Houston v. Houston

199 Misc. 469, 99 N.Y.S.2d 199, 1950 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1908
CourtNew York Family Court
DecidedJuly 7, 1950
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 199 Misc. 469 (Houston v. Houston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Family Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Houston v. Houston, 199 Misc. 469, 99 N.Y.S.2d 199, 1950 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1908 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1950).

Opinion

Sicher, J.

The parties duly intermarried on September 28, 1940, and that relationship has never been terminated by judgment of divorce, separation, annulment or dissolution. However, respondent asserts complete exoneration from any present duty of support, on the ground that because of claimed sterility he is not the father of petitioner’s child born June 3, 1949. Such disclaimer carries with it an imputation of petitioner’s adultery, which, if established, would limit respondent’s support obligation to the minimal duty of indemnifying the community against the burden of petitioner’s maintenance (Lifshitz v. Lifshitz, 249 App. Div. 859); and at this time petitioner is not a ‘1 public charge ’ ’ nor likely to become one.

In this proceeding the Family Court has jurisdiction, and the duty, to determine legitimacy (Baxter v. Baxter, 250 App. Div. 502; cf. Matter of Lentz, 247 App. Div. 31). Such determination, however, would be solely for purposes of this court’s support orders (Matter of Melis v. Department of Health of City of N. Y., 260 App. Div. 772), and would not be res judicata in any other court (see Loomis v. Loomis, 288 N. Y. 222). The child would be bound only by an adjudication of legitimacy in a Supreme Court plenary action to which he is a party or by appropriate steps for the disposition of that issue upon the trial of a divorce action (see “ Primavera ” v. “ Primavera ”, 195 Misc. 942, especially authorities collated pp. 946-947).

The instant case has been unusually well prepared and presented by zealous counsel, who have aided the court in a difficult situation by the competence and fairness of their trial tactics and scholarly briefs.

Stipulations and concessions have narrowed the original issues to one of paternity; the sole still disputed question for determination is whether the evidence adduced by respondent suffices to overcome the time-honored presumption that a child born to a married woman during coverture was procreated by her husband.

There is no contention of nonaccess; the parties lived under the same roof and occupied one bed until more than a month after the August 25, 1949, filing of the support petition; the blood-grouping tests which respondent requested did not estab[471]*471lish definite exclusion; there was no identification of a paramour nor proof of any inclination of petitioner to infidelity. .Respondent’s seemingly sincere belief that he is not the father of the child and his consequent resistance to any order of support derive wholly from certain medical testimony. A clinical laboratory technician (not a physician) testified that his June 7, 1948, and October 20, 1948, examinations of purported specimens of respondent’s seminal fluid showed complete absence of spermatozoa. A qualified urologist also testified that his microscopic examination of respondent’s seminal fluid at that urologist’s office on November 24, 1948, and a second examination after sedimentation and centrifugal processing, disclosed azoospermia, which he attributed to a blocking of the epididymis ducts from prostatitis or a previous infection. He further testified that the scar tissue he observed indicated, in his opinion that the November 24,1948, absence of spermatozoa had existed at least for thirty days and perhaps sixty days. However, both he and another urologist called to the stand by respondent admitted that it was medically possible that the sterility condition observed on November 24, 1948, might not have existed already at the date of the impregnation of petitioner in August or September, 1948, although each of them deemed it unlikely that the inception of the sterility condition was more recent.

Decision has been long deferred, initially during the now collapsed negotiations for an over-all adjustment of the entire marital conflict and thereafter to await the outcome of the appeal in Commissioner of Welfare v. Costonie (277 App. Div. 90 [June 13, 1950]).

That appeal raised squarely the question whether “ competently performed blood-grouping tests excluding paternity ” are mere opinion evidence or whether “it is a scientifically established and accepted fact that an exclusory finding is conclusive as to nonpaternity ” and that “ in such case the courts should accept the decisiveness of a nonpaternity finding properly arrived at as it would accept the demonstrable fact that a mixture of blue and yellow colors will produce varying shades of green, but never a red color ”. (Per Curiam opinion, Commissioner of Welfare v. Costonie, 277 App. Div. 90, 91.)

In its Per Curiam reversal of the Court of Special Sessions the Appellate Division, First Department, unanimously adopted the view of the highest court of the State of Maine (Jordan v. Mace, 69 A. 2d 670) that ‘ ‘ biological laws were not to be ignored and that where exclusion of paternity was definitely established [472]*472by blood-grouping tests, the finding of nonpaternity was binding upon the jury unless it found that the tests had not been properly made.” (Per Curiam opinion, 277 App. Div. 90, 91.) And in a concurring opinion Mr. Justice Shientag wrote: The Legislature has not thus far seen fit to make conclusive the blood grouping test where definite exclusion of paternity is established. Despite that, however, the courts may not ignore the universal scientific opinion that such tests, resulting in exclusion, are, in fact, conclusive on the issue of paternity. These tests, while they cannot indicate affirmatively that the defendant in a filiation proceeding is the father of the child, do, in certain cases, exclude the possibility of the defendant being the father. Such scientific exclusion should, assuming the tests to have been competently and accurately made, be accepted as conclusive by the trial court, notwithstanding the strength, as in this case, of the nonscientific testimony to the contrary. There should be no occasion for expert testimony in every case to prove the scientific validity of blood-grouping tests resulting in exclusion of paternity. The scientific opinion on that point is so general that courts may take judicial notice of it in filiation proceedings.” (Commissioner of Welfare v. Costonie, 277 App. Div. 90, 92.)

That enlightened judicial acceptance of the decisiveness of properly ' administered blood-grouping tests supersedes the narrower view elaborated in Harding v. Harding (22 N. Y. S. 2d 810, affd. 261 App Div. 924). Incidentally, since the Harding v. Harding affirmance was without opinion, the Appellate Division, Second Department, did not adopt the reasoning of the court below (see Rogers v. Decker, 131 N. Y. 490; 10 Abbott’s N. Y. Digest, Courts, § 90 [1]); indeed, a sufficient ground for refusal in Harding v. Harding to recognize the blood-grouping tests report would have been that in October, 1940, there was no provision therefor in a Family Court proceeding. The Domestic Relations Court of the City of New York is a statutory court of enumerated powers; and the authorization for blood-grouping tests in its Family Court Division was first enacted by section 1 of chapter 761 óf the Laws of 1942. That is, the critical analysis of section 306-a of the Civil Practice Act in the Harding v. Harding opinion was quite aside the mark; the Civil Practice Act applies to the practice only in courts of record (Civ. Prac.

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Bluebook (online)
199 Misc. 469, 99 N.Y.S.2d 199, 1950 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1908, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houston-v-houston-nyfamct-1950.