30 Del. 534 | New York Court of General Session of the Peace | 1920
delivering the opinion of the court:
This is a demurrer to an information filed January 12, 1920, wherein it is charged that thedefendant onthefirst day of January, 1918, and on divers other days and times between that day and the day of filing the information, willfully neglected to support his illegitimate child under the age of sixteen years, to wit, nine years of age, being in necessitous circumstances.
The causes of demurrer are:
(1) That the act upon which the information is based is ex post facto as to the offense charged, and, therefore, void as to this offense.
(2) That said information was not filed within two years next after the alleged offense was committed.
(3) That the information was not filed within two years next after the birth of said illegitimate child.
In support of his first grounds of demurrer, counsel contends that the act of February 24, 1913, Rev. Code 1915, § 3034, under which the information is filed, was not passed until after the child was bom, and, because it increases the penalty provided in the law covering bastardy proceeding in force at that time, is therefore ex post facto as to this charge.
Section 3034 provides:
“* * * ' Any parent who shall, without lawful excuse, desert or willfully neglect or refuse to provide for the support and maintenance of his*536 or her legitimate child or children, under the age of sixteen years, in destitute or necessitous circumstances, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. * * * It is made the duty of the parent of any illegitimate child or children, under the age of sixteen years, to provide for the support and maintenance of such illegitimate child or children.”
Section 3034 does not make it unlawful for one to be the parent of an illegitimate child, nor does it provide punishment therefor. It does not repeal, nor is it inconsistent with, the bastardy act. What it does is to impose a duty upon the parent of such child to provide support for it until it arrives at the age of 16 years, and if such child during that time becomes in necessitous circumstances and the parent willfully and without lawful excuse neglects or refuses to provide for its support, such parent is then liable.
This liability accrues, not because of the birth of the child, that is only incidental, but because it is in necessitous circumstances and without support.
While the proof to sustain the charge in the information must necessarily show the defendant to be the father of the child, as claimed by counsel, nevertheless the law provides no penalty for that, as does the bastardy act, nor is this prosecution for the purpose of enforcing such penalty, but as we have already said, to punish for the failure to support the child when in necessitous circumstances.
“The act of assembly under which the accused is charged was passed after the child in question was bom. This fact is unimportant. The question before you is: Is the accused the father of the child? The parentage of the*537 child may be determined under the act now invoked. It might have been determined under the bastardy act. But the act under which the accused is being tried does not repeal the bastardy act.”
The demurrer is overruled.