State Ex Rel. Applewhite v. Hales

The defendant objects that the Justice of the Peace, when he issued his warrant in April, 1869, requiring the relator to appear before him, etc., did not have jurisdiction, because the relator, not having resided for twelve months in Wayne county, had acquired no settlement there. He contends that the subsequent birth of the child after a settlement did not validate the previous unauthorized proceeding. (245) The language of the statute (Rev. Code, chap. 12, sec. 1,) *Page 187 furnishes an answer to this objection: "Any Justice of the Peace, upon his own knowledge, or information made to him that any single woman within hiscounty is big with child," etc., "may cause her to be brought before him," etc. The jurisdiction of the Justice to issue the warrant, before the birth of the child, depends on the present domicil of the mother, and not on her legal place of settlement. If the defendant, immediately upon the return of the process against him, had moved to quash, for the want of jurisdiction, his motion could not have availed; for he would have been obliged to have shown what county had jurisdiction, which, depending as it did on the settlement of the mother at the birth of the child, could not be known before. That this is the test was distinctly declared in State v. Elam,61 N.C. 460. Had the birth taken place whilst the legal settlement of the mother was in the county of Wilson, the defendant might successfully have moved to quash. But at the birth she had acquired a settlement in Wayne, which county alone was likely to become subject to the charge, and which therefore was the one entitled to be indemnified. This is the principle which governed the decision in State v. Elam, supra.

The judgment of the Court below is affirmed; the defendant must answer the charge. Let this opinion be certified.

Per curiam.

Judgment affirmed.

Cited: S. v. Green, 71 N.C. 174.

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