Court Opinion

ID: 3672454
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:20:24.543884+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:49:08.388801
License: Public Domain

The Attorney-General lodged motion to dismiss the appeal under Rule 19 of this Court for reason that the record does not show the organization of the court below or the jurisdiction thereof. This motion may be well bottomed and warrant the dismissal of the appeal. However, where "a serious question is presented," this Court has "sometimes not dismissed." S. v.May, 118 N.C. 1204. A question serious at least to the defendant is here presented, namely, whether he must serve sentence of six months imprisonment. Under the circumstances divulged upon the imperfect record we feel constrained to disallow the motion.
It was evidently intended to charge the defendant with a violation of ch. 228, Public Laws 1933, being "An act to amend chapter six of the Consolidated Statutes of North Carolina on Bastardy," N.C. Code of 1935 (Michie), sections 276 (a), et seq. The affidavit upon which the warrant was predicated fails to allege or charge that the defendant willfully neglected or refused to support and maintain his illegitimate child, the language of the affidavit being "and has failed to support the same." The defendant moved in arrest of judgment, and we are constrained to hold that there was error in disallowing the motion. S. v. Cook, 207 N.C. 261; S.v. Tarlton, 208 N.C. 734. In fact, the Attorney-General on the argument confessed error in the event his motion to dismiss was disallowed.
The motion in arrest of judgment is allowed and the judgment below is
Reversed.