The plaintiff m error, Charles H. Schuman, was arrested, tried and convicted in the police court of the city of Cincinnati under section 8140-2, which provides that “the father of a child under sixteen years of age, living in this state, who, being able either by reason of financial means or by personal services, labor or earnings, shall neglect or refuse to provide such child with necessary and proper home, care, food and clothing, shall upon oonviction be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and punished accordingly.”
The defense to this action in the police court was the claim of the plaintiff in error that previous to his arrest his wife had secured a decree for alimony, and the care and custody of their minor child had by the decree of court been given to his divorced wife, and under the existing circumstances this statute did not apply to him.
The court is of opinion that the claim of the plaintiff in error is not well founded. The decree cf alimony simply fixed the status of the parties as between themselves and child, and did not fix the status or relation of the father to the state.
It is the duty primarily of the father to support his minor children out of his property cr by his labor, and he has no right to allow them to become a public charge. The design of this statute, as our supreme court bas said, is to enforce, as far as practical, the fulfillment of the father’s duty to the public; and the duty that he owes the public of saving it from the expense of supporting his children is a personal and a continuing duty, and if he omits this duty he must answer to the state for such emission notwithstanding the status that may have been theretofore fixed between himself, the mother and the child.
In this regard the court will call attention to the ease of Pretzinger v. Pretzinger, 45 Ohio St., 452, and the case of Bowen v. The State, 56 Ohio 235, in which this statute is discussed.
The jugment of the police court, therefore, will be affirmed.