2 Conn. Cir. Ct. 580 | Conn. App. Ct. | 1964
The plaintiff, a sixteen-year-old unmarried female, filed in the Circuit Court a complaint charging the defendant with being the father of a bastard child born to her on February 28,
The findings, briefly stated, develop these facts: The plaintiff became acquainted with the defendant early in May, 1960. Their first “date” took place in about the middle of that month. A number of “dates” followed. On two or three occasions they were alone together. The court found that “ [opportunity existed for the plaintiff and the defendant to engage in sexual intercourse.” Upon noticing that her daughter was becoming “stout,” the plaintiff’s mother took her to see Dr. Timpson, whose office was located on Dixwell Avenue in New Haven, and it was then ascertained that the complainant was pregnant. The defendant was told of the pregnancy during the first week of November, 1960. He disavowed ever having had sexual relations with the plaintiff. The finding does not show intimate relations by the plaintiff with any other man, or even that she had any special friendship with any other man during this period. When the defendant learned that the plaintiff was pregnant, he discussed the situation with her and her mother. These conversations concerned the pregnancy and the consequences thereof. The plaintiff swore that
From our view of the entire record, the facts as found, together with others which need not be recited here, sufficiently constitute the existence of probable cause to support the complaint. “Whether particular facts constitute probable cause is always a question of law, and the conclusion of the trier is one of law that may be reviewed on appeal.” Paranto v. Ball, 132 Conn. 568, 571; see Stroman v. Gilbert, 2 Conn. Cir. Ct. 179, 180, and cases cited. We approve of and adhere to the Stroman case.
The defendant has made a broad assault upon the constitutionality of certain provisions of our bastardy statutes, and the court, in a lengthy supplemental memorandum of decision, seriously doubted that the arrest (§ 52-435) and the enforcement (§ 52-442) provisions of those statutes conform with constitutional precepts.
There is error; the case is remanded with direction to enter a finding of probable cause and to bind the defendant over to the appropriate court.
In this opinion Pruyn and Dearington, Js., concurred.
By Public Acts 1963, No. 602, § 1, amending § 52-435, a commissioner of the Superior Court is no longer empowered to issue a warrant of arrest in bastardy proceedings. Only the Circuit Court is authorized under the amendatory legislation to “issue a warrant and cause . . . [the accused] person to be brought before it. . . . If the court finds probable cause, it shall order such accused person to become bound to the complainant with surety to appear before such court on a day designated by such court, and abide the order of such court, and, on his failure to do so, shall commit him to jail.”
For a long list of cases decided under various provisions of the bastardy statutes, see 1 Phillips, Conn. Digest, Bastardy, pp. 276-278 & Cum. Sup.; 4 West’s Conn. Digest, Bastards §§ 1-105 & Cum. Sup.