The evidence offered by the defendant to prove the date of the marriage of Olivia Wilkins and William Wesley Redmond, and of the birth of the plaintiff, becomes immaterial, as the marriage was admitted and that the plaintiff was born a few months thereafter, and it is' therefore only necessary to consider the admissibility of the declarations of the mother tending to prove the illegitimacy of the plaintiff.
A child born in wedlock is presumed to be legitimate, and, as stated by Ruffin, C. J., in S. v. Herman, 35 N. C., 503, quoting from Coke on Littleton, this presumption exists “if the issue be born within a month or a day after marriage.” It is also stated by Coke, 244a, that “By the common law, if the husband be within the four seas, that is, within the jurisdiction of the King of England, if the wife have issue, no proof is to be admitted to prove the child a bastard unless the husband hath an apparent impossibilitie of procreation; as if the, husband be but 8 years *744old”; but this has been modified by admitting evidence to rebut tbe presumption of legitimacy which shows that the husband could not have been the father of the child. Ewell v. Ewell, 163 N. C., 236. The modern rule which generally prevails is that “When a child is born in wedlock, the law presumes it to be legitimate, and unless born under such circumstances as to show that the husband could not have begotten it, this presumption is conclusive; but the presumption may be rebutted by the facts and circumstances which show that the husband could not have been the father, as he was impotent or could not have had access.” S. v. McDowell, 101 N. C., 734.
It is also generally accepted that in the absence of statutory authority a married woman is incompetent to testify to the nonaecess of her husband on the question of the legitimacy of her offspring. Matter of Mills, 127 Cal., 298, 91; Craufurd v. Blackburn, 17 Md., 49; Scanlon v. Walshe, 81 Md., 118; Abindton v. Duxbury, 105 Mass., 287; Egbert v. Greenwalt, 44 Mich., 245; People v. Court of Sessions, 45 Hun. (N. Y.), 54; Ratcliff v. Wales, 1 Hill (N. Y.), 63; People v. Overseers of Poor, 15 Barb. (N. Y.), 286; Cross v. Cross, 3 Paige (N. Y.), 139; Bell v. Territory, 8 Okla., 75, 853; Dennison v. Page, 29 Pa. St., 420; Tioga County v. South Creek Township, 75 Pa. St., 433; Mink v. State, 60 Wis., 583, 445; Boykin v. Boykin, 70 N. C., 262.
In the last case cited Justice Bynum, says: “It is, then, conclusively settled that at common law neither the husband nor wife could prove access or nonaccess, and it is equally well settled that where they were not allowed to make such proof during marriage, neither will be allowed to do so after the death of the other, thus removing one great cause of distrust by making the confidence which once subsists ever afterwards inviolable in courts of law”; and ho concludes that the statutory changes in the law of evidence have not affected the rule.
And the same principle which excludes the husband and wife as witnesses ap|)lies with greater force to their declarations because in both the same public policy is conserved, and as to d .clarations there is the absence of an oath, no opportunity for cross-examination and no opportunity for the jury to observe the demeanor of the declarant, which are recognized tests of truth, and which would be present if the husband or wife was examined as a witness.
It seems that the first time the admissibility of the declarations of the husband or wife on the question of illegitimacy was d-finitelv settled was in Goodright v. Moss, 11 Eng. Rul. Cases, 520, decided in 1777, when Lord Mansfield said: “The law of England is clear that the declarations of a father or mother cannot be admitted to bastardize the issue borne after marriage”; and this has been generally followed, although there are some cases, involving issues of paternity and pedigree strictly, which appear to hold to a contrary view.
*745In 8 Enc. Ev., p. 174, tbe author says: “Declarations of neither husband nor wife can be received for the purpose of assailing the legitimacy of a child born to the wife during wedlock”; and he cites many cases in the note in support of the text, among others, Johnson v. Chapman, 45 N. C., 217, where Nash, C. J., says: “The only evidence upon which the defendants rely to prove the plaintiff to be illegitimate consists of the declarations of Frederick Johnson to his wife. This 'evidence is not competent. Mr. Greenleaf, vol. 2, sec. 151, says the husband and wife are alike incompetent to prove the fact of nonaccass while they lived together, nor are the declarations of either competent to prove the illegitimacy, though the child was born three months after marriage, and therefore they had separated by mutual consent”; and Rhyne v. Hoffman, 59 N. C., 336, in which Battle, J., speaking of a child born in wedlock, states the same rule as follows: “This plaintiff must, therefore, be taken to be legitimate, unless it be proven by irrefutable evidence that the husband was impotent or did not have any sexual intercourse with his wife; but the former is not pretended, and the latter is a fact which neither the wife nor the declarations of the wife is admissible to prove. Rex v. Luffe, 8 East, 193. Here, independent of the declarations of the wife, which must be rejected as incompetent, there is no testimony sufficient to rebut the presumption of access.” In Wallace v. Wallace, 137 Ia., 37, the Court says: “Declarations, as well as the evidence of either husband or wife as to access or nonaccess, are excluded whenever the issue of legitimacy is involved, and this includes cases of - antenuptial conception. The first ruling on this latter phase of the inquiry was by Sir John Romilly, Master of the Rolls, in 1856 (Anonymous v. Anonymous, 23 Beav. (Eng.), 273), and it has been approved by the consensus of judicial opinion since.”
This last case is also reported in 15 A. and E. Anno. Cases, 716, and in the note to that case and to Evans v. Freeman, 6 Anno. Cases, 816, and Godfrey v. Bowland, 7 Anno. Cases, 577, numerous authorities are collected sustaining the rule.
The. principle is also clearly recognized in Ewell v. Ewell, 163 N. C., 237, where the Court says, while discussing proof of nonaccess: “The latter (nonaccess) is a fact which neither the wife nor the declarations of the wife is admissible to prove.”
The eases of Woodard v. Blue, 107 N. C., 407, and Erwin v. Bailey, 123 N. C., 634, which are relied on by the defendant, are easily distinguishable from the one before us.
Those cases are based on tha act of 1866 as amended by the act of 1879, legitimating the children of former slaves, and there was no valid mandaste at the time of the birth of issue, which is the essential fact upon which this opinion rests.
*746When Woodard v. Blue was first reported (103 N. C., 116), tbe Court, realizing that tbe same rule did not prevail under tbe statutes relating to slaves as in cases of a lawful marriage, said: “To repel tbe inference of paternity, drawn from tbe mere fact of cobabitation, tbe same stringent rules do not prevail as in cases of established legal marriage, when to bastardize tbe issue there must be full, affirmative, repelling proof, sucb as impotency, nonaccess, and tbe like, or tbe presumption of legitimacy will stand. 1 Green. Ev., par. 28; Abbott’s Trial Ev., 88.”
Tbe case of S. v. Liles, 134 N. C., 742, also relied on, involved no issue except paternity, and contains nothing in conflict with tbe ruling in tbe Superior Court.
We are therefore of opinion that tbe evidence offered by tbe defendant was properly excluded and that there is
No error.