41 Mich. 167 | Mich. | 1879
The plaintiff having been condemned in a prosecution under the statute concerning bastardy, alleges error. . The complaint against him was by the woman, and it set forth the time and place -when and where the child was begotten, with particularity. She did not claim that there was any uncertainty or that she was not able to fix the place and the time also, within a day or two.
It would be difficult to ascribe anything fair or just in the requirement of a formal charge if it could be wholly departed from in substance on the trial. It would be as much as saying the purpose of the law was to entrap the party, and not as the fact is, to determine whether the wrong imputed to him is true or not. No doubt proceedings under this statute should be free from technicalities, but it could not have been intended that the plainest safeguards against injustice should be cast aside. The accusation can never be more definite than the complainant is able to make it, but the law requires one to be made, and when made the other party is called on to meet it; but not to meet one which has not been previously asserted at all. And he may well decline to disprove what is not charged.
Complaint is also made of the judgment or order entered on the finding. It does not state to whom the money is required to be paid. As the prosecution was on the part of the woman, the order should have provided for payment to her or to the county superintendent of the poor, or both in some specified proportion. Comp. L., § 1979. The failure of the order to expressly direct some part of the child’s maintenance to be by the mother is not error. It provides what he shall do, and
Tbe proceeding must be set aside.