Nicola Toso, a pizza baker, was acquitted on criminal charges of failing to pay child support after a judge ruled that he had done his best during difficult times to provide 400 Euros worth of pizzas, calzone and other goods from the take-out pizza place he was managing.
Toso and his ex-wife Nicoletta Zuin divorced in 2002 and for several years all parties followed accords.
In 2008, Italy was hit by a deep economic crisis and Toso, who had remarried and had three more children, began struggling to pay child support, 'The Telegraph' reported.
"In lieu of money, the defendant offered his ex-wife the same amount of compensation in the form of take-away pizzas from his workplace, an offer promptly rejected as "beggar's change," Judge Chiara Bitozzi wrote in her hearing.
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Zuin then filed a criminal complaint. In Toso's defence, his attorney argued the pizza baker had fallen on hard times and big debts. He was even forced to close his business in 2010 after being unable to pay vendors and employees.
The attorney also noted that he had held up all his other custody obligations, such as not missing visits and helping his daughter develop cordial relations with his new partner and three step-siblings.
Judge Bitozzi, therefore, wrote that there was no evidence that the pizza baker had committed a crime.