172 N.E.2d 143 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1960
This is an appeal on questions of law from the judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of Miami County, affirming a judgment of conviction by the Municipal Court of Piqua in a criminal case in which the defendant was charged with nonsupport of his two illegitimate children under the age of 16 years.
The affidavit was filed under Section
"No person * * * being the parent * * * of a child under the age of sixteen years shall * * * willfully or negligently fail to furnish him necessary and proper food, clothing, or shelter."
The affidavit was filed March 1, 1957. The defendant having entered a plea of not guilty, the cause was tried to the court without the intervention of a jury. The court found the "defendant guilty as he stands charged in said affidavit." An appeal was taken to the Common Pleas Court, which affirmed the judgment.
The evidence shows that the complainant and the defendant were never married and that no bastardy proceeding had ever been instituted. There was substantial evidence supporting the charge that the defendant was the father of the children.
The errors assigned are: That the Piqua Municipal Court *353 had no jurisdiction; that "the verdict of the court" was against the weight of the evidence; that the action of the trial court was prejudicial to the defendant; and that the law was not properly applied to the facts.
We have no difficulty in resolving all errors assigned in favor of the state. The only question raised which merits discussion is whether the Piqua Municipal Court had jurisdiction. The Municipal Court has jurisdiction in criminal proceedings in which the offense charged is a misdemeanor. Section
The defendant contends that the Municipal Court had no jurisdiction on the ground that there was no evidence establishing the paternity of the children by a bastardy proceeding or otherwise, and that since the Municipal Court had no authority to determine the paternity in a bastardy proceeding, it could not proceed to a determination of the nonsupport charge which was necessarily based on a finding that the defendant was the father of the children. The defendant further contends that the question of the paternity of the children can only be determined in a bastardy proceeding, and that the Juvenile Court is given exclusive jurisdiction to make a final determination in such matters, citing Section
A bastardy proceeding is brought by an individual and, although quasi criminal, the action is essentially civil in nature. *354 7 Ohio Jurisprudence (2d), 440, Section 4. The nonsupport action is criminal in nature and prosecuted in the name of the state.
In State v. Schwartz,
"An adjudication in a bastardy proceeding is not conclusive upon the state unless expressly made so by statute, and the state has the power to prosecute criminal proceedings for nonsupport of an illegitimate child at any time, before, after and independently of an adjudication in a bastardy proceeding, and wholly independently of any finding therein made, or judgment therein rendered, with respect to the question of paternity."
In Ogg v. State,
"An indictment under Section 3140-2, Revised Statutes, for failure to provide for an illegitimate child under sixteen years of age need not allege that in a previous proceeding under the bastardy act the defendant had been adjudged to be the reputed father of such child, nor is evidence of such former adjudication necessary to a valid conviction."
See, also, State v. Snyder,
In the Ogg case, the defendant was charged under the felony statute, whereas in the instant case the defendant was charged under the misdemeanor statute. The analogy however is a forceful one, and in the application of the principle of law announced in the Ogg case, to the factual situation presented in the case at bar, we would be required to rule that the determination of paternity in a bastardy proceeding was not a prerequisite to the prosecution of the defendant on a nonsupport charge. We also hold that the jurisdiction of the Juvenile Court under Section
In State v. Bone, 25 Cow. C. (N.S.), 447, 27 Cow. D., 472 (motion to certify overruled by the Supreme Court, April 25, 1916), the defendant was prosecuted under Section 12970, General Code (now Section
It should be pointed out that Section
We come now to consider certain statutory provisions enacted since the above cases were decided. In 1941, Section 12123, General Code, of the bastardy act was amended by adding a provision at the end of the section. Under the codification effective in 1953, Section 12123, General Code, became Section
"In any such prosecution for nonsupport the adjudication that the accused is the reputed father of the illegitimate child is admissible in evidence. The acquittal of the accused in a bastardy proceeding shall be a bar to any such prosecution."
There is nothing in this provision which requires that a bastardy proceeding shall be brought prior to instituting a prosecution for nonsupport. This provision simply changes the case law in the state relative to the legal effect of the final determination of a bastardy proceeding establishing the paternity, or an acquittal, if a bastardy proceeding is instituted. *356
The case of State v. Parker,
In our opinion, the Piqua Municipal Court had jurisdiction. We find no error assigned well made.
We are not required to pass on the assignment of error filed by appellee as provided in Section
Judgment affirmed.
CRAWFORD and KERNS, JJ., concur. *357