116 S.E. 168 | N.C. | 1923
It appears from the evidence that at the time of the alleged indictment there were no living children of the marriage, and it is insisted for defendant that in such case no conviction under the statute can be sustained, but the question has been resolved against defendant's position in the recent case of S. v. Bell,
The defendant excepts further that the court overruled defendant's plea setting up a divorce had at the instance of the wife since the former trial of the cause, but the evidence as accepted by the jury established a *670 completed criminal offense at and before the former trial in 1921, and there is nothing in the statute, nor is there any principle of (637) law, that gives to a divorce subsequently obtained any such effect as that claimed.
True, in the subsequent section (4449), the statute confers upon the judge having jurisdiction power to make such orders as he may consider necessary to provide for the support of an abandoned wife and children, but this is only an additional power conferred and resting in the discretion of the trial judge or recorder, and does not and was not intended to otherwise modify or interfere with the force and effect of the principal section, No. 4447, which constitutes the forbidden conduct a misdemeanor, as stated.
Again it is objected that under our Constitution, Art. II, sec. 4, persons guilty of a misdemeanor can only be punished by commitment to houses of correction, but a perusal of this provision will disclose that this method of dealing with convicted defendants is discretionary with the Legislature, and accordingly it has been directly held that for this and other offenses of like kind such defendants may be sentenced to imprisonment and assigned to work on the roads during their term. C.S. 1359, and S. v. Weathers,
The objection to the rulings of the court excluding certain evidence is without merit. At the time offered it was mere hearsay, and clearly incompetent, and the same was not again offered after the testimony of witnesses subsequently examined might have rendered the excluded evidence receivable in contradiction.
We find no error in the record, and the judgment on the verdict is affirmed.
No error.
Cited: Peeler v. Peeler,