Gower v. State

290 S.W. 978, 155 Tenn. 138, 2 Smith & H. 138, 1926 Tenn. LEXIS 28
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 26, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 290 S.W. 978 (Gower v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gower v. State, 290 S.W. 978, 155 Tenn. 138, 2 Smith & H. 138, 1926 Tenn. LEXIS 28 (Tenn. 1927).

Opinion

MR. Chibe Justice Green

delivered the opinion of the Conrt.

The plaintiff in error was indicted under chapter 120 of the Acts of 1915 for failnre to snpport his child. ITe was found guilty and ordered by the court to make a prescribed weekly payment for the child’s maintenance and to enter into bond to secure obedience to this order as required by the Statute. He thereupon appealed in error to this court.

Plaintiff in error entered a plea of not guilty bélow, his defense being- that he was not the father of the child.

*140 The State introduced Mrs. Eula Grower, tlie child’s mother, who testified that she and plaintiff in error were married March 23, 1925. On May 12, 1925, he filed a divorce hill against her which she answered June 6, 1925. Later, with permission of the court, she amended her answer and asked that it he treated as a cróss-hill. A decree of divorce was granted to her upon this cross-hill October 14, 1925. The child was horn to her March 31, 1926, ten months and nineteen days — three hundred twenty-three days, after the divorce proceedings were instituted.

The mother further testified that she and her husband did not live together after the divorce bill was filed May 12, 1925, but that they both continued to live in Nashville and that they met at times up through July, 1925', and indulged in acts of coition. That her husband was the father of this child.

Upon cross-examination, the record in the divorce suit was offered as an exhibit to her testimony but was excluded by the court.

Other proof was introduced by the State tending to show that the plaintiff in error had contributed nothing to the child’s support since its birth, which, as we understand the record, is not controverted.

Plaintiff in error took the stand in his own behalf and the record in the divorce case was again offered as an exhibit to his testimony, and again excluded by the trial judge.

Plaintiff in error offered to testify that his wife was running around with other men before and after the divorce bill was filed. He offered in evidence a letter purporting to have been written by her in which she admitted acts of adultery with other men. The trial judge ruled out this evidence likewise and refused to permit any *141 proof of acts of adultery on the part of the wife between the time of the filing of the divorce hill and the birth of the child.

The learned special judge who tried the case filed a written opinion, which is sent np with the transcript, setting ont his views with reference to the evidence which was admissible. In this opinion the court held that, m propounding his defense that he was not the father of the child, plaintiff in error was limited to the following matters :

‘ ‘ (a) That the child was not born in lawful wedlock, or,
“(b) That the child was not begotten and conceived in lawful wedlock.
“(c) That the child was born after the separation of the parents, too remote from said separation to be within the period of gestation, to-wit: 10 months.
‘‘ (d) That said reputed father, during the period of gestation and at all times during which the child was begotten and during the ten months elapsing to the birth of the child, was, impotent of the body and was incapacitated from procreation, or that he was continuously,' during said period, so far removed from the wife, that sexual intercourse or access to the wife was impossible.”

Ruling on the offer to prove acts of adultery upon the part of the wife between the filing of the divorce bill and the birth of the child, the court said; “. . . I am lim-

iting this to two points; first, was the defendant the husband of the prosecutrix at the time of the conception, and, second, did he have • access to her at that time. ’ ’ Counsel stated that he had witnesses present to prove that the wife committed acts of adultery during that time. The court said: “I refuse to permit that testimony to be introduced.” And in the same connection the court added: “There are but two points to be considered for *142 the defense; first, was the defendant too far away from his wife that access and intercourse was impossible, and second, was he incapable of procreation.” Proper exception was. taken to these rulings of the trial judge, and the assignments of error in this court are based upon such rulings.

There is everywhere a presumption that a child born in wedlock is legitimate. It was the common law that if the husband be within the four-seas (that is, within the jurisdiction of England), and his wife have issue, no evidence is admissible to prove the child a bastard, except in the sole case of an apparent impossibility of procreation by the husband — as of his not having attained the age of puberty, etc., Gannon v. Gannon, 26 Ténn. (7 Humph.), 410.

This presumption obtained as to a child born in marriage, no matter how soon after the marriage a birth followed. That is to say the child was presumed to be legitimate unless it was shown that the husband was impotent or beyond the four seas during the period when the child must in the course of nature have been begotten. Jackson et al. v. Thornton et al., 133 Tenn., 36.

As to children born after the death of the father, the common law went to extraordinary lengths to hold them legitimate. “In the time of Edward II, the Countess of Gloucester bore a child one year and seven months after the death of the duke, and it was pronounced legitimate. In the reign of Henry VI, Mr. Baron B-olfe expressed the opinion with apparent gravity, that a widow might give birth to a child seven years after her husband’s death without injury to her reputation.” Dickinson’s Appeal, 42 Conn., 491, 19 Am. Rep., 553.

•Such, however, is not the law in Tennessee. In Cannon v. Cannon, supra, although the child was born in lawful *143 wedlock, the circumstances proven clearly negatived the presumption that the child horn was the husband’s child, and the presumption of legitimacy was overthrown.

In Jackson et al. v. Thornton et al., supra, where the child was born three or four months after marriage, the court indulged the presumption that it was legitimate, but on the distinct ground that there was no clear and convincing testimony tending to show that the husband was not the father of the child. It was conceded that upon a sufficient showing the presumption of legitimacy might be overcome, even though the husband was not beyond the four seas and was not impotent at the time the child was begotten.

The common-law rules above stated we suppose have been relaxed in England and in all the states of the union. There remains, however, a conflict of authority as to what proof may be admitted to rebut the presumption of the legitimacy of a child born in wedlock.

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Bluebook (online)
290 S.W. 978, 155 Tenn. 138, 2 Smith & H. 138, 1926 Tenn. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gower-v-state-tenn-1927.