Outside court, an emotional Povey declined to comment but his wife Carole said that through the love of their family they got through the trauma. "We've been through it all."
The family - from Helensville and around the Kaipara Harbour north-west of Auckland - filled the public gallery during sentencing.
Mrs Povey said the accident happened on the way back from her grandfather's tangi. He had been a chief and was the last of the Paikea line. Baby Paikea had been named after him. Otamatea in the Kaipara region, where the tangi was held, was a 2-hour drive from the family home near Helensville.
"There wasn't any fatigue, there had just been a lunch ... there was nothing we could have done differently."
She said her husband wasn't tired and he had just had a good rest.
"It was just something that happened," Mrs Povey said.
She said baby Paikea was the "peacemaker" of the family. He was a twin and had two brothers. "The boys might be fighting and he would come between the two of them and start singing. He was not a cry baby, just a happy, sweet little cherub."
She said he was buried next to his grandmother in the family urupa (cemetery) near Helensville.
In his sentencing, Judge Christopher Field said alcohol, drugs and speed had nothing to do with the crash. He sent the court's condolences to the Povey whanau, who let out an emotional sigh as the judge passed sentence.
Povey's lawyer, Michael Mann, described the case as a "tragic matter". He said his client's carelessness had been at the lowest end of the spectrum.
"There was no alcohol, no speed, there were no medical conditions such as jet lag to cause sleepiness."
The crash happened in the mid-afternoon in sunny conditions and on a relatively straight stretch of road.
"He momentarily nodded off and the vehicle went off the road."