Gursky v. Gursky

39 Misc. 2d 1083, 242 N.Y.S.2d 406, 1963 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1764
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 26, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 39 Misc. 2d 1083 (Gursky v. Gursky) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gursky v. Gursky, 39 Misc. 2d 1083, 242 N.Y.S.2d 406, 1963 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1764 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1963).

Opinion

Mark A. Costantino, J.

The plaintiff alleged three causes of action in an amended pleading, the first of which was for annulment, and the others for separation on the ground of abandonment and cruel and inhuman treatment. Plaintiff also alleged that there was no issue of the marriage. The court dismissed plaintiff’s action for annulment for failure of proof. Defendant wife had interposed an answer and counter-claimed for separation. On the trial and after plaintiff’s dismissal defendant moved for leave to amend her answer to allege a counterclaim for annulment. The motion to amend was granted without objection thereto by plaintiff husband.

The believable testimony, the medical proof and other evidence in the case, including the formal admissions made on the part of the plaintiff husband, sustained defendant’s position that there had been a failure of the consummation of the marriage between the parties.

After trial defendant was granted judgment of annulment.

The evidence indicated that the parties, upon discovery of the infirmities of plaintiff, sought medical advice. As a result of such advice and plaintiff’s condition they then further consulted medically the possibility of artificially inseminating defendant wife.

Further testimony adduced at the trial revealed that the parties agreed that defendant wife would be artificially inseminated with the semen of a third-party donor. The plaintiff and defendant both signed the consent to have her artificially inseminated. Plaintiff, in addition, promised to pay all expenses involved to effect such procedure. A contract was signed by the plaintiff for waiver of liability and for medical and/or surgical treatments. These papers are in evidence and marked as exhibits.

[1085]*1085As a result of said artificial insemination a child was born on September 14, 1961 — Minday Frances Gursky. It was conceded on the trial that the birth certificate listed Annette Gursky as the mother and Stanley Gursky as the father. In view of the issue of the legitimacy of the child raised in this litigation the statements in said certificate are neither controlling nor determinative of the parental status of the parties nor of the status of the infant.

We are now confronted with the problem of determining whether or not a child conceived by means of artificial insemination of a married woman through the use, with the husband’s consent, of semen contributed by a donor other than the husband is legitimate. For the sake of convenience this practice will also be referred to in this opinion as heterologous artificial insemination or A. I. D.

The court wishes to emphasize at the outset that however much it is concerned with arriving at a solution that is least harmful to the child, it must in the final analysis be guided by the settled concepts of the common law as modified by statutory enactment. The court is, however, aware that any literal application of the law should be grounded in reason and logic if it is to lead to a proper and just adjudication.

The concept which historically is deeply imbedded in the law is that a child who is begotten through a father who is not the mother’s husband is deemed to be illegitimate. This view is adverted to in Commissioner of Public Welfare v. Koehler (284 N. Y. 260, 264) as follows: “ In judicial opinions, judges, according to their individual tastes or whims, had used indiscriminately the terms ‘ natural child ’ or 1 child born out of wedlock ’ or ‘ bastard ’ to describe a child whose father was not the mother’s husband; and difference in the descriptive terms was not intended to carry any juridical consequences.”

The foregoing concept has been judicially deemed to have been carried over into statutory law. Thus Judge Lehman, speaking for the Court of Appeals in the Koehler case (supra) at page 264 points out that: “ The Legislature in different statutes enacted at different times has also used those terms indiscriminately to describe a child whose father is not the husband of the child’s mother and the Legislature has conferred upon the Court of Special Sessions in the City of New York, and upon other courts elsewhere, jurisdiction in proceedings to establish the paternity of such a child for the purpose of compelling the father to pay for the child’s support and education.”

Unless there can be read into the statutory enactments of this State, dealing with persons born out of wedlock, an intention [1086]*1086to modify the settled concept as to the status of a child whose father was not married to its mother, it must be presumed that the historical concept of illegitimacy with respect to such a child remains in force and effect. Turning to the statutes of this State involving the instant question, we find that the term ‘1 a child born out of wedlock ’ ’ is deemed to be synonymous with and must be construed as meaning an “ illegitimate child ”. (General Construction Law, § 59.) A child born out of wedlock was defined in section 119 of the Domestic Relations Law (which was in effect at the time of the child’s birth) as “ a child begotten and born: (a) Out of lawful matrimony; (b) while the husband of its mother was separate from her a whole year previous to its birth; or (c) during the separation of its mother from her husband pursuant to a judgment of a competent court, ’ ’ Reason and logic impel the conclusion that the phrase “ Out of lawful matrimony ’ ’ refers not solely to the child of an unmarried woman, but also to the child of a married woman. In other words, subdivision (a) is to be deemed to refer to any child whose natural father was not married to its mother irrespective of the marital status of the mother (see State of North Dakota v. Coliton, 73 N. D. 582). (See, also, Schatkin, Disputed Paternity Proceedings [2d ed.], § 2.)

That this construction accords with the intent of the Legislature in passing the statute hereinabove referred to (Domestic Relations Law, § 119), the repeal of which went into effect on September 1, 1962, is manifest from the definition provided in section 512 of the Family Court Act, which went into effect on September 1, 1962. That section of the Family Court Act defines a child born out of wedlock as being a child begotten and born out of lawful matrimony. The comment provided by way of annotation in McKinney’s Consolidated Laws points out that the provision found in the definition contained in the Domestic Relations Law relating to the separation of the husband from the mother of the child for a period of a year previous to the birth of the child constituted proof of the fact that the child was born “ out of lawful matrimony.”

While section 112 of the New York City Sanitary Code appears to constitute a recognition of the existence of the practice of artificial insemination by setting forth measures required to be adopted by physicians engaged in the practice, such provision of law must be read within the framework of the established concept of illegitimacy as hereinabove discussed and can in no wise be deemed to sanction the practice of artificial insemination or to render legitimate any issue thereof.

[1087]*1087The State Legislature has exercised its power to modify the concept of illegitimacy in certain respects when it has deemed it fitting to do so. Thus it has provided that the subsequent marriage of parents of an illegitimate child legitimatizes such child.

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Bluebook (online)
39 Misc. 2d 1083, 242 N.Y.S.2d 406, 1963 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1764, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gursky-v-gursky-nysupct-1963.