Birth, Sex, Legitimacy
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- ↑ The presumption in favour of legitimacy may be rebutted by ‘clear and satisfactory evidence’. Fitzgerald v. Green [1911] E. D. L. at p. 462.
- ↑ Gr. 1. 12. 3; Van Leeuwen, 1. 7. 2; Cens. For. 1. 1. 3. 5; Voet, 1. 6. 5 and 7; V. d. K. Th. 169.
- ↑ (Paulus) Dig. 2. 4. 5; Voet, 1. 6. 6; Richter v. Wagenaar (1829), 1 Menz. 262.
- ↑ Voet, 24. 2. 15; Horak v. Horak (1860) 3 Searle 389. It is not so in English law. Moss v. Moss [1897] P. 263.
- ↑ Schorer ad Gr. 1. 12. 3; Voet, 1. 6. 7.
- ↑ Cod. 5. 9. 2 (Gratian, Valentmian, and Theodosius, a.d. 381).
- ↑ Gr. 1. 5. 3, and Schorer's note. Van Leeuwen (1. 14. 14) says that a widow must wait six months after the death of her former husband, unless in the interval she has been delivered of a child.
- ↑ Fockema Andreae, Bijdragen, vol. i, p. 167; V. d. K. Th. 67.
- ↑ Cod. 6. 9. 2.
- ↑ Cens. For. 1. 1. 13. 27; Groenewegen, de leg. abr. Cod. ad loc; Bynkershoek, Quaestiones Juris Privati, lib. II, cap. iv; V. d. K. Th. 68.
twelfth month inclusive in a case where the lady's character was thought to be beyond reproach. Voet, loc. cit.; Sande, Decis. Fris. 4. 8. 10. In Ceylon the limit of time is two hundred and eighty days after the dissolution of marriage, the mother remaining unmarried. Evidence Ordinance, No. 14 of 1895, sec. 112.