29 App. D.C. 188 | D.C. | 1907
delivered the opinion of the Court:
John A. Moss, Junior, the plaintiff in error, upon an information in the juvenile court of this District, sworn to by Georgie Washington, on October 20, 1906, was charged with being the father of a minor child, Wilbur Washington, twenty-three months old, and with having refused and neglected to provide such food, clothing, and shelter as to prevent the suffering and secure the safety of said child. At the trial, Georgie Washington testified that Moss was the father of her illegitimate male child then two years old. Moss denied this paternity, and also denied cohabitation with the mother of the child. This case was tried before the judge of the juvenile court, Moss having waived a jury trial, and the defendant was found guilty and was sentenced to pay a fine of $100, and in default to be imprisoned three months in the workhouse, with the direction that the fine, if paid, be turned over to the mother for the support of said minor child. There were several exceptions, which we need not consider, because we think the court below erred in refusing to grant the plaintiff’s motion to dismiss the case for want of jurisdiction.
A salutary law, the Maryland act of 1781, chap. 13, long in force in this District, empowered a justice of the peace to require a female person having an illegitimate child to indemnify the county from any charge on account of such child unless she on oath discovered the fattier, who was required to indemnify the county from all charges for the maintenance of such child. The statute gave an appeal to the person charged with being the father of a bastard child, when aggrieved by such a judgment. This statute is still in force in Maryland, and
The act of March 19, 1906, chap. 960 [31 Stat. at L. 73], created and established the juvenile court of the District of Columbia. Upon this court was conferred original and exclusive jurisdiction of all'crimes and offenses of persons under seventeen years of age committed against the United States, save capital and other excepted crimes, and also of all offenses of persons under seventeen against the laws and regulations of this District, and also power to commit or hold to bail the same class of persons in cases cognizable therein or in the supreme court of the District of Columbia. Upon the juvenile court was conferred all the powers and jurisdiction conferred by the act of February 13, 1885, chap. 58 [23 Stat. at L. 302], which authorized the Washington Humane Society to extend its operations to the protection of children as well as animals, from cruelty and abuse. The agents of this society could arrest on ■sight persons violating laws for the protection of children, and other like offenders, upon warrant from the police court, and ■could bring before that court any child subjected to cruel treatment or neglect, or any. child under sixteen in a house of ill fame; “Provided, that any parent, guardian, or near relative” aggrieved may appeal. It was made a misdemeanor for any person to maltreat a child under eighteen years of age, or for any person having the custody of a child under fourteen' to ■abandon it, or to dispose of or hire it for specified wrongful employments; or for any person to entice a female child into prostitution. This act, of course, in no wise contemplated- the punishment of the convicted father of á bastard child.
To the juvenile court was further given original and exclusive jurisdiction of all cases involving legal punishment of chil
We are convinced that the terms “parent or guardian,” “father or mother,” “father and mother,” so often occurring, cannot be construed to relate to a man charged with being the father of a bastard child; but mean lawful parents; and “that any person” means the lawful parent or guardian of such child.
The act to create a juvenile court, of March 19, 1906, proceeds to make other provisions concerning “neglected,” “dependent,” or “delinquent” children, and in sec. 9 defines the terms “dependent or neglected” child to mean “any child who is destitute, or homeless, or abandoned, or dependent upon the public for support, or who has not the proper parental care or guardianship, or who habitually begs or receives alms, or whose home, by reason of neglect or cruelty, or depravity of the parents, is an unfit place for such a child.” We cannot doubt that this definition contemplates only a child having a legal guardian, or the child of a lawful mother. Secs. 10 to 23, inclusive, are concerned with the mode of prosecution and trial, matters of administration, and provisions for an appeal to this court. Sec. 24 provides that in cases where a child shall be found to be a delinquent child “the parent or parents, legal guardian, or person having the custody of such child,” encouraging its delinquency, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. This language, which in its terms mentions “legal guardian,” refers to parents in lawful wedlock or to a person in loco parentis, and by its relation to the prior sections conclusively shows that the father of a bastard child is not within the purview of this act. The remaining sections, 25 and 26, repeal prior in
It is plain that the juvenile court act and the prior acts included in it, taken separately, did not contemplate the punishment of the father of a bastard child, did not deal with his offense, did not require him to pay for the support of his illegitimate child. The judge of the juvenile court erred, therefore, in concluding that by combining expressions occurring in several of these acts, which separately do not include this subject-matter, it can be made to appear that Congress intended to charge a man accused of the paternity of a bastard with the maintenance of such child. On the contrary it is, undoubtedly, the duty of the court to ascertain the meaning of the legislature, from the words used in the statute, and the subject-matter to which it relates, and to restrain its operation within narrower limits than its words import, i.f the court are satisfied that the literal meaning of its language would extend to cases which the legislature never designed to embrace in it. Brewer v. Blougher, 14 Pet. 197, 198, 10 L. ed. 417, 418.
Taken together, these statutes convince us that Congress dealt only with the neglected children born in lawful wedlock, whose parents were known, whose guardians were legal, whose custodians stood indisputably in loco parentis. Destitute and homeless children, without reference to parents, were committed to the board of children’s guardians by the act of July 26, 1892. In this beneficent system it would have been unwise for Congress to incorporate the trial of a disputed paternity, and thereby delay the commitment of children to the care of the board of guardians. We fully agreed that the juvenile court should have power upon conviction to compel the father of an illegitimate child to maintain his child. Unhappily, the old bastardy act is no longer in force, the Code failed to revive it, and until Congress gives such power to the judge of the juvenile court, this court cannot affirm such a judgment as this.
Counsel for appellant insists that this prosecution was brought under the act of March 3, 1901, providing, among other things, for the maintenance of minor children, by their parents or
Were it necessary for us to decide whether or not the provision of the act of March 3, 1901, upon which the- information was based, whereon the judgment in this case was grounded, was repealed by the act of March 23, 1906, we would be slow to reach such conclusion, but we need not prolong this decision to discuss a matter which it is unnecessary to determine, lie-peals by implication are never favored, and are never supposed to be intended except where the provisions of the prior and subsequent statutes are immanifest and in irreconcilable conflict. No statute.will be construed as repealing a prior one, unless so
This judgment must be reversed for the reasons we have discussed. We add, however, that for all offenses against the District of Columbia and against the United States within the jurisdiction of the juvenile court, the prosecution should be on information by the corporation counsel, and in the name of the District of Columbia or of the United States as the case may be.
The judgment in the Juvenile Court must be reversed, and the cause remanded, with directions to discharge the defendant, and it is so ordered. Reversed.