Yarmark v. Strickland
This text of 193 So. 2d 212 (Yarmark v. Strickland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Ronald YARMARK, Appellant,
v.
Nancy STRICKLAND, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida. Third District.
Stephen F. Bazzano, Miami, for appellant.
Norman Francis Haft, Miami, for appellee.
Before HENDRY, C.J., and PEARSON and CARROLL, JJ.
CARROLL, Judge.
The appellee Nancy Strickland filed a suit in equity in the circuit court of Dade County on January 5, 1965, against the appellant Ronald Yarmark under Chapter 742 Fla. Stat., F.S.A., alleging him to be the father of a child born to her out of wedlock on September 14, 1964, seeking a decree determining him to be the father of the child and providing for child support and attorney fees. The cause was tried before the chancellor without a jury. A decree was entered in favor of the plaintiff, determining parentage as prayed for. On this appeal by the defendant it is contended, and we agree, that the decree is contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence.
The plaintiff's treating and attending obstetrician, and the treating pediatrician testified that in their opinion the child was not born prematurely, but was a normally developed baby born as a result of full gestation. Using the normal gestation period (280 days) the opinion expressed by *213 the obstetrician was the time of conception (with 90 percent medical certainty) was "from the 14th to the 18th or 19th of December 1963."
On behalf of the appellee stress was placed on the fact that upon the birth of this baby the hospital listed it as premature. The appellee argues that fact refutes the possibility that the child was conceived earlier than January, 1964. However, it was explained that babies which at birth weighed less than 5 1/2 pounds or measured less than 18 1/2 inches were classified as premature by the hospital routinely as a policy, and it was done in this instance because this baby which met the length standard, weighed only 5 pounds, 4 ounces, which was 4 ounces less than the weight standard so applied. The only special treatment given the baby as a result of such classification by the hospital was a more frequent feeding schedule which is called for. The weight of this baby was not material in determining the time of conception in the view of the doctors, and their testimony disclosed that even a baby which is born prematurely may weigh more than 5 1/2 pounds, and also that one which results from a full or normal period of gestation may weigh less than that figure.
The question of whether the baby was the result of a full gestation period or was born prematurely became important when it was disclosed that the plaintiff had intercourse with a man other than Yarmark in December of 1963 and first had intercourse with the appellant Yarmark "about the end of the first week in January," between the 4th and 7th of January of 1964, which was approximately 260 days prior to the date of birth.
Of vital significance in this case is the fact that on cross examination plaintiff testified she had sexual intercourse with a man other than Yarmark during October, November and December of 1963. Plaintiff missed her menstrual period in January 1964, which, according to her obstetrician should have occurred January 3rd to 6th, and it was his testimony that the normal and likely time for conception by her would be approximately 14 days after menstruation. Thus, assuming that conception occurred in this instance at a time corresponding to normal medical understanding, the opinion of the obstetrician that conception occurred in December is consistent, and an assumption that it occurred as a result of her intercourse with Yarmark between the 4th and 7th of January or thereafter would be inconsistent.
In reviewing this case we accept the plaintiff's statement that she first had intercourse with the defendant Yarmark in the early part of January, although it should be noted Yarmark testified that such occurrence was on the 27th or 28th of January 1964, and further testified that on that occasion plaintiff was upset and expressed concern that she had been made pregnant by another man.
As late as April 16, 1964, following a visit by plaintiff to her doctor, she informed a girl with whom she was sharing an apartment (who so testified) that she was in doubt as to who was the father of the child she was carrying, and stated it could be either of two men she then named, one being Yarmark and the other being the man with whom she admitting having had such relations during October, November and December of 1963.
The medical evidence revealed that although the normal gestation period is 280 days, it is recognized in medical science that a normal full gestation period may be anywhere from 260 days to as long as 340 days. Therefore, this baby, which the doctors regarded as one having been born following a full period of gestation, could have been conceived either in December or in the first part of January.
In the present case, where the plaintiff admitted having had intercourse with another man as well as with the defendant during the medically recognized time in which conception may have occurred, she *214 was not free to choose between them, and it was not permissible for plaintiff or for the court as the trier of the facts to guess which of the two men was the father, and for the court to determine parentage of the child on such speculation. Bishop v. State ex rel. Garnette, 136 Fla. 268, 186 So. 413, 415; State v. Giles, 1961, 41 Ala. App. 363, 133 So.2d 62; Commonwealth v. Rex, 147 Pa.Super. 121, 24 A.2d 98, 99; Commonwealth v. Young, 163 Pa.Super. 279, 60 A.2d 831; Commonwealth v. Jodlowsky, 163 Pa.Super. 284, 60 A.2d 836; Commonwealth v. Harbaugh, 201 Pa.Super. 360, 191 A.2d 844, 846.
In Commonwealth v. Rex, supra, the Pennsylvania Court said:
"Where bastardy is charged, a fact extremely important in the inquiry is whether the mother of the child had connection with others than the defendant at or about the time the child was begotten. If so, it is impossible for her to determine to which of them her conception is to be imputed. Com. v. Fritz, 4 Clark 219. The admission of a number of connections at about the time of conception destroys her competency as a witness to prove that the defendant is the father. It is only where such relations with others are denied by the mother and the proof of them rests upon the testimony of other witnesses that an issue for the jury is presented. Com. v. McCarty, 2 Clark 351; Com. v. Eaby, 52 Pa.Super. 619."
In a similar case, Commonwealth v. Young, supra, the court applied the rule announced above, saying:
"From the admissions of this prosecutrix, the father of her child might have been either Freeman or the defendant, and she cannot be permitted to choose between them. The Commonwealth's testimony therefore falls far short of proof of bastardy beyond reasonable doubt and does not rise higher than a mere balance of probabilities as to which of the two was responsible for her conception. Under the circumstances, certainly, defendant is entitled to a new trial at least.
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