30 Mo. App. 299 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1888
delivered the ojnnion of the court.
The defendant was prosecuted by indictment for abandoning his wife without good cause and failing, neglecting, and refusing to provide for her, under section
The record shows that all of these repeated solicitations of the defendant to the wife to return to him were made before the means of living which he had left with her had been exhausted. Had he persisted in his separation from her without soliciting her to return to him and without providing her with additional means, the evidence would present a stronger appearance of a criminal abandonment and refusal of support; though, the cause of the abandonment remaining undisclosed, it would still be insufficient to sustain a conviction. But when he solicited her to return to him, promising good treatment, and even sent a messenger to bring hex*, he then put himself right before the law even if wrong before, and her refusal to return to him, not adequately
But the good effect of these instructions seems to have been destroyed by the giving of the following instruction at the request of the state:
“ The court further instructs the jury that, if you believe from the evidence that, at the time the defendant left his wife, he intended without good cause to abandon and desert her, then any requests or persuasions he may have employed to get her to come to him at Peirce City (if you find from the evidence he used any requests or persuasions) constitute no defence in this cause, if you find such requests and persuasions were a mere artifice used to shield himself, and not used and employed in good faith on his part to induce his said wife to go and live with him at Peirce City.”
We see no evidence in the case warranting the giving of such an instruction. There is nothing on the face of the letters indicating that the repeated requests to her to come and live with him were a mere artifice, nor was there any extrinsic evidence indicating that they covered
With the concurrence of Judge Rombauer, it is so ordered.