150 N.Y.S. 731

(88 Misc. Rep. 136)

PEOPLE v. SMITH.

(Livingston County Court.

December 17, 1914.)

Parent and Child (§ 17*) — Abandonment or Neglect to Support — Acts Constituting Offenses.

A husband’s desertion of his wife and child was not a violation of Penal Law (Consol. Laws, c. 40) § 480, providing that a parent or other person,, charged with the care or custody for nurture or education of a child, who abandons it in destitute circumstances and willfully omits to furnish necessary and proper food, clothing, or shelter for such child, is guilty of a misdemeanor, where prior to the desertion both he and the wife were working and contributing money for the support of the family, and the child thereafter was not in destitute circumstances, but had all necessary food, shelter, and clothing, since, while it is the duty of the father to provide in the first instance for a child, it is the mother’s duty secondarily to do so, and the section in question was enacted for the protection of children, and has no relation to the duties of the husband and wife as to each other.

[Ed. Note.—For other cases, see Parent and Child, Cent. Dig. §§ 176-181; Dec. Dig. § 17.*]

Scott Smith was indicted for abandonment, under Penal Law, § 480. 'On motion to dismiss the indictment at the close of the people’s case. Motion granted, and indictment dismissed.

At the conclusion of the people’s case, defendant moves for a dismissal of the indictment, on the ground that the- people have not made -out their case, for the reason that they have not shown that the child in question was in destitute circumstances.

John M. Hastings, Dist. Atty., of Mt. Morris, for the People.

William S. McGreevy, of Wayland, for defendant.

ABBOTT, J.

The court has considered the motion made by defend.ant’s counsel to dismiss the indictment on the ground that the people *732have not made out a cause of action. This indictment has arisen under a comparatively new section of the Penal Law, which was enacted in 1905. For that reason, there are no adjudicated cases that bear exactly upon the point raised by the defendant’s counsel in this case. The language of the section is:

“A parent or other person charged with the care or custody, for nurture or education, of a child under the age of sixteen years, who abandons the child in destitute circumstances and willfully omits to furnish necessary and proper food, clothing or shelter for such child, is guilty of felony.”

The facts in this case as proved on the trial are that the mother rents the house where these people lived, that she was also working and contributing money week by week for the support of the family, and that the husband was also contributing. On a certain day in May last he-goes away. The testimony of the child shows a home somewhat different from one that would be in destitute circumstances. She testifies to an eight room house nicely furnished, with every necessary convenience, and that she has had all the necessary food and shelter and clothing that she could ask for, and was perfectly happy. It seems to the court that one could scarcely say that that child was in destitute circumstances. It is true that it is the duty of the father to provide, in the first instance, for the child, and also the duty of the mother, secondarily, so to do; and it seems in this case that both of them contributed and labored for the maintenance of this home and the care and support of this child.

The section of the Code is enacted for the protection of children, so that children shall not be neglected by their parents and not properly cared for.- This section has no relation to the duties due to each other of husband and wife. There is no law that compels husband and wife to live together, if they do not see fit to do so, and it seems in this case that the father went away. If this child was in destitute circumstances, if the facts and circumstances showed that it needed clothing and food and shelter, then unquestionably the father and husband would be liable under this section; but I do not believe that the section contemplates, or that the Legislature intended, that where a child was not in actual destitute circumstances, or likely to be so, it was intended to convict the husband and father of a felony and send him to state prison therefor. The circumstances of each case must determine whether or not it is within the language of the statute; and notwithstanding the contention of the counsel I hardly believe that a child, one of whose parents happened to be a millionaire, and the other parent went away, that that parent could be found guilty of abandonment under this section of the Code.

The only case cited by the counsel for the people is People of the State of New York v. Connell, 151 App. Div. 943, 136 N. Y. Supp. 912, and the facts in that case bear out the decision of the court in this case, because the mother of the child, it appeared, had no means at all, but was dependent upon a mother and brother, who furnished support for the child out of their meager earnings. If a child had to be provided for by charity, or by the care of friends, or in a public institution, I think that would bring the case within the limits of this sec*733tion of the Code; but if the circumstances were that its other parent had ample means to take care of the child and did do so, I do not believe that the deserting parent would be liable under this section, and the dicta of the court in the case cited by counsel is obiter, and was not necessarily given in the decision of the case cited.

For the reason stated, the motion of the defendant’s counsel is granted, and the indictment is dismissed.

People v. Smith
150 N.Y.S. 731

Case Details

Name
People v. Smith
Decision Date
Dec 17, 1914
Citations

150 N.Y.S. 731

Jurisdiction
New York

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