Title 19, Chapter 10, Section 1
( 19-10-1)
(a) A child abandoned by its father or mother shall be considered to
be in a dependent condition when the father or mother does not
furnish sufficient food, clothing, or shelter for the needs of the
child. (b) If any father or mother willfully and voluntarily abandons his
or her child, either legitimate or born out of wedlock, leaving it
in a dependent condition, he or she shall be guilty of a
misdemeanor. Moreover, if any father or mother willfully and
voluntarily abandons his or her child, either legitimate or born out
of wedlock, leaving it in a dependent condition, and leaves this
state or if any father or mother willfully and voluntarily abandons
his or her child, either legitimate or born out of wedlock, leaving
it in a dependent condition, after leaving this state, he or she
shall be guilty of a felony punishable by imprisonment for not less
than one nor more than three years. The felony shall be reducible to
a misdemeanor. Any person, upon conviction of the third offense for
violating this Code section, shall be guilty of a felony and shall
be imprisoned for not less than one nor more than three years, which
felony shall not be reducible to a misdemeanor. The husband and wife
shall be competent witnesses in such cases to testify for or against
the other. (c) The offense of abandonment is a continuing offense. Except as
provided in subsection (i) of this Code section, former acquittal or
conviction of the offense shall not be a bar to further prosecution
therefor under this Code section, if it is made to appear that the
child in question was in a dependent condition, as defined in this
Code section, for a period of 30 days prior to the commencement of
prosecution. (d) In prosecutions under this Code section when the child is born
out of wedlock, the venue of the offense shall be in the county in
which the child and the mother are domiciled at the time of the
swearing out of the arrest warrant; but, if the child and the mother
are domiciled in different counties, venue shall be in the county in
which the child is domiciled. (e) Upon the trial of an accused father or mother under this Code
section, it shall be no defense that the accused father or mother
has never supported the child. (f) In the trial of any abandonment proceeding in which the question
of parentage arises, regardless of any presumptions with respect to
parentage, the accused father may request a paternity blood test and
agree and arrange to pay for same; and in such cases the court
before which the matter is brought, upon pretrial motion of the
defendant, shall order that the alleged parent, the known natural
parent, and the child submit to any blood tests and comparisons
which have been developed and adapted for purposes of establishing
or disproving parentage and which are reasonably accessible to the
alleged parent, the known natural parent, and the child. The results
of those blood tests and comparisons, including the statistical
likelihood of the alleged parent's parentage, if available, shall be
admitted in evidence when offered by a duly qualified, licensed
practicing physician, duly qualified immunologist, duly qualified
geneticist, or other duly qualified person. Upon receipt of a motion
and the entry of an order under this subsection, the court shall
proceed as follows: (1) Where the issue of parentage is to be decided by a jury, where
the results of those blood tests and comparisons are not shown to
be inconsistent with the results of any other blood tests and
comparisons, and where the results of those blood tests and
comparisons indicate that the alleged parent cannot be the natural
parent of the child, the jury shall be instructed that if they
believe that the witness presenting the results testified
truthfully as to those results and if they believe that the tests
and comparisons were conducted properly, then it will be their
duty to decide that the alleged parent is not the natural parent; (2) The court shall require the defendant requesting the blood
tests and comparisons pursuant to this subsection to be initially
responsible for any of the expenses thereof. Upon the entry of a
verdict incorporating a finding of parentage or nonparentage, the
court shall tax the expenses for blood tests and comparisons, in
addition to any fees for expert witnesses whose testimonies
supported the admissibility thereof, as costs. (g) In prosecutions under this Code section, when the child is born
out of wedlock and the accused father is convicted, the father may
be required by the court to pay the reasonable medical expenses paid
by or incurred on behalf of the mother due to the birth of the
child. (h) The accused father and the mother of a child born out of wedlock
may enter into a written agreement providing for future support of
the child by regular periodic payments to the mother until the child
reaches the age of 18 years, marries, or becomes self-supporting;
provided, however, that the agreement shall not be binding on either
party until it has been approved by the court having jurisdiction to
try the pending case. (i) If, during the trial of any person charged with the offense of
abandonment as defined in this Code section, the person contends
that he or she is not the father or mother of the child alleged to
have been abandoned, in a jury trial the trial judge shall charge
the jury that if its verdict is for the acquittal of the person and
its reason for so finding is that the person is not the father or
mother of the child alleged to have been abandoned, then its verdict
shall so state. In a trial before the court without the intervention
of the jury, if the court renders a verdict of acquittal based on
the contention of the person that he or she is not the father or
mother of the child alleged to have been abandoned, the trial judge
shall so state this fact in his verdict of acquittal. Where the
verdict of the jury or the court is for acquittal of a person on the
grounds that the person is not the father or mother of the child
alleged to have been abandoned, the person cannot thereafter again
be tried for the offense of abandoning the child, and the verdict of
acquittal shall be a bar to all civil and criminal proceedings
attempting to compel the person to support the child. (j)(1) In a prosecution for and conviction of the offense of
abandonment, the trial court may suspend the service of the
sentence imposed in the case, upon such terms and conditions as it
may prescribe for the support, by the defendant, of the child or
children abandoned during the minority of the child or children.
Service of the sentence, when so suspended, shall not begin unless
and until ordered by the court having jurisdiction thereof, after
a hearing as in cases of revocation or probated sentences, because
of the failure or refusal of the defendant to comply with the
terms and conditions upon which service of a sentence was
suspended. (2) Service of any sentence suspended in abandonment cases may be
ordered by the court having jurisdiction thereof at any time
before the child or children reach the age of majority, after a
hearing as provided in paragraph (1) of this subsection and a
finding by the court that the defendant has failed or refused to
comply with the terms and conditions upon which service of the
sentence was suspended by the court having jurisdiction thereof. (3) Notwithstanding any other provisions of law, in abandonment
cases where the suspension of sentence has been revoked and the
defendant is serving the sentence, the court may thereafter again
suspend the service of sentence under the same terms and
conditions as the original suspension. The sentence shall not be
considered probated and the defendant shall not be on probation,
but the defendant shall again be under a suspended sentence.
However, the combined time of incarceration of the defendant
during the periods of revocation of suspended sentences shall not
exceed the maximum period of punishment for the offense. (4) Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the contrary,
the terms and conditions prescribed by the court as to support by
the defendant shall be subject to review and modification by the
court, upon notice and hearing to the defendant, as to the ability
of the defendant to furnish support and as to the adequacy of the
present support payments to the child's or children's needs. The
review provided for in this paragraph as to the ability of the
defendant to furnish support and as to the adequacy of the present
support payments to the child's or children's needs shall not be
had in less than two-year intervals and shall authorize the court
to increase as well as to decrease the amount of child support to
be paid as a term and condition of the suspended sentence. The
review as to ability to support and adequacy of support shall not
be equivalent to a hearing held in cases of revocation of probated
sentences for purposes of service of the suspended sentence; nor
shall a modification, if any, be deemed a change in sentence; nor
shall a modification, if any, be deemed to change the suspended
sentence to a probated sentence. |