Rose v. Tandowsky

183 P.2d 347, 80 Cal. App. 2d 927, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1414
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 22, 1947
DocketCiv. 15667, 15779
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 183 P.2d 347 (Rose v. Tandowsky) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rose v. Tandowsky, 183 P.2d 347, 80 Cal. App. 2d 927, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1414 (Cal. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

WHITE, J.

This is an appeal by defendant from a judgment decreeing him to be the father of the minor child of plaintiff and ordering him to pay $100 per month for the child’s support. Defendant also has appealed from an order allowing plaintiff additional counsel fees upon the appeal. The two appeals have been consolidated and presented upon a single set of briefs.

The action was commenced in November, 1945, to establish paternity of a child born May 21, 1940. Plaintiff testified that she first met the defendant, a physician practicing in Hollywood, in 1934; that in the year 1936, she commenced having sexual relations with the defendant at his office after business hours, and that their relations continued up to the time of the conception of the child in August, 1939; that she had no relations with any other man during this period.

According to plaintiff’s testimony, upon discovering her pregnancy, it was decided by plaintiff and defendant that *929 she should go to San Francisco. The defendant visited her in San Francisco, was with her for three days, and gave her some money. Plaintiff returned to Los Angeles and the child was born in a Los Angeles hospital. At defendant’s suggestion plaintiff went under the name of the husband who had divorced her some years before and stated for the birth certificate that such divorced husband was the father of the child. Defendant visited her in Los Angeles before the birth, and at the hospital, gave her money for her rent and money for her hospital bills. After the birth of the child defendant continued to visit plaintiff at her home several times a week, on Saturday afternoons, Wednesday afternoons, and sometimes in the evening. Defendant gave plaintiff $10 per week in cash until some time in 1942, when he commenced paying her by check. In May of 1945, plaintiff asked defendant for more money and the defendant offered to pay her $3,000 cash and $20 per week. In July of 1945, defendant stopped all payments.

The defendant denied that he ever had sexual intercourse with the plaintiff. He testified that until 1936, he saw the plaintiff only in the company of a Mr. Lippman. The first visit of plaintiff to defendant’s office was in 1936, in the company of Mr. Lippman, for the purpose of determining whether plaintiff was pregnant. From 1936 to 1939, defendant saw the plaintiff only when making professional visits to her home to treat her mother, or when plaintiff was in the company of Mr. Lippman. In the summer of 1939, pla.irit.iff came to him for a pregnancy test, which was “positive,” but she did not name the father. Defendant denied that he spent three days in San Francisco with plaintiff, stating that he went there on business, and met her there only once for lunch, in order to tell her about her mother’s condition. He denied ever giving plaintiff any cash whatsoever; denied that he visited her at the hospital or paid her hospital bills, and testified that he did not see her after the San Francisco visit until April, 1941, when he was separated from his wife, and about that time he gave plaintiff a check for $10 to help her out on her rent; that in September of the same year he gave her a check for $60 to help finance a trip to New York. During the period from April to September, 1941, he visited her at her home and sometimes she visited at his home in company with others. Plaintiff worked in the defendant’s office for a short period in the summer of 1941, and again *930 in the summer of 1942, for which she was paid by check. That about January, 1943, in response to plaintiff’s demands, and in order to avoid a scandal, he commenced sending her $10 per week by check. In 1945, upon advice of counsel, he stopped the payments.

There was testimony corroborative of the plaintiff as to frequent visits by defendant at her home from August, 1940, to September, 1941 (the defendant denied seeing plaintiff after the San Francisco visit until April, 1941), and testimony by a “surprise” witness to an act of sexual intercourse between plaintiff and defendant, at the home of the witness, in 1938. The defendant introduced evidence supporting his testimony that the San Francisco trip was primarily a business trip; records of the building in which he had his office in contradiction of plaintiff’s testimony that they met there after business hours; testimony by an employee of Mr. Lippman to the effect that plaintiff continued her association with Lippman until the early part of 1938; and evidence of a pharmacist that Lippman and plaintiff consulted with him in reference to a pregnancy test in 1938.

The first assignment of error is that the trial court gave misleading and improper instructions. It is contended that the two following instructions were conflicting and led to confusion on the part of the jury:

“You are instructed that the mere possibility that some person other than Balph M. Tandowsky might be the father of Bobert Bose will not support a verdict for the defendant, and if you believe from a preponderance of all the evidence, the defendant, Balph M. Tandowsky, is the father of the child, you must return a verdict in favor of Betty Bose, the plaintiff.

“You are instructed that the burden of proof has remained on the plaintiff throughout this trial, to prove that the defendant is the father of Bobert Bose. Therefore, you will not find that the defendant is the father of Bobert Bose unless you are satisfied by a preponderance of the evidence that the defendant had sexual intercourse with the plaintiff at the time when according to the usual laws of nature, the child was begotten, and that the plaintiff, Betty Bose, did not have sexual intercourse with any other man at the time when according to the usual laws of nature, the child was begotten.”

It is urged that the first instruction above quoted had the effect of removing from the jury’s consideration the issues *931 of plaintiff’s relations, if any, with Mr. Lippman or with her former husband. This contention cannot be sustained. The two instructions, which followed one another, were not in conflict. By them the jury was advised to decide the case in accordance with the preponderance of the evidence. If the jury, from a preponderance of the evidence believed that the defendant had sexual intercourse with the plaintiff at or about the time the child was begotten and did not have sexual intercourse with any other man, then it was to find that defendant was the father. The use of the words “mere possibility” certainly did not exclude from the jury’s consideration either defendant’s denial of intercourse or his contention that plaintiff continued to associate with Mr. Lippman. By excluding “mere possibility” the court did no more than direct the jury to confine its consideration to the evidence adduced and to avoid conjecture and speculation. While the burden of proof did not rest on defendant to prove that he was not the father, nevertheless, in his attempt to show that plaintiff had illicit relations with other men it was incumbent upon him to show that such relations were had at or about the time when, in the ordinary course of nature, the child must have been conceived. (Berry v. Chaplin, 74 Cal.App.2d 652, 662 [169 P.2d 442], and cases cited.) A “mere possibility” that some other man was the father could be said to exist in almost any conceivable case.

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Bluebook (online)
183 P.2d 347, 80 Cal. App. 2d 927, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1414, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rose-v-tandowsky-calctapp-1947.