47 S.E. 750 | N.C. | 1904
This is a proceeding in bastardy. The prosecutrix was a married woman at the time of the birth of the child, which was born four or five months after marriage. The court charged the jury that (736) "This is a criminal action and the offense is completed when the child is begotten." To this the defendant excepted. The object of the proceeding, as stated in the Code, sec. 32, is to require the mother, if she shall refuse to declare the father, to "give bond, payable to the State, with sufficient surety to keep such child or children from being chargeable to the county"; and if she shall accuse any man with being the father, if he admit the charge, or, denying it, shall be found to be the father of such child, he shall give bond, with sufficient surety to indemnify the county from charges for the maintenance of such child, with a provision that from the judgment "the affiant, the woman or the defendant, may appeal to the next term of the Superior Court of the county where the trial is to be had de novo."
The law as to proceedings in bastardy first appears in the Laws of North Carolina, 1741, ch. 14, sec. 10, and may be found in 23 State Records, 174, in which volume the laws still extant from 1666 to 1791 are collected and reprinted. Some slight changes were made in 1799, chapter 531, section 2, and other statutes mentioned in the heading to section 32 of the present Code (of 1883). The statute is also codified in Revised *533
Statutes, ch. 12, sec. 1, and Revised Code, ch. 12, sec. 1. Clearly the object of the statute is in no sense criminal, but is expressed on its face to be a fiscal regulation to compel the mother or (if the father was declared by her and proved to be such) the father to give sufficient surety "to keep such child from being chargeable to the county" for its maintenance. Accordingly, we find that in an unbroken line of decisions, down to and including S. v. Edwards,
In one of these (S. v. Giles, 103 N.C. at p. 396), Smith, C. J., speaking for a unanimous Court, says: "The remaining exception is to the judgment itself as inconsistent with the Constitution, though following the statute, in that it imposes upon the defendant the payment of fifty dollars for the use of the woman and a fine of ten dollars besides, and imprisons for an indefinite period in case of a default in making payment. The fine is quasi penal, but the payment of the residue is not, and the proceeding is not in the exercise of a criminal, but of a civil jurisdiction in providing for the present support of the child and an indemnity to the county in case of its becoming a further public charge. . . . The error in this contention consists in regarding the requirement of the payment of these amounts and an enforcement of imprisonment as an award of punishment for a criminal *535
offense, which in no sense they are, unless the ten-dollar fine may be so considered. It is but the exercise of a power to compel obedience to the order of the court, and an imprisonment from which the party may be relieved under the insolvent law, as if committed for fine and costs in a criminal prosecution. Code, sec. 2967; S. v. Davis,
Among the reasons why we return to antiquas vias is, that the cases ofMyers v. Stafford, S. v. Ostwalt and S. v. Ballard were decided by a divided Court upon the effect of the statute of 1879, imposing (in another section) a fine of ten dollars, which it is held per se changed the proceeding into a criminal action, whereas three opinions of a unanimous Court (two of which were not cited in the three cases just named) had held that the statute of 1879 did not change the nature of the action; further, because section 32, from 1741, had contained a provision for a "fine of five dollars" against the woman, and, notwithstanding this, our unbroken line of decisions had held the proceeding to be civil in its nature; because, also, to construe the statute criminal in its nature is contrary to its express provisions, which declare its object to be to secure sureties to prevent the child becoming a charge on the county; and that if the action were changed into a criminal proceeding, this might negative appeals by the woman and by the State and the use of the woman's affidavit as presumptive evidence (all of which are given by the statute and are essential to its enforcement), and by further requiring a disparity of challenges and proof beyond a reasonable doubt, and other incidents of a criminal action, which would practically make the statute nugatory, and would also repeal the statute of limitation of three years provided by section 36. We do not think such radical changes can fairly be inferred to have been caused by the incidental authorization in another section of a fine of ten dollars. If the fine cannot be levied as an incident *536
in the civil action, like the fine of five dollars upon the (741) woman, authorized by section 32, or the fine of $2,500 authorized to be taxed against a sheriff when judgment is rendered against him on his bond for failure to pay over the taxes in full (Davenport v. Mckee,
Besides, there being already the criminal action for fornication and adultery, there is no need to abolish this proceeding, which was enacted to protect the county against being chargeable with the maintenance of the child. If it were a criminal proceeding, it is singular that the woman is not made liable when the man is; for if tried for a criminal offense, both are guilty, since she was present, aiding and abetting in its commission. In construing statutes, the mischief to be remedied must be considered, and there was in this matter no defect of criminal proceeding, for fornication and adultery was already a complete remedy.
The weight of authority elsewhere recognizes bastardy as a civil proceeding to enforce a police regulation. Bishop Stat. Crimes, sec. 691; 2 McLain Cr. Law, sec. 1186; 3 Am. Eng. Ency. (2 Ed.), 874; 3 Ency. Pl. Pr., 277, which cites numerous cases to that effect from Arkansas, Connecticut, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Maine, Massachusetts, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New York, North Carolina, Rhode Island and Vermont; and among the States which hold the proceeding neither strictly civil nor strictly criminal, but quasi civil to enforce a police regulation, are cited Alabama, Florida, Michigan, Ohio and Wisconsin. To similar effect is 9 Cyc., 644, which adds (742) to States holding as above Minnesota, New Jersey, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennessee and Wisconsin, and sums up the doctrine thus: "The object of these proceedings is not the imposition of a penalty for an immoral or unlawful act, but is merely to compel the putative father to provide for the support of his offspring and thus secure the public against such support."
We are constrained to return to the former uniform rulings of this Court, that proceedings in bastardy are essentially civil in their nature, though with some anomalous features. S. v. Edwards,
The presumption in bastardy proceedings is that the woman is single. S.v. Peebles,
Formerly a child born of a married woman was conclusively presumed to be legitimate, but now legitimacy or illegitimacy is an issue of fact resting upon proof of the impotency or nonaccess of the husband. See Woodward v. Blue,
Though there was error in holding the action to be a criminal proceeding, it was harmless error, in the view we have taken, and upon the whole case the judgment below is
Affirmed.
DOUGLAS, J., concurs in result only.
Cited: S. v. Morgan,