137 Me. 80 | Me. | 1940
Ellen H. Parker, the widow of Miles R. Parker, was appointed administratrix c.t.a. of his estate by the Probate Court for the County of Androscoggin. Miles R. Parker had been previously married to one Geneva Owen Parker, against whom he filed a divorce libel on December 22, 1924, alleging as a cause for divorce cruel and abusive treatment. A decree of divorce was entered at the September Term, 1925, of the Supreme Judicial Court for the County of Androscoggin. Previously on July 26, 1925, a child
The case with the consent of the parties is before this court on report under a stipulation and an agreement that the testimony and exhibits presented at the hearing before the Judge of Probate on the allowance of the will, with the exception of the testimony of O. E. Hanscom, shall be'a part of the report.
The appellant contends that the child is not the son of the testator. As a basis for her claim she says that the mother made two different statements as to when the child was begotten, one that it was while she was living in Greene in September, 1924, and the other that it was in October, also that she told a Mrs. Trask on December 1, 1924, that she had been carrying the child three months. The appellant calls attention to testimony showing that the wife left her husband the first part of September; that she kept company with another man; that she was seen with this man in September and
The presumption that a child born during wedlock is the child of the husband and legitimate is one of the strongest known to the law, and in the words of Cardozo, C. J., “will not fail unless common sense and reason are outraged by holding that it abides.” Matter of Dindlay, 253 N. Y., 1, 8, 170 N. E., 471; Hubert v. Cloutier, 135 Me., 230, 194 A., 303. Proof of the mother’s adultery is not in itself sufficient to rebut it. Grant v. Mitchell, 83 Me., 23, 21 A., 178.
The evidence, which it is claimed by the appellant in this case rebuts the presumption, utterly fails to do so, even if we disregard the controverting testimony which shows that after the wife left her husband and returned to her father’s house the husband visited her on a number of occasions during September, October, November and December, 1924, that they were on terms of friendly intimacy, and that he stayed there during a part at least of several nights. And in addition there is the testimony of the wife herself that her husband did have access to her during such time. Not only is the presumption of legitimacy not rebutted but the evidence taken as a whole tends to establish that the boy born July 26, 1925, was in fact the child of Miles It. Parker.
Case remanded to the Supreme Court of Probate for the entry of a decree denying the appeal of Ellen H. Parker and affirming the decree of the Probate Court.