133 S.E. 824 | S.C. | 1926
Lead Opinion
July 1, 1926. The opinion of the Court was delivered by The defendant, A.H. Lancaster, was convicted in the Court below on a charge of abandonment and nonsupport of his wife and minor children dependent upon him. It was fully established that the defendant left his wife and children; that one I.B. Eubanks lived in the house with defendant and his said wife, and the said Eubanks continued to reside in the same house with the wife after defendant had left her; and that part of the time, at least, there were no others in the house except Mrs. Lancaster, the children, and the said Eubanks. Mrs. Lancaster claimed that Eubanks was there in the capacity of a boarder; the defendant, Lancaster, claimed that Eubanks was there in the role of a paramour of Mrs. Lancaster.
There are several questions raised, but we shall consider only two which, in our judgment, determine this appeal: (1) Defendant requested the trial Judge to charge: *414
"I charge you that adultery on the part of the wife would be a just cause and excuse for a husband not supporting her."
This was a sound proposition, supported by legal reasoning and the common instinct of humanity. The question of "just cause or excuse" is the crux of this prosecution. What could justify a husband more in the eyes of the law and of society than the fact that his wife is blasting the martial relation and wrecking the home by intimacy with another man, in leaving the wife and in seeking a better and purer atmosphere in which to live and work.
The learned Judge was wrong in giving as his reason for the refusal to charge this request that it was a charge on the facts, as this was not a comment on the the facts, but was an abstract proposition of law. Edwardsv. Railway,
He was wrong, also, as this was a sound proposition of law and applicable to the testimony in the case on trial.
"Adultery of a wife prior to the abandonment is a defense to a prosecution for the husband's failure to support." 21 Cyc., 1613. State v. Schweitzer,
"Unfaithfulness on the part of a wife is a good cause for deserting her within the statute defining desertion without good cause." State v. Stout,
"The expression `good cause' as used in the statute, punishing desertion of wife and children, means `sufficient cause' and in case of the wife, this may be such as would justify separation." State v. Dvoracek,
The Court takes occasion to say that while this defense of adultery would apply so far as the wife is concerned, it would not apply as regards the children and would not affect that part of the prosecution relating to the abandonment and failure to support the children. The first exception must, therefore, be sustained.
2. The Court was further in error in failing to charge the fourth request as presented and in qualifying the same as he did:
"The husband has the right to choose the domicile, and if a wife refuses to go with her husband, she cannot claim support, and if you find such to be the facts in this case, your verdict would be not guilty."
That eminent lawyer, Chancellor Dargan, lays down the correct rule in Hair v. Hair, 10 Richardson's Equity, at page 176:
"Stripped of all extraneous matters, the simple question is, did the husband desert his wife, the plaintiff? It must be a legal desertion. It is not every withdrawal of himself by the husband from the society of the wife that constitutes desertion in legal contemplation. The conduct of the wife must be blameless. If she elopes or commits adultery or violates or omits to discharge any of the important hymeneal obligations which she has assumed upon herself, the husband may abandon her without providing for her support and this Court would sustain him in such a course of conduct. The husband has the right without the consent of the wife to establish his domicile in any part of the world, and it is the legal duty of the wife to follow his fortune wheresoever he may go."
This is a clear statement of the law as applied to a civil case, and it will apply with still greater force in a criminal prosecution where the defendant must be proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. *416
The following appears in the testimony of Mrs. Lancaster:
"Q. Are you willing to let him have them (the children)? A. No, sir; I am not.
"Q. You are not willing to let him have the children? A. No, sir; he wasn't good to them when he was here. He can't get them either. * * *
"Q. When Lancaster came down and asked you to go to North Carolina and live with him, you refused to go? A. I told him I didn't know I had a home up there.
"Q. Didn't you refuse to go? A. Yes, I refused to go."
"A husband is only required to furnish the necessities of life at his place of residence" unless "he destroys his home and provides no other place where she can live." State v.Stone,
"The same rule applies to children." State v. Scurry,
As the case must go back for a new trial, we do not care to discuss the issues raised any further.
It is the judgment of this Court that the judgment of the lower Court be reversed and the case remanded for a new trial.
MESSRS. JUSTICE WATTS, COTHRAN, BLEASE, and STABLER concur.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE GARY did not participate.
Concurrence Opinion
I construe the request to charge as referring to the conduct of the wife prior to the alleged abandonment; so construed, it contained a sound proposition.
Concurrence Opinion
I fully agree with the opinion of Mr. Acting Associate Justice Ramage. Like Mr. Justice Cothran, I construe defendant's request to charge as referring to the wife's conduct prior to the alleged abandonment. In my opinion, the adultery of the wife after the abandonment would not be a defense in prosecution for nonsupport occurring prior to her adultery. *417
If the Judge had charged the request, it would not have been a charge on the facts. He could have stated that adultery prior to the abandonment was a good defense, so far as failure to support the wife was concerned, just as a Judge might state, in a case where murder is charged, that self-defense, under the law, is a good defense against that charge.
MR. JUSTICE STABLER concurs.