Johnson v. People

66 Ill. App. 103 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1896

Mr. Justice Crabtree

delivered the opinion op the Court.

This was an indictment found under the act of June IT, 1893 (Rev. Stat. 1895, p. 588, Sec. 480), charging the defendant with having abandoned his wife and two children under the' age of twelve years, and neglecting and refusing to maintain and provide for them at and within said Peoria county.

The case was certified to the County Court, and upon a trial by jury, the defendant was convicted, and a motion for new trial being overruled, he was sentenced to pay a fine of $100 and costs. The defendant prosecutes- this writ of error and insists upon a reversal, mainly on the ground that the court was without jurisdiction to try him in Peoria county.

It is conceded that the defendant and his wife, Laura C. Johnson, were duly married on January 8, 1882, and that they have two children, Gerald Johnson, aged eleven years, and George Johnson, aged eight years. Defendant and his wife were married in Peoria county at the home of the wife’s parents, and lived together at various places in Nebraska, Pennsylvania and Iowa, until the month of September, 1894, when they were living at Sioux City, Iowa, at which time and place a separation occurred, and since then they have not lived together. There is some conflict in the evidence as to the reasons for this separation, and we do not deem it a very material question; but it is not denied that defendant left the home where he had been living with his wife and children, and thereafter did very little, if anything, for their support, so that, as the wife claims, she was compelled to and did leave the State of Iowa, and, with her two children, returned to her mother’s home in Peoria county, Illinois, where she has since resided, the defendant doing nothing whatever for her support, or that of the children, since she came to this State.

About October 1,1894, shortly after his wife and children had left the State of Iowa, the -defendant returned to Illinois, and.went to live with his mother, at Pontiac, in Livingston county. Mrs. Johnson testifies that she arrived at Peoria, September 29, 1894, and that she had not seen the defendant for a week before she left Iowa, and then only on the street. That he had left her a month before that. Learning that the defendant was at Pontiac, on March 22, 1895, the wife took one of the children with her and went to see the husband, staying with him at Pontiac from Friday until the following Wednesday. She testifies that he promised her he would do right and go to work, and send her money; that he took her to the depot and bought a ticket for her, and sent her back to Peoria, and promised to be over in two or three weeks, and that she left him with that promise, and that that was the reason she left Pontiac and came back to Peoria; that he did not come to Peoria, nor send her any money, and has done nothing for her support, or that of the children, since September, 1894. The defendant nowhere denies this conversation, nor that he sent his wife back to Peoria county and promised to support her and the children there, and yet, within the same month of March, defendant wrote a letter to his wife, telling her that his “ days of providing for her were over.”

Upon these facts, we think the venue was properly laid in Peoria county, although the defendant had not been in that county for several years prior to March, 1894.

If the defendant can not be indicted and tried in Peoria county, he can not be punished anywhere. It may be conceded that under the laws of this State a defendant can only be tried in the county where the offense was committed. Hence, if the defendant in this case did not abandon his wife and children in Peoria county, he was improperly tried and convicted there. But it is to be observed that the personal presence of the offender is not always an indispensable element in fixing the local jurisdiction of a criminal offense. A crime is, in legal contemplation, committed in the place where the doer’s act takes effect, whether he is himself in such place or not; in this way one may even perpetrate an offense against a State or county upon whose soil he never set foot. 1 Bishop’s New Crim. Proc., 53; 1 Bishop’s New Crim. Law, 110-111.

In the case of Bennefield v. State, 4 S. E. Rep. 869, the precise question here involved was before the Supreme Court of Georgia, and determined adversely to the contention of plaintiff in error. In its opinion, delivered by Simmons, J., the court says: “ It is argued that the court found contrary to law, because the separation of the husband and wife occurred in Heard county, and therefore the court in Carroll county had no jurisdiction to try the case. The record discloses the fact that while the separation between husband and wife took place in Heard county, the husband hired one Sheats to move his wife and child to her father in Carroll county. The child, according to the evidence, was not dependent and destitute in Heard county, but became so only after it was left in Carroll county; and from the time of the separation up to the trial of the case, the husband had never contributed a cent toward the support and maintenance of the child. We think that where a husband voluntarily and willfully separates from his wife in one county, and sends her by his agent into another county, and his children there become dependent and destitute, he is indictable in the latter county, because it was by his act that they were removed from one county to another. In this case the husband’s agent carried the child from Heard into Carroll. It was the same as if he had stood upon the county lines between Heard and Carroll, and had pushed his child across the line into Carroll, and then left it dependent and destitute. If the law were otherwise, it would be an easy matter for people who wish to get rid of their wives and offspring, to send them to a different county, and leave them dependent and destitute in that county, and avoid indictment under this statute. We therefore hold that the court in Carroll county had jurisdic-, tion of this offense under the facts disclosed by the record, and that the court committed no. error in refusing a new trial on this ground.”

The statute under which the prosecution was had in the case cited, was similar to the one under which plaintiff in error was indicted. If the reasoning of the court above quoted is sound, and we think it is, then it is equally applicable to the case at bar as to the one the Georgia court had under consideration. Here, the plaintiff in error took his wife and child to the depot, bought a ticket for his wife and sent them to Peoria county, with a promise to join them there and support them.

Judging from his letter of a few days afterward, above referred to, he never intended to fulfil this promise, but the intent to abandon was consummated after they reached Peoria county, and it can not be said they were abandoned in Livingston county. It can make no difference that the wife had been living with her mother in Peoria county before she went to Pontiac to see her husband and claim that support she was entitled to -under the law. When he sent her back to Peoria county under the circumstances appearing in the evidence, she went with his consent and assistance, and she and her children became dependent and abandoned in Peoria county, by reason of his failure to support them there, as he promised to do when he sent them away.

We therefore hold that the indictment and trial in Peoria county was proper.

Objections are urged to the rulings of the court in permitting counsel for the people .to ask certain questions of the plaintiff in error on his cross- examination. While a witness in his own beha If, he had sworn to certain alleged facts touching his relations with his wife, his condition of health, and the causes of separation, and as to whose was the fault; and in view of his testimony on these subjects, we do not think it was error for the court to permit counsel for the people to ask him on cross-examination as to whether or not he had had the syphilis and communicated it to his wife, and concerning his trip to Chicago to the World’s Fair with another woman, and questions of that kind, which seem to have been fairly germain to the subject-matter of the inquiry then before the jury. In this action of the court we think there was no prejudicial error.

We think the law of the case was fairly given to the jury and we find no error in giving or refusing instructions.

The judgment will be affirmed.