Commonwealth v. Losey

79 Pa. Super. 75, 1922 Pa. Super. LEXIS 186
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 13, 1922
DocketAppeal, No. 294
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 79 Pa. Super. 75 (Commonwealth v. Losey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Losey, 79 Pa. Super. 75, 1922 Pa. Super. LEXIS 186 (Pa. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

Opinion by

Porter, J.,

The indictment charged that the defendant did, at a designated place in the State of New York, commit fornication with a certain unmarried woman, naming her, of the Borough of Lawreneeyille, County of Tioga and State of Pennsylvania, and a bastard child of the body of her did then and there beget which said bastard child was thereafter born at the Borough of Lawreneeyille, County of Tioga and State of Pennsylvania: The trial resulted in a verdict of guilty and the court sentenced the defendant to pay a small amount for expenses at the birth of the child and its support to the day of sentence, and to give security to perform an order of maintenance, which is not here asserted to be unreasonable. No fine was imposed. The defendant appeals from that sentence. The first assignment of error complains of the refusal of the court to quash the indictment. The grounds upon which the appellant moved the court to quash the indictment were that: (1) The court had no jurisdiction, the indictment charging the offense fornication and bastardy and the fornication being averred to have occurred in the State of New York, and the bastardy to have occurred in this county; (2) That fornication and bastardy is one offense, and fornication being the essential offense and bastardy the result thereof, the offense, if any was committed, was committed in the State of New York; (3) That the Act of 1860, relating to venue in fornication and bastardy cases, where the fornication occurs outside of the state, does not give jurisdiction to the courts of the [78]*78county where the bastard is born. The contention of the appellant is that the indictment should be drawn charging only the bastardy and not the fornication which occurred outside of the State.

The 37th section of the Act of March 31, 1860, P. L. 392, imposes, as a penalty for fornication, a fine not exceeding one hundred dollars; but acting upon the principle that the father of a bastard child should be liable for its maintenance, the legislature provided that upon conviction the father should be sentenced to pay the expenses incurred at the birth of such child and give security for its maintenance. The same statute, in its 38th section, provided that when a bastard child was begotten outside of the State and born within the State a like sentence should be passed upon the father, “except in the imposition of a fine, which part of the sentence shall be omitted.” These provisions do not render the father of a bastard child begotten outside of the State but born within it liable to a fine for the offense committed outside of the State, but they do render him liable to prosecution to compel him to support his bastard child when that child is born within the State. It is the birth of a child within the State that renders the father liable to be prosecuted, in such a case, upon the ground of his paternity of the child. The courts of quarter session of the peace have jurisdiction within the respective counties; “......of all crimes, misdemeanors and offenses whatsoever, against the laws of this Commonwealth, which shall be triable in their respective county.” It is the birth of the child which renders the father liable to be sentenced to maintain it, and the jurisdiction is in the court of quarter sessions of the county where the birth occurs. Bastardy cannot properly be called a different offense from fornication. The bastard is begotten in the act of fornication and his birth is the consequence of it. But the punishment of fornication, and the order to maintain the child, are quite different things. A fine is imposed for fornication, or in case af adultery a fine and [79]*79imprisonment, the order for maintenance is intended for the enforcement of a moral duty, and the protection of the public from expense: Duncan v. Com., 4 S. & E. 450. Had this indictment contained but one count charging bastardy only, as the appellant contends it ought to have done, the Commonwealth would still have been required to prove when and where the child was unlawfully begotten. It was said in Com. v. Lloyd, 141 Pa. 29: “While it is true that this offense may be so far separated as to charge fornication in one count of an indictment and bastardy in another, yet the bastardy is but an incident of the fornication, the result of a single act. Hence, we do not think the Commonwealth can prosecute for one offense in one county, and for the other in a different county.” But this does not mean, nor is there any case in which it has been decided that fornication and the bastardy which is the resulting incident thereof, may not be charged in the same count. Convictions have been repeatedly sustained on indictments charging fornication, or adultery, and the resulting bastardy in one count: Duncan v. Com., supra; Heiks v. Com., 26 Pa. 514; Dinkey v. Com., 17 Pa. 126; Gorman v. Com., 124 Pa. 536; Com. v. Lewis, 140 Pa. 561. It is never improper to aver in an indictment the essential facts which the Commonwealth will be required to prove in order to warrant a conviction and indicate the sentence which may be imposed. The learned judge of the court below did not err in overruling the motion to quash the indictment and the first specification of error is dismissed.

The 37th section of the Act of March 31, 1860, P. L. 392, contains this provision: “The man by such woman charged to be the father of such bastard child......and she persisting in said charge, in the time of her extremity of labor, or afterwards in open court upon the trial of such person so charged, the same shall be given in evidence, in order to convict such person of fornication.” It was, therefore, entirely proper for the district attorney to ask the physician who attended at the accouche[80]*80ment whether, while she was in her labor pains, she named any one as the father of the child and the court did not err in overruling the objection of counsel for the defendant to that question. The second assignment of error must, therefore, be dismissed.

The third assignment of error refers to the refusal of the court to strike out the answer of the witness to the question which was the subject of the second assignment of error, above stated. The answer of the witness to that question was really not responsive to the question, it merely stated that the woman had, during her labor, said, “God damn that Marcine Losey, I will kill him.” Further examination of the witness and his cross-examination clearly disclosed that the words above quoted were all that the woman said about the defendant during the period of her labor. Nothing was said by her or any other person in her presence as to the paternity of the child, nor was she asked any question relating to that matter. Upon the conclusion of the testimony counsel for the defendant moved to strike out the answer above quoted, which motion the court overruled, and the defendant took an exception to that ruling. The declarations of a woman while in the extremity of labor are not under the general rules of evidence, in such a case, competent, they are only admissible because the statute so provides and when of the character by the statute indicated.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 Pa. Super. 75, 1922 Pa. Super. LEXIS 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-losey-pasuperct-1922.