State v. Reese

135 P. 270, 43 Utah 447, 1913 Utah LEXIS 86
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 10, 1913
DocketNo. 2494
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 135 P. 270 (State v. Reese) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah 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. Reese, 135 P. 270, 43 Utah 447, 1913 Utah LEXIS 86 (Utah 1913).

Opinion

EK.IOK, J.

Some time prior to May 6, 1912, one-, an unmarried woman whom we shall designate tbe prosecutrix, filed a complaint before a justice of tbe peace of Cache County, Utah, against the appellant, a married man, charging him with being the father of her unborn child. The justice held appellant to answer to the district court of said county, and on the 6th day of May aforesaid the district attorney of Cache County filed an information in the district court of said county in which he charged the appellant with having had unlawful sexual intercourse with the prosecutrix on the 29th day of August, 1911; that as a result of said intercourse said prosecutrix became and is pregnant with child, which if born alive will be a bastard, the maintenance and education of which will likely become a public burden, and that the appellant is the father of said child. To this information the appellant pleaded not guilty, and upon a trial to a jury after the child was born he was found guilty of being the father of said child. The court entered judgment adjudging him to be the father and required him to pay to the clerk of said court the sum of $200 for the first year and $150 each year thereafter for a period of seventeen years, payable in quarterly installments, for the support and maintenance of said child; that appellant enter into a bond with approved sureties to secure all of the payments aforesaid; and that in case he failed or neglected to pay said money or give the bond aforesaid “he be committed to the county jail of Oache County, Utah, until compliance with said demand or until discharged in due course of law.” Appellant appeals from said judgment and has assigned numerous errors for which he insists the judgment should be reversed. We shall consider the errors deemed material [452]*452substantially in tbe order in which they are presented by appellant’s counsel in their brief. We shall state the facts, so far as deemed necessary, in connection with the points decided.

1 It is contended that the act (chapter 62, Laws Utah 1911) under which appellant was prosecuted is invalid for various reasons: The first reason urged is that the act is invalid because it does not define bastardy, and that the procedure to be followed is vague and uncertain. The act is copied bodily from the laws of the state of Illinois upon the subject of bastardy. See 1 Starr & Curtis Ann. Ill. Stats. (2d Ed.) 1896, p. 522 eí seq. The only difference between the Illinois statute and chapter 62 aforesaid consists in the changes necessary to make said chapter conform to the jurisdiction of our courts and their procedure. The manner of lodging complaint before a justice of the peace, the hearing thereon and requiring the accused to appear before the trial court, and the information filed therein are, however, the same as provided by the Illinois law. The statute was in force in Illinois for almost forty years before it was adopted by the legislature of this state, and the courts of Illinois, as we shall hereinafter see, have passed upon almost every phase of it. Without going into the subject farther at this time, we are constrained to hold that the act is not invalid as a whole. The specific provisions of the act which it is contended are invalid will be taken up in their order hereafter.

2 It is next insisted that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the judgment of conviction. This contention is, to a large extent, based upon the theory that the proceeding is criminal, and that therefore appellant’s guilt had to be established beyond a reasonable doubt. The trial court took this view and so charged the jury; and, although they found that the fact of appellant’s guilt was established beyond a reasonable doubt, he nevertheless insists that the finding of the jury is without support in the evidence. It has repeatedly been held by both the Supreme and Appellate Courts of Illinois that the proceeding, al[453]*453though prosecuted in the name of the state and criminal in form, is nevertheless civil, and that a preponderance of the evidence is sufficient to convict. (Rawlings v. People, 102 Ill. 475; Davis v. People, 50 Ill. 199; People v. Starr, 50 Ill. 52; Johnson v. People, 140 Ill. 350, 29 N. E. 895; Gehm v. People, 87 Ill. App. 158; Lewis v. People, 82 Ill. 104.) Under a law which is in many respects similar to the Illinois statute, the Supreme Court of Nebraska has laid down the same doctrine in the following cases: Cottrell v. State, 9 Neb. 125, 1 N. W. 1008; Jones v. State, 14 Neb. 210, 14 N. W. 901.

In 9 Neb. 127, 1 N. W. 1009, it is said:

“And (the action), being essentially a civil action, the better course is to conduct the prosecution in tbe name of the real party in interest. But in such a case the state is a mere trustee, and the real party in interest obtains the benefit of the judgment; the object of the action being merely to enforce the discharge of a civil and moral obligation, that of support by a father of his own child.”

In view of what is said above, the proceedings in Nebraska are usually conducted in the name of the mother of the child against the putative father. But whether conducted in the name of the state or by the mother the procedure is the same and the rules of evidence and the quantum of proof applicable to civil cases control.

In passing upon the question now under consideration, the Supreme Court of Illinois in Rawlings v. People, supra, says:

“It is well settled by the decisions of this court that a prosecution under the bastardy act is a civil and not a criminal proceeding; that, though in forjn criminal, it is essentially of the nature of a civil action, the object being, not the imposition of a penalty ■for an immoral act, but merely to compel the putative father to contribute to the support of his illegitimate child.”

Entirely apart from the fact, however, that the legislature of this state adopted the Illinois statute.after the highest court of that state had held the prosecution and consequences [454]*454thereof to be civil and not criminal, we tbink it is manifest that the legislature of this state did not intend the bastardy act to be criminal in its consequences.

An unlawful sexual act, other than rape, is by our statute made a crime and can be punished as such. In the case at bar the prosecutrix could have been punished for fornication while' appellant could have been convicted and punished for adultery. It was wholly unnecessary, therefore, to enact another criminal statute to punish acts already made punishable, but it was necessary to adopt some law whereby the putative father of an illegitimate child could be compelled to make provision for its support and education. Why should not the fathers of illegitimate children be compelled to provide for their offspring so far as this can be done by law, when the fathers of legitimate children are by law required to do so ? The proceeding is therefore intended to enforce a moral obligation and is thus civil in its consequences, and a mere preponderance of the evidence is sufficient to support the verdict. In this connection it has squarely been held by both the Supreme Court and the Appellate Court of Illinois that the uncorroborated testimony of the prosecutrix is sufficient to support a verdict although the accused may testify directly contrary to her statements. The question is for the jury and they must ordinarily determine which one is most worthy of belief. (Davis v. People, supra; People v.

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Bluebook (online)
135 P. 270, 43 Utah 447, 1913 Utah LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-reese-utah-1913.