Thе defendant in this Court made a motion to dismiss for want of jurisdiction.
For a crime to be prosecuted and judgment given it is necessary that the trial court have jurisdiction of the subject matter and of the person of the defendant. Jurisdiction of the subject matter is derived from the law.
S. v. Oliver,
The defendant came voluntarily into Caswell County, this State, and was arrested for reckless driving, hunting without a license, and then on the warrant in this case. The defendant was present in person during his trial in the Recorder’s Court and the Superior Court. Those courts had jurisdiction of the person of the defendant.
S. v. Oliver, supra;
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Pettibone v. Nichols, 208
U.S. 192,
The bastard was begotten in Virginia, where her mother domiciled in this State, was working. The bastard’s father was domiciled in Virginia, where he has always lived. The mother having no money and being unable to work about three and one-half months before the bastard’s birth returned to Caswell County, where she was domiciled, and gave birth to the bastard. Since then the bastard and her mother have lived in Caswell County, where they are domiсiled. The court here had jurisdiction over the person of the defendant. Did the court have jurisdiction over the subject matter charged in the indictment?
Our bastardy statute applies whether the child shall have been begotten or born within or without the State, provided the child to be supported is a bona fide resident of this State at the time of the institution of the action for support of the child. G-.S. 49-3.
An act to be punishable as a crime in this State must be an act committed here and against this sovereignty.
S. v. Cutshall,
But as to some crimes the physical presence of the accused at the place where the crime is committed is not essential to his guilt is well settled. “The constitutional requirement is that the
crime
shall be tried in the state and district where committed; not necessarily in the state or district where the party committing it happened to be at the time.”
Burton v. U. S.,
“There may he a constructive presence in a jurisdiction, distinct from a personal presence, by which a crime may be consummated, and a person beyond the limits of a state or country putting in operation a force which produces a result constituting a crime within those limits, is as liable to indictment and punishment, if jurisdiction can be obtained of his person, as if he had been within thе limits of the state or country when the crime was committed.” 22 C.J.S., Crim. Law, p. 219, citing numerous cases.
At common law the father of a bastard child is under no legal obligation to support it.
We have found no case embodying the exact facts of this case, nor have counsel for the State or the defendant in their briefs referred us to any such case.
In Am. Law Inst. Restatement, Conflict of Laws, p. 545, it is stated: “Bastardy Proceedings at Domicil of Father. A statute of the state of domicil of the father of a minor bastard child will be there applied to compel him to contribute to the support of the child, irrespective of where the mother is domiciled, unless the statute provides otherwise. Comment: a. Rationale. Whether a bastardy statute is criminal or civil in nature, it represents the exercise of the state’s police power either to punish misconduct or to impose the onus of supporting a сhild upon its natural parent to prevent the child becoming a dependent upon society.”
The same work on p. 546 states : “Bastardy Proceedings at Domicil* of Mother. A statute of the state of domicil of the mother of a minor bastard child will be there applied, if a court there obtains jurisdiction over the father, to compel him to contribute to the support of the child, unless the statute provides otherwise.”
The above statement of the law is copied almost verbatim in 7 Am. Jur., Bastards, p. 684.
The prosecution in this action is based on our statute. Whether under the Virginia law a father is required or not required to support his bastard child is not involved.
In
Where bastardy statutes do not expressly provide that the proceedings shall be brоught by a woman resident within the state, the question has often arisen whether such a statute may be invoked where the father is domiciled in the state, and the mother and child are nonresidents. The courts have taken two views of the question. The rule in a majority of jurisdictions is that a nonresident of the state may institute a рrosecution under the statute. These decisions are based on the reason that the principal object of such a statute is to convert the moral obligation of the father into a legal duty by compelling him to assist the mother in support of the child. 18 Ann. Cas. 574, note, where numerous cases are сited.
7
Am. Jur., Bastards, Sec. 85, says this seems to be the better view “the bastardy proceedings being considered transitory in their nature and the
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father subject to suit in the county of bis residence. A sound reason for this view is that if the rule were otherwise, there might be no remedy where the father took care to cross state lines at the proper time or where the complainant and her child were, by force of circumstances, compelled to reside outside the state.” In
S. v. Etter,
In
S. v. Wellman,
*212
In
Osborn v. Harris,
In 27 Am. Jur., Husband and Wife, Sec. 444, it is written: “Where he (the husband) sends the wife or child to another place, he is- properly indicted and tried for the offense in the jurisdiction where the wife or child becomes dependent, regardless of his non-residence, for that is the place where the duty of suppоrt should be discharged, and consequently the place where the offense of failure to support is committed.”
We realize that the cases of a husband’s failure to support his wife or legitimate child do not present the exact facts before us, but they are cited by analogy.
The defendant got the prosecutrix pregnant. She testified after she became pregnant the defendant knew she was going back to her aunt’s in Caswell County. He did not undertake to give her any help. She didn’t have any money, and couldn’t work — and in her sore distress the only place she had to return to was Caswell County, the place of her domicil, and where she and her child have been domiciled since. Caswell County is the place where the defendant’s duty to support his bastard child should be discharged, and the place where the failure to support has been committed.
There may be a constructive presence in a jurisdiction distinct from a personal appearance by which a crime may be consummated. There is a constructive presence of the defendant in this jurisdiction for by his lust in Virginia he begot a bastard child upon the body of Ruby Elizabeth Hamlett, and thereby put into operation a force which produced the result
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of bis bastard ebild and ber mother being domiciled in tbis State from tbe date of tbe child’s birth until now, and further produced tbe result of bis willful failure to support bis bastard child in North Carolina, which is a crime under our law, G.S. 49-2, and our courts have jurisdiction over tbe defendant’s person.
U. S. v. Steinberg,
C.C.A.N.Y.,
State ex rel. Gildar v. Kriss,
In respect to a person committing a crime in a state where he was not physically present, see the statement in
S. v. Hall,
The defendаnt’s motion to dismiss the case for want of jurisdiction is overruled. The defendant’s assignment of error No. 2 based in large part upon substantially the same ground is overruled. There was plenary evidence to carry the case to the jury. It appears in the record that during the court’s charge, the court inquired of the defendant’s lawyer if there was any contention made by the defendant that he had supported the child, and the defendant’s lawyer replied No. The defendant’s assignment of error that all the evidence shows the defendant is not guilty is overruled.
The defendant’s assignment of error No. 1 based upon his motion for judgment of nonsuit made at the close of the State’s evidence is untenable for the defendant introduced evidence.
The defendant was tried under a bill of indictment. "While the sufficiency of the indictment is not mentioned in the assignments of error, the defendant in his brief challenges its correctness because it dоes not copy verbatim the statute under which it was drawn. The indictment follows substantially the words of the statute and is sufficient.
S. v. Maslin,
The defendant in his brief contends G.S. 49-2 and 49-3 are unconstitutional. This Court has decided that question against the defendant’s contention in
S. v. Spillman,
The defendant’s other assignments of error have been examined, and are overruled.
There is no exception to the charge of the court
In the trial in the court below we find
No error.
