Taylor v. Taylor

15 Tenn. App. 563, 1932 Tenn. App. LEXIS 125
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 10, 1932
StatusPublished

This text of 15 Tenn. App. 563 (Taylor v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Taylor, 15 Tenn. App. 563, 1932 Tenn. App. LEXIS 125 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

SENTER, J.

This is a divorce suit instituted in the Domestic Relations Court of Knox County, Tennessee, by petitioner, T. P. *564 Taylor, against the defendant Nova Madison Taylor. The sole ground for divorce relied upon by petitioner is the statutory ground that at the time of his marriage to the defendant on April 17, 1931, the defendant was then pregnant by another man without the knowledge or consent of the complainant. The defendant answered the bill, and by her answer she denied all the allegations in the bill with reference to her ever having had sexual relations with any man other than her husband, and denied specifically'that she was, at the time she married petitioner, pregnant by another man.

At the hearing of the cause, the Chancellor held that complainant had failed to make out his case and dismissed the suit.

It appears that both petitioner and the defendant formerly resided in the City of Knoxville, and about November 7 and 8, 1930, the petitioner was then living in Rock Hill, South Carolina, and had been living there for several months prior to November 7, 1930. While he was living in Knoxville before going to Rock Hill, South Carolina, it appears that he was keeping company with the defendant, a young girl about seventeen years of age. The petitioner at that time was about 28 years of age. According to the admissions of both the petitioner and the defendant, they had engaged in sexual relations before petitioner left Knoxville to go to Hock Hill, South Carolina. The young lady’s character seemed to have been good, except for her improper relations with petitioner, and there is nothing in the record to indicate that she had ever conducted herself improperly except with the petitioner up until the time he went to Rock Hill, South Carolina. On November 7 the defendant wras invited by friends who were going to Rock Hill, South Carolina, in an automobile to spend two days, to drive through with them, and she accepted the invitation, and wired the petitioner that she would reach Rock Hill, South Carolina, that evening. The petitioner met her when she arrived at Rock Hill, and they spent a portion of the night together, and also a part of the next day, and according to the admissions of both parties they engaged in sexual relations both on November 7, or the night of November 7, and on November 8, when the defendant left Rock Hill with her friends, and returned to her home in Knoxville. The defendant had made her home in Knoxville with her aunt. Some time after returning from Rock Hill, she discovered that she was pregnant, and her aunt made the discovery also, and had a State warrant issued for the defendant in Rock Hill, South Carolina, and had him arrested on the charge of a violation of the age of consent law, and he was arrested and returned to Knoxville. He met the defendant at the office of the Justice of the Peace in Knoxville, and she there explained to him in a conversation her condition, and-informed him that he was responsible. Whereupon, the petitioner pro *565 posed or agreed to marry tbe defendant, and the charge against him was dismissed upon his marrying the defendant. They lived together in Knoxville as husband and wife for some months, when the petitioner left Knoxville and went to Chattanooga, where he procured employment. After leaving Knoxville he did not contribute toward the support and maintenance of the defendant, and, he was arrested upon a warrant issued at her instance on a charge of abandonment and failing to provide for her and her unborn child. He was discharged from this arrest and the warrant dismissed, and whereupon, he filed his petition in this cause for a divorce.

Petitioner testified that he lived with the defendant in Knoxville until after the lapse of the usual nine months period of gestation, and the child not then having been born, he became suspicious that he was not the father of the unborn child, and left the defendant, claiming that between November 8, 1930, and the time he was married to defendant in April, 1931, he had not been with the defendant. The child was not born until ten months and twenty-one days after November 8, 1930. The defendant testified that she had never at any time engaged in sexual relation with any other man except petitioner, and that she was not with him after November 8, 1930, until they married in April, 1931. The child was born on September 23, 1931. The petitioner introduced Dr. B. B. Howard, a practicing physician of Knoxville, who testified in substance that the normal period of gestation, and for the normal birth of the child, is 280 days from the date of conception; that in some instances some normal women go over a few days, and that it Was more usual for the first-born to be a few days less than 280 days. This witness testified that it is an impossibility for a woman to carry a child for the period of 321 days before giving birth to a child; that in his opinion it would be a physical impossibility for a normal woman, who gave birth to a normal child on September 23, 1931, to have become pregnant on November 8, 1930. This witness also stated that the leading medical authorities on the subject of obstetrics supported his opinion. The defendant introduced Dr. Horace E. Brown, a practicing physician, who stated that the normal period of gestation and for the birth of a normal child is approximately 280 days, and he further testified that it is possible for a woman to carry a child for 321 days, and that leading medical authorities on the subject sustained his opinion. After these doctors had testified, the trial judge suggested that by and with the approval of the respective parties, that he would consult other doctors, and it was agreed that the defendant would select one doctor and the petitioner one, and that the court would also select one, and that these three would submit statements on the subject. This resulted in these three addressing a statement to the trial *566 judge, which is as follows; the statement being signed by Dr. Copen-haver, one of the three selected:

“December 14, 1931.
■“Judge Hugh B. Webster,
“Knoxville, Tennessee.
“Dear Judge:—
“Dr. B. R. Zemp, Dr. W. T. McClain and I have tatted over the possibility of 321 days pregnancy. Neither of us can quote from our own personal experience as to the probable duration that a woman can carry a child past the expected time, but we all agree on the authenticity of the authorities and quote to you a few.
“ ‘In Obstetrics, Normal and Operative,’ by George Peaslee Shears, Professor of Obstetrics and an Attending Obstetrician at the New- York Polyclinic Medical School and Philip F. Williams, Assistant Professor of Obstetrics, Graduate School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania and Obstetrician to the Maternity Hospital, on Page 44, the following is said with reference to the duration of pregnancy, ‘Pregnancies continuing to 300, 302 and 331 days after the only possibility of legal conception have been held possible by decisions of the French, Prussian and English Courts.’
“Quoting from ‘Practical Obstetrics’ by George W. Jarman, Obstetric Surgeon to the New York Maternity Hospital and Simon Marx, Surgeon to the New York Maternity Hospital and Lecturer on Obstetrics, New York Post-Graduate Medical School and Egbert H.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 Tenn. App. 563, 1932 Tenn. App. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-taylor-tennctapp-1932.