinction is made between a married and an unmarried defendant. 2 Stark Ev. 438, 440. This alone would not be very conclusive, but it may serve to show the meaning attached to the term. So where it is said that when a man finds another committing adultery with his wife, and kills him in the firsftransport of passion, it is only manslaughter, (T. Raym. 212; 2 East’s P. C. *519234,) it is not to be understood that it would be a different crime if the party was an unmarried man.
The statute relative to divorces specifies adultery, in either of the parties, as one of the causes of divorce; and for this purpose, intercourse by a married man with an unmarried female is always held to be adultery. The reason of the case points clearly to such a construction, for the offence of the husband against the wife does not depend upon the question whether a married or single woman was the participator.
Whether the intercourse of a married man with an unmarried female can be held to be adultery in either of the parties, within the statute for the punishment of adultery, does not seem to be settled in this state. On the part of the man it would be clearly within some of the definitions of that crime, and perhaps it has generally been so regarded ; but upon this it is not necessary to express an opinion.