State v. Chaffee

259 N.W. 502, 65 N.D. 439, 1935 N.D. LEXIS 127
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 13, 1935
DocketCr. File No. 116.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 259 N.W. 502 (State v. Chaffee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Chaffee, 259 N.W. 502, 65 N.D. 439, 1935 N.D. LEXIS 127 (N.D. 1935).

Opinion

Nuessle, J.

The defendant is charged with having failed to provide properly for his wife and for his children contrary to the provisions of § 9594a2, Supplement to the 1913 Compiled Laws. He entered his plea of not guilty and the case was tried to a jury. The jury returned a verdict of guilty. Thereafter the defendant moved for a new trial. The motion was denied and judgment of conviction was entered against him. Thereupon he perfected the instant appeal.

Section 9594a2, supra, provides that “Every man, who without lawful excuse, wilfully fails to furnish proper food, shelter, clothing or medical attendance to his wife; and every person having legal responsibility for the care or support of a child who is under sixteen years of age, unable to support himself by lawful employment, who wilfully fails to make proper provision for such child is guilty of a felony, . . .” The information here charged that the defendant “without lawful excuse did wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously fail to furnish proper food, shelter, clothing, or medical attendance to his wife and having the legal responsibility for the care and support of his two minor children under the age of sixteen years and unable to support themselves by lawful employment, did wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously fail to make proper provision for said children. . .

*441 The defendant grounds this appeal on the proposition that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the verdict of guilty returned by the jury. The record is long. The following facts material in the case may be winnowed from it. The defendant was a resident of Fargo. In April, 1931, he advertised for a stenographer. In response to this advertisement the complaining witness applied for the position. The defendant employed her. She had not known the defendant prior to that time. He represented he was a man of large wealth. She says she believed him. She was 23, he 43. He was a man of education and experience; she was not wholly unsophisticated. At the end of two weeks, on May 2, 1931, they went to Minnesota and were married. In fact the defendant had but little property. They set up housekeeping in the little town of Amenia a few miles distant from Fargo. A child was born to them on April 23, 1932, and a second child on April 10, 1933. In the meantime they had lived part of the time in a house in the country some two miles from Amenia. Their living quarters while in Amenia were cramped and crowded but warm and otherwise comfortable. The house in the country was commodious and fitted with modern conveniences. Their married life was at times rather stormy. They had frequent disagreements. Defendant did not get along well with his wife’s parents and finally forbad them to visit at his home except subject to the requirements which he imposed, and which were somewhat unreasonable. Except for an occasional small item the only income he had was a salary paid to him for some bookkeeping work. During the first part of their married life this was $100 a month, but in 1932 it was cut down to $50 per month. Thereafter the defendant’s income was from $50 to $65 per month. The complaining witness says, and with reason, that the defendant was selfish and niggardly. It appears he had bought practically no clothing for the complaining witness or the children. He admits this but says she was well provided for when they were married and he bought all that was reasonably possible considering his income. Complaint is also made on account of failure to provide sustenance. Here, also, defendant says he provided as well as he was able. In any event, neither Mrs. Chaffee nor the children suffered on account of lack of shelter, food or clothing. The state’s principal contention, however, is that the defendant-failed to provide proper medical attendance for his wife. During her *442 first pregnancy she was ill on several occasions and defendant provided medical attention for her. When the second child was born they were living in the country home two miles from Amenia. A day or two before the baby was born complaining witness telephoned for and procured a woman to attend her during her confinement. Sometime during the forenoon of the day the baby was born she asked the defendant to send for the doctor, lie said he would do it when it became necessary. The child was born about four o’clock in the afternoon. About half past two the defendant telephoned for the doctor. The latter, however, was busy with another case and told the defendant to call him back in an hour. The doctor was engaged longer than he had thought to be and defendant neglected or was not able to get him until after the child was delivered. The defendant himself attended his wife at the delivery and looked after the child. He administered two morphine hypodermics. Prior to her marriage she had taken some training as a nurse. She had also had some exjDerience as a hospital laboratory technician. He says he administered the hypodermics at her request and with her needle. She denies that the needle was hers. An hour or two after the child was born, the doctor, having been called again, attended complaining witness and delivered the afterbirth. He examined both mother and child and pronounced all well with them. He did not thereafter call upon her. The woman who had been summoned by Mrs. Chaffee remained to care for her some ten days after the baby was born. This woman was not a nurse. Shortly after the baby was born complaining witness’ parents came to see her. There was a violent quarrel between her mother and the defendant and she was greatly perturbed thereby. Matters did not mend. On April 27, her parents again visited her and took her and the children away with them. When she left she told defendant she was leaving for good. At the trial, however, she testified she really had intended to return home after “the storm had blown over.” On April 28, she went to the state’s attorney and swore out a warrant charging the defendant with having failed to provide properly for her and the children. Defendant was thereupon arrested. However, he was released. The record does not disclose what arrangements were made with respect to the matter. He endeavored to have his wife and children return to his homo but they did not come back. In the meantime such offers of support as *443 he made or as were made in his behalf were not accepted. On June 3 st complaining witness swore to another complaint and defendant was again arrested. She also swore to a complaint charging him with the unlawful possession or use of narcotics. He was then bound over on the second nonsupport charge and thereafter the information on which he was tried and convicted was filed and the trial was had as herein-before set forth.

Section 9594a2, supra, is a statute of compulsion. Its primary purposes are to compel husbands to maintain their wives and to compel those persons having legal responsibility for the care and support of children to support them properly. The punishment prescribed is secondary; a means to these ends. Consistent with its purposes and means the statute places a large measure of discretion in the trial judge. All of those things clearly appear from that portion thereof which provides that upon conviction thereunder the defendant “shall be punished therefor by imprisonment in the state penitentiary for not more than five years lnut, before the trial, with the consent of the defendant, or at the trial on entry of a plea of guilty, or after conviction, instead of

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514 N.W.2d 662 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1994)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
259 N.W. 502, 65 N.D. 439, 1935 N.D. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-chaffee-nd-1935.