164 Wis. 223 | Wis. | 1916
Tbe information charged tbe defendant with wilfully and feloniously, on May 1, 1915, at tbe city of Wau-kesba, Waukesba county, Wisconsin, without lawful excuse,, deserting and refusing to provide for tbe support and maintenance of bis legitimate minor children under tbe age of sixteen years, viz. Hazel, aged six years, and Sheridan, aged four years, leaving them in destitute and necessitous circumstances.
It appears from tbe evidence that on tbe 25th day of April, 1915, tbe wife of defendant left her home in tbe city of Ra-nine and went with her two children to Waukesba, Wisconsin. It further appears that for many months before tbe complainant left Racine defendant bad furnished practically no-support for bis wife and children. Tbe preliminary examination of defendant was bad on July 23, 1915, and be was bound over to tbe September term of tbe municipal court.
The trial of defendant was had in March, 1916, and it appears by the evidence that of the $5 weekly allowance ordered paid by the court at the preliminary examination in September, 1915, only $5 had been paid. And it further appeared that for eleven months before the trial nothing had been contributed to the support of defendant’s wife and children by defendant, except $5 paid shortly after the preliminary examination and $1 sent by defendant to buy firecrackers for the children. The defendant spent his time largely in the saloons playing and jigging for drinks. His wife, the complainant here, took in washings to support herself and children. She left Eaeine after defendant told her to go to work for the support of the children and went to Waukesha, where the opportunity for supporting herself and children was better for reasons stated in her testimony.
We shall not further discuss the evidence. It is ample to support the conviction under the statute.
Sec. 458le, Stats., provides in part: “. ... any person who shall, without lawful excuse, desert or wilfully neglect or refuse to provide for the support and maintenance of his or her legitimate or illegitimate minor child or children under the age of sixteen years in destitute or necessitous circumstances, shall be guilty of a crime, and, on conviction thereof, shall be punished by fine not exceeding five hundred dollars, or imprisonment in the state prison, . . .”
There was no prejudicial error in the refusal of this instruction. The court, however, did give the following instruction, which doubtless was too favorable to defendant:
“A wife who abandons her husband without legal justification thereby forfeits her right to support for herself and infant children taken with her, the husband being entitled to establish the domicile and residence; but in order to convict the defendant in this action, you must find that the children, Hazel Adams and Sheridan Adams, had at the time complained of a legal residence in Waukesha county, Wisconsin. But if a man fails to supply his wife with such necessities and comforts of life as are within his reach, and by cruelty compels her to leave him and seek shelter and protection elsewhere, such conduct constitutes an abandonment of her by him, as much as if he had deserted her and gone away himself.”
“When a husband and wife live separately by consent, and the wife becomes destitute or the children are in a destitute condition, to the husband’s knowledge, and he thereafter, though of sufficient ability, refuses to provide for her and them, he has abandoned them in a destitute condition, within the statute punishing a husband for wilfully abandoning and neglecting to support his wife and children.
“Cruel treatment does not always consist of actual violence. There are words of false accusations or gross insult that inflict-deeper anguish than physical injuries to the person, more enduring and lacerating to the wounded spirit of a gentle woman than actual violence to the person, though severe. Opprobrious insinuations used by a husband toward his wife are abusive treatment.”
We are of opinion that no error was committed upon tbe trial wbicb affected any substantial right of defendant, therefore under the provisions of sec. 3072m, Stats., the judgment below must be affirmed.
By the Court. — The judgment is affirmed.