Commonwealth v. Tobin

130 S.W. 1116, 140 Ky. 261, 1910 Ky. LEXIS 233
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 13, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 130 S.W. 1116 (Commonwealth v. Tobin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Tobin, 130 S.W. 1116, 140 Ky. 261, 1910 Ky. LEXIS 233 (Ky. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge O’Beár

Affirming.

A general demurrer was sustained to the following [262]*262indictment, and the Commonwealth appeals:

“The grand jury of the county of Bourbon in the name and by the authority of the Commonwealth of Kentucky, accuse Claude Tobin of the crime of willfully (and without such cause as constitutes a statutory ground for divorce-to the husband) abandoning and deserting a female twenty-one years of age, whom he had seduced under promise of marriage, within three years after the marriage committed as follows, viz:

“The said Claude Tobin, in the said county of Bourbon on the tenth day of June, A. D., 1910, and within twelve months theretofore the finding of this indictment, did unlawfully, willfully, and feloniously, without such cause as constitutes a statutory ground for divorce to the husband, abandon and desert his wife who was Nannie Berry, a female under twenty-one years of age, whom he had unlawfully and feloniously seduced and had carnal knowledge of under promise of marriage, and for which seduction the said Tobin, was by the grand jury of Bourbon county, indicted on the fourth day of December, 1909, and to avoid prosecution under said indictment, the said Tobin had after December 4th, 1909, married said Nannie; and within three years after said marriage the said Tobin had and did abandon and desert said Nannie as and when aforesaid, against the peace and dignity of the Commonwealth of Kentucky.”

The indictment was framed under section 1214, Ivy. Stats. (Carroll’s)

The indictment must charge in its accusative part, the public offense for which it is intended to present the accused, and in the descriptive part, must state the facts which if established by the proof constitute the offense charged. (Brooks v. Commonwealth, 98 Ky. 143, 17 R. 693.) It must be direct and certain as to (1) the party charged; (2) the offense charged; (3) the county in which the offense was committed, and (4) the particular circumstances of the offense charged, if they be necessary to constitute a complete offense. (Sec. 124, Criminal Code.)

The same act may constitute either of several punishable offenses. It is at the election of the prosecuting officer, or in an indictable offense, at the election of the grand jury, to determine which of the offenses embraced in the act complained of the accused will be put on trial for. Hence the necessity for charging with certainty the particular offense for which he is to be prosecuted. The [263]*263rule'is, the offense charged controls and a description of it that might have enlarged that offense will not operate of itself to do so, the matter in addition to that necessary to be stated being regarded as surplusage. (Coe v. Commonwealth, 94 Ky. 606; Commonwealth v. Jarboe, 89 Ky. 143.)

The offense charged in this indictment is that the accused “willfully abandoned a female under twenty-one years of age, whom he had seduced under promise of marriage, within three years of the marriage.” But that is not a criminal offense under the laws of Kentucky. While that fact is taken notice of by the statutes for other purposes, it is not punishable criminally.

But it is argued for the Commonwealth, if the indictment is sufficient in its terms to charge a public, offense, and is reasonably certain as to the offense charged, and the circumstances of it, it is good although it may contain surplusage, and necessitate some grammatical re-arrangement. We have endeavored to apply the rule contended for to the case in hand. Conceding that the accusation sufficiently charges the seduction of a female under twenty-one years of age under a promise of marriage, and admitting the charge of her abandonment within three years was an unnecessary statement in the accusation, it must then appear in the description of the offense that it had been committed within the jurisdiction of the indicting court. Overlooking the arrangement of the language of the description which seems to be aimed at the supposed offense of abandonment, and noting the facts appearing, which may be taken as that the accused seduced Nannie Berry, an infant female under twenty-one years of age, under a promise of marrying her, and after having been indicted therefor he did marry her, but within three years, without statutory cause to him for a divorce, abandoned her, still the indictment is deficient. It does not state in what county the seduction occurred, nor does it allege that the seduction occurred in this state. It does charge that the abandonment occurred in Bourbon county, Kentucky. But for aught that appears the seduction may have occurred elsewhere, and beyond the jurisdiction of the Bourbon circuit court. It is as necessary to state the county in which the offense charged was committed, as any other fact named in the indictment.

The opinion in Commonwealth v. McNutt, 118 S. W. 978, is relied on by the Attorney General as authority [264]*264in the support of the sufficiency of this indictment. The question in McNutt’s case was if the accused marry the girl before indictment, whether the statute for seduction applied. We held that it did.

The statute originally was that “whoever shall, under promise of marriage, seduce and have carnal knowledge of any female under sixteen years of age, shall be guilty of a felony, and upon conviction thereof, shall be confined in the penitentiary not less than one nor more than five years; * * * provided, however, that no prosecutions shall be instituted when the person charged shall have married the girl seduced; and provided further, that any prosecution instituted 'under this act shall be discontinued if the party accused marry the girl seduced before final judgment.” (Act May 17, 1886, Gen. Stats., c. 29, pago 473.)

In the revision known as Kentucky Statutes, the same provision is brought forward, except that the “age of consent” is raised from sixteen to twenty-one years, and the limitation of prosecution extended from one year to two years. In 1894 this court in Commonwealth v. Wright, 16 Ky. Law Rep. 251 (marked for official publication) held that an offer by the accused to marry the girl before final judgment, which was refused by her, excused the defendant, and was a bar to further prosecution under the statute as it then was. That opinion was followed in a number of subsequent cases. (Commonwealth v. Hodgkin, 23 R. 829; Commonwealth v. Israel, 23 Rep. 841; Ingram v. Commonwealth, 114 Ky. 726, 24 R. 1531; Commonwealth v. Akers, 28 Rep. 78.) The last amendment, the one of 1906, which is section 1214, supra, adopts the court’s construction of the former statute, incorporating it in express language that an offer to marry the girl is sufficient reparation. There was incorporated also a provision against another evil, namely, when the accused married the girl in order to end his prosecution, and then directly abandoned her as soon as the prosecution was dismissed. So, the present amendment, as does the whole statute, looks primarily to the best reparation that could be made after such a seduction, the marriage of the parties, the fulfillment of the pledge under which the seduction had occurred. But it would not be reparation, or at best but slight, if an immediate abandonment were allowed to frustrate the main purpose of the law. Hence the seducer is required to live with his wife for at least three years, unless there [265]*265be statutory ground for divorce from her; before his offense under the criminal law is extinguished.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
130 S.W. 1116, 140 Ky. 261, 1910 Ky. LEXIS 233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-tobin-kyctapp-1910.