72 Wash. 371 | Wash. | 1913
The charge against the defendant is that on the 7th day of February, 1912, he wilfully and without law
His first contention is that his demurrer to the information should have been sustained because of the failure to allege a continuing neglect. The information follows the language of the statute and is not vulnerable to a demurrer. Rem. & Bal. Code, § Méé; 21 Cyc. 1613, 1614. The statute makes it a crime for the husband wilfully and without lawful excuse to desert, or to wilfully neglect or refuse to provide for the support and maintenance of his wife, if she is in necessitous circumstances. This is covered by the information.
It is further contended that there is no evidence that the wife was in necessitous circumstances. The facts pertinent to this inquiry are, that the appellant was married to his wife on the 10th day of December, 1911; that he was 16 years of age in the month of July preceding; that she was 17 years of age in the month of October preceding; that they lived with the wife’s mother for a short time, and thereafter lived in apartments until the 11th day of February, 1912; when she returned to her mother’s home at his command, and that thereafter she lived with her mother and stepfather, and he lived with his parents. She testified that she had been pregnant five or six months at the time of the separation. When they left their apartments they had about three days’ provisions in the house. The wife testified that she had no money, and her mother said that the wife had no means to make the payments upon the furniture, which were $10 per month.
It is argued that the evidence does not show a wilful neglect or refusal to provide for the support and maintenance of the wife. The appellant testified, that he was earning $9 per week as a clerk in á department store at the time of the separation; that his salary was not sufficient to meet the necessary family expenses; that his wife promised to do outside work and did not, and that he was driven to the extremity of sending her to her mother. The wife and mother testified that the appellant represented to them that his salary was $15 per week, and the mother said that he told her that he was expecting a raise in his salary. The wife told him that she would get a lodging house and keep roomers, and that her mother would supply such furniture as they needed. To this offer he demurred. Between the date of the separation and the trial three months later, the appellant contributed nothing toward the support of his wife. His confession of his inability to support his wife is not to his credit. It shows a moral cowardice that few young men would confess. The prosecuting attorney very pertinently asked him if he was the only married clerk in the city. The court properly instructed the jury that it is the duty of the husband “to do the best he can” to support and maintain his wife “in the manner suitable to his station and circumstances.” He contributed nothing at all to his wife’s support, and the jury evidently concluded that he had not done the best he could. The contention that the evidence of the wife’s pregnancy was inadmissible is without merit. It was a circumstance tending to prove her necessitous condition.
It is strenuously contended that the statute, Rem. & Bal. Code, § 2444; Laws 1909, p. 946, § 192, does not apply to a husband under 18 years of age, but that he can be punished only as a delinquent child, as defined by Laws 1909, p. 668, § 1 et seq.; Rem. & Bal. Code, § § 1987 to 2004, and in the manner therein provided. Section 12 of this act provides
This view is based upon the principle that, under the statute, the marriage is not void but merely voidable, and until legally annulled is valid for all civil purposes. In the Hollopeter case, we said: “The ordinary legal consequences follow
“As before stated the marriage was valid until annulled by the court. Until it was annulled, therefore, the defendant was liable for the expenses of his family and the support and maintenance of his child.”
The marriage of a minor emancipates him. In re Hollopeter, supra; 1 Bishop, Marriage, Divorce, and Separation, § 557; Town of Northfield v. Town of Brookfield, supra.
“The better opinion now is that parties marrying before the age of consent may dissent to the marriage within nonage, and thus avoid it m fofo.” Tyler, Infancy and Coverture (2d ed.), § 81.
See, to the same effect: 2 Parsons, Contracts (9th ed.) p. 83; Eliot v. Eliot, 77 Wis. 634, 46 N. W. 806, 10 L. R. A. 568; State v. Lowell, supra. The reason for the rule is thus stated in the Eliot case:
“If the plaintiff had capacity to. become a party to such imperfect and inchoate or conditional marriage, he should have capacity to disaffirm it at any time thereafter, before it has ripened into an absolute marriage, by invoking the authority of the court to annul it under the statute. No good reason is perceived why the parties should be compelled to remain in so unfortunate a position until the plaintiff becomes eighteen years of age.”
The opinion of this court in the Hollopeter case is based on this principle. The right to annul such a marriage is given by statute, and this construction will more nearly protect the right than the construction contended for by the appellant, i. e., that the right is unavailing during non-age. In State v. Lowell, supra, it was held that the marriage of a minor above the age of consent established by the common law — 14 years for males and 12 years for females — emancipates the child from the custody of the parent, is voidable only, and must be treated as valid for all civil purposes until annulled by judi
The court instructed the jury: (a) “So, the question in this case is: Did this defendant desert his wife without lawful excuse? If he did, he is guilty,” and (b) “If you find that he has not wilfully failed to support and maintain her, she being in necessitous circumstances, then you will find him not guilty. If you find he has failed wilfully, she being in necessitous circumstances, then you will find him guilty as charged.” The statute, Rem. & Bal. Code, § 2444, upon' which the charge is rested, provides:
“Every person who shall wilfully and without lawful excuse desert, or wilfully neglect or refuse to provide for the support and maintenance of his wife, or child under the age of sixteen years, either said wife or child being in necessitous circumstances, shall be punished,” etc.
The words “being in necessitous circumstances” qualify all the preceding words in the section. Desertion alone is not a crime, it is only a crime when it is wilful and without lawful excuse and the wife or a child under the age of 16 years is left in necessitous circumstances. The clause of the instruction last quoted covers the whole law of the case. The record shows that the appellant claimed immunity from liability to support on two grounds: (1) because the marriage is voidable, and (2) because of his inability to support his wife. As we have seen, neither of these grounds is tenable as a matter of law. The instruction first quoted was wrong and the second instruction was right. They are in direct conflict and irreconcilable, and for this error the appellant is entitled to a reversal.
In view of the fact that there will probably be a new trial, we desire to say that the judgment of the court should have been limited in point of time. It should not have gone beyond the continuance of the marital state. Section 11 of Laws of
“When any child shall be sentenced to confinement in any institution to which adult convicts are sentenced, it shall be unlawful to confine such child in the same building with such adult convicts, or to confine such child in the same yard or inclosure with such adult convicts, or to bring such child into any yard or building in which such adult convicts may be present.”
This clause should be embodied in any judgment hereafter entered in this case.
For the reasons stated, the judgment is reversed.
Crow, C. J., Mount, Parker, and Chadwick, JJ., concur.