State v. Jinkens

179 N.W. 541, 189 Iowa 1233, 1920 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 317
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 1, 1920
StatusPublished

This text of 179 N.W. 541 (State v. Jinkens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Jinkens, 179 N.W. 541, 189 Iowa 1233, 1920 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 317 (iowa 1920).

Opinion

• Arthur, J.

1- Smo»?" tion anes" -Defendant was indicted May 7, 1917, under Section 4764 of the Code, charging that defendant “did unlawfully, willfully, and designedly marry one Lottie Burrows, for the purpose of escaping a prosecuto'011 for fke crime of seduction, committed against the said Lottie Burrows; and while said charge was pending, he married her, the said Lottie Burrows, for the purpose of escaping prosecution for said crime of seduction, and thereafter without good and just cause deserted her.”

On the trial,, the State produced evidence tending to show that, on September 7, 1916, information was filed in [1235]*1235justice court, charging defendant with seduction of Lottie Burrows, prosecutrix in this action; that the defendant. was arrested, and brought into court the following day'; was arraigned; entered plea of not guilty; gave bond for appearance; and the case was set down for hearing four days later. When the case came on for hearing, defendant appeared, with counsel, and hearing was postponed, from time to time, until September 20th. Defendant and prosecutrix were married on September 18th, and the charge of seduction was dismissed. A few days before his arrest, Jinkens went to the Burrows home, and talked with Lottie about her condition and what they should do about it, and also talked with Mrs. Mary Burrows, Lottie’s mother. Jinkens and Lottie called Mrs. Burrows into the room where they were,, to talk the matter over with them. Jink-ens said he had “got Lottie into trouble.” Mrs. Jinkens asked him if he was going to marry Lottie, and he said:

“I will never marry her nor live with her. The only thing I will do, I will take her to Ottumwa to a doctor, and she would be operated on.”

He did take her to Ottumwa, the evening of the day that he said he would take her, but he was arrested on the seduction charge that same evening, immediately upon their arrival in Ottumwa.. In about a week after his arrest, and near the time set for his preliminary hearing on the seduction charge, he again went to the Burrows home, where Lottie and her mother were, and talked about marrying Lottie, and called several times and-talked about the same subject, and finally brought his lawyer with him, and secured the written consent of the parents to the marriage, —Lottie being under 38, — and the marriage took place on September 18, 3910. After the marriage,, they lived about two weeks with Lottie’s parents, and then, they went to Luray, Missouri, and ran a small restaurant, for about six weeks. Then he told her that the restaurant was no.t paying, and that, he had a buyer for it and would sell, and for her to go and stay with her folks, until he sold the restaurant, and that he would get a position in Iowa, and [1236]*1236come after her. They agreed to that arrangement. He gave her money to return to her folks, and, shortly afterwards, shipped tlmir household effects to Milton, Iowa. She arrived at' the home of her parents, which is two or three miles out of the little town of Milton, in Davis County, Iowa, on Monday; and, on Thursday of the same week, defendant appeared in Milton, but did not visit his wife. She saw him in Milton, and he saw her; she attempted to have a talk with him, but he avoided her. During the six weeks they were in Missouri, he treated her badly, endeavored to provoke her to leave him, and asked her to leave him. She told him she would not leave him. After returning to Iowa, she remained at the home of her parents, and a child was born there, February 13, 1917. A few days after the baby was born, this action for wife desertion was commenced in justice court, and Jinkens was arrested at Milton,, Iowa, on February .18, 1917.

The record is silent as to whether or not defendant remained in Davis County from about November 21, 1916, when prosecutrix saw him in Milton, until his arrest in Milton, on February 18, 1917. Jinkens escaped from the sheriff, and was not found until January, 1918, when he was arrested as a fugitive in Denver, Colorado, and returned to Davis Coiinty, Iowa.

When the State had submitted the foregoing facts and rested, the court, on motion of the defendant, directed a verdict in his favor, and he was discharged.

The offense charged is defined in Section 4761 of the. Code, and reads:

“Every man who shall many any ivoman for the purpose of escaping prosecution for seduction,, and shall after-u-ards desert her without good cause, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and shall be punished accordingly.”

There is no question but that the facts disclosed by the evidence establish conclusively that defendant married prosecutrix to escape prosecution on the charge of seduc-. tion then pending against him. It is evident that he did not enter the marriage ceremony in good faith. He re[1237]*1237fused to marry her, and proposed an abortion, instead of marriage, and did attempt to carry out his wicked scheme, and was prevented by arrest on the charge of seduction. It was only after his arrest, and when the preliminary hearing was almost reached, that he, in fear of prosecution, concluded to marry her. That element of the charge, that defendant married prosecutrix for the purpose of escaping prosecution for seduction, does not require further consideration.

2. Wife Desertion : venue The trial court evidently concluded that his court was without jurisdiction, because the- desertion element of the offense, if desertion was established, occurred,, not in Iowa, but in Missouri. And that is the pertinent ...... inquiry m this case,

We think it may be said, from the evidence, that defendant did desert his wife, and that such desertion was without good cause, and in pursuance of a purpose and design to desert her, formed at the time of the marriage. Anyway, it cannot be said, as a matter of law, that he did not so desert her.

Now, where did the desertion occur? The first two weeks after the marriage, defendant and his wife lived at the home of her parents; lived there until he found some place to engage in business, — not an unusual occurrence.

Then they went to Luray, Missouri,- and conducted a restaurant. Both worked in the restaurant, and lived in rented rooms.' That way of working and living continued about six weeks, and then defendant told his wife that' their restaurant business was not paying; and that he would sell it; and that they would return to Iowa; and for her to go to her folks and remain with them until he could close out the business; and that he would join her, and find employment in Iowa; and that he would come and get her; that he thought he would find a place in Keokuk to work; and that they would go there to live. They agreed to that arrangement; she did what he asked her to do, went to the home of her parents, and awaited his coming. In pursuance of such arrangement, he furnished her trans[1238]*1238portation to go to Iowa, and, later, shipped their household effects to her, and paid the freight on them. Latex*, in four days, he arrived in Milton, Iowa, as he had agreed with her that he would. Whatever willful design and purpose he may have entertained at the time of the marriage, and hax’bored all along, during approximately two months, of deserting this woman,, xxp to that time he had xxot abandoned hex*, nor left her unprovided for.

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Related

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179 N.W. 541, 189 Iowa 1233, 1920 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-jinkens-iowa-1920.