establish that the absence of the husband must be continuous and
cover the period of conception and of birth led Lord Ellenborough to
deal in his judgment with the change in the law. In doing so, he
teferred to the case in the Year Book 10 Edw. I., Paschae B. Rot. 23,
1 Rolle 359, commonly called Fozcroft's Case. This case has since
been explained as depending upon the insufficiency of the ceremony
of marriage. It was so explained by Sir Harris Nicolas, op. cit.,
pp. 31 and 357, and by Sir Frederick Pollock and F. W. Maitland,
History of English Law, vol. 2, p. 384, and note 9 R.R., p. vii.
Owing to a not unnatural misunderstanding, Lord Ellenborough (1).
treated the case as one in which a child was bastardized because it
was born twelve weeks after the mother's marriage to an infirm
bedridden man. "This therefore,' Lord Ellenborough said, " is
another instance of an exception to the general rule, admitted at
so early a period as the 10 Edw. I. and founded on natural impos-
sibility arising from bodily infirmity." This means, to my mind, that
his Lordship considered that a man who married a single woman
big with child could always bastardize it by " special matter." He
proceeds to show that in a case like that before him, where a child
begotten and born during a marriage could not possibly be the
husband's, the presumption of legitimacy is overcome He con-
cludes : - " Without weakening, therefore, any established cases, or
any legal presumption, applicable to the subject, we may without
hesitation say, that a child born under these circumstances is a
bastard. With respect to the case where the parents have married
so recently before the birth of the child that it could not have been
begotten in wedlock, it stands upon its own peculiar ground. The
marriage of the parties is the criterion adopted by the law, in cases
of ante-nuptial generation, for ascertaining the actual parentage of
the child. For this purpose it will not examine when the gestation
began, looking only to the recognition of it by the husband in the
subsequent act of marriage" (2).