1 Barb. Ch. 375 | New York Court of Chancery | 1846
The adultery is sufficiently established, in this case, to entitle the complainant to a divorce. But the master erred in supposing that the testimony before him was sufficient to authorize the court to declare all the children illegitimate. The statute declares that when the husband is complainant, the legitimacy of children, born or begotten before the commission of the offence charged, shall not be affected by the decree. And even as to children begotten after that time, and before, the commencement of the suit for the divorce, their legitimacy shall be presumed until the contrary is shown. (2 R. S. 145, § 42.) The first offence of adultery charged in the complainant’s bill, in this case, is stated therein as having occurred sometime in the year 1841, but without s.tating at what particular time of the year. ■ It cannot, however, be presumed to have occurred so as to have broken off sexual intercourse between the complainant and the defendant until the time when he says he first learned the fact, in July or August of that year. If the eldest child, therefore, was born within the usual period of gestation from the first of July, 1841, it must have been begotten before the time of the commission of the first offence charged in the bill. At least such is the legal presumption, in the absence of any evidence of a premature birth. The time of the birth of such first child, however, is not stated either in the bill or in the proofs, so as to enable the court to form an opinion whether it was, or was not begotten before the commission of the first offence charged, in the bill. It is true, one of the witnesses, who was examined in .December last, stated that the defendant had lived and cohabited with her paramour for the last five years, and that her. eldest child was born more than one year after she commenced living with him. That, however, would extend the adulterous.intercourse buck-into.1840, and would not show that the child was begotten after the commission of the first offence charged in this bill. The time of the birth of that, child should at least have been ascertained, to enable-the court to see whether it was probably begotten after the first offence charged. For if it was begotten before that time, the court has no jurisdiction to declare it illegitimate; even if the fact of the non-access of the husband was fully established. (2 R. S. 145, § '
The usual decree for a divorce must be entered in this case, but without bastardizing -the children; unless the complainant prefers to have the case referred back to the master, to enable the latter to receive evidence of the actual non-access of the husband : or proof that he was residing at such a distance from her at the time these children must have been begotten, or such of them as were not begotten previous to the adultery charged in the bill, as fully to rebut the presumption that they are his children. If he prefers to have a further inquiry on that subject, the matter will be referred back to the master to review his report, and to take further testimony; and the entry of the decree in the meantime will in that case be suspended.
(a) K. John. “ Sirrah, your brother is legitimate;
Your father’s wife did after wedlock bear him:
And, if she did play false, the fault was her’s:
Which fault lies on the hazards of all husbands That marry wives. Tell me, how if my brother, Who, as you say, took pains to get this son, Had of your father claimed this son for his 1
In sooth, good friend, your father might have kept This calf, bred from his cow, from all the world.”
(King John, actl, scene 1.)