State v. Camp

205 S.E.2d 800, 22 N.C. App. 109, 1974 N.C. App. LEXIS 2255
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedJune 19, 1974
DocketNo. 7427SC384
StatusPublished

This text of 205 S.E.2d 800 (State v. Camp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Camp, 205 S.E.2d 800, 22 N.C. App. 109, 1974 N.C. App. LEXIS 2255 (N.C. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

BALEY, Judge.

The issue presented by this case is: May the courts take judicial notice of the principles of heredity upon which blood tests for paternity are based? Our answer is yes. The trial court in this case should have taken judicial notice that two parents of blood group 0 cannot have a child of blood group A, and the jury should have been so instructed.

“There are many facts of which the court may take judicial notice, and they should take notice of whatever is, or ought to be, generally known within the limits of their jurisdiction, for justice does not require that courts profess to be more ignorant than the rest of mankind.” State v. Vick, 213 N.C. 235, 238, 195 S.E. 779, 780-81; see McCormick, Evidence 2d, §§ 328-30; 1 Stansbury, N. C. Evidence (Brandis rev.), §§ 11, 14. Courts frequently take notice of scientific facts and principles. E.g., State v. Key, 248 N.C. 246, 102 S.E. 2d 844; Kennedy v. Parrott, 243 N.C. 355, 90 S.E. 2d 754; Ingold v. Light Co., 11 N.C. App. 253, 181 S.E. 2d 173. “A judge of court may take judicial notice of any fact in the field of any particular science which is either so notoriously true as not to be the subject of reasonable dispute or is capable of demonstration by resort to readily accessible sources of indisputable accuracy.” Kennedy v. Parrott, supra at 358, 90 S.E. 2d at 756.

Blood tests for paternity are based on the laws of genetics. The theory behind them may be summarized as follows:

“A blood-grouping test involves examining an individual’s red blood cells to determine if either or both of two substances known as agglutinogen A and agglutinogen B are present. The individual’s blood group is described accordingly: if both substances are present, the blood group is classified as group AB; if neither is present, the blood is classified as group O; and if only agglutinogen A or agglutinogen B is present, the blood group is A or B respectively.
“Blood groups have three important qualities which enable certain conclusions to be drawn about the identity of a child’s parents. The first is that the blood group of a person can be determined at birth or very shortly thereafter. In addition, an individual’s blood group remains constant throughout life, unaffected by age, disease or medication. Perhaps more importantly, a child inherits his blood [112]*112group from his parents in accordance with certain known laws of genetics. By these laws, if a particular agglutinogen does not appear in the. red blood cells of either the mother or father, it cannot appear in the red blood cells of the child. Also, a parent with group AB blood cannot have a child with group 0 blood (regardless of the blood group of the other parent), nor can a parent with group 0 blood have a child with group AB blood.”

Note, Family Law — Blood-Grouping Tests and the Presumption of Legitimacy, 50 N.C.L. Rev. 163, 165. For more extended discussion, see McCormick, supra, § 211, at 518-20; 1 Wigmore, Evidence 3d, §§ 165a-b; Comment, Evidence — The Use of Blood Grouping Tests in Disputed Parentage Proceedings — A Scientific Basis for Discussion, 50 Mich. L. Rev. 582. In the present case, agglutinogen A was present in the blood of Timothy Taneau Hames, but it was not present in his mother’s blood or in defendant’s blood. Therefore, defendant could not be the father of the child.

The reliability of blood grouping tests, and the validity of the scientific principles which underlie them, are generally accepted among scientists. As stated in Schatkin, Law and Science in Collision: Use of Blood Tests in Paternity Suits, 32 Va. L. Rev. 886, 890 :

“[B]lood tests are accurate, reliable and certain, and when they result in exclusion, they provide us with incontrovertible and inexorable proof of the defendant’s non-paternity.”

Comment, Conclusiveness of Blood Tests in Paternity Suits, 22 Md. L. Rev. 333, 338, states:

“Even the most conservative discussions of the development of blood testing emphasize its almost absolute accuracy, at least where exclusion is found. While there remains the possibility that, in a given case, mutation may occur to cause an apparent exception to the Mendelian laws of inheritance, statistical studies would seem to reduce this possibility to an infinitesimal chance.”

Case Comment. Blood Grouping Test Results: Evidential Fact or Conclusion of Law?, 23 Wash. & Lee L. Rev. 411, 417-18:

“The medical profession does not claim that the tests are infallible . . . but instead admits there are theoretical [113]*113exceptions — one in approximately 50,000 to 100,000 cases. Such exceptions, however, are of little importance when it is considered that when ‘tests are accurately performed there is hardly any other evidence that can approach in reliability the conclusions based on such blood tests.’ By considering the results of all of the tests which are readily performable, the probabilities are one in one hundred billion that such an exception will occur.”

Note, Children Born in Wedlock: Blood Tests and the Presumption of Legitimacy in Missouri, 39 U.M.K.C.L. Rev. 121, 125-26:

“Not only are the medical experts in agreement about the reliability of blood tests in determining paternity, but also, their reliability has been remarkably verified in both Europe and the United States. For example, during a ten year period of tests in affiliation cases before the Court of Special Sessions in New York City 65 exclusions resulted from 656 blood tests and 100% of the exclusions were followed by the mother’s first confession of sexual relations with a man other than the alleged father during the conception period. Similar verification has been found in the Children’s Court of the City of Buffalo, New York. In Europe, where blood test exclusions are regarded as conclusive proof of nonpaternity, the exclusions are ‘almost invariably followed by the mother’s belated confessions . . . .’ The biological certainty of over 99.99% found in the ABO exclusion . . . and the verification found in courts where it has been used, makes it one of the most reliable methods of proof available to the courts.”

In addition, see Ross, The Value of Blood Tests as Evidence in Paternity Cases, 71 Harv. L. Rev. 466; Whitlatch & Marsters, Contributions of Blood Tests in 73U Disputed Paternity Cases: Acceptance by the Law of Blood Tests as Scientific Evidence, 14 West. Res. L. Rev. 115.

Many courts have recognized the accuracy of blood grouping tests. In State v. Damm, 64 S.D. 309, 312, 266 N.W. 667, 668 (1936), the court held:

“[I]t is our considered opinion that the reliability of the blood test is definitely, and indeed unanimously, established as a matter of expert scientific opinion entertained by authorities in the field .... ”

[114]*114Clark v. Rysedorph, 281 App. Div. 121, 123, 124, 118 N.Y.S. 2d 103, 104, 106 (1952).

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Bluebook (online)
205 S.E.2d 800, 22 N.C. App. 109, 1974 N.C. App. LEXIS 2255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-camp-ncctapp-1974.