Miller v. Anderson
Miller v. Anderson
Opinion of the Court
The question presented by this record is, whether, under the state of facts disclosed, Anderson can be held as the putative father of this child, and be required to contribute to its support, or whether Riddlemoser, having married the complainant^ with full knowledge of her condition, is alone liable for its support.
The Revised Statutes provide: “ Sec. 5614. When an unmarried woman, who has been delivered of or is pregnant with a bastard child, makes complaint thereof in writing, under oath, before any justice of the peace, charging a person with being the father of such child, the justice shall thereupon issue his warrant,” etc.
Can the child in this ease, in legal contemplation, be regarded as a bastard ?
Blaekstone, under the inquiry, “Who are bastards?” says: “A bastard, by our English laws, is one that is not only begotten, hut born out of lawful matrimony.” 1 Blaekstone, 454. And Kent also defines illegitimate children
In Best on Presumptions, in discussing presumptions of legitimacy, the author says: “ One of the strongest illustrations of this principle (although resting in some degree on grounds of public policy) is the presumption in favor of the legitimacy of children ” . . . “ Thus it is said to be a presumption, juris et de jure, that a child born during wedlock, and of which the mother was visibly pregnant at the time of marriage, must be taken to be the offspring of the husband.” Section 58.
The supreme court of Iowa, in the case of The State v. Romaine, 58 Iowa, 48, lays down the rule that “ if a woman be pregnant at the time of the marriage, and if the pregnancy be known to the husband, he should be conclusively presumed to be the father.”
In State v. Herman, 13 Ired. 502, the supreme court of North Carolina held that “ a child born in wedlock, though born within a month or a day after marriage, is legitimate by presumption of law, and where the mother was visibly pregnant at the marriage, it is a presumption juris et de jure that the child was the offspring of the husband.”
And in Rhym v. Hoffman, 6 Jones Eq. N. C. 335, the court quote with approval a quotation from 1 Roll’s Abr. 358, and 2 Bac. Abr. 84, as follows: “ So, if the woman be big with child by A., marry B., and then the child is born, it is the legitimate child of B.”
It has been held in a large number of cases, both in England and America, that the wife is not a competent witness to prove non-access of the husband, whether the child was begotten before or after marriage.
In Rex v. Reading, Hardw. 79, Lord Hardwicke said, “ it must be of very dangerous consequence, to lay it down in general, that a wife should be a sufficient sole evidence to bastardize her child, and to discharge her husband of the burthen of its maintenance.”
Similar language is used by Lord Ellenborough in The
The reason for this rule is stated in Tioga County v. South Creek Township, 75 Pa. St. 433, in the following language: “ That issue born in wedlock, though begotten before, is presumptively legitimate, is an axiom of law so well established that to cite authorities in support of it would be mere waste of time. So the rule that the parents will not be permitted to prove non-access for the purpose of bastardizing such issue is just as well settled. Many reasons have been given for this rule. Prominent among them is the idea that the admission of such testimony would be unseemly and scandalous, and this not so much from the fact that it reveals immoral conduct upon the part of the parents, as because the effect it may have upon the child, who is in no fault, but who must, nevertheless, be the chief sufferer thereby. That the parents should be permitted to bastardize the child, is a proposition which shocks our sense of right and decency, and hence the rule of law that forbids it.”
This doctrine is recognized in Parker v. Way, 15 N. H. Rep. 45 ; Davis v. Houston, 2 Yeates, 289; Page v. Dennison, 1 Grant’s Gases, 377; s. c., 29 Pa. St. 420, in which ease the court in addition hold that: “Whether the child is begotten in or out of wedlock, if marriage precedes the birth, the presumption of paternity is the same, and it can only be bastardized by proof of non-access. The wife is not a competent witness to prove non-access on the part of her husband, and that her child begotten before, but born during wedlock, was not begotten by him.”
On the same point see State v. Wilson, 10 Ired. 131, and State v. Herman, supra, in both of which cases the pregnancy preceded the marriage.
The cases are collected on this point in 1 Phil, on Ev. *87, and note, and the reason of the rule stated in the text, as follows: “ This rule is established, independently of any possible motives of interest in the particular case, upon principles of public policy and decency.”
The question yet remains, whether, if Riddlemoser, by contracting marriage with the complainant, and putting himself in loco parentis, and assuming the place of a parent and his duties and obligations, has legitimated the child or not, for if by that act the child in legal contemplation is the child of Riddlemoser, it is not a bastard, and the defendant can not be held under our bastardy act.
No case in point has been adjudicated in Ohio, so far as our reports show.
This court, in Roth v. Jacobs, 21 Ohio St. 646, held that after a woman, pregnant with child, had filed her sworn complaint in bastardy, charging the defendant with the paternity of her unborn child, her subsequent marriage with another did not necessarily vrork a discontinuance of the action, for the reason, as the court say, that it can not be conclusively presumed that the man who marries a pregnant woman is the father of the child. He may not have known that she was in that condition when he married her, and therefore, if born alive, it may be a bastard. There was no suggestion in that case of what the result would have been had the marriage been contracted by a man with fall knowledge of the pregnancy.
In Haworth v. Gill, 30 Ohio St. 627, it was attempted to make a defendant liable under the bastardy act by showing that \vhile complainant was the wife of another he became the father of her unborn child.
After the child was born the complainant procured a di
So we say here: By the act of Riddlemoser in marrying the complainant he most solemnly and effectively acknowledged the unborn child to be his own. He knew her condition, and every honorable sentiment would require him to marry her if the child was his and to avoid her if it was not. He chose to marry her and thus legitimate her issue and make it his own. The act would have made the child heir to his estate, and, being made so by his act, can the inhuman mother, by her uncorroborated testimony, make it a bastard ? We have a statute, Revised Statutes, section 4175, providing, that when a man has children by a woman, and afterward intermarries with her, such issue, if acknowledged by him as his children, are deemed legitimate, and will then have all the rights of heirship and inheritance of children born in wedlock.
Suppose a woman has children believed by a man who afterward marries her to be his; that he contracts marriage with the mother, and fully acknowledges the children to be his own, can they be bastardized by proving somebody else begat them, and especially can theiy mother bastardize them and take from them the rights they acquired by the marriage of their mother with the man that acknowledged them to be his own ?
A case precisely in point with the one under considera ■
In that case a child was begotten by the defendant, and during the pregnancy of the complainant, and two months before the birth of the child, she was married to another man, who was fully informed that complainant was enciente, and her condition apparent from her appearance. Upon these facts the court held that the defendant could not be made liable under the bastardy act. The reasoning of the court was in substance as follows, and this court adopts it as its own.
If another man, not the father of the unborn child, elects to stand in loco parentis to the child, the law will esteem such man as the father; that one who marries a woman that he knows to be enciente is regarded in law as adopting the child into the family at its birth; that he could not expect the mother to discard it or abandon it at its birth, or refuse it nurture or maintenance, and that the child, so receiving nurture ' and support, must necessarily become one of the family of the wife, which would also be of the family of the husband; that this understanding must necessarily enter into the marriage contract of the husband and wife, and when this relation is established the law raises a conclusive presumption that the husband is the father of such child.
As recognized in that case, we do not affirm this rule holds good on questions of heirship. There the lights of others are involved outside of the husband and the alleged bastard child. But in such a case as this the rights and liabilities of husband and child alone are involved.
The court say: “A husband who, in the manner we have indicated, has put himself in loco parentis of a bastard child of his wife, ought not to be permitted to disturb the family relation, and bring scandal upon his wife and her child, by establishing its bastardy, after he has condoned the wife’s offense by taking her in marriage.”
And this rule, as announced, is established upon obvious principles of public policy and decency. This child
Our conclusion is that the judgment of the district court should be
Affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.