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NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
A.S.M. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
PENNSYLVANIA
Appellant
v.
E.M.S.
Appellee No. 1151 MDA 2016
Appeal from the Order Entered June 10, 2016
In the Court of Common Pleas of York County
Criminal Division at No(s): 2016-FC-366-23
BEFORE: BOWES, J., OLSON, J., AND STABILE, J.
CONCURRING MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.: FILED FEBRUARY 24, 2017
I concur with the learned majority’s disposition and join in the well-
reasoned statement of rationale relating to Father’s inability to rescind his
acknowledgment of paternity of his now-nine-year-old son, B.P.M., pursuant
to 23 Pa.C.S. § 5103, and the trial court’s rejection of Father’s motions for
additional testimony.1 I write separately to highlight what I perceive as a
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1
As it relates to Father’s claim that he is entitled to a paternity test pursuant
to a support order entered in 2010, I add two observations. First, Father
misstates the nature of the operative order. Contrary to Father’s
characterization, the order does not direct Mother to submit B.P.M. to
genetic testing. In reality, the 2010 support order memorialized Mother’s
assent to private testing at that time provided that Father paid for it. Father
neglected to schedule genetic testing for the ensuing six years. Stated
plainly, as no order exists directing Mother to comply with genetic testing,
the trial court did not err in denying Father’s petition to enforce it. Second,
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conspicuous omission in the review of Father’s request: the child’s best
interest.
Instead of a mechanical application of § 5103(g)(2)2 to determine
whether Father had been deluded by fraud, duress, or mistake of fact in
executing the written acknowledgment, I favor an approach that requires
trial courts to incorporate the best interest of the child in determining
whether a non-birth father may rescind his acknowledgement of paternity.
My position is founded on the recognition that the rescission of an
acknowledgment of paternity pursuant to § 5103(g)(2) and the decision
concerning whether to apply paternity by estoppel share attributes, which
our High Court found in K.E.M. v. P.C.S., 38 A.3d 798 (Pa. 2012),
implicated the best interest of the child as the predominate consideration.
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(Footnote Continued)
this issue is a red herring. The certified record includes the results of a
private genetic test performed during 2015 that confirms the 99.99%
probability that an individual identified as R.S., is the birth Father. Thus,
Father’s paternity is conclusively disestablished, at least genetically, and a
second paternity test would be superfluous. A more convincing argument,
which Father declined to assert, would have addressed the effect of the
conclusive genetic evidence on Father’s previously executed
acknowledgment of paternity absent fraud, duress, or mistake of fact.
2
In pertinent part, § 5103(b)(2) provides, “After the expiration of the 60
days, an acknowledgment of paternity may be challenged in court only on
the basis of fraud, duress or material mistake of fact, which must be
established by the challenger through clear and convincing evidence.”
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Section 5103 is the natural extension of our legislature’s codification in
§ 5102(b)(2) of the common law doctrine of paternity by estoppel,3 the
principle that, in the absence of a marriage, a male who has held himself out
as the child’s father is estopped from challenging paternity regardless of
biology. See Kohler v. Bleem, 654 A.2d 569, 574 n.7 (Pa.Super. 1995)
(“The General Assembly has codified the principles of paternity by estoppel
in cases involving children born out of wedlock. See 23 Pa.C.S.A. §
5102(b)(2)”). The interrelationship between a § 5103(g)(2) rescission and
the common law doctrine is best illustrated by the fact that the two
principles require identical considerations in determining the effect of fraud
in the formation of the parental relationship. For example, just as proof of
fraud will defeat the application of paternity by estoppel, the same facts
would provide a basis to rescind an acknowledgment of paternity pursuant to
§ 5103. Compare R.W.E. v. A.B.K., 961 A.2d 161 (Pa.Super. 2008)
(applying five-prong approach to determine fraud in the context of
rescinding acknowledgment of paternity under § 5103(g) and Doran v.
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3
The relevant portion of § 5102 provides that the paternity of children born
out of wedlock may be determined by the father’s actions when, “during the
lifetime of the child, the father openly holds out the child to be his and
receives the child into his home, or openly holds out the child to be his and
provides support for the child which shall be determined by clear and
convincing evidence.”
23 Pa.C.S. § 5102(b)(2).
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Doran, 820 A.2d 1279, 1283-84 (Pa.Super. 2003) (outlining identical “test
for fraud” to determine whether to apply paternity by estoppel).
In K.E.M., supra at 803, our Supreme Court examined a paternity
dispute in the context of child support and confronted “the application of the
doctrine of paternity by estoppel . . . [and] its continuing application as a
common law principle.” The High Court first noted the doctrine’s role in
Pennsylvania jurisprudence and approvingly recited this Court’s prior
observation in Commonwealth ex rel. Gonzalez v. Andreas, 369 A.2d
416, 419 (Pa. Super 1976):
Absent any overriding equities in favor of the putative father,
such as fraud, the law cannot permit a party to renounce even
an assumed duty of parentage when by doing so, the innocent
child would be victimized. Relying upon the representation of the
parental relationship, a child naturally and normally extends his
love and affection to the putative parent. The representation of
parentage inevitably obscures the identity and whereabouts of
the natural father, so that the child will be denied the love,
affection and support of the natural father. As time wears on,
the fiction of parentage reduces the likelihood that the child will
ever have the opportunity of knowing or receiving the love of
his natural father. While the law cannot prohibit the putative
father from informing the child of their true relationship, it can
prohibit him from employing the sanctions of the law to avoid
the obligations which their assumed relationship would otherwise
impose.
Id. at 807–08. The High Court interpreted the foregoing discussion as
emphasizing the best interest of the child, which it proclaimed to be the
paramount consideration in applying the doctrine. The Court stated, “The
operative language of this passage centers on the best interests of the child,
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and we are of the firm belief—in terms of common law decision making—that
this remains the proper, overarching litmus, at least in the wider range of
cases.” Id. at 808.
Hence, in K.E.M., our Supreme Court determined that the doctrine of
paternity by estoppel would only be applied in situations where maintaining
the fiction of the father-child relationship was in the child’s best interests
based upon a developed record. Specifically, the High Court stated,
“paternity by estoppel continues to pertain in Pennsylvania, but it will apply
only where it can be shown, on a developed record, that it is in the best
interest of the involved child.” Id. at 810. Significantly, as it relates to the
facts in the case at bar, the Supreme Court reasoned in K.E.M. supra, that
since the putative father was not deluded into believing that he was the
birth-father, “the strongest case for ‘overriding equities’ [,such as fraud,] is
not present[.]” Id at 808 n.7. Nevertheless, it determined, “even in such
circumstances, there are arguments to be made that the best interests of a
child should remain the predominate consideration[.]” Id.4
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4
I recognize that the K.E.M. Court was hesitant to extend its reasoning to
cases, such as the case at bar, where a parent has executed a formal
acknowledgement of paternity. See K.E.M.,supra at 810 n.12, (“While our
decision here reflects increased flexibility in the application of the paternity
by estoppel doctrine, we note that courts have been most firm in sustaining
prior adjudications (or formal acknowledgments) of paternity based on the
need for continuity, financial support, and potential psychological security
arising out of an established parent-child relationship.”). However, I believe
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This Court applied K.E.M. in ensuing cases with varied results. In V.E.
v. W.M., 54 A.3d 368 (Pa.Super. 2012), we held that the doctrine did not
apply in a child support case where there was no relationship between a
putative father and a four-month-old child born out of wedlock. The doctrine
was asserted as a defense to a complaint in child support. The defendant
denied paternity and averred that the putative father, who signed the birth
certificate, was the biological father. We affirmed the trial court’s finding
that the doctrine was inapplicable even though the putative father had
acknowledged the infant as his own during the brief four-month period. We
explained, “Where there is no relationship, application of the doctrine is
irrelevant to the child's best interests. Absent a relationship, what becomes
relevant is who will be financially responsible for the child.” Id. at 371.
Rather than require the trial court to apply the doctrine mechanically under
those facts, we upheld the court’s determination that genetic testing was the
most efficient method to determine paternity, and therefore financial
responsibility.
Later, in R.K.J. v. S.P.K., 77 A.3d 33 (Pa.Super. 2013), another child
support case involving a § 5103(g) rescission as well as paternity by
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(Footnote Continued)
that the psychological and economic best-interest considerations that we
fashioned in R.K.J. v. S.P.K., 77 A.3d 33 (Pa.Super. 2013), which I discuss
infra, alleviate the noted concerns regarding continuity, financial support,
and psychological security.
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estoppel, this Court distinguished the facts underlying that case from the
facts of V.E. on the basis that, unlike V.E., sufficient time passed in that
case for the father-child relationship to blossom. Id. at 42. In order to
determine whether application of the common law doctrine was in the child’s
best interest, we fashioned five psychological and economic considerations.
Those factors, which we gleaned from K.E.M., supra were: (1) a party
cannot renounce an assumed duty of parentage when the innocent child
would be victimized; (2) the law can prohibit a putative father from
employing sanctions of the law to avoid the obligations that his assumed
relationship with the child would impose; (3) the closeness of the child's
relationship to the putative father; (4) the harm that would befall the child if
the putative father's parental status were to be disestablished; and (5) the
need for continuity, financial support, and potential psychological security
arising out of an established parent-child relationship. Id. at 38.
Applying these factors, the R.K.J. Court affirmed the trial court’s
determination that the evidence supported application of the doctrine of
paternity by estoppel to bar the putative father from disestablishing
paternity. We reasoned, inter alia, that 1) the putative father executed the
acknowledgment of paternity knowing he was not the birthfather; 2) while
the biological father had never interacted with the child, the purported
father, whom the child calls “dad” lived with the child for several years, and
bonded with him for approximately six years. We noted approvingly, “the
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evidence before the trial court addressed the factors set forth in K.E.M. as
relevant to the child's best interests [and] the trial court did not apply the
doctrine of paternity by estoppel by rote, but considered the individual
circumstances of this case, as required by K.E.M.” Id. at 40.
Relating the foregoing principles from K.E.M., supra, V.E., supra,
and R.K.J., supra to the instant factual scenario for the purpose of
demonstration, I do not believe that the proposed best-interest
considerations would have influenced the trial court’s determination
regarding Father’s attempts to rescind his acknowledgment of paternity
pursuant to § 5103(g). I observe that Father testified that he had no
relationship with B.P.M. and highlighted that genetic testing confirmed that
R.S. was the child’s biological father. Consistent with V.E., supra, both of
these factors militate in favor of finding that the results of the 2015 genetic
test is the most direct method to determine financial responsibility for B.P.M.
Conversely, however, Mother testified that Father maintained a
modicum of a relationship with B.P.M. between 2007 and 2012. More
importantly, Appellant executed the acknowledgement of paternity despite
his suspicions that he was not the birth father, and he continues to satisfy
his child support obligations. While R.S. has been identified as the genetic
parent, unlike Father, R.S. never made a financial commitment to the child
and there is no evidence that the nine year old has established contact with
R.S. nor that a relationship is likely to spring from the scientific confirmation
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of paternity. Hence, this case is more complex than the mechanical
assessment of financial responsibility that we addressed in V.E., supra. In
addition to the financial aspects of the decision, the current facts reveal the
child’s need for continuity and the psychological security arising out of the
cessation of a weak, but established, parent-child relationship. Thus, I do
not believe that the proposed application of the child’s best-interest would
have affected the trial court’s decision to reject Father’s request to rescind
his acknowledgement of paternity.
In sum, I believe that the General Assembly should revisit the binding
legal fiction created by § 5103 in light of the advancements in genetic
testing and our contemporary perspective of family and fashion an approach
for rescinding the acknowledgment of paternity that requires trial courts to
consider the child’s best interests in the same manner that our High Court
demands that trial courts address the issue when determining whether to
apply the doctrine of paternity by estoppel.
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