This is an appeal from a judgment of conviction under subdivision 1 of section 899 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, which provides:
“The following are disorderly persons:
“1. Persons who actually abandon their wives or children without adequate support, or leave them in danger of becoming a burden upon the public, or who neglect to provide for them according to their means.”
On the trial, the defense made to the charge was that the wife had been guilty of adultery, and the defendant offered to prove the fact. The police justice refused to receive the testimony, holding .that, if true, it was no defense. For the purpose of considering the law question involved on this appeal, we are bound to assume that the charge made by the husband against the wife is true. The question is therefore presented whether a husband is a disorderly person, under the statute, if he refuses to continue to support Ms wife if she is an adulteress.
It is a well-settled principle of the common law that if a
, “I do not think there is any need to cite authorities to show ' that a husband is not bound -at common law to maintain a wife who has been guilty of adultery and who is living apart from him. The question is whether it was the object of this statute to impose a liability upon him, in -such a case, that did not ex.ist before. I do not hesitate to come to the conclusion -that it was not, and that the order ought not to have been made. It seems to me impossible to suppose that the statute intended' to cast on the husband the obligation of maintaining a wife who has committed adultery and gone away from him.”
In -the case of Rex v. Flintan, 1 Barn. & Adol. 227, it was-held that a man is not liable to the penalty of 5 George IV., chap. 83, -section 3, for neglecting and re-fusing to maintain hiswif-e where she ha-s left him and committed adultery, although he hims-elf has been guilty of adultery since her departure. In the case of State v. Schweitzer, 57 Conn. 532, the defendant w-as-prosecuted under section 3402 of the General Statutes of Connecticut, which provided that -every person who -sh-all unlawfully neglect to -support hi-s wife and children shall be sentenced to hard labor, etc. On conviction, an -appeal was taken to the supreme court. The conviction was reversed. Andrews, C. J., in the opinion, said:
“We think the court was correct in charging that adultery,
In Carney v. State, 4 South. 285, a husband was prosecuted under a statute forbidding the abandoning of one’s wife and child and leaving them in danger of becoming a burden to the public. The defense was the adultery of the wife. Judge Sommerville, writing for the court, said:
“The statute cannot be construed to make it criminal for one to abandon his wife under any and all circumstances. If she be guilty of adultery, as the evidence tends to show the defendant’s wife was in this case, he would certainly be excused in leaving her. * * * There can be no guilt where there is legal excuse or justification for the act charged.”
These cases establish that the defendant Brady is not bound to support his wife, under the circumstances disclosed in his offer of proof. It would be shocking to send a man to the penitentiary for the nomsupport of his wife if she is an adulteress The obligations of the husband and wife are mutual, and the right to Claim support depends upon the continued virtue of the wife. The honor iof the family, the conscience of the community, and Christian teachings commend this rule. There is nothing in People v. Mitchell, 2 Thomp. & C. 172, which militates against this doctrine. In that case, in answer to a charge of nonsupport, the defendant put in evidence that he had begun a divorce suit against Ms wife, and that a judgment in Ms favor had been reversed at general term, and that he had paid a certain sum of money. There was no offer, in the case, of any testimony to prove that the wife had been guilty of adultery, which distinguishes it from the present case, and the record in the divorce case, even if unreversed, was incompetent within the rule, “res inter alios acta alteri nocere non debet.” The contention of the counsel for the people that the remedy of the husband, in a case like the one at bar, is to secure a divorce, and that until he procures une he must, under penalty of imprisonment support his wife, is not founded in reason, and
Judgment reversed, and defendant discharged.