State v. Beims

253 S.W. 420, 212 Mo. App. 221, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 100
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 12, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 253 S.W. 420 (State v. Beims) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Beims, 253 S.W. 420, 212 Mo. App. 221, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 100 (Mo. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinions

Defendant was proceeded against by information filed by the Prosecuting Attorney and lodged in the St. Louis Court of Criminal Correction. He is charged with failing and refusing to provide for his lawful child under the age of sixteen years, to-wit, aged one year and nine months. The statute under which this proceeding is had may be found in the Laws of 1921, pages 281 and 282, which section, in so far as it has any pertinent application here, is as follows:

"If any man or woman shall without good cause, ____ fail, neglect or refuse to provide the necessary food, clothing or lodging for his or her child or children, born in or out of wedlock, under the age of sixteen years ____ then such person shall ____ be punished by imprisonment," etc. *Page 224

Defendant, and his wife who prior to her marriage was Mildred Bleyer, were married on August 1, 1918. About ten or eleven days thereafter, the defendant, who had been drafted, entered the service, and remained until the day before Christmas, 1918. After defendant's return from the army, he and his wife lived together in a house belonging to the wife's father, on Washington avenue, in the city of St. Louis. Defendant and his wife, the wife's father, her grandmother, and her father's brother made up the family which lived in this home. About the 20th of October, 1920, defendant went to Kansas City, and on January 14, 1921, defendant's wife obtained a divorce from him. The care and custody of the child was awarded to the mother, but no provision was made for its support.

The divorced wife of defendant testified that, for several months prior to the date of the trial defendant had contributed very little to the child's support — "no more than about $10 per month before he left on October 20, 1920." After that time, and up to August 12, 1921, he had sent only $10. She stated she did not know whether or not defendant was employed. On cross-examination she testified that she was awarded the custody of the child by agreement with the defendant; that this agreement was entered into with defendant by her father, who is a member of the Bar of the city of St. Louis. She testified that she was living with her father at the time of the divorce, and had been living with him ever since; that her father owned the home in which they lived, and that the child is being provided for there; "it is suffering no want, it is not in any way neglected, and is being properly taken care of in every way."

Mrs. Beim's father testified that, since October, 1920, both the child and its mother had been residing with him and his mother; that the daughter had been providing for the child out of an allowance which he gave her; that the defendant had not contributed anything to the support of the child in ten months. After the defendant's return from the army he did not know whether *Page 225 he had ever been employed, but defendant had informed him that he had. This was all the evidence offered on the part of the State.

Counsel for the defendant asked that he be discharged, but the court overruled this motion.

Defendant testified that he was twenty-four years old; that he had left the home in which he and his wife had been living on October 20, 1920, and had been in Kansas City from that time until the time the decree of divorce was granted. He testified that, until the 12th of August, 1921, he had been selling "check protectors," but had made very little above his expenses and the necessaries of life. He went to work for this company in January, 1921. After he returned from the army, and until he left for Kansas City on October 20, 1920, he and his wife had lived at the home of her father, as stated.

On cross-examination defendant stated he was six feet one inch tall, and weighed about one hundred and seventy-three pounds, and was in perfect health; that his father is President of the Claes Lehnbeuter Manufacturing Company. He says he sent $10 to the child after he left, and that prior to the divorce he had also sent a check to the wife for $50. This child was born on October 21, 1919. The offense for which defendant was tried was alleged to have been committed on August 12, 1921. From October, 1919, to May, 1920, he stated he was making $150 a month, and, while he contributed to the support of the child, he could not state definitely just how much. He also testified that he had had a talk with his wife's father, Mr. Bleyer, about the 12th of August, with respect to the support of this child. Mr. Bleyer, he said, wanted $50 a month, and $350 back pay, and stated to the defendant that it was immaterial whether he paid or not, as he would rather send him to the penitentiary than to have the money. At the time he left, the child was being taken care of, all of its wants were looked after and provided for when he lived there and when he last heard of the child, and that he had *Page 226 made inquiries as to its condition and how it was being provided for.

In rebuttal, Mrs. Beims testified that defendant never spent more than $10 in any one month for the child when he was making $150 a month, and that the $50 was sent her by defendant in October or November, 1920; and further stated: "I am the only child of my father, and am in comfortable circumstances, living in a good home; and the child is provided with every possible comfort."

It further appears from defendant's testimony that when he began selling the check protectors his mother advanced him $1,000. He purchased twenty-seven, and had $300 left. During the eight months in which he was engaged in selling these check protectors he lost money, and as soon as he sold what he had purchased he quit and came back to St. Louis. This was in August, 1921. It was at this time that he discussed with his father-in-law, Mr. Bleyer, the question of contributing to the support of his child, and was told by Mr. Bleyer that he must contribute $50 a month, and pay $350 back pay, or he would be sent "over the road." At that time he says he had no money, no job, nor any bank account. After he returned from the army, at the suggestion of his wife and her father, he went to live in their home, which was a nine-room, well furnished house. The father of his former wife is an attorney-at-law, and he attended to the legal business in connection with the divorce and arrangements concerning alimony. Defendant testified that he did not know at the time he was discussing the question of support for the child that any prosecution had been instituted against him. Prior to the time he left his wife, and after his return from the army, he was earning $150 a month, and during all the time he was at this home he says he contributed to the support of the wife and child, although he did not remember the exact or definite amount given in any one month. He also testified that he had written to his wife and told her that any time the child was sick or he could do anything, he would be only too glad to do it. *Page 227

Defendant was found guilty, and his punishment fixed at one year in the workhouse.

The question before us for our consideration on this appeal is, will this record sustain a conviction for the offense described in the statute. A very similar question was before our Supreme Court in State v. Thornton, 232 Mo. 298, 134 S.W. 519. The statute under which the proceeding was there had was as follows:

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Related

State v. Winterbauer
300 S.W. 1071 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1927)
State of Missouri v. Hobbs
291 S.W. 184 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1927)

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Bluebook (online)
253 S.W. 420, 212 Mo. App. 221, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-beims-moctapp-1923.