v.
Romaine
In Rhym v. Hoffman, 6 Jones Eq. N. C., 335, where a mother was pregnant when married, and gave birth to a child six months afterward, it was held the child was legitimate. The court say: “That if a woman big with child by A, marry B, and then the child be born, it is the legitimate child ofB.” See 1 Bolls Abr., 358; 2 Bac. Abr., 84. In the same case it was held, that a child begotten and born after marriage, is legitimate, unless it bé proven by irresistible evidence that the husband was impotent, or did not have any sexual intercourse with the wife.
In State v. Heman, 13 Iredell, 502, it was held that a child born during wedlock, though born within a month or a day after marriage, is legitimate by presumption, and when a child is born during wedlock of which the mother was visibly pregnant at the marriage, the conclusive presumption is that it was the offspring of the husband.
In Hargrave v. Hargrave, 9 Beav., 552, in determining the question as to the illegitimacy of a child begotten and born during wedlock, it is held that the presumption in favor of legitimacy is to have its weight and influence, and the evidence against it ought to be strong, distinct, satisfactory, and conclusive.
[*48] In Shuler v. Bull, Sup. Ct. S. Carolina, Vol. 12, p. 156, of the Eeporter, it is held that the question of the paternity of a child born in wedlock is one of fact, to be determined upon competent evidence, and such evidence is not limited to proof of impossibility of access. In 2 Starkie on Ev., 196, in discussing the question as to the legitimacy of a child begotten before marriage, the author says: “ It seems, however, that in such cases, it is competent to prove that it was impossible that the husband could have been the father, for a stronger presumption cannot arise in such a case, than is made in favor of a child conceived after wedlock.” It appears to us that the true rule adduced from the authorities as well as from principle, is that a child born in wedlock, whether begotten before or after marriage is presumed to be the child of the husband, but that such presumption may be rebutted by strong, satisfactory, and conclusive evidence that the husband did not have" access to the mother of the child when it was begotten. And if a woman be ju’egnant at the time of the marriage, and if the pregnancy be known to the husband, he should be conclusively presumed to be the father.
We think the court in this case did not attach sufficient importance to tíie presumption of legitimacy. It is true the jury were instructed that the law presumes that a child born in wedlock is legitimate, and that the burden of proof is on the State to show that the child was begotten by some person other than the husband of the mother. In view of the evidence in the case, which shows beyond question that about the time the child was begotten the husband was visiting the complainant as a suitor, once or twice a week, and the further fact that the child was born in about three months after marriage, the jury should have been instructed that the presumption of legitimacy was so strong that it could only be overcome by “ distinct, strong, satisfactory, and conclusive” evidence to the contrary. Hargrave v. Hargrave, supra.
[*49]
Reversed.