167 S.E. 493 | N.C. | 1933
The defendant was convicted of the abandonment and nonsupport of his wife, in breach of C. S., 4447, and from the judgment pronounced he appealed to the Supreme Court. He assigned as error the court's refusal to dismiss the action, to direct a verdict against the State, and to instruct the jury that if they should find from the evidence that the abandonment took place in Reno, Nevada, and not in North Carolina, their verdict should be not guilty.
These assignments are based upon the assumption either that the evidence necessarily shows or that there is evidence tending to show that the act of abandonment was committed in another State. True, the courts of this State have no jurisdiction of extra-territorial crimes, S. v. Buchanan,
The conduct of the parties in Reno does not bar the State's prosecution of the crime. Abandonment of the wife by the husband was not a criminal offense at common law; it is a statutory misdemeanor. No common-law implications attach to the offense, and it is not condoned by the renewal of the marital relation.
Condonation in law is the conditional forgiveness by a husband or wife of a breach of marital duty by the other, whereby the forgiving party is precluded, so long as the condition is observed, from claiming redress for the breach so condoned. Its basis is the agreement of the parties to a civil action, not the consent of the State, and the condition *54
is, that the original offense is forgiven if the delinquent will abstain from the commission of a like offense afterwards and treat the forgiving party with conjugal kindness. Bishop on Marriage and Divorce, sec. 53;Gordon v. Gordon,
The judgment is not conditional, as contended by the defendant, C. S., 4449, S. v. Vickers,
No error.