43 Mo. 429 | Mo. | 1869
delivered the opinion of the court.
These proceedings were commenced in the St. Louis Court of Criminal Correction, upon the sworn complaint of Agnes New-berry, the defendant’s wife. The complaint charges that the defendant, on the 22d day of May, 1868, without good cause, abandoned his wife, the complainant, in the city of St. Louis, without providing her with the means of support. It is based on the act of 1867 (Sess. Acts 1867, p. 112), which provides that “ every husband shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor who shall, without good cause, abandon his wife, and fail, neglect, and refuse to maintain or provide for her.”
Motions to dismiss and in arrest were made in the court below, grounded on the supposed insufficiency of the complaint, in this: that it was not sworn to and verified by a person competent to
The case of The State v. Berlin, 42 Mo. 572, would be decisive of this if it were true, in this, as it was in that case, that the wife of the arraigned party yas incompetent to testify on the trial of the complaint. The complaint in that case charged adultery and other kindred offenses, of a nature susceptible of proof without the testimony of the wife; the wife was not the party likely to have personal knowledge of the facts alleged. Here the circumstances are entirely different. The wife is the party having the best means of knowledge, and may be the only person capable of establishing the facts in proof.
This prosecution is had under a statute entirely new in this State, and perhaps without precedent in the legislation of the country. It proposes to punish the husband criminally for a willful abandonment of his wife without making a suitable provision for her support. Its object is not primarily to punish the husband, but to protect the wife, and to secure her against the consequences of such desertion. In order to make effectual the beneficial purposes of the Legislature, the statute must have a sure and faithful execution, and that requires testimony. Can this be had without the employment of the wife as' a witness ? It might in some cases, but can it in all or most of the cases which are likely to arise? Take the present case, which is the first that has come up for adjudication. The defendant, as the testimony shows, lured his wife into the execution of certain deeds releasing her dower interest in certain lands in Illinois, upon the false pretense that he wished to dispose of his property there in order to re-invest in Kansas, where, as he represented to her, he proposed to settle. The deeds having been executed by which the title to the property was vested in the defendant’s brother, the defendant, in further execution of his scheme of fraud upon his wife, brought her to St. Louis, on pretense of removing to Kansas, lodged her in a public hotel in that city, and then abandoned her, declaring his purpose never to see her again. He thus left her alone in a strange city, with only ten dollars in her possession to provide for her support. These occurrences in St. Louis — the
The practice under the English vagrant act (5 Geo. IV, ch. 83, §§ 3, 4) appears to be in exact accordance with this view. Phillips, in the volume just cited, p. 94, says: “In proceedings before justices, under the vagrant act, against a husband for neglecting to support or deserting his wife and family, it is believed to be the universal practice — as also at sessions in cases of appeal — to admit the wife as a witness. This practice is presumed to have arisen from the necessity of the case; for, although instances frequently may and must arise when all the facts necessary to a conviction might be proved by other witnesses, yet it must often happen that some of the circumstances, such as the husband’s ability'to support his family, or the act of desertion, could be proved only by the wife.” , It is to be observed, as this passage from Phillips intimates, that the wife may be a competent witness to some of the facts necessary to be established in making out a case, and not be competent as to other facts. (15 Barb. 286; 15 N. H. 45.)
The conclusion, therefore, upon the whole case, is that Mrs. Newberry, the complainant, was a competent witness to testify to the fact of abandonment and its attendant circumstances. If competent to testify to these, then she was competent to verify the complaint which recited and set out the facts. On the trial no instructions were given or asked, nor was any exception taken to evidence given or excluded.
The finding and judgment of the court is warranted by the evidence, and it is therefore affirmed.