136 N.W. 105 | S.D. | 1912
It is the -contention of appellant that this action is, in its nature, quasi criminal; respondent insists that it is purely civil, and that therefore section 86, supra, has no application thereto. We are of the opinion that respondent is -correct.
In the case of In re Walker, 61 Neb. 803, 86 N. W. 510, under a statute very similar to our own, the court held, in accordance with a long line of decisions, that the action was civil in character; and the court quoted the following from the case of Stokes v. Sanborn, 45 N. H. 276: “Indeed, it is .quite obvious that the object of the law is to redress a civil injury, by compelling the putative father to aid the mother in the support of the child, and to- indemnify -the to-wn chargeable with its support against the expenses which may be incurred thereby, giving to the court the power to require of the father or the mother, or both, security against this liability. * * * Some of the forms of this proceeding, it is true, are borrowed from the criminal law; but -these are simply with the view of giving a more summary and stringent character to the process by which the respondent is brought into -court and held to answer the charge, leaving it in most other respects to stand upo-n 'the footing of ordinary civil causes. It is therefore held in- Marston v. Jenness, 11 N. H. 156, and Little v. Dickinson, 29 N. H. 56, that the respondent is not arrainged, but appears -and pleads by attorney. Under a similar law in Massachusetts, this is held to be a civil proceeding. Wilbur v. Crane, 13 .Pick. 284; Williams v. Campbell, 3 Metc. 209. So in Mariner v. Dyer, 2 Greenl. [Me.] 165; Hinman v. Taylor, 2 Conn. 357; Robie v. McNiece, 7 Vt. 419; Gray v. Fulsome, 7 Vt. 452; Smith v. Lint, 37 Me. 546. * * * The service in these cases is by arrest of the body, and security taken for the appearance of the respondent at -the -proper court, by bond, and, al
In some of the earlier decisions of this court, it was held that the action was quasi criminal in its nature; but, in State v. Patterson, supra, which also involved the question of the bar of the ■statute of limitations, this court held the action to be civil in character; and that it was not barred until the expiration of six years from time cause of action arose.’ Appellant insists that what was said in that case upon each of these points was mere dictum and unnecessary to the determination of the real question then before the court, and, furthermore, calls attention to the fact that section 86, supra, as it now reads, was not then in force. We are content to sustain the views of this court as expressed in that case; the same being sustained by the great weight of authority. 5 Cyc. 644; notes to State v. Adington, 11 Ann. Cas. 316. It follows that section 86 of the Code of Criminal Procedure has no application.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.