Code § 74-9901 provides that if the father of a bastard child shall refuse or fail to give security for the maintenance and education of such child and certain expenses of the mother, when required to do so in terms of law, he shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. In the present case the record discloses that the defendant failed and refused to give security in the bastardy proceeding, and he was convicted under § 74-9901.
Under the act approved March 17, 1956 (Ga. L. 1956, p. 800), if the father of an illegitimate child shall voluntarily abandon his child, leaving it in a dependent condition, he is guilty of a misdemeanor. The act provides that the child shall be considered to be in a dependent condition when the parent charged with the offense does not furnish sufficient food and clothing for the needs of the child.
There is no merit in the defendant’s contention that the charge *411 of abandonment (on which he was convicted in the present case) placed him twice in jeopardy for the same offense, or sought to deprive him of his liberty without due process of law.
“The crimes of bastardy and abandonment are separate crimes under our statutes. Under our law as it presently stands, the father of a bastard child may be convicted for refusing to give the bond for its support and maintenance, and after the expiration of his sentence in the bastardy case, be convicted for the separate offense of abandonment under Code § 74-9902, as amended by the act of 1956 (Ga. L. 1956, p. 800).”
Williams
v.
State,
213
Ga.
221, 222 (
The act amending Code § 74-9902, making it an offense against the laws of this State to abandon an illegitimate child (Ga. L. 1956, p. 800), was approved on March 17, 1956. The defendant contends that the abandonment, if there was an abandonment within the meaning of the statute, occurred no later than September, 1955; that the destitute condition of the child arose at the time of its birth on January 8, 1956; and that the acts for which the defendant was tried and convicted, if committed at all, were committed at a time when such acts were not an offense against the laws of this State. It is insisted that to apply the 1956 act to the facts of this case would make it an ex post facto or retroactive law, in violation of stated provisions of the State and Federal Constitutions.
The accusation charging the defendant with the abandonment of his illegitimate child is dated September 30, 1957, and the accusation alleges that the abandonment occurred on November 1, 1956, or more than seven months after the passage of the act making it an offense to abandon an illegitimate child.
Counsel cite the rule stated by this court in
Gay
v.
State,
105
Ga.
599, 605 (
The irule stated in the
Gay
case, to the effect that, after an acquittal or conviction, before there could be a subsequent conviction, the father must resume the family relationship, is not now the law.
Hall
v.
State,
202
Ga.
42, 47 (
Under the act of 1956 (Ga. L. 1956, p. 800), the father of an illegitimate child can be prosecuted and convicted under the act for wilful and voluntary abandonment of his child, leaving it in a dependent condition. The law does not require that the father of such illegitimate child shall have lived with the mother in any relationship after the birth of the child.
In
Bull
v.
State,
80
Ga.
704 (
In
Brown
v.
State,
122
Ga.
568 (2) (
Under the act of 1956 (Ga. L. 1956, p. 800), and the rulings of this court in Bull v. State, 80 Ga. 704, and Brown v. State, 122 Ga. 568, both supra, the father of an illegitimate child may abandon the mother and the child immediately after it is conceived. He can not, however, be convicted of abandonment unless he shall fail to “furnish sufficient food and clothing for the needs of the child” after its birth; and in the present case the failure to provide for the child would have to exist at a time subsequent t<? the approval of the act, as is alleged in the accusation.
In special ground 6 of the amended motion for new trial, error is assigned on the admission in evidence of an accusation charging the defendant with the offense of bastardy, together with the verdict of the jury finding him guilty. It is asserted that the defendant objected to the admission of this record upon the grounds: (1) It is irrelevant, immaterial, and highly prejudicial to the defendant. (2) It places the defendant in double jeopardy, in violation of stated provisions of the State and Federal Constitutions. (3) It seeks to deprive the defendant of life, liberty, or property without due process of law, in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States. The defendant contended that the only issue to be tried was the paternity of the child, and the admission of the prior proceedings was highly prejudicial to' the defendant, and probably led the jury to believe that, since he had been once convicted, they should also convict him.
*414
“Generally, on a prosecution for a particular crime, evidence of another and distinct crime wholly independent from that for which one is on trial is inadmissible; but there are exceptions to this rale. One is, if the separate crime was committed as a part of the same transaction as that for which the accused is being tried, and forms a part of the res gestae.”
Bradberry
v.
State,
170
Ga.
859 (
“Evidence of the commission of one crime is not admissible on the trial of the defendant for another crime, where the sole purpose is to show that the defendant is guilty of such other crime; but such evidence is admissible where there is some logical connection between the two from which it can be said that the proof of the one tends to establish the other; . . .”
Wilson
v.
State,
173
Ga.
275 (2) (
In the present case it appears that the defendant denied that he was the father of the child in each of the separate criminal charges against him. The issue as to paternity having been established in the bastardy proceeding, which judgment became final, it was not error to admit the record showing the defendant’s previous conviction. The jury upon the second trial was not bound by the findings of the jury in the former case, but such findings constituted a circumstance for proper consideration of the jury on the sole issue of paternity.
Judgment affirmed.
