54 S.E.2d 376 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1949
The court did not err in overruling the certiorari for any of the reasons assigned.
The indictment was brought under the Code, § 74-9902. The basic act of this Code section will be found in the Acts of 1866 (p. 151). The act has been since amended several times, but in no material way affecting the question here presented. The *824
record here discloses that the defendant and his wife obtained a divorce in 1946. The children were awarded to the mother. Thereupon, alimony of $4 per week for each child was awarded to support the minor children, and $5 per week for the support of the wife. We are not here concerned with the alimony awarded to the mother; we are concerned only with the award to the children. In the order of the judge of the superior court overruling the certiorari, he says in part: "We are familiar with the cases ofBrock v. State,
(b) It is agreed that the only question before this court is whether, after a decree of divorce and an award for the support of the children, the father of such children can be prosecuted for abandonment under the Code section, supra. In effect the question is limited and restricted under the record of this case to the question: After such judgment and award of alimony for the support of minor children, can the father be prosecuted for abandonment where he does not comply with the judgment, and where, as here, the record reveals that he only partially complied with the decree of the court? The question as to whether the father would be criminally liable under the abandonment section if he fully complied with the judgment of the court in paying the amount required of him is not before this court for decision, and what we might say here in regard thereto would be obiter dictum. We think the question has been settled by this court, under the record of this case, in King v. State,
The jury in the instant case were authorized to find, under the present record, that the defendant only partially — and in a very small part — complied with the judgment and decree of alimony for the support of his wife and the minor children. Of course the alimony for the mother is not involved here. We have considered the cases mentioned in the order of the judge of the superior court, Honorable Bond Almand. The case of Brock v.State,
There are many authorities cited by counsel for the State, and some cited by counsel for the defendant, both from our appellate courts and from foreign jurisdictions and treatises on the question of the lawful duty of a father to support his minor children, and concerning criminal statutes upon his failure to do so, but we do not think it necessary to go into them here, because King v. State, supra, is binding on this court and is on all-fours with the record in the instant case.
The court did not err in overruling the certiorari for any of the reasons assigned.
Judgment affirmed. MacIntyre, P. J., and Townsend, J., concur.