Maxwell v. Maxwell

167 N.W.2d 114, 15 Mich. App. 607, 1969 Mich. App. LEXIS 1532
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 30, 1969
DocketDocket 3,711
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 167 N.W.2d 114 (Maxwell v. Maxwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maxwell v. Maxwell, 167 N.W.2d 114, 15 Mich. App. 607, 1969 Mich. App. LEXIS 1532 (Mich. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

Levin, J.

Plaintiff Truman F. Maxwell appeals a supplemental judgment of divorce granting defendant Sandra L. Maxwell $35 per week support for a child born to her after the parties were divorced. 1

The full-term baby was born October 13, 1963. This was some 15 months after the parties separated (July 18, 1962), 11 months after plaintiff filed his complaint for divorce (September 12, 1962) and nearly 7 months after the judgment of divorce was entered (March 19, 1963).

At the hearing on defendant’s petition that plaintiff be required to support the child, witnesses testified that.during the time the child presumably was conceived the defendant was living with a boyfriend in her parents’ apartment. A number of witnesses testified that the defendant told them the boyfriend was the child’s father. The defendant testified, the plaintiff denied, that they had sexual intercourse together after the complaint for divorce was filed.

After completion of the testimonial hearing and the submission of briefs on the law, the. trial judge delivered his opinion finding that the plaintiff was *609 the child’s father. The judge carefully reviewed the' testimony and decisions of' the Michigan Supreme Court and then explained in detail the reasons for his" decision.

The judge stated that he considered himself bound by Michigan Supreme Court decisions to 'exclude,from consideration all testimony of the plaintiff husband and the defendant wife regarding the plaintiff’s access or nonaccess to the defendant .and all the testimony concerning extrajudicial statements' by the defendant as to who fathered the child. This left only the evidence that the defendant was carry-ing on a steady, intimate relationship with another man during the period when the child was- conceived. 2 In the trial judge’s opinion the possibility that the child was conceived in that union was not enough to overcome the presumption that a ehild conceived in wedlock is the legitimate issue of the marriage.

On this appeal no claim is made that the judge’s finding that plaintiff fathered the child was, as such, clearly erroneous. The only question before us is whether the judge correctly refused to consider, in" deciding the dispute the testimony of the plaintiff husband and defendant wife and of those who claimed to have heard her say that-the boyfriend’ was the father.

The rule of'law applied by the trial judgeun.excluding from consideration the judicial and extrajudicial declarations of the parties is known as Lord Mansfield’s rule — to its critics as Lord Mansfield’s dictum. Described by Professor McCormick as ’ a *610 rule of “eccentric incompetency” 3 and generally condemned by most writers, 4 Mansfield’s famous declaration was made in 1777 in an ejectment case where the issue of legitimacy of the claimant was raised:

“the declarations of a father or mother cannot be admitted to bastardize the issue born after marriage. * * *
“it is a rule founded in decency, morality, and policy, that they shall not be permitted to say after marriage that they have had no connection, and therefore that the offspring is spurious.” Goodright v. Moss (1777), 2 Cowp 591 (98 Eng Rep 1257).

Dean Wigmore tells us that the rule traveled to the United States in the treatises of the early 1800s and was accepted by most courts unquestioningly. 5

It made its debut in Michigan in Egbert v. Greenwalt (1880), 44 Mich 245, 248 (38 Am Rep 260) and, despite its having barely passed the century mark, was described as “an ancient rule of the common law.” The rule has been applied in Michigan in a variety of cases. 6

*611 The rule as enunciated by Mansfield literally barred only testimony proving “no connection,” i.e., nonaccess by the husband to the wife, and did not preclude testimony showing that a husband did in fact have access to his wife or that she had access to another man.

In Yanoff v. Yanoff (1927), 237 Mich 383, the Michigan Supreme Court ruled that Mrs. Yanoff could not testify that she had intercourse with her husband prior to their marriage and that Mr. Yanoff could not testify that there was no premarital connection. The Yanoff Court declared (p 389):

“When the legitimacy of a child born in lawful wedlock is involved, no matter what the form of action, the rule of law bars the husband and wife from testifying to access or nonaccess of the husband, antenuptial or postnuptial.” 7 (Emphasis supplied.)

In Bassil v. Ford Motor Co. (1936), 278 Mich 173, 180 (107 ALR 1491), the Court ruled that the presumption of legitimacy could not be “met or overcome by the testimony of either of the parents,” and reasoned that the prohibition applied not only to their judicial statements but as well to repetition of their out-of-court declarations. Similarly, see King v. Peninsular Portland Cement Co. (1921), 216 Mich 335, 339; Magarell v. Magarell (1950), 327 Mich 372, 376.

Later, in People v. Bedell (1955), 342 Mich 398, the Court ruled that the wife may not testify that a man other than her husband was the father of the *612 child. This ruling was preceded by King v. Peninsular Portland Cement Co., supra, where the Court sustained the lower tribunal’s refusal to consider the wife’s extrajudicial or judicial declaration that the husband was not the father and by Zakrzewski v. Zakrzewski (1927), 237 Mich 459, 462, where the Court stated that Mansfield’s rule prohibits the husband from repeating the wife’s alleged statement' that another man fathered the child.

Thus, the rule barring either husband or wife from saying that the wife did not have or could not have had intercourse with her husband was expanded to prohibit their testimony that she did have intercourse with her husband or with another man. 8

We recognize that in some, mostly early, cases the Supreme Court acknowledged that Mansfield’s rule does not prevent testimony that the wife had relations with another man (Rabeke v. Baer [1897] 115 Mich 328, 331, 332 [69 Am St Rep 567]; People v. Case [1912], 171 Mich 282, 285) or repetition of her extrajudicial declarations as to who was the father (In re Wright’s Estate [1927], 237 Mich 375, 382). 9

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Bluebook (online)
167 N.W.2d 114, 15 Mich. App. 607, 1969 Mich. App. LEXIS 1532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maxwell-v-maxwell-michctapp-1969.