
1 Mass. App. Ct. 668 (1974)
306 N.E.2d 279
COMMONWEALTH
vs.
PAUL F. PIZZIMENTE.
Appeals Court of Massachusetts, Suffolk.
October 15, 1973.
January 17, 1974.
Present: ROSE, KEVILLE, & GOODMAN, JJ.
Joseph C. Delcore for the defendant.
J. Kevin Leary, Assistant District Attorney, for the Commonwealth.
ROSE, J.
The defendant was charged with getting the complainant with child under G.L.c. 273, § 11, and convicted upon a jury verdict. The case comes before us on the defendant's bill of exceptions which raises in substance the sufficiency of the evidence to convict.
The jury could have found the facts to be as follows. The complainant was at all times material to the conception and birth of her child married to someone other than the defendant. She separated from her husband on January 15, 1970, and did not see him after March of 1970, although she knew that he lived in a neighboring community. The complainant met the defendant in August, 1970, and thereafter had sexual relations with him two or three times a month. She became pregnant in December, 1970, and *669 stopped seeing the defendant the following spring. Her child was born on July 19, 1971.
"The legal presumption always is, that a child born in lawful wedlock is legitimate. But this presumption may be rebutted by proof that the husband had no access to the wife during the time when, by the course of nature, he could be the father of the child." Phillips v. Allen, 2 Allen 453, 454 (1861). It has long been the rule in this Commonwealth that although non-access must be proved "beyond all reasonable doubt," the proof need not be such as to show "an impossibility that the husband could be the father." Ibid. Commonwealth v. Kitchen, 299 Mass. 7, 9 (1937). Commonwealth v. Leary, 345 Mass. 59, 60 (1962).
In this instance the Commonwealth sought to rebut the presumption of legitimacy by introducing the complainant's testimony as to non-access by her husband. That a wife's testimony, standing alone, is sufficient to rebut the presumption of legitimacy is well settled. See Commonwealth v. Rosenblatt, 219 Mass. 197, 198 (1914); Commonwealth v. Circo, 293 Mass. 361, 362 (1936); Commonwealth v. Kitchen, supra, at 9; Commonwealth v. Leary, supra, at 61. The defendant emphasizes that in this instance the complainant knew of her husband's whereabouts. But this furnishes no ground for holding her testimony concerning non-access insufficient as a matter of law.
As the court said in the Leary case (at page 61): "We are of opinion that [the complainant's] testimony was sufficient to overcome the presumption of legitimacy. The jury could, and apparently did, believe her testimony. There was no error in the denial of the defendant's motion for a directed verdict."
Exceptions overruled.
