135 Me. 230 | Me. | 1937
This complaint in bastardy was duly tried before a jury. At the conclusion of the complainant’s case the respondent rested without introducing any evidence and each party moved for a directed verdict. The motion of the complainant was granted and that of the respondent denied. To these rulings the respondent has filed exceptions.
The complainant at the time the child was conceived and born was a married woman; and the presumption is that such child born during wedlock is the child of her husband and legitimate. In early times in England such presumption was held to be conclusive, if the wife had issue while the husband, not being impotent, was. within the four seas, that is, within the jurisdiction of the King of England. Co. Litt., 244 ; Rolle’s Abr., 358, tit. Bastard; Matter of Findlay, 253 N. Y., 1, 170 N. E., 471, 472; 7 Am. Jur., 636. The rigor of such doctrine has now given way to reason; and it is held that such presumption can be rebutted. It is, nevertheless, as Cardozo, Ch. J. says in Matter of Findlay, supra, “one of the strongest and most persuasive known to the law” and “will not fail unless common sense and reason are outraged by a holding that it abides.” Proof of the mother’s adultery is not in itself sufficient to rebut it. Grant v. Mitchell, 83 Me., 23, 21 A., 178; Matter of Findlay, supra.
In the case now before us it was accordingly necessary for the complainant to prove non-access by her husband. The only evidence of any weight on this point is her own testimony to the effect that she and her husband had not lived together for two years. Without such evidence her case would fall. The respondent objected to its introduction. We think his objection was well taken.
In 1777, Lord Mansfield laid down the rule in England that the testimony of neither husband nor wife could be admitted to show non-access by the husband, if the result would be to bastardize issue born after marriage. “It is,” he said, “a rule founded in decency, morality, and policy.” Goodright, ex dem. Stevens v. Moss, Cowp., 591. This doctrine has since been followed in England and by the
Statutes removing the bar against parties testifying or even those specifically authorizing the mother to testify in bastardy proceedings do not change the rule. The effect of such enactments is merely to make a witness competent, not to let down the bars as to the evidence which may be properly admitted. Kennedy v. State, supra; Boykin v. Boykin, supra; Russell v. Russell, supra.
The rule which we feel must be applied to this case has been criticized by very eminent authority. 4 Wigmore on Evidence, 2 ed., 381, et seq. It was, however, promulgated by Lord Mansfield, a very great and an essentially practical judge. It has been followed because it has appealed to the sober common sense of subsequent generations. Cases may be cited, real or suppositious, where it may work a hardship. The question, however, is not what may be the bearing of the rule on a particular problem, but whether by and large the enforcement of it is politic. The application of it prevents many unseemly contests over the legitimacy of children, and tends to keep inviolate those marital confidences, the disclosures of which arouse only disturbing suspicion and prove nothing.
The vital evidence in this case of non-access was objected to, but exceptions were not taken to its introduction. As the rale justifying its exclusion rests on broad grounds of public policy, the court had no right to consider it even though it might technically be in the case. Without it the proof utterly fails.
Exceptions sustained.