Harward v. Harward

196 A. 318, 173 Md. 339, 1938 Md. LEXIS 316
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 12, 1938
Docket[No. 64, October Term, 1937.]
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 196 A. 318 (Harward v. Harward) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harward v. Harward, 196 A. 318, 173 Md. 339, 1938 Md. LEXIS 316 (Md. 1938).

Opinion

Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The parties to this appeal were married January 3rd,. 1925, at St. Patrick’s Church in Washington, D. C., and lived together until the summer of 1934, when J. Burleigh. Harward, the appellee, left the common home at Bush River, in Harford County, and has since lived apart from, his wife.

After their marriage in 1925, Harward and his wife, Catherine E. Harward, the appellant, lived for a time in Baltimore, then they removed to Bel Air, in Harford County, then back to Baltimore, where they lived for a. time, and then back to Harford County. Harward is employed by Sisk & Son as a saleman at an annual salary of $3,500, and has an office in Aberdeen, in Harford County. In 1930, Nancy, the first child of the marriage,, was born.

At some time, apparently prior to 1934, he acquired, possession of a six-room bungalow at Bush River, a short distance east of Abington, on the Philadelphia Road, which he, his wife, and the little girl Nancy, occupied. until he left the home in July or August of that year.. After he left, Mrs. Harward and Nancy continued to occupy the bungalow until some time in the fall of 1934. It was heated only by an open fireplace, and as the weather became colder Mrs. Harward was. forced to seek another home for herself and Nancy. She went first to her mother’s home in Laurel, where she-left Nancy for a few days, to go, she said, to see her husband about arranging a home for the future. After that she lived at different times at Barcroft, Virginia, at. *342 College Park Inn, and at Terrapin Inn, at College Park, Maryland, at Havre de Grace, again at the bungalow at Bush River, and finally at Rosecroft Terrace in Baltimore, and she was confined for a time at the Bon Secours Hospital., While she was living at the bungalow, on herreturn there in 1935, on July 23rd, of that year, her second child, Mary Elizabeth, was born.

On the 11th of October, 1935, J. Burleigh Harward, the husband, filed the bill of complaint in this case against his wife, in which he charged:

“That although the conduct of your Orator toward his wife the said Catherine E. Harward, has always been kind, affectionate, chaste and above reproach, the Defendant Catherine E. Harward, compelled your Orator by her cruel treatment, vicious temper and threatened violence to leave in the latter part of July, 1934, the home he was occupying with said Defendant at Bar Harbor in Harford County, State of Maryland, since which time he has not lived or cohabited with the said defendant.
“5. That since your Orator has been compelled to leave the said Defendant, she, the said Catherine E. Harward, has committed the crime of adultery with a person whos§ identity is at this time unknown to your Orator, as a result of which adultery the said Catherine E. Harward, Defendant herein, was delivered of a female child on July 22nd, 1935, and that your Orator has not lived or cohabited with the defendant since the latter part of July, 1934, nor has he condoned the misconduct of the said Defendant.”

The defendant answered, denied those charges, and the case was tried on the bill, answer, and testimony. At the conclusion of the trial, the court decreed: (1) That the husband be divorced a vinculo matrimonii from the defendant; (2) that she be awarded custody of their child, Nancy; that the husband pay to her for its support $12.50 per week; and (,3) that the custody and maintenance of the child remain subject to the further order of the court.

*343 This is the wife’s appeal from that decree.

The husband, in support of his bill, testified that he had had no sexual intercourse with his wife after their separation in the summer of 1934; he contended that the birth of a child on July 23rd, 1935, was therefore conclusive proof that she had been guilty of adultery; and he said that she had on more that one occasion admitted that to him. A motion to strike that 'testimony out was overruled on January 30th, 1937, and on August 19th, 1937, after the appeal was taken, the testimony was filed in the court. Except for the husband’s testimony that he had not had marital relations with his wife after their separation, there was no evidence of any kind tending to prove that the wife had been guilty of adultery; no effort was made to show that she-knew or had even spoken to a man other than her husband and her physicians during the separation; so that the decree rests solely upon the finding that the child, bom on July 23rd, 1935, was conceived at a time when there was no possibility of marital intercourse between the husband and wife, and the necessary inference that some person other than the husband was its father.

The issues in the case were: (1) The possible period of gestation; and (2) possibility of intercourse between the husband and wife at or about the inception of that period.

No evidence was offered in respect to the first issue, but both sides appear to have accepted the view that the period of gestation in human beings is a matter of such common and exact knowledge that courts will take judicial notice of it. The predicate of that conclusion is unsound. Knowledge of the fact is neither common nor exact, but, on the contrary, the period of gestation has not only been the subject of extensive investigation and of differing conclusions, but its use in connection with the issue of legitimacy has been limited by statutes which fix its extent differently in different countries. So the French law allows the legitimacy of a child bom 180 days after marriage and 300 days after the death or non- *344 access of the husband; the Prussian law declared a child legitimate born 302 days after the husband’s death; in Scotland legitimacy was established if the child was born within ten months after the death of the husband. Reese, Medical Jurisprudence & Toxicology, 255. Reese also states: “There is a diversity of opinion among obstetricians of the highest reputation on the subject of the natural period of gestation—varying from 274 to 301 days. It may be assumed that the average period is between thirty-eight and forty weeks.” That irregularity has been confirmed not only by the observation of human beings, but finds corroboration in the course of gestation in the lower animals such as cows, sheep, mares, and cats. Reese states that: “In the cow the average period of gestation is about 285 days; yet, from Dr. Krahmer’s tables, it is found that, out of 1,105 cows, 335 calved on the fortieth week, 429 on the forty-first week, and 135 on the forty-second week; the balance varied from the thirty-eighth week to the fifty-first week—a period of about 90 days.” Ibid, 149.

In 3 Wharton & Stillé, Medical Jurisprudence, page 24, it is said: “Since the earliest historic times the normal duration of the period of gestation in woman has been held to be approximately nine calendar months, or ten lunar months. But the exact number of days necessary for the complete development of the fetus will remain open for discussion. The period is apparently not the same in all women, varying even in the different pregnancies of the same woman.

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Bluebook (online)
196 A. 318, 173 Md. 339, 1938 Md. LEXIS 316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harward-v-harward-md-1938.