MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT Reporter of Decisions
Decision: 2019 ME 152
Docket: Yor-19-54 and Yor-19-183
Submitted
On Briefs: June 26, 2019 and September 10, 2019
Decided: October 22, 2019
Panel: SAUFLEY, C.J., and ALEXANDER, MEAD, GORMAN, JABAR, HJELM, and HUMPHREY, JJ.
IN RE CHILD OF NICHOLAS P.
HJELM, J.
[¶1] In this consolidated opinion, we consider two appeals advanced by
Nicholas P. in a child protection proceeding in the District Court (Biddeford)
involving his child. In the first appeal, the father challenges the court’s (Sutton,
J.) entry of a jeopardy order against him on grounds that his parentage had not
yet been established and that the evidence was insufficient to support the
court’s finding of an aggravating factor. In the second appeal, the father asserts
that the court (Duddy, J.) erred by later entering an order, based on genetic test
results but without conducting an evidentiary hearing, adjudicating that he is
the child’s father. We affirm both decisions.
I. BACKGROUND
[¶2] The Department of Health and Human Services initiated this child
protection proceeding in May of 2018, alleging that the father had neglected the
child and exposed the child to violence, had been convicted of assaulting the
2
mother when she was pregnant with the child, had been substantiated for
abusing another child, and had refused to participate in a risk assessment or
any treatment for his history of abuse and neglect.1 See 22 M.R.S. § 4032
(2018). The Department did not initially seek a preliminary protection order2
but did so a month after filing its initial petition. See 22 M.R.S. § 4034(1) (2018).
The court (Duddy, J.) then entered a preliminary protection order placing the
child in departmental custody and temporarily relieving the Department of its
obligation to furnish rehabilitation and reunification services to the father
because of an aggravating factor arising from the father’s abuse of the other
child.3 See 22 M.R.S. §§ 4002(1-B)(A), 4034(2), (4), 4036(1)(G-2),
4041(2)(A-2)(1) (2018).
1The child protection proceeding also involves the child’s mother. The court (Sutton, J.) entered
a separate jeopardy order as to the mother with her agreement. She has not appealed from that order
and is not a party to the father’s appeal. We therefore recount the facts and procedure only as
relevant to the father.
2 When the Department commenced this action, the child was residing with a grandmother.
3“If the court’s preliminary protection order includes a finding of an aggravating factor, the court
may order the department not to commence reunification or to cease reunification . . . .” 22 M.R.S.
§ 4034(4) (2018); see 22 M.R.S. § 4041(2)(A-2)(1) (2018) (allowing the court to enter a cease
reunification order at any stage of a proceeding upon finding an aggravating factor). An aggravating
factor is defined to include circumstances in which “[t]he parent has subjected any child for whom
the parent was responsible to aggravated circumstances, including . . . [r]ape, gross sexual
misconduct, gross sexual assault, sexual abuse, incest, aggravated assault, kidnapping, promotion of
prostitution, sexual exploitation of a minor, sex trafficking or aggravated sex trafficking,
abandonment, torture, chronic abuse or any other treatment that is heinous or abhorrent to society.”
22 M.R.S. § 4002(1-B)(A)(1) (2018).
3
[¶3] At the summary preliminary hearing held in August of 2018, the
father did not challenge the award of custody of the child to the Department but
stated to the court that “the purpose of this trial, quite candidly, is to prevent
the cease [reunification] from happening.” While testifying during the hearing,
the father was asked, “[Y]ou’re the father of [this child]?” and the father
responded, “Yes.” In the resulting order, the court maintained the
Department’s custody of the child but found that the Department failed to
establish the existence of an aggravating factor. Accordingly, the court
discontinued the cease reunification provision that was contained in the
preliminary protection order and instead required that “[r]eunification will
move forward for the father.”
[¶4] Two months later, in October of 2018, the court (Sutton, J.)
commenced a contested jeopardy hearing on the Department’s child protection
petition. See 22 M.R.S. § 4035 (2018). Prior to the hearing, the court
(Moskowitz, J.) had entered a case management order indicating that there were
“[n]o paternity issues” in the matter.4 The father did not object to the order.
Nonetheless, on the morning of the first day of the hearing, the father
4 Similarly, in a case management order previously entered prior to the summary preliminary
hearing, the court (Duddy, J.) did not check the box on the form order that would have indicated that
parentage was disputed.
4
asserted—for the first time—that the court lacked “subject matter jurisdiction”
to determine jeopardy because his parentage had not been established in
accordance with the Maine Parentage Act (MPA), 19-A M.R.S. §§ 1831-1939
(2018). The father requested that the court continue the jeopardy proceeding
pending a determination of his parentage. Despite this new position, the father
also explicitly took the paradoxical stance that the court should not disturb the
summary preliminary order and that the Department should be required to
continue providing him reunification services as the child’s parent.
[¶5] The court (Sutton, J.) sharply rejected the father’s argument and
denied his request for a continuance. The court characterized the father’s
argument as “disingenuous” and “nothing more [than] a delay tactic” given that
the father had not previously raised the issue of parentage and had, at the
summary preliminary hearing, “argu[ed] strenuously against a cease
reunification order to a child [whom] he now says he’s not the father of or may
not be the father of.” The court then proceeded to conduct a three-day jeopardy
hearing.
[¶6] Based on competent evidence presented at the jeopardy hearing,
the court found, by a preponderance of the evidence, that “[the father] is the
child’s biological father” and that the child is in circumstances of jeopardy to his
5
health or welfare based on the father’s abuse of both the mother and the other
child. See 22 M.R.S. §§ 4002(6)(A), (10), 4035(2) (2018). The court further
found, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the father’s abuse of the other
child constituted an aggravating factor and, on that basis, again entered a cease
reunification order. See id. §§ 4002(1-B)(A)(1), 4036(1)(G-2),
4041(2)(A-2)(1).
[¶7] Soon after, the guardian ad litem moved for an order of genetic
testing of the father and the child. The court (Cantara, J.) granted the motion.5
See 19-A M.R.S. § 1911; 22 M.R.S. §§ 4005-F, 4036(2-A) (2018). Before the
genetic testing was conducted, the father filed the first appeal in this matter
(the jeopardy appeal), arguing to us that the court erred by adjudicating the
issue of jeopardy before his parentage had been established and also
challenging the court’s finding of an aggravating factor. See 22 M.R.S. § 4006
(2018).
[¶8] While the jeopardy appeal was pending, the Department filed a
motion with the trial court seeking an adjudication that the father is, in fact, the
child’s biological parent. See 19-A M.R.S. §§ 1851(6), 1904(2), 1915. In support
5 That same day, the Department petitioned to terminate the father’s parental rights. The
termination petition remains pending as of the date of this opinion.
6
of its motion, the Department submitted a report of the results of the genetic
testing the court had previously ordered. The genetic test results revealed, to
a 99.99% probability, that the father is the child’s biological parent. The
Department also filed with us a motion to allow the trial court to act on its
motion notwithstanding the pending appeal. See M.R. App. P. 3(d). We granted
the Department’s motion to allow the trial court to act, and the court (Duddy, J.)
issued an order, based on the genetic test results that had been filed by the
Department, adjudicating that the father is a biological parent of the child. The
court did not conduct a hearing before adjudicating the father’s parentage. The
father then instituted a second appeal, challenging the parentage adjudication
(the parentage appeal).
[¶9] We address both appeals.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Parentage Determination: Judicial Estoppel
[¶10] In the jeopardy appeal, the father challenges the court’s jeopardy
order primarily on the ground that the court was required to adjudicate that he
is a parent of the child before it could consider whether he presents
circumstances of jeopardy to the child.6
The father also challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the court’s finding of an
6
aggravating factor based on the father’s abuse of the other child. The father does not challenge the
7
[¶11] We note initially that the father has erroneously framed this
argument as one that concerns the court’s subject matter jurisdiction.
“Jurisdiction” is a concept reserved for “delineating the classes of cases
(subject-matter jurisdiction) and the persons (personal jurisdiction) falling
within a court’s adjudicative authority.” Landmark Realty v. Leasure, 2004 ME
85, ¶ 7, 853 A.2d 749 (quotation marks omitted). Subject matter jurisdiction in
particular “refers to the power of a particular court to hear the type of case that
is then before it.” Jensen v. Jensen, 2015 ME 105, ¶ 11, 121 A.3d 809 (quotation
marks omitted). The power of the District Court to adjudicate a child protection
matter is indisputable. See 22 M.R.S. § 4031(1)(A) (2018) (“The District Court
has jurisdiction over child protection proceedings . . . .”); In re Austin T.,
2006 ME 28, ¶ 7, 898 A.2d 946; see also Adoption of M.A., 2007 ME 123, ¶¶ 6-7,
930 A.2d 1088 (concluding that the Probate Court’s subject matter jurisdiction
was not affected by the asserted procedural issues).
court’s finding that he had assaulted the other child; he argues only that the Department failed to
prove that the child was one “for whom [he] was responsible” pursuant to the statutory definition of
“[a]ggravating factor.” 22 M.R.S. § 4002(1-B)(A) (2018); see 22 M.R.S. § 4002(9) (2018) (defining
“[p]erson responsible for the child”); supra n.3. The record contains ample evidence to support the
court’s plenary finding of an aggravating factor, and we do not address the argument further. See
In re E.L., 2014 ME 87, ¶ 15, 96 A.3d 691 (applying the clear error standard of review to an
aggravating factor finding).
8
[¶12] Instead, what the father actually argues—although it is not entirely
clear—is that the court lacked authority, as a matter of law, to consider
jeopardy as to him in the absence of a prior parentage adjudication; or that the
court’s finding in the jeopardy order itself that he is the child’s parent is not
supported, as a matter of fact, by sufficient record evidence; or both. See In re
Children of Shirley T., 2019 ME 1, ¶ 19 n.9, 199 A.3d 221 (stating that we review
the court’s underlying factual findings for clear error and address issues of law
de novo); see also 22 M.R.S. § 4002(7) (2018) (defining a “[p]arent” as “a natural
or adoptive parent or a parent established under [the MPA], unless parental
rights have been terminated”).
[¶13] Neither argument is persuasive.
[¶14] First, the child protection statutes make clear that jeopardy
proceedings are not dependent on parentage status,7 and the father has offered
7 The Child and Family Services and Child Protection Act, 22 M.R.S. §§ 4001 to 4099-H (2018),
which encompasses jeopardy proceedings, applies to parents as well as to certain nonparents. E.g.,
id. § 4033(3-A) (stating that a preliminary protection order may remove a child from the “parents,
legal guardian or custodians”); id. § 4034(3), (4) (allowing a child’s “parent, custodian or legal
guardian” to waive the right to a summary preliminary hearing and consent to a preliminary
protection order); id. § 4034(4) (stating that the court’s role in the summary preliminary hearing is
to discern whether “returning the child to the child’s custodian would place the child in immediate
risk of serious harm”); id. § 4035(2-A) (creating a rebuttable presumption of jeopardy for the actions
of a “person seeking custody or contact with the child” or a “parent or person responsible for the
child”); id. § 4036(1)(C) (stating that, in a child protection order, the court may require “[t]hat the
child, the custodians, the parents and other appropriate family members accept treatment or services
to ameliorate the circumstances related to jeopardy”); id. § 4036(1)(F) (providing that the court may
order the removal of the child “from his custodian” in a jeopardy order); see also id. § 4002(9-C)
(defining “[r]emoval of the child from home” to include the home of “the parent, legal guardian or
9
no authority—from the child protection statutes or elsewhere—to support his
contention that an affirmative adjudication of parentage (or other relevant
nonparent status) is necessary before a court may undertake the jeopardy
proceedings. Rather, a determination that the person is someone against whom
the court may issue a jeopardy order may be based on evidence presented at
the jeopardy hearing itself. See 22 M.R.S. § 4035(1), (2)(A), (B) (providing that
the court “shall make a fresh determination of the question of jeopardy” based
on evidence admitted at the jeopardy hearing and “shall make findings of fact
on the record upon which the jeopardy determination is made”).
[¶15] As to the court’s finding in the jeopardy order that the father is the
child’s parent, the court concluded, in essence, that the father was judicially
estopped from asserting that he is not the child’s parent or insisting that the
Department prove his parentage. The court’s conclusion was correct.
[¶16] Judicial estoppel applies when
(1) the position asserted in the subsequent legal action [is] clearly
inconsistent with a previous position asserted; (2) the party in the
previous action [has] successfully convinced the court to accept the
inconsistent position; and (3) the party [has] gain[ed] an unfair
advantage as a result of [his or her] change of position in the
subsequent action.
custodian”); id. §§ 4032(2)(G), 4034(5) (affording “parents and custodians” the right to counsel in a
child protection proceeding).
10
Linnehan Leasing v. State Tax Assessor, 2006 ME 33, ¶ 25, 898 A.2d 408. The
doctrine rests on the principle that, after a party successfully asserts one
position during a legal proceeding, that party is barred from asserting a
contrary position at a later stage of the proceeding. New Hampshire v. Maine,
532 U.S. 742, 749 (2001). In this way, judicial estoppel “prohibit[s] parties from
deliberately changing positions according to the exigencies of the moment.”
Id. at 750 (quotation marks omitted); see Me. Educ. Ass’n v. Me. Cmty. Coll. Sys.
Bd. of Trs., 2007 ME 70, ¶¶ 16-17, 923 A.2d 914.
[¶17] Throughout the proceedings leading up to the jeopardy
determination, the father consistently and explicitly maintained that he is the
child’s father, and he sought and sometimes obtained relief in the form of
rehabilitation and reunification services based solely on his status as the child’s
parent.8 This is revealed in a number of aspects of the summary preliminary
hearing process:
• In a case management order entered prior to the hearing, the father did
not challenge the court’s indication that paternity was not disputed;
Although rehabilitation and reunification services may be available to certain individuals other
8
than parents, such as a child’s custodian, see 22 M.R.S. § 4036(1)(C), in this matter, the father has
never asserted—to the District Court or to us—that he is entitled to receive reunification services on
any basis other than his status as the child’s parent. Rather, at every turn leading up to the jeopardy
hearing, he has relied on his parentage, and the record contains no suggestion that the father’s
involvement in this proceeding is as anything other than a parent.
11
• At the hearing, the father testified, under oath, that he is the child’s
father;
• The father did not challenge the Department caseworker’s testimony
that he is the child’s father;
• The father, during his attorney’s cross-examination of the Department
caseworker, referred to himself as the child’s parent when asking, “And
so at the onset of this case . . . , it was the Department’s plan to reunify
both parents” (emphasis added);
• The father stated on the record that he requested a hearing for the
express purpose of challenging only the cease reunification provision in
the preliminary protection order, thereby arguing to the court that he
should receive the benefit of rehabilitation and reunification services as
the child’s parent, see 22 M.R.S. §§ 4002(1-B), 4034(4), 4041 (2018); and
• The father opposed the court’s finding of an aggravating factor, which is
defined only “with regard to the parent,” on the ground that the evidence
of his abuse of the other child was not credible, but without asserting
that the Department failed to prove that he was “the parent” at issue, id.
§ 4002(1-B) (emphasis added).
[¶18] The father’s efforts at the summary preliminary hearing were
successful; the court found that the Department did not prove the existence of
an aggravating factor and ordered the Department to commence rehabilitation
and reunification efforts for the father.
[¶19] It was not until the morning of the first day of the jeopardy
hearing—almost five months after the child protection petition was filed—that
the father first asserted that the matter could not proceed unless and until his
parentage was established, this despite his successful assertion of rights as the
12
child’s father just nine weeks earlier at the summary preliminary hearing.
Additionally, even during the jeopardy phase of the case, the father continued
to hold himself out as the child’s father in other respects:
• He did not object to a case management order entered by the court prior
to the jeopardy hearing, in which the court stated that there were “[n]o
paternity issues” in the matter;
• He argued at the jeopardy hearing that the court should not vacate the
summary preliminary order, which required the Department to provide
him with services that would allow him to reunify parentally with the
child;
• He argued at the jeopardy hearing that the court should not allow the
Department to cease reunification efforts for him, and, on
cross-examination, he challenged the recommendation that the
Department cease reunification services for him;
• In his written closing argument for the jeopardy hearing, he argued that
the Department “failed to meet its burden of proving an aggravating
factor justifying continuing the Cease Reunification”; and
• As at the summary preliminary hearing, he opposed the finding of an
aggravating factor by contesting the allegation that he abused the other
child and by asserting that he was not a “person responsible for the child,”
but he did not argue that there was insufficient evidence to prove the
“parent” element necessary for finding an aggravating factor, id.
[¶20] Significantly, the father has never denied that he is the child’s
biological parent, and he has never asserted that he has evidence to suggest that
some other person is the child’s biological father. Instead, he has argued only
that the Department was required to prove his parentage, despite his own
13
admissions of parentage and his reliance on the fact of his parentage as a
predicate to the relief he has sought at multiple stages of this child protection
proceeding. With good reason, it was apparent to the court that the father’s
last-minute nominal challenge to his parentage was an unwarranted about-face
that would delay the jeopardy hearing beyond the statutory deadline;9 unfairly
disadvantage the Department in the litigation; and otherwise groundlessly
impede the progression of this case, which involves the safety of a child.
[¶21] We agree with the court’s conclusion that all three prerequisites
for the application of judicial estoppel are present, and the father is therefore
barred from advancing any challenge to his parentage in this proceeding. See
New Hampshire, 532 U.S. at 755-56; Me. Educ. Ass’n, 2007 ME 70, ¶ 20, 923 A.2d
914; Linnehan Leasing, 2006 ME 33, ¶ 25, 898 A.2d 408. Because the father was
estopped from arguing to the trial court that the jeopardy hearing could not
proceed in the absence of a parentage finding, the court committed no error by
denying the father’s request to continue the jeopardy proceedings on that
basis.10
9 Pursuant to 22 M.R.S. § 4035(4-A), “[t]he court shall issue a jeopardy order within 120 days of
the filing of the child protection petition.”
10 In the end, there can be no uncertainty about the father’s parentage because, for the reasons we
discuss below, he has since been affirmatively and properly adjudicated to be the father. See
19-A M.R.S. §§ 1851(6), 1904(1)(A), 1915(1)(A)(2) (2018); supra ¶ 8; infra ¶¶ 31-40.
14
[¶22] The estoppel effect goes further because it also precludes the
father from arguing in the jeopardy appeal that the trial court erred by finding
jeopardy without first finding from the evidence that he is the child’s father.
[¶23] Judicial estoppel also applies to the father’s parentage appeal,
despite the father’s assertion that it does not foreclose his challenge to the
parentage adjudication in particular. More specifically, the father contends that
genetic parentage can only be established when certain scientific and
documentary criteria are met,11 see 19-A M.R.S. §§ 1851(6), 1902-1904, 1915,
and therefore it can never be established by testimony alone. This means,
according to the father, that he cannot be judicially estopped from challenging
genetic parentage based on his conduct in the case, including his prior
testimony.
11Curiously, and in a way that demonstrates the frailty of his position, the father rests his
contention entirely on his analysis of only one of the ways to become a parent pursuant to the MPA—
genetic parentage—when in fact the MPA recognizes fifteen different ways to become a parent: (1) by
admitting to parentage in a pleading or under oath, 19-A M.R.S. § 1841 (2018); (2) by default,
19-A M.R.S. § 1842 (2018); (3) by implication, 19-A M.R.S. § 1844(2) (2018); (4) by affording full faith
and credit to a determination of parentage from another state, 19-A M.R.S. § 1845 (2018); (5) by
birth, 19-A M.R.S. § 1851(1) (2018); (6) by adoption, 19-A M.R.S. § 1851(2) (2018); see 18-A M.R.S.
§§ 9-101 to 9-404 (2018); (7) by a recorded acknowledgement of paternity, 19-A M.R.S. §§ 1851(3),
1861-1873 (2018); (8) by presumption, 19-A M.R.S. §§ 1851(4), 1881-1883 (2018); (9) by an
adjudication of de facto parentage, 19-A M.R.S. §§ 1851(5), 1891 (2018); (10) by an adjudication of
parentage based on genetic testing, 19-A M.R.S. §§ 1851(6), 1901-1915 (2018); (11) as a result of a
refusal to submit to genetic testing ordered by the court, id. § 1914(1); (12) through assisted
reproduction as to a spouse, 19-A M.R.S. §§ 1851(7), 1922(2)(A) (2018); (13) through assisted
reproduction with a written agreement, 19-A M.R.S. §§ 1851(7), 1922(2)(B) (2018); (14) through
assisted reproduction after a lab error, 19-A M.R.S. §§ 1851(7), 1929 (2018); and (15) through a
gestational carrier agreement, 19-A M.R.S. §§ 1851(8), 1931-1939 (2018).
15
[¶24] The father’s argument falls short of the mark in two respects. First,
it is directly contradicted by the MPA, which expressly recognizes
circumstances in which a party to a genetic parentage dispute may be
“estop[ped] . . . from denying parentage” based on his or her conduct. Id.
§ 1912(1)(A).
[¶25] Second, the father’s argument conflates the requirements of proof
when proof is necessary, with circumstances in which no proof is required in
the first place because the putative parent, through his or her conduct during
the judicial proceeding, becomes barred from denying parentage. See New
Hampshire, 532 U.S. at 755-56; Me. Educ. Ass’n, 2007 ME 70, ¶¶ 16, 20, 923 A.2d
914. In the latter situation, judicial estoppel obviates any need to evaluate the
scientific or other evidence of parentage that would otherwise be examined
according to the applicable proof requirements in the MPA. Instead, judicial
estoppel precludes the father from challenging parentage in any way given his
prior conduct in the case, including his successful reliance on his own
assertions of parentage to obtain relief at the summary preliminary hearing.
The father is therefore estopped from arguing in the parentage appeal that the
court erred by failing to follow a particular process in making its affirmative
determination of parentage.
16
B. Parentage Determination on the Department’s Motion: The MPA
[¶26] Although, for the reasons we have just explained, the father is
judicially estopped from denying his parentage to the child, we nonetheless
take this opportunity to examine the MPA and reach his challenge to the
affirmative, evidence-based determination that he is, in fact, the child’s parent.
Before doing so, however, we address a threshold issue regarding the
justiciability of the parentage appeal.
1. Justiciability of the Parentage Appeal
[¶27] Although neither party has raised the question of the justiciability
of the issues raised in the father’s parentage appeal, we consider the question
sua sponte. See Chretien v. Chretien, 2017 ME 192, ¶ 5 n.3, 170 A.3d 260.
[¶28] Pursuant to 22 M.R.S. § 4006, only three types of orders may be
appealed in child protection matters: a jeopardy order, a judgment terminating
parental rights, and a medical treatment order. Any other Title 22 order is not
justiciable. 22 M.R.S. § 4006; In re L.R., 2014 ME 95, ¶¶ 5-9, 97 A.3d 602; In re
B.C., 2012 ME 140, ¶¶ 12-14, 58 A.3d 1118. This presents the question of
whether a parentage determination entered in a child protection action can be
properly appealed.
17
[¶29] As we have recognized, an order entered in the context of a child
protection case, but which is not itself an order entered pursuant to the Child
and Family Services and Child Protection Act, 22 M.R.S. §§ 4001 to 4099-H
(2018), may be cognizable on appeal despite the limitations created by section
4006. See In re Children of Shirley T., 2019 ME 1, ¶¶ 1, 15 n.6, 199 A.3d 221
(reviewing on the merits the denial of a motion to transfer jurisdiction of a child
protection matter to a tribal court pursuant to the Indian Child Welfare Act of
1978, 25 U.S.C.S. §§ 1901-1963 (LEXIS through Pub. L. No. 116-56)); In re Jacob
C., 2009 ME 10, ¶¶ 10-14, 965 A.2d 47 (agreeing to consider an appeal from a
Title 19-A parental rights and responsibilities judgment issued in the context of
a Title 22 child protection proceeding). A parentage determination, even when
it is part of a child protection proceeding, see 22 M.R.S. §§ 4005-F, 4036(2-A);
see also 19-A M.R.S. § 1834(3), is not governed by Title 22 but rather by the
MPA. The father’s parentage appeal is therefore justiciable because it is from a
final judgment that was entered pursuant to the MPA and is not itself a Title 22
order. See 14 M.R.S. § 1901 (2018) (stating that appeals from District Court
decisions may be taken to the Law Court); 19-A M.R.S. § 104 (2018) (providing
for appeals of District Court decisions entered pursuant to Title 19-A);
19-A M.R.S. § 1844(4) (“A party to an adjudication of parentage may challenge
18
the adjudication only by appeal or in a manner otherwise consistent with the
Maine Rules of Civil Procedure.”).
[¶30] We therefore proceed to the substance of the father’s contentions
in the parentage appeal.
2. Merits of the Parentage Appeal
[¶31] In the parentage appeal, the father challenges the parentage
determination, which is based on genetic testing, by asserting only that the
court erred by adjudicating his parentage without first conducting a hearing.
The father points to no specific provision of the MPA that mandates an
evidentiary hearing, but he instead infers such a requirement from 19-A M.R.S.
§ 1913, which provides for the “admissibility” of genetic test results as evidence
of parentage. From that, the father also suggests that, because the MPA
prescribes scientific and documentary criteria that must be met before a court
may rely on genetic test results, a hearing was necessary to allow
cross-examination in order to challenge or otherwise test compliance with
those requirements.
[¶32] Whether the MPA mandates the trial court to conduct a hearing
before adjudicating genetic parentage requires us to interpret the MPA de novo,
which we do by first examining its plain language. See Guardianship of
19
Patricia S., 2019 ME 23, ¶ 12, 202 A.3d 532. If the statute is unambiguous, we
consider the statute according to its plain meaning. See id. Only if the statute is
ambiguous—which, for the reasons that follow, we conclude it is not—would
we then consider other indicia of legislative intent, such as the legislative
history leading to the MPA’s enactment. See id.
[¶33] A genetic test result is not, by itself, an enforceable and final
judicial determination of parentage. 19-A M.R.S. §§ 1851(6), 1904(2). Rather,
a person who is identified as a parent in a genetic test result that complies with
statutory requirements is “rebuttably identified as the genetic parent of [the]
child.” Id. § 1904(1); see id. § 1902. Parentage is then judicially determined
only after the court enters an adjudication based on that genetic test result.
Id. § 1851(6) (“Parentage may be established by . . . [a]n adjudication of genetic
parentage under subchapter 6.”); id. § 1904(2) (“Identification of a genetic
parent through genetic testing does not establish parentage absent
adjudication under this chapter.”). The court’s obligation to enter an
adjudication based on genetic test results is circumscribed: if a genetic test
result meets statutory scientific requirements, id. §§ 1902, 1904; is described
in a report that provides certain specified information, id. § 1903; and identifies
20
a person as the parent, the court “shall find that person to be the genetic parent
and may adjudicate the person as the child’s parent,” id. § 1915(1)(A)(2).
[¶34] When there is some legitimate question asserted about the
reliability of the genetic test results, the MPA sets out the process for rebutting
the identification of a person as a biological parent and for admitting other
evidence that bears on a genetically-based parentage adjudication. Those
statutorily prescribed procedures include the following elements.
• “[A] record of a genetic testing expert is admissible as evidence of the
truth of the facts asserted in the report unless a party objects to its
admission within 14 days after its receipt by the objecting party and cites
specific grounds for exclusion.” Id. § 1913(1).
• A rebuttably identified genetic parent “may rebut the genetic testing
results,” although “only by other genetic testing” that either excludes that
person as the parent or identifies another person as the possible genetic
father. Id. § 1904(3).
• “A party objecting to the results of genetic testing may call one or more
genetic testing experts to testify in person or by telephone,
videoconference, deposition or another method approved by the court.”
Id. § 1913(2).
• “Testimony relating to sexual relations or possible sexual relations of the
woman giving birth at a time other than the probable time of conception
of the child is inadmissible in evidence.” Id. § 1915(2).
• “In a proceeding to adjudicate parentage, the court may . . . deny
admissibility of the test results at trial if the court determines that
. . . [t]he conduct of the parties estops a party from denying parentage [or]
[i]t would be an inequitable interference to the relationship between the
21
child and a parent or otherwise contrary to the best interest of the child.”
Id. § 1912(1).
• “A report made under the requirements of this subchapter is
self-authenticating”; if the testing laboratory documentation establishes
a reliable chain of custody, the genetic test results are “admissible
without testimony.” Id. § 1903(2).
[¶35] Despite the references to admissibility and testimony in these
provisions, the MPA does not require a hearing as a predicate to an adjudication
of parentage. The relevant provisions of the MPA instead contemplate that an
adjudication can be issued based on genetic test results alone, which are
self-authenticating. Id. A party who seeks to challenge those results is required
to file a timely objection to the test results within fourteen days after receipt of
the test results and, in that objection, he or she must state the “specific grounds”
for contesting the genetic test results. Id. § 1913(1). If a putative parent files
such an objection, a hearing likely is necessary because a “rebuttably identified”
parent may, for example, rebut his genetic identification as a parent with
proper evidence of contradictory test results, id. § 1904(1), (3), or may seek to
discredit the results by presenting competing genetic testing expert testimony,
id. § 1913(2). Therefore, although a hearing may constitute the best practice in
many instances, the MPA does not contain a provision requiring the court to
hold a contested hearing for all adjudications of genetic parentage, nor would
22
such a requirement be an efficient means of resolving a dispute in the face of
uncontroverted scientific proof.12
[¶36] If a hearing were categorically required in every parentage
dispute, there would be little reason for the Legislature to have imposed this
discrete statutory process requiring a putative parent to affirmatively object to
genetic test results and, in that objection, articulate the particular basis for a
challenge. See Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. State Tax Assessor, 2012 ME 110, ¶ 8,
52 A.3d 941 (“A statute should be interpreted to avoid surplusage, which
occurs when a construction of one provision of a statute renders another
provision unnecessary or without meaning or force.” (quotation marks
omitted)). The objection procedure instead allows a party the opportunity to
create a further factual record, but that process is triggered only when the party
has an evidentiary basis on which to rebut the genetic test results and describes
that basis with specificity in the objection. 19-A M.R.S. §§ 1904(3), 1913(1).
12 When the Legislature requires a hearing in a matter, it is fully capable of saying so, including in
Title 19-A matters, and even within the MPA itself. See, e.g., 19-A M.R.S. § 1891(2)(C) (“The court
may in its sole discretion, if necessary and on an expedited basis, hold a hearing to determine
disputed facts that are necessary and material to the issue of standing [to seek de facto
parenthood].”); 19-A M.R.S. § 2009(6) (2018) (“If a downward deviation is proposed, the court shall
hold a hearing prior to entering [a child support ] order.”); see also 15 M.R.S. § 106(3) (2018) (“[T]he
court shall conduct a hearing within 30 days of the filing of [a] motion [for involuntary medication]
. . . .”); 18-C M.R.S. § 5-319(2) (2018) (“The court shall conduct a hearing to determine whether
termination or modification of a guardianship of an adult is appropriate . . . .”); 22 M.R.S. § 4054 (“The
court shall hold a hearing prior to making a termination [of parental rights] order.”). The Legislature
has enacted no similar provision with regard to genetic parentage adjudications.
23
[¶37] The conclusion that a hearing is not always needed for an
adjudication of parentage is also consistent with portions of the MPA that
govern parentage adjudications other than by genetic testing. For example,
parentage may be established by an admission in a pleading. Id. § 1841(1). If
“there is no reason to question the admission, and no other party contests it,
the court may issue an order adjudicating the child to be the child of the person
admitting parentage.”13 Id. § 1841(2). Like the genetic parentage provisions,
section 1841 places the obligation on the objecting party to initiate proceedings
necessary to resolve a factual dispute. In the absence of an assertion that there
exists a legitimate factual dispute, the pleading alone is a sufficient basis for
adjudicating parentage.
[¶38] Additionally, an acknowledgement of paternity that is signed and
recorded with the State Registrar of Vital Statistics is “equivalent to an
adjudication of parentage.” Id. § 1865(1). That statutory acknowledgement
process allows an adjudication of parentage in the absence of a hearing, even
though an effective acknowledgement of paternity—like a genetic test result—
13 Parentage also may be established by testimony under oath to that effect. 19-A M.R.S.
§ 1841(1). Given the father’s testimonial admission of parentage during the summary preliminary
hearing and the absence of any subsequently obtained evidence calling his parentage into question,
the court could well have adjudicated parentage pursuant to section 1841(1), thus obviating the need
for any genetic testing or application of the doctrine of judicial estoppel.
24
must satisfy a list of statutory requirements. Id. § 1862. Also, a party may be
adjudicated to be a parent without a hearing or any input at all if he or she fails
to submit to court-ordered genetic testing. Id. § 1914(1). Even the de facto
parentage statute, which requires the petitioning parent to meet threshold
fact-based standing criteria, requires the court to hold a hearing only when, in
the court’s “sole discretion,” a hearing is necessary “to determine disputed facts
that are necessary and material to the issue of standing.” Id. § 1891(2)(C);
cf. Young v. King, 2019 ME 78, ¶¶ 11-13, 208 A.3d 762 (concluding that a
hearing was required to resolve the conflicting facts as to de facto parenthood
standing that had been properly presented by the parties).
[¶39] These examples demonstrate that, although parentage may be
determined by genetic testing that implicates underlying scientific statutory
criteria that, in turn, could provide fodder for challenging genetic test results in
a fact-finding setting, a hearing on the matter is not always required. In
multiple settings governed by the MPA, a person may be adjudicated a parent
in the absence of any kind of hearing. The Legislature has not differentiated a
parentage determination based on genetic testing from those approaches.
Additionally, as a more general matter, a court is given great latitude in
determining whether a hearing is necessary, even when a motion is based on a
25
factual predicate. See M.R. Civ. P. 43(e) (“When a motion is based on facts not
appearing of record the court may hear the matter on affidavits presented by
the respective parties, but the court may direct that the matter be heard wholly
or partly on oral testimony or depositions.”); Randall v. Conley, 2010 ME 68,
¶¶ 18-19, 2 A.3d 328 (“We review the court’s decision not to hear testimony
only for abuse of discretion.” (quotation marks omitted)).
[¶40] We conclude that the MPA plainly and unambiguously does not
require a testimonial hearing in every case before a court may properly
adjudicate parentage based on a genetic test result.14 Here, despite the
opportunity allowed by section 1913, the father did not object to or challenge
14 Even if we were to conclude that the MPA reveals some measure of ambiguity on the point,
which would allow us to resort to legislative history, see Guardianship of Patricia S., 2019 ME 23, ¶ 12,
202 A.3d 532, the result would be the same. In a report of the Family Law Advisory Commission, on
whose recommendations the MPA was enacted, it was recommended that an adjudication of
parentage based on a party’s admission or by default should not require a hearing. Family Law
Advisory Comm’n, Report to the Joint Standing Comm. on Judiciary app. B at 3 (Dec. 2014); see P.L.
2015, ch. 296, §§ A-1 to D-1 (effective July 1, 2016); L.D. 1017, Summary (127th Legis. 2015). It would
be absurd to interpret the genetic parentage provisions, which are based on scientific evidence of
parentage, to suggest that genetic test results are less reliable than an admission or default. See
Urrutia v. Interstate Brands Int’l, 2018 ME 24, ¶ 12, 179 A.3d 312.
Moreover, comments to the Uniform Parentage Act, on which the MPA is also based, establish
that genetic test results were intended to be decisive in a parentage dispute: “This section establishes
the controlling supremacy of admissible genetic test results in the adjudication of paternity.” Unif.
Parentage Act § 631 cmt. (Nat’l Conference of Comm’rs on Unif. State Laws 2002); see L.D. 1017,
Summary (127th Legis. 2015). Although “errors (and sometimes fraud) may occur in testing,” which
could require “other evidence of paternity [to be] presented in the proceeding,” genetic testing
otherwise “can be absolute”; “if test results are admissible, those results control unless other test
results create a conflict rebutting the admitted results.” Unif. Parentage Act § 631 cmt. These
comments support an interpretation of the MPA that genetic test results that comply with the
scientific requirements of the statute are dispositive—without the need for a hearing—absent a
timely objection and rebutting evidence.
26
the genetic test results. Rather, the father objected to the motion only on the
grounds that the District Court lacked jurisdiction to adjudicate parentage
while an appeal was pending and that the District Court should vacate its
jeopardy order and allow the parties to litigate parentage along with jeopardy
in a new hearing; he did not argue that the genetic test results themselves were
flawed. It is also significant to note that the father has never substantively
drawn the test results into question in any other way; he has never asserted
that the testing process did not meet the scientific or documentary criteria set
out by statute, see 19-A M.R.S. §§ 1902-1904, or that the genetic test results—
which establish a 99.99% probability of his paternity—are unreliable for some
other reason. In the absence of any such challenge articulated in a proper
objection, and having been presented with self-authenticating test results, the
court was not obligated to conduct a hearing. See id. § 1903(1). We therefore
identify no error in the court’s adjudication of the father’s parentage without
having conducted a hearing.
C. Conclusion
[¶41] None of the father’s challenges to the court’s orders is persuasive.
Given the stance the father had taken in this action up to the moment the
jeopardy hearing began, the court appropriately determined that the father was
27
judicially estopped from challenging his parentage of the child or the
Department’s obligation to prove his parentage. Later, after the court was
presented with the results of a court-ordered genetic test demonstrating the
father’s parentage—and without the father’s statutorily sufficient objection to
that report—the court did not err by adjudicating his parentage without
holding a hearing.
The entry is:
Judgments affirmed.
Scott M. Houde, Esq., Biddeford, for appellant father
Aaron M. Frey, Attorney General, and Meghan Szylvian, Asst. Atty. Gen., Office
of the Attorney General, Augusta, for appellee Department of Health and Human
Services
Biddeford District Court docket number PC-2018-24
FOR CLERK REFERENCE ONLY