88 Neb. 775 | Neb. | 1911
The defendant has appealed from the judgment of the district court for Franklin county adjudging him to he the putative father of the plaintiff’s bastard child. The case has twice before been in this court upon the defendant’s appeal. The judgment was first reversed because of an error in the trial court in refusing to give an instruction requested by the defendant. Quinn v. Eggleston, 76 Neb. 409. The second time it was reversed because by one of the instructions of the court the burden of proof upon a particular issue was erroneously placed upon the defendant. Eggleston v. Quinn, 81 Neb. 457. Upon this appeal the defendant insists that the evidence is not sufficient to support the verdict. Upon both former appeals this court took occasion to say that the judgment was supported by sufficient evidence. It is now' insisted that-there was some additional evidence upon the last trial tending to show' that the defendant was not the father of the child, and that the evidence therefore is not as convincing as upon the former appeals.
The plaintiff’s testimony showed that these parties began their illicit intimacy early in the spring of 1903, and continued until about the 23d or 24th of December of that year. The child was born October 1, 1904. If the court assumes that the ordinary period of gestation is 280 days, that period began on December 25. If the court, in the absence of evidence, takes judicial notice of the usual duration of this period, it will also consider that in the course of nature this period not infrequently varies from the ordinary duration.
From about the end of the first week in November to the very latter part of December the plaintiff lived in several different families as a domestic. Upon her cross-
We think that the case was properly submitted to the jury, and, there being no error in the record, the judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.