State Ex Rel. Pierce v. Williams

120 S.E. 594, 95 W. Va. 218, 1923 W. Va. LEXIS 236
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 11, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 120 S.E. 594 (State Ex Rel. Pierce v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Pierce v. Williams, 120 S.E. 594, 95 W. Va. 218, 1923 W. Va. LEXIS 236 (W. Va. 1923).

Opinion

Lively, Judge:

The judgment complained of was entered the 18th of September, 1922, in a bastardy proceeding, and requires defendant Buford Williams to pay to the county court $75.00 a year up to an including the year 1929, and to give bond in the penalty of $1,000 for the payment of said sums.

Jennie Pierce, an unmarried woman, accused Buford Williams of being the father of a female bastard child bom the 8th day of October, 1921. A warrant was issued for his arrest under the statute, the ease was tried by a jury in the circuit court, and on a verdict of guilty as charged in the complaint the judgment was rendered.

A motion to quash the warrant was made and overruled, and this is the first assignment of error. The warrant on its face is regular, reciting that Jennie Pierce, an unmarried woman, of the county, had that day, upon examination under oath before the justice of that county, issuing the warrant, accused one Buford Williams of said county of being the father of a female bastard child, of which she was delivered in said county on the 8th day of October, 1921, and commands that defendant be brought before the justice to be dealt with according to law. It is doubtless the examination of Jennie Pierce, the complainant, which was the subject of the motion to quash. The statute requires that the justice shall examine the complainant under oath, and reduce her examination to writing, and sign it. This was done, and it shows that she was unmarried, appeared before the justice on the 30th day of January, 1922, and being sworn “deposes and says that she is an unmarried woman, who- has resided in the said county for one year next preceding this date on the 8th day of October, 1921, she was delivered of a female bastard child, and that Buford Williams of said county is the father of said child.” The point is made that the examination does not show that she had resided in the county of Cabell for the year preceding the date of her complaint; that is, that she had resided in said county for one year next preceding the 8th *221 day of October, 1921, and not for one year preceding tbe 30tb of January, 1922, tbe date of tbe warrant. We do not so interpret ber examination. Tbe date of tbe birtb of tbe child was October 8, 1921. Tbe examination under oatb says sbe bas resided in tbe county for one year next preceding tbis date, evidently referring to tbe 30tb of January, 1922, tbe date at wbicb sbe appeared before tbe justice. Evidently tbe justice was following tbe form prescribed by Dr. Hogg-on page 499 of Hogg’s Treatise and Forms, and neglected to place after tbe words “tbis date” a semi-colon as given in that form.. There is no punctuation between tbe words “tbis date” and “on tbe 8tb day of October, 1921”, but it is clear from tbe context that “tbis date” refers to tbe date on wbicb tbe information was given. Tbe warrant is good on its face, containing all tbe necessary averments. Tbe motion to quash was properly overruled.

Defendant filed a plea in bar setting up tbe fact that Jennie Pierce was a resident of tbe state of Obio and not of tbe state of West Virginia, and tbat therefore sbe could not maintain tbe action. Tbe evidence of tbe prosecutrix is tbat she bad resided in Huntington, Cabell county, about two and a half years next preceding and bad lived with her sister' in tbat city; tbat sbe .was employed as elevator girl in one of tbe bank buildings of tbat city; tbat on tbe 7th of January, 1921, sbe became enciente by Williams while on an automobile excursion into tbe nearby country; and becoming unwell two or three months afterwards as a result of her pregnancy, and not able to continue ber employment, sbe went to ber mother who lived in Millersport, Obio, a short distance from tbe Obio River and near tbe city of Huntington, where sbe remained until sbe was delivered of tbe child in October, 1921; tbat after ber recovery from ber childbed sickness sbe returned to Huntington in December, 1921, and on January 30, 1922, instituted the action; tbat it was never ber intention to leave Huntington, wbicb sbe considered ber borne and residence, and tbat ber trip to Ohio was for tbe purpose of having ber mother take care of ber in' ber sickness attendant upon tbe birtb of tbe child; tbat at tbe time of the trial she was residing in tbe city of Huntington. Upon tbe coming in of tbis evidence a motion was made to strike it out and dis *222 miss the case because she had not resided in the county of Cabell one year next preceding the time of her complaint and that she was then a resident of Ohio. The court refused this motion, and this is the second assignment of error. The statute does not require that the prosecutrix shall be a resident of the county for one year next preceding her complaint in the legal sense of residence. It only requires that she shall have resided therein for that period. For about two and a half years she had been residing in the city of Huntington with her sister and making her livelihood. This was with the consent of her mother, who appears to be a widow. It is immaterial whether she had gained a legal residence there. While she did not actually stay in Cabell county for one year next preceding her complaint, it is apparent that her absence was only temporary for the purpose of giving birth to the child and at the most natural place which she would likely go, to her mother’s house, where tender care and sympathy could be bestowed. Had she gone to Cincinnati or other convenient place outside Cabell county to a lying-in hospital or for the purpose of being attended in her childbirth by competent physicians and nurses, it would not preclude her from maintaining this action. If it should be held that her temporary .absence would preclude her, any break in her actual residence for any length of time in the year preceding her complaint| would be sufficient to defeat her action. A like contention was made in Bowen v. Parsons, 78 W. Va. 591, where lack of residence of the prosecutrix in the county for one year next preceding the date of the accusation was set up by special plea. The proof showed that for a month preceding the birth of the child and for another succeeding that date she was at the home of her father outside the county but that with the exception of this break in the continuity of her residence she had resided for several years in the county in which the complaint was filed. Judge PoffenbaRgeR disposed of this point of error by saying: “It would be useless to take the time and space here to demonstrate that this temporary absence from the county did not destroy the residence in the county which she had gained in which the proceeding was instituted.” A like contention was made in Hodge v. Sawyer, 85 Me. 285. The child was begotten in Cumberland county. *223 Maine, where the defendant was a resident and'the complainant eommorant. Before the child was bom the complainant, a minor, returned to her father’s house in New Hampshire, and was there delivered. Afterwards she came back to Cumberland county for the purpose of making- the complaint, but had no residence in the state since the child was bom. The complaint alleged her residence to be in. Cumberland county, Maine.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
120 S.E. 594, 95 W. Va. 218, 1923 W. Va. LEXIS 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-pierce-v-williams-wva-1923.