This libel for divorce, filed May 2, 1947, and alleging adultery with a person unknown to the libellant, is here on reservation and report by a judge of the Probate Court. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 215, § 13. The libellee gave birth to a child on June 29, 1947, and the birth record in the city clerk’s office in Everett names the libellant as the father. The parties lived in Everett after November, 1945,
In Taylor v. Whittier,
In this Commonwealth statutory authority allowing testi- ■ many by spouses as to nonaccess exists in two types of. cases. In prosecutions for nonsupport under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 273, § 1, as amended by St. 1939, c. 177, § 1, "both husband and wife shall be. competent witnesses to testify against each other to any relevant matters, including the fact of their marriage and the parentage of the child.” G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 273, § 7. In illegitimacy proceedings under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 273, §§ 11-19, as amended, a mother, although married, may testify, notwithstanding that the husband is not a party, that some other man is the father of her child. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 273, § 16. Commonwealth v. Rosenblatt,
There is, however, no comparable statute relating to divorce proceedings. Whether, notwithstanding what was said by this court more than twenty-five years ago in Taylor v. Whittier,
The libellee contends that to admit the evidence of her statement to the probation officer would be a circumvention of the Lord Mansfield rule. This we do not accept. The rule, where applicable, relates to the competency of a husband and a wife as witnesses as to nonaccess, and never has served to prevent the introduction of such evidence through other witnesses. Whatever its intrinsic soundness, it should not operate in a case to which a wife is a party to exclude her admission of extramarital intercourse. In England, where the rule originated, and where it has relatively recently been affirmed by a divided decision of the House of Lords (Russell v. Russell, [1924] A. C. 687), the libellee’s admission in the present case would be received to prove adultery, but not to prove the illegitimacy of the offspring. Warren v. Warren, [1925] P. 107. Roast v. Roast, [1938] P. 8. Frampton v. Frampton, [1941] P. 24.
The form of the report calls for the entry of a decree nisi if both items of evidence should have been admitted, or for the dismissal of the libel if both items should not have been admitted. Nothing is expressly said as to what should be done if only one item is held to have been competent. We have before us all the facts necessary for determining the question in dispute. We construe the report as in effect stating that this court may order the entry of a decree in accordance with such rulings as the judge ought to have made. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 231, § 124.
A decree nisi of divorce is to be entered with custody to the libellee of the three minor children named in the libel.
So ordered.
