People v. Curry

231 P. 358, 69 Cal. App. 501, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 95
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 30, 1924
DocketCrim. No. 786.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 231 P. 358 (People v. Curry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Curry, 231 P. 358, 69 Cal. App. 501, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 95 (Cal. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

HART, J.

The defendant was found guilty by a jury in the superior court of Tolo County of the crime of willfully omitting, without lawful excuse, to furnish necessary food, clothing, shelter, and medical attendance for his two minor children. He made a motion for a new trial, which was denied, and he brings the ease here on appeal from the judgment and the order denying said motion.

It appears that the defendant and his wife, the father and mother of two minor children, were divorced by a decree entered in the superior court of Yolo County. The record does not clearly show when this decree was entered, but it does appear that the wife was awarded the custody of the two minor children in October, 1914, and during all the years down to the time of the filing of the information herein had their legal custody. It appears that when the decree of divorce was entered (we judge from the record some time in the year 1914) the court also made an order requiring the defendant to pay to his wife for the care, support, education, etc., of said two minor children the sum of $20 per month or $10 per month for each child. The evidence shows that the defendant was not prompt in the payment of the moneys so ordered to be paid by him to the mother of the children, but from time to time during the several years intervening between the year 1914 and the time when the information herein was filed (December 5, 1923) he paid certain amounts, some of which were less and others in excess of any sum *504 which he was required under the order to pay for any one month. The larger amounts so paid were in part payment of any of the sums past due and which he failed to pay regularly each month, as the order of the court required. In other words, as Mrs. Barnett (the former wife of the defendant and mother of the two minor children named in the information, she having intermarried with Prank Barnett after the divorce from the defendant) testified, the defendant paid in the year 1914 $17.50 only, on December 22, 1915, he paid $10, in the year 1916 he paid nothing, in the year 1917 he paid $170', in the year 1918, $220, in 1919 $190, in ■ 1920 $228.80, in 1921 $130, in 1922 $100, and on January 5-, 1923, $100': All the foregoing amounts, Mrs. Barnett testified, were, with the exception of $100, applied to the payment of old bills which had accrued by reason of the support, etc., of the minor children. She testified that at the time of the trial, which took place on the fourth day of March, 1924, the defendant was still indebted on account of the order for his payment of $20 per month for the children in the sum of $781.17. It appears, though, that on the fifth day of October, 1923, a writ of execution was issued on the judgment of the superior court awarding her the sum of $20 per month for the care, etc., of the children, in which it was recited that down to that time the sum of $310 had accumulated against the defendant under the terms of said order. Her attention having been called by the attorney for the defendant to the discrepancy between the amount alleged to be due in the writ of execution and the amount she testified was due at the time the trial was had, she still maintained that, although she gave the sum of $310 to the sheriff as the amount then due, the sum of $781.17 was actually due at said time. Mrs. Barnett testified that none of the money paid by the defendant covered the amounts due for the year 1923. She further testified that the sum of $20 a month was at this time inadequate for the proper support, care and education of and for medical attendance for the minor children. The defendant did not himself take the witness-stand. He, however, called as his witness his brother, 'Charles H. Curry, by whom he undertook to prove that the defendant was maintaining a home in the town of Davis, Yolo County, for his mother, and supporting the *505 latter. This testimony was objected to by the district attorney and the court sustained the objection and struck the testimony of said Curry from the record. In purported rebuttal the People showed by one Earl Smith that the defendant during several months of the year 1923 was his partner in the cement business and also had worked for him; that the defendant was a skillful cement worker and capable of earning eight dollars per day. Smith also testified that from May to and including September, 1923, which covered the period of their association as partners, he paid to the defendant approximately the sum of $1,000.

The above statement of the evidence is sufficient for the purposes of the decision hereof.

The point first made by the defendant is that, inasmuch as the information specifically charges that the alleged offense was committed “on or about the first day of November, 1923,” it was improper to permit the People to prove that the accused had willfully omitted to furnish necessary support, maintenance, etc., for the minor children at any other time than on the day so named. In other words, the contention is that evidence was inadmissible to prove the commission of the crime, if any were committed, prior to the first day of November, 1923. The contention is without merit. The general rule is that where a crime is charged to have been committed on a day specifically named in the accusatory pleading, it is competent for the People to show that it was committed at any time before the statute of limitations barred prosecution therefor. In the instant case the crime charged in the information is in the nature of a continuing offense, and, as is said by Mr. Justice Richards in People v. Stanley, 33 Cal. App. 624, 626 [166 Pac. 596)], in which a petition for hearing in the supreme court was denied, “Public policy would require such a construction of the terms of section 270 of the Penal Code as to render each and every willful omission without legal excuse on the part of the parent to furnish necessary food, clothing, shelter, or medical attendance to his or her child a fresh offense.” Even if it were true that the sums paid by the defendant for moneys past due under the order of the court were sufficient to satisfy his obligation down to the first day of October, 1923, when the writ of execution was issued, still the *506 evidence is undisputed that the defendant paid nothing in pursuance of said order after the service of the writ of execution issued on the day mentioned. As we have seen, the information was filed in the superior court on the fifth day of December, 1923, so that there would at least be in that case approximately two months during which he did not comply with the requirement that he pay for the support of the children the sum of $20 per month.

It will not be denied, in view of what is said in the case of People v. Schlott, 162 Cal. 374 [122 Pac. 846], that a parent may be proceeded against under section 270 of the Penal Code for willful omission to furnish his minor children with food, clothing, etc., notwithstanding that under a decree of divorce between the defendant and his wife the latter is awarded the custody of the minor children, and where, as here, a valid order has been made in the divorce proceeding that the defendant shall pay a specified sum per month for such support, maintenance, etc. And under said section, as it was amended by the legislature of 1923 (Stats. 1923, p.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Swoap v. Superior Court
516 P.2d 840 (California Supreme Court, 1973)
Gluckman v. Gaines
266 Cal. App. 2d 52 (California Court of Appeal, 1968)
People v. Sorensen
437 P.2d 495 (California Supreme Court, 1968)
City of Fontana v. Atkinson
212 Cal. App. 2d 499 (California Court of Appeal, 1963)
People v. Vogel
242 P.2d 969 (California Court of Appeal, 1952)
Ex Parte Filtzer
100 P.2d 942 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1940)
People v. Martin
280 P. 151 (California Court of Appeal, 1929)
State v. Francis
269 P. 878 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1928)
People v. Frazier
261 P. 1071 (California Court of Appeal, 1927)
People v. Hamil
238 P. 1075 (California Court of Appeal, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
231 P. 358, 69 Cal. App. 501, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-curry-calctapp-1924.