The parties were divorced January 13, 1967, and 219 days later on August 20, 1967, a daughter was born to the plaintiff who thereafter filed a motion to modify the decree to include an allowance for maintenance of the child. Rules 88.03 and 88.07; §§ 452.070 and 452.110. 1 The sole question on appeal is whether the evidence is sufficient to support that portion of the trial court’s decree adjudging defendant to be the father of the child, a fact he disavows. As iterated multitudinously, our duty is to effect a de novo review of the record upon both the law and evidence to determine what the decree of the trial court should have been, subject to the injunction that the “judgment shall not be set aside unless clearly erroneous, and due regard shall be given to the opportunity of the trial court to judge of the credibility of the witnesses.” 2
Courts may not feign ignorance of matters known by the general public and every back-fence twaddler. Elder v. Delcour, 364 Mo. (banc) 835, 838,
When a rebuttable presumption arises, the person against whom the presumption operates is confronted with a rule of law which casts upon him the burden of producing substantial evidence to controvert the presumed fact [Terminal Warehouses of St. Joseph, Inc. v. Reiners, Mo.,
The term “substantial evidence” alludes to the quantum of the evidence required to overcome the presumption. As the presumption was concocted and is invoked to protect the innocent child from bastardy, it is said that in order to qualify as being “substantial” the evidence must amount to clear, convincing and satisfactory proof that no copulation occurred or was possible between the husband and wife during the conception period or must equate to proof so strong and persuasive as to leave no reasonable room for doubt. Other comments on the quantum of the evidence needed to overcome the presumption are collected in Simpson v. Blackburn, Mo.App.,
Because defendant was in the military service when the parties were married, they never lived “together in the same established home.” A child (not the one in dispute) was born of the marriage and when defendant left the service in June 1965 he and the plaintiff stayed at her parents’ home “for two or three days.” It was then, according to plaintiff, that defendant advised her “he did not want the responsibility of being married and having a home;” according to defendant, it was then that “it came up that I wanted a divorce.” Defendant left to reside with his parents and subsequently “lived in several apartments around town.” Plaintiff testfied “this [separation] did not exclude any sexual relationships however,” that she continued “to see or visit” defendant “three or four times a month” and that they had intercourse on most of these occasions. This visiting and coition, *664 plaintiff related, continued into January 1967, the month the divorce decree was entered. Plaintiff moved into a house across the street from her parents’ home in August 1966 and she stated that defendant visited her there “between ten and fourteen times” in September and October 1966 and “five or six times” in November and December 1966 and that they had intercourse most every time. “[D]uring the month of November, 1966, or December, 1966,” plaintiff’s brother-in-law ob- ■ served defendant’s automobile parked near plaintiff’s house on “approximately three occasions;” her mother saw the car there once and at another time observed the defendant’s coat and shoes “in the front room” when she went to the house at 9 p. m. to see her daughter. The “child was conceived some time around the middle of November of 1966.” The petition for divorce was filed November 14, 1966, and plaintiff said it was “late November or early December [1966] when we found out that I was pregnant.” By plaintiff’s account, defendant acknowledged to her that he was the father of the child when informed of the situation but “said he was having strained relations with his family at that time,” urged her “to go ahead with the divorce,” asked her not to tell her parents or counsel about the pregnancy, and assured her that “within ¿■•''month or so [after the divorce] we would be remarried.” When defendant was reminded of this last subject “during the summer of 1967,” plaintiff recalled that defendant told her “he didn’t want to be remarried. * * He said that he did not want to pay child support for the child but he would be willing to pay the hospitalization, but he did not want to pay the child support, and if I tried to get it that he wouldn’t pay it [and] that he would take away the name from the child.” Although plaintiff agreed that defendant had frequently lied to her, she stated “I wanted to believe [what he said about remarriage] so I guess what you want to believe you do believe.” 7
Blood tests of the parties and the child were received into evidence as showing the possibility of defendant being the father was not excluded. Plaintiff vowed she had not had intercourse with anyone other than defendant during the times in question. Defendant did not directly suggest plaintiff had been intimate with another, but did testify that he did not have intercourse with the plaintiff after June 1965 and denied he had fathered the child born to plaintiff subsequent to the divorce. Likewise, defendant denied he had ever acknowledged parenthood or had promised to rewed the plaintiff. Defendant admitted having seen the plaintiff after July 1965 and having “been in that house” where plaintiff resided across the street from the home of her parents. He said the only purpose for these visits was to deliver support payments for the first child. Defendant agreed he had knowledge that plaintiff was pregnant before the divorce was granted and had indicated to plaintiff “I would give her some financial assistance” towards defraying the expenses attending the birth of the second child, but asseverates this offer should not be interpolated into an admission of his paternity.
Although defendant did not literally contest the divorce, he and his attorney appeared at the hearing and admitted to the court that plaintiff possessed good character. Plaintiff’s verified petition for divorce alleged the parties had separated in June 1965, that defendant had abandoned plaintiff and their child for a period in excess of one year and that defendant had become cold and lost all love and affection for her. At the divorce hearing plaintiff anwered “Yes” to the con-clusional inquiries of her counsel if the petition averments were correct and testified she had not “been with the defendant *665 at all since June of 1965.” Plaintiff con- ■ ceded at the trial on the motion to modify that she had testified in the divorce case as indicated and defendant’s counsel elicited from her the explanation that she had selected June 1965 as the date of separation because that was when the defendant moved to the home of his parents. She stated that the defendant’s abandonment of her was “[financially only” and when asked if it was true that defendant had become cold and lost all love and affection for her prior to the divorce, plaintiff responded “Emotionally, yes; physically, no.” Plaintiff admitted her prior testimony that she had not “been with” defendant after June 1965 referred to sexual intercourse and that the statement was untrue. She didn’t know and couldn’t remember if that statement was “deliberately inaccurate * * * I don’t know why I said that unless it would indicate at some time when I was trying to get a divorce that it would be stopped. * * * I did not [want a divorce]. This is the way [defendant] wanted to do it, I wanted to do it as he wanted to do it to make it simpler because it was a very difficult • situation.”
It is not disputed that defendant was present in the vicinity during the entire period in which the child must have been begotten and had been in plaintiff’s physical presence on occasion. This attests to the possibility and opportunity for intercourse. No suggestion is made that defendant lacked the power of procreation and there is no evidence that plaintiff had adulterous relations at the time the child was conceived. Therefore, if the evidence, in order to overthrow the presumption, must show conclusively that defendant by reason of absence or otherwise could not have had relations with the plaintiff at the beginning of any reasonable period of gestation (Rasco v. Rasco, supra,
The undertakings by plaintiff to explain the conflicts between her testimony at the divorce hearing and that given on the motion to modify, cast the matter into a situation different from that presented in Steele v. Kansas City Southern Ry. Co.,
The state is an interested party in all divorce cases [State ex rel. Chandler v. Scott, Mo.App.,
If we comprehend defendant’s argument aright, he does not say that plaintiff’s evidence, if true, was not sufficient to sustain the judgment — rather his argument is that plaintiff’s evidence is not-worthy of belief for the reasons heretofore stated. The crux of evaluating plaintiff’s testimony is whether she told the truth when she said she had intercourse with the defendant, and no other, during the period of conception and we must assume that the trial court believed plaintiff’s evidence ' because it found in her favor. Snip v. City of Lamar,
It is so ordered.
Notes
. References to statutes and rules are to RSMo 1959, V.A.M.S., and to Missouri Supreme Court Rules of Civil Procedure, V.A.M.R.
Rule 73.01(d); § 510.310, subd. 4; T. v. T., Mo.App.,
. F- v. F-, Mo.App.,
. §§ 452.010 and 474.080; Rasco v. Rasco, Mo.App.,
. Duff v. St. Louis Mining & Milling Corp., 363 Mo. (banc) 944, 948(1),
. See annotations in
. “Women love the lie that saves their pride but never an unflattering truth.” Gertrude Franklin Atherton.
