(dissenting).
I. INTRODUCTION
The majority’s decision in this case denies the plaintiff any standing even to cross the threshold of the courthouse door in his claim to a hearing on whether he is the natural father of the child at issue.1 The majority rejects the literal meaning of the Paternity Act, imposes an untenable construction on that law fraught with anomalies and injustice, implicitly overrules both the reasoning and the result of this Court’s decision in Syrkowski v Appleyard, 420 Mich 367; 362 NW2d 211 (1985), and throws into grave doubt the constitutional validity of the Paternity Act.
II. THE PATERNITY ACT
A. THE STATUTORY BACKGROUND
The majority begins, as do I, by quoting the language of the two relevant provisions of the Paternity Act:2
The father or putative father of a child born out of wedlock may file a complaint in the circuit court in the county in which the child or mother resides or is found, praying for the entry of the *254order of filiation as provided for in [MCL 722.717; MSA 25.497]. The mother of the child shall be made a party defendant and notified of the hearing on the complaint by summons which shall be in such form as the court shall determine and shall be served in the same manner as is provided by court rules for the service of process in civil actions. The court, following the hearing, may enter an order of filiation which shall have the same effect, be subject to the same provisions, and enforced in the same manner as an order of filiation would be if entered on complaint of the mother. [MCL 722.714(6); MSA 25.494(6).]
"Child born out of wedlock” means a child begotten and born to a woman who was not married from the conception to the date of birth of the child, or a child which the court has determined to be a child born or conceived during a marriage but not the issue of that marriage. [MCL 722.711(a); MSA 25.491(a).]
In this case, Girard, the putative father, alleges that the child was begotten and born to Judy Wagenmaker during the latter’s marriage to Harvey Wagenmaker, but is not the issue of that marriage, being rather the issue of himself and Judy Wagenmaker. In my view, a literal reading of the statutory language resolves this case— which at this stage involves nothing more than the threshold issue of standing — in Girard’s favor, without further ado. The majority, however, disagrees.
In order to understand the present state of the law regarding paternity claims it is necessary to review several recent historical developments. I will not attempt to retrace Justice Brickley’s careful and scholarly discussion of the historical lineage of Michigan’s paternity laws dating back to 1809. It suffices, for present purposes, to note *255that prior to 1977, not only did the legal definition of a "child born out of wedlock” exclude a child born to a married woman but fathered by someone other than the woman’s husband, but there existed a virtually irrebuttable presumption, known as "Lord Mansfield’s rule,” that a child born to a married woman was fathered by the husband. This Court rejected Lord Mansfield’s rule in Serafín v Serafín, 401 Mich 629; 258 NW2d 461 (1977), and held that the presumption of legitimacy could be rebutted by clear and convincing evidence. See id. at 636.3
Unfortunately, Serafín created an anomaly in Michigan law. While a husband could now effectively disown a child of his wife and thereby escape his support obligation by rebutting the presumption of legitimacy, Michigan law still did not recognize a child in that situation as having been "born out of wedlock,” and therefore did not permit a paternity claim against the actual father. Thus, while an unmarried woman had legal recourse for support of a child against the natural father, a married woman whose child was not fathered by her husband could be denied recourse against either the husband or the natural father.
The Court of Appeals responded to this "gap in the law,”4 and the grave constitutional problems it raised, in Smith v Robbins, 91 Mich App 284; 283 NW2d 725 (1979). In order to avoid finding the Paternity Act’s definition of children born "out of wedlock” unconstitutional,5 Smith construed that *256definition to encompass a child born to a married woman but not fathered by her husband. See id. at 289-291.
The Legislature also responded to the anomaly created by Serañn. Essentially following Smith,6 it amended the statutory definition of children born "out of wedlock” to include "a child which the court has determined to be a child born during a marriage but not the issue of that marriage.” 1980 PA 54. The outcome of this case revolves in large part around the true meaning of this 1980 amendment.
B. THE STATUTORY LANGUAGE
The primary argument of the majority is that because the 1980 amendment of MCL 722.711(a); MSA 25.491(a) refers to "a child which the court has determined to be a child born during a marriage but not the issue of that marriage,” a putative father must, as a prerequisite to ñling his paternity claim, show that the child in question has already been determined, in some previous judicial proceeding, not to be the issue of the marriage. The majority claims not only that this is *257the "outcome required by the plain language” of the statute, but makes the remarkable assertion that this is "the only reasonable construction of the Paternity Act which will give effect to all its parts as a whole.” Ante, p 243. Not only is the majority’s interpretation unpersuasive as a literal construction of the words and unsupported by what scant legislative history exists, it makes no sense and produces anomalous results when the statutory scheme is considered in context as an integrated whole.
The majority relies heavily on the fact that the words "has determined” are in the present perfect tense, thereby suggesting that at the time the court considers the paternity claim, it will have already been determined that the child is not the issue of the marriage in question. Nothing about the use of the present perfect tense, however, requires the conclusion that the language refers to some separate and prior court proceeding. Rather, it would simply seem to indicate that before the ultimate question of patérnity is resolved on the merits, it is necessary that "the court” — the very court hearing the paternity claim — will have determined that the child is not the issue of the marriage in question. Obviously, the latter finding is a prerequisite of the former, and must temporally precede it; that is in the very nature of the definition. But nothing compels the conclusion that separate courts in separate proceedings must separately determine the paternity (or nonpaternity) of the husband and the putative father.7_
*258The majority asks "why the Legislature would use those words before the second prong of the out of wedlock definition, but not the first.” Ante, p 243. After all, even without words referring to a "court determination,” it would be clear that the court hearing the paternity claim would have to make the findings necessarily required by the statutory definition. A perfectly natural explanation comes to mind for this purported paradox. In the case of the first prong of the statutory definition, it is unlikely that there would ever be a serious factual dispute concerning whether a mother was married at the time of a child’s birth. By contrast, there will frequently be a substantial factual dispute concerning whether a child born to a married woman is or is not the issue of the marriage. Thus, the Legislature’s use of the words "which the court has determined” may simply reflect a common-sense acknowledgment of the fact that the court will usually be called upon to make a substantial inquiry into that contentious issue.
The majority suggests that the statute might more easily bear the meaning urged here if it referred to "a child which the court determines [present tense] to be a child born during a marriage but not the issue of that marriage,” or if the reference to a "court determination” were absent altogether. Ante, pp 243-246. This may well be, but it is no less true that far more comprehensible and clearcut language could have been chosen to express the meaning the majority forces upon the statute. The majority cites no evidence that the Legislature intended to place such extraordinary *259significance — leading to such anomalous results— on the presence of the disputed words, or on the fact that the present perfect tense, rather than the present tense, is used.
It is true that the need to protect mothers and children caught in the Serafín-created "gap,” rather than the issue of the putative father’s standing to bring a paternity claim, was the "principal focus” of the 1980 amendment. Ante, pp 245-246, quoting House Legislative Analysis, HB 4389, April 11, 1979. But this is not surprising or dispositive, or even particularly relevant. The standing of putative fathers was not directly at issue with regard to the 1980 amendment because the putative father’s standing to bring a paternity claim had long since been established under the Paternity Act. As the majority itself notes, it was in 1941 — thirty-nine years before the 1980 amendment — that the ancestor of the present Paternity Act was amended to grant standing to putative fathers to claim paternity of their children. See ante, p 239; 1941 PA 316, ch 42, § 12. This provision has survived as modified into the present-day Paternity Act as MCL 722.714(6); MSA 25.494(6). The 1980 amendment had nothing to do with who could bring a paternity action, but rather concerned the scope of the definition of children born out of wedlock.8
Indeed, what scant direct evidence we have of *260the Legislature’s intent in enacting the 1980 amendment tends to refute the majority’s interpretation. The brief, one-page legislative analysis, aside from noting the goal of closing the Serafín "gap” as discussed above, summarizes the amendment as follows:
The bill would amend the Paternity Act to include in the definition of a "child born out of wedlock” a child whose mother was married at the time of the birth but whose father, in the determination of the circuit court, was not the mother’s husband. [House Legislative Analysis, HB 4389, April 11, 1979. Emphasis added.]
Significantly, the legislative analysis renders the emphasized words as a prepositional phrase within a forward-looking conditional sentence describing what the act "would” do, undermining any notion that the Legislature vested peculiar importance in the present-perfect-tense phrasing of the actual statutory language. The language refers to the question whether the mother’s husband is the father as something to be determined by "the circuit court,” presumably the very same circuit court hearing the paternity claim itself. If the legislative analysis had envisioned the interpretation asserted by the majority, any number of more sensible and understandable ways could have been found to say so, such as by referring to "a child . . . whose father, as previously determined by any court, was not the mother’s husband.”
As the very title of the law indicates, and as this Court has held, the Paternity Act’s central function is to provide a judicial forum to litigate and determine paternity, along with its consequent legal rights and obligations.9 To be sure, in most *261cases it is the abandoned or needy mother, or the Department of Social Services suing on her behalf, who is the claimant, and a predominant goal of the law is no doubt to facilitate the support of children born out of wedlock whose natural fathers are reluctant to acknowledge them. But since 1941 the law has also recognized that putative fathers themselves have independent standing to seek determinations of their own paternity.10
Yet the majority contends that the Paternity Act, having vested the circuit courts with jurisdiction to hear paternity claims, whether brought by the mother, the father, or the dss, and having defined a child born to a married woman but not the issue of the marriage as a "child born out of wedlock,” paradoxically denies to the very circuit court otherwise authorized to hear the paternity claim any authority to determine whether the child is in fact the issue of the marriage. Instead, according to the majority, the law mocks the putative father in Girard’s position with a Catch-22 situation. He is turned away at the courthouse door and told that he has no standing to litigate his paternity claim unless that very issue has already been litigated in some prior proceeding. Yet the question whether his putative child is or is not "the issue of [the mother’s] marriage” is, in part, precisely what he seeks to determine by filing his paternity claim in the first place.11 Thus, *262according to the majority, if a legal forum has already been provided to determine that question, the law provides yet another. But if no such forum has yet been provided, then the putative father, precisely when he needs one the most, is denied any forum at all.12
The hardship and injustice which the majority’s construction works on the litigant in Girard’s position is self-evident. He is denied any legal forum or procedure to claim his alleged paternal status, even though that status is cognizable under the substantive law. Furthermore, the majority concedes, as it must, that its interpretation would necessarily apply not only to paternity claims brought by putative fathers such as Girard, but also to those brought by mothers or the dss. See ante, p 246. As the Court of Appeals noted, "[t]he allegations in [Girard’s] complaint are the same as those which would be sufficient to support a complaint brought by the defendant mother.” 173 Mich App 735, 740; 434 NW2d 227 (1988). It has never until this day, to my knowledge, been seriously suggested by any court in this state that a mother filing a paternity claim in this kind of *263situation must, in order to get through the courthouse door, present some prior court determination that the child in question is not the issue of her marriage.
The majority, which completely ignores this problem, perhaps assumes that its interpretation will not, in practice, affect many mothers bringing paternity claims. It is perhaps true that in the most common or typical case, a mother bringing such a claim will have gone through a prior divorce or support proceeding at which her former husband will have succeeded in disproving his presumed paternity. It is easy to hypothesize cases, however, in which it would be unlikely or impossible for the prior court determination to have taken place. Suppose the husband dies before any divorce proceeding? Is the mother then forever barred from proceeding against the natural father? Suppose the husband does not realize or accept the possibility of his nonpaternity, and fails or chooses not to litigate the issue during divorce proceedings? Where the husband or former husband dies or chooses not to renounce paternity of the child, are both the mother and the natural father forever barred from obtaining legal recognition of the natural father’s status, even if the mother and natural father themselves subsequently marry and seek custody of their child?13 The majority’s rationale sweeps far more broadly than it cares to admit.
*264In sum, even if the textual interpretation issue could be regarded as close, the anomalous and unjust results produced by the majority’s reading would alone counsel decisively against its adoption. See Franges v General Motors Corp, 404 Mich 590, 612; 274 NW2d 392 (1979) ("statutes should be construed to prevent absurdity, hardship, injustice or prejudice to the public interest”).
C. CONTROLLING PRECEDENT
The majority gives short shrift to perhaps the most serious obstacle to its interpretation of the 1980 amendment. That interpretation is squarely foreclosed by this Court’s decision six years ago in Syrkowski v Appleyard, 420 Mich 367; 362 NW2d 211 (1985). The Court’s decision today necessarily overrules both the result and the reasoning of Syrkowski. As the majority notes, the facts of Syrkowski were unusual and certainly distinguishable from this or most other paternity cases. Syrkowski’s reasoning and result, however, did not rest on the distinctions between that case and this one. Quite the contrary, Syrkowski reached the result it did on the basis of a straightforward interpretation of the plain language of the Paternity Act which, applied to this case, dictates ruling in Girard’s favor.
Syrkowski was a collusive lawsuit involving a "surrogate mother” arrangement, in which the *265natural mother and her husband cooperated with the natural father’s efforts to obtain a legal determination of his paternity. Syrkowski is analogous to this case in that the putative father (Syrkowski) was seeking to claim paternity of a child (Teresa) born to a woman (Corinne Appleyard) who was and remained married (to Roger Appleyard). See id. at 369. The trial court and the Court of Appeals in Syrkowski held that subject-matter jurisdiction of this type of paternity claim did not exist under the Paternity Act. See id. at 368-369. This Court, however, unanimously reversed. Id. at 375.
A number of propositions are established with abundant clarity by Syrkowski’s reasoning and holding. First, Syrkowski necessarily rejected the majority’s interpretation of the 1980 amendment. It is clear that there was no separate or prior court determination in Syrkowski that the child was not the issue of the Appleyards’ marriage. We specifically noted that Syrkowski "is prepared to prove” that the child "is a child born out of wedlock as defined by the Paternity Act. That will bring the child within the provisions of the act.” Id. at 374 (emphasis added). Language does not get any clearer than this. The conclusion is inescapable that this Court in Syrkowski read the statute according to its literal meaning, to permit the determination whether the child was the "issue of th[e] marriage” to be made during the very proceeding brought under the Paternity Act by the putative father.
The majority’s attempts to distinguish Syrkowski are unpersuasive. The majority asserts that Syrkowski dealt with the circuit court’s subject-matter jurisdiction under the Paternity Act, rather than with the question of standing. This is a distinction without a difference. To hold that the circuit court has no statutory jurisdiction to enter*266tain a putative father’s claim in this type of case, or that the putative father has no statutory standing to bring his claim, are merely two ways of stating the same thing. As a matter of basic jurisprudential philosophy, a party’s lack of standing has often been said to deprive a court of jurisdiction over that party’s claim. See Allen v Wright, 468 US 737, 750-751; 104 S Ct 3315; 82 L Ed 2d 556 (1984); Los Angeles v Lyons, 461 US 95, 101-102; 103 S Ct 1660; 75 L Ed 2d 675 (1983).14
Syrkowski’s resolution of the "subject-matter jurisdiction” issue was clearly premised on its holding that the putative father in that situation has the statutory right to bring a paternity claim. After noting the statutory provision "authorizing] . . . the father ... to file a complaint alleging paternity,” this Court noted that "[t]he same section confers jurisdiction upon the circuit court.” 420 Mich 374. Then, evidently referring to both parts of this section, we stated: "That language is as clear as statutory language can be. There is no need to interpret or look beyond the words of the statute to the intent of the Legislature.” Id. at 375 (emphasis added). We concluded our analysis in two short sentences, the first of which clearly addressed the issue of standing: "The act allows fathers to seek and receive ¡paternity] determinations. We hold that the circuit court does have subject-matter jurisdiction.” Id. (emphasis added).
The majority suggests that Syrkowski did not address the interpretation of the "has determined” clause of the 1980 amendment. Even if the partic*267ular textual argument adopted by the majority were not urged in so many words by any party in Syrkowski, however, the specific language and holding of Syrkowski necessarily preclude the majority’s conclusion. This Court chose in Syrkowski to reverse the lower courts’ holdings in lieu of granting leave and without benefit of oral argument or plenary briefing, evidently because we found that the lower courts had clearly erred in the face of a literal reading of the statutory language. If the majority’s present interpretation of the Paternity Act were correct, we would not and could not have ruled as we did in Syrkowski, because the putative father plainly would have had no standing to proceed and the circuit court would have lacked jurisdiction. The majority’s decision in this case thus appears to overrule the result in Syrkowski and indicates that, in the majority’s view, we should have affirmed the lower courts in that case.
Finally, the majority suggests that our decision in Syrkowski somehow rested on the fact that Roger Appleyard filed a certificate of nonconsent under MCL 333.2824(6); MSA 14.15(2824X6), regarding his wife Corinne’s artificial insemination by Syrkowski. Quite aside from the fact, as the majority itself concedes, that Syrkowski articulated no such theory, the majority does not explain how filing a § 2824(6) nonconsent form could operate to free a putative father like Syrkowski from the restrictions on standing created by the majority’s statutory construction in the instant case. The mere assertion of nonconsent by the husband obviously could not even "[a]rguably,” ante, p 248, n 6, constitute a "determination” by "the court” that the child conceived is "not the issue of the marriage,” as the Paternity Act, according to the majority, requires as a prerequisite to standing. *268More generally, I see no basis in reason, logic, or any of the applicable statutes for holding that a putative father by artificial insemination should have any greater right or more preferred standing to litigate his paternity than any other putative father.
Indeed, Syrkowski rejected precisely the same legislative purpose argument that the majority now relies upon. As noted in part ii(b), the majority places special emphasis on the Paternity Act’s predominant purpose of helping mothers obtain support from reluctant natural fathers and on the conceded goal of the 1980 amendment of serving this purpose by closing the Serafín-created "gap.” Syrkowski and this case each involve situations concededly remote from this general and predominant statutory purpose. Yet Syrkowski rejected the notion that this general legislative intent somehow requires an incongruously cramped interpretation of the statutory language. "We can accept the[] assumption that the Legislature was primarily motivated by a desire to provide adequate support for children born out of wedlock. However, the support obligation cannot be enforced without a preliminary determination of paternity.” Id. at 374. As we concluded: "The act allows fathers to seek and receive such determinations.” Id. at 375. "Any other conclusion,” we held, "requires an impossibly restrictive and unnecessary interpretation of the statutory language.” Id. (emphasis added).
Judge Hood stated the matter very well, in my view, in his opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part in In re Paternity of Flynn, 130 Mich App 740, 765-766; 344 NW2d 352 (1983):15
[Although I agree with the majority opinion’s *269finding that the primary purpose of the Paternity Act is to provide support for illegitimate children, . . . the act certainly cannot be construed to preclude Alan Castle’s petition merely because David Flynn does currently provide support to Jessica Flynn and is willing to continue to do so. The act is concerned with determining the biological father’s duty to support. If Alan Castle declares himself to be that biological father, seeks a court determination of that fact, and is willing to accept support obligations thereto, his petition under the Paternity Act is appropriate.
I frankly do not understand why the Paternity Act’s concededly predominant purpose of facilitating support for children born out of wedlock should be thought to militate affirmatively against the standing of a putative father in a case like the one before us. The unfortunate fact that, in our society, the act’s primary utility lies in compelling unwilling and recalcitrant fathers to meet their support obligations is no reason to deny standing to those fathers who desire to acknowledge their paternal responsibilities. See part ii(d).
d. policy concerns
This brings me to the policy concerns implicated by this case. The majority does not address most of these concerns to any significant degree, although they are the concerns upon which the Wagenmakers, and the Attorney General as amicus curiae, primarily rely.16 The Wagenmakers contend *270that it would be profoundly undesirable to permit a putative father legal standing to bring a paternity claim against the wishes of the mother and her husband, where the mother and husband maintain an intact marriage and choose to treat the child as their own. At first glance, there might appear to be substantial force to this argument, which relies not only on the principle of protecting the sanctity of the family, but on the emotional and psychological well-being of the child involved. It must be conceded that a case like this one raises a painful moral dilemma. For several reasons, however, I believe this broad policy argument must fail.
First, and perhaps most important given the precept of judicial restraint, a substantive policy question like this should be left to the Legislature. As I have demonstrated above, the only reasonable reading of the language of the Paternity Act, as previously interpreted by this Court, compels the conclusion that the Legislature has authorized a paternity action like that brought by Girard in this case. If, on the other hand, the statutory language does not permit this Court to avoid the moral and policy questions, I would conclude that the balance of interests weighs in favor of permitting Girard’s claim. It is more than a little hypocritical to contend, as do the Wagenmakers, that denying standing to Girard is consistent with "the law’s repugnance to adulterers.” The biological *271mother in this kind of situation is certainly no less an "adulterer” than the biological father. It is surely a bit late to talk of preserving the "sanctity” of the marital family by the time a situation like the one alleged in this case has arisen.
There is still a more basic pragmatic issue. Denying putative fathers like Girard a legal forum in which to press their claims will not prevent such claims from being made, quite possibly at times and in a manner far less conducive to the psychological health and security of the child involved. The law, after all, cannot sweep reality under the rug. Instead of leaving such paternity disputes unresolved, to fester and rankle down through the years, would it not be more desirable to give the parties their day in court and settle the issue once and for all? If the concern is the possibility of malicious or unfounded lawsuits, appropriate sanctions already exist. Furthermore, the Wagenmakers’ concern that the mechanics of the paternity inquiry would intrude unacceptably into their intimate marital privacy is unfounded given the ease and reliability of modern scientific paternity testing on the basis of blood samples. See Mark D. Kolins, M.D., The role of paternity testing in cases of disputed parentage, 63 Mich B J 1169 (1984).
The Wagenmakers seek to distinguish prior cases which have upheld a putative father’s standing to claim paternity of the child of a married woman by noting that in all such cases, unlike this one, the marriage involved had ended or divorce proceedings had begun. See, e.g., Perry v Stewart, 177 Mich App 460; 442 NW2d 677 (1989); Smith, supra. I would certainly agree that the continuing existence of an intact marriage would likely be a crucial factor weighing in favor of the mother with regard to any support, custody, or visitation dis*272pute arising in a case like this one. But such factors are not properly considered at the stage of litigation which we address in this case. This, I believe, is the crux of the flaw in the Wagenmakers’ policy arguments. There is no question that in any dispute concerning the biological father’s right to develop or maintain any actual relationship with his child — once it is established that he is the biological father — the ultimate governing standard would be "the best interests of the child.” See MCL 722.25; MSA 25.312(5). But this governing factor can best be considered individually in the very hearing the putative father seeks following the threshold determination of paternity.
It cannot be emphasized too strongly that upholding Girard’s standing to bring his paternity claim would not in any way endorse or prejudge his claim to provide support for the child, or his claim to custody or visitation rights. But to deny Girard standing to bring his claim at the very outset is inherently unjust. The fact that it might appear unlikely or improbable that a given putative father might ultimately succeed on the merits of his claim in no way justifies denying him his day in court to make that claim. I am unwilling to make the arbitrary assumption that no support, custody, or visitation claim by a putative father, regarding the child of a married woman, will ever have sufficient merit to justify recognizing the standing of any such claimants. The merits of each case are most appropriately considered at the very court hearing which the putative father seeks. His minimal right to such a hearing — in elemental due process teims, "the opportunity to be heard 'at a meaningful time and in a meaningful manner’ ”17 —is the only issue before this Court in this case.
*273The Attorney General argues that the sole permissible purpose of a paternity claim under the Paternity Act is to obtain support for the child, and that where the mother does not desire to receive support from a putative father such as Girard, and where no objective and demonstrable need for such support exists, the putative father should be held to lack standing. This is similar to the legislative purpose argument put forth by the majority, which I have discussed in parts ii(b) and (c). Indeed, the majority appears to endorse the Attorney General’s illogically narrow view of the purpose of the statutory grant of standing to putative fathers,18 This legislative purpose argument is also, essentially, the argument this Court rejected in Syrkowski.19 See part 11(c). It is difficult to reconcile the argument with the fact that MCL 722.714(6); MSA 25.494(6) categorically grants standing to putative fathers to bring paternity claims, and does not predicate that standing upon some demonstrated need or desire for child support on the part of the mother._
*274Indeed, it seems obvious that in some cases, regardless of whether the mother is married or unmarried, she may not want to have anything more to do with the biological father and may affirmatively resist any effort by him to claim paternity or provide support. It is equally apparent that the primary utility of MCL 722.714(6); MSA 25.494(6) and its ancestor provisions has been to permit the biological father to independently assert and preserve his own interest in, and relationship to, the child. It is difficult to imagine what other purpose the provision could conceivably serve.20 If the exclusive purpose of the law *275were to assist the mother in obtaining support from a recalcitrant father, that would already be fully served by the law’s grant of standing to the mother and the dss.21
Taking the broadest view of the , statutory scheme, it seems to me that there would be something oddly askew with a legal framework which recognized the standing of a husband seeking to disclaim paternity of his wife’s child, yet refused standing to a man seeking to claim paternity of such a child.22 There is a sadly negative cast to the *276entire law of paternity. The focus is almost always on the recalcitrant father, forced unwillingly into supporting a child he refuses to acknowledge. It is rarely on the out-of-wedlock father who willingly shoulders his paternal responsibilities and voluntarily seeks to establish a relationship with his child. This undertow of social assumptions has even affected the constitutional case law of the United States Supreme Court, which has shown solicitous concern for the due process rights of the unwilling father threatened with involuntary liability for child support,23 while turning a remarkably cold shoulder to the due process claims of willing fathers who wish to maintain a relationship with their children.24 This Court, however, need not and should not interpret Michigan’s Paternity Act in such a selective and negative manner.25
III. CONSTITUTIONAL CONCERNS
Even if the majority’s interpretation of the Paternity Act were otherwise plausible, a final con*277sideration would nevertheless incline me to read the law so as to grant Girard the day in court that he seeks. The majority’s resolution of this case may have the effect of foreclosing any possibility for Girard to develop a legally sanctioned relationship with his putative child, despite the fact, as we must assume in the case’s present posture, that he is every bit as much her natural parent as Judy Wagenmaker. His potential relationship with his child is thus destroyed without his ever having been afforded the opportunity to present his case on the merits in a fair, individualized hearing.
The Michigan Constitution guarantees every individual the right not to "be deprived of life, liberty or property, without due process of law.” Const 1963, art 1, § 17. A father’s interest in establishing and maintaining a relationship with his child unquestionably falls within the scope of that "liberty” of which a person may not be deprived without due process. The United States Supreme Court, applying the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, US Const, Am XIV, § 1, has rendered two deeply divided rulings during the past decade concerning the rights of a putative father to establish or maintain a relationship with his child. See Michael H v Gerald D, 491 US 110; 109 S Ct 2333; 105 L Ed 2d 91 (1989); Lehr v Robertson, 463 US 248; 103 S Ct 2985; 77 L Ed 2d 614 (1983).26 In each of those cases, the majority rejected the putative father’s due process claim, *278and it appears reasonably likely that Michigan law, as interpreted by the majority in this case, would likewise pass muster under the federal Due Process Clause as currently interpreted. For purposes of interpreting Michigan’s own Due Process Clause, however, I find far more persuasive the reasoning expressed in Justice White’s dissenting opinion in Lehr, see 463 US 268-276, and in Justice Brennan’s and Justice White’s dissenting opinions in Michael H, see 491 US 136-157, 157-163. I would adopt that reasoning in interpreting Michigan’s Due Process Clause.
Applying the analysis of the Lehr and Michael H dissents, the validity of the Paternity Act under the Michigan Constitution is thrown into grave doubt by the majority’s statutory interpretation in this case. In accordance with our duty to interpret the laws of this state, wherever possible, so as to conform to constitutional requirements, see People v Neumayer, 405 Mich 341, 362; 275 NW2d 230 (1979); People v Bricker, 389 Mich 524, 528; 208 NW2d 172 (1973), I would interpret the Paternity Act so as to afford Girard the standing he seeks.27
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, I dissent and would affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeals.
*279Levin, J., concurred with Cavanagh, C.J. Mallett, J., took no part in the decision of this case.Neither the child’s mother, Judy Wagenmaker, nor Judy’s husband, Harvey Wagenmaker, has ever denied that Girard is in fact the father of the child. This failure is not itself evidence that he is the father, of course, but this Court must decide this case on the assumption that he is. As the Court of Appeals correctly noted, the trial court’s summary disposition on the pleadings, in effect holding that Girard had failed to state a claim on which relief could be granted, see MCR 2.116(C)(8), can be affirmed "only if the pleadings are so clearly unenforceable as a matter of law that no factual development can justify a right of recovery.” 173 Mich App 735, 738; 434 NW2d 227 (1988), citing Chapin v Coloma Twp, 163 Mich App 614, 616-617; 415 NW2d 221 (1987). "The allegations of fact in the complaint and all reasonable inferences drawn from those allegations are accepted as true for purposes of the motion.” Chapin, 163 Mich App 617.
For the sake of convenience to the bench and bar, I shall quote the present, revised version of both provisions.
This Court found that the ancient policy reasons behind Lord Mansfield’s rule, always somewhat murky and dubious, were no longer persuasive in today’s world. See id. at 633-635.
See House Legislative Analysis, HB 4389, April 11, 1979.
Smith found, in light of Serafín, that the statutory definition of children born "out of wedlock,” if literally construed, would be unconstitutional under the Equal Protection Clause as articulating an irrational classification of children born out of wedlock. See id. at 287-289.
It appears the Legislature became aware of the problem created by Serafín under then-prevailing Michigan law even before the Court of Appeals decided the Smith case. Representative Geerlings introduced the House bill which became the 1980 amendment on March 28, 1979, and a legislative analysis succinctly describing the problem was issued on April 11, 1979. See House Legislative Analysis, HB 4389, April 11, 1979. Smith was not decided until July 10, 1979. Presaging the concerns stated in Smith, the legislative analysis noted that
the Serafín decision has created a gap in the law by which some children are deprived of access to support from their fathers, and often must be supported on public welfare instead —a situation which could be corrected by amending the Paternity Act to include such children. [House Legislative Analysis, HB 4389, April 11, 1979.]
The majority’s literalist approach cuts both ways. It might be thought significant that the statutory language refers to "the court” rather than "a court.” If the language were really meant to refer to some prior court finding that the child is not the issue of the marriage — quite possibly the finding of some court other than the precise one hearing the paternity claim — the phrase would more logically read "a child which a court has determined.” The use of the *258words "the court” would seem to suggest that the statute is referring to the very same circuit court which is hearing the paternity claim. See MCL 722.711; MSA 25.491 ("As used in this act: . . . (d) 'Court’ means the circuit court”).
It is, of course, true that by expanding the scope of that definition, the 1980 amendment, under either the reading urged here or the majority’s reading, necessarily expanded the number of potential cases which could be brought by those possessing standing under the Paternity Act. Again, it is certainly clear that the predominant goal of the Legislature was to facilitate paternity claims by mothers whose husbands have succeeded in rebutting their presumed paternity. But the amendment accomplished that goal, not by tinkering with the relative rights of mothers or putative fathers to bring paternity claims, but by expanding the scope of the definition of children born out of wedlock.
See Syrkowski v Appleyard, 420 Mich 375: "The act was created *261as a procedural vehicle for determining the paternity of children 'born out of wedlock,’ and enforcing the resulting support obligation.”
I expand further on this point, and the policy issues surrounding it, in part ikd). In particular, I address in part ikd) the majority’s and the Attorney General’s unpersuasively narrow view of the purpose of the statutory provision now embodied in MCL 722.714(6); MSA 25.494(6).
Where, as here, there are only two potential claimants to paternity, the paternity or nonpaternity of the putative father and the husband are simply two sides of the same coin, two ways of looking at the same fundamental issue. That fundamental issue — paternity—is *262precisely the issue for which the Paternity Act exists to provide a judicial forum for legal determination.
Cf. Heller, Catch-22 (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1961), p 46:
There was only one catch and that was Catch-22, which specified that a concern for one’s own safety in the face of dangers that were real and immediate was the process of a rational mind. Orr was crazy and could be grounded. All he had to do was ask; and as soon as he did, he would no longer be crazy and would have to fly more missions. Orr would be crazy to fly more missions and sane if he didn’t, but if he was sane he had to fly them. If he flew them he was crazy and didn’t have to; but if he didn’t want to he was sane and had to. Yossarian was moved very deeply by the absolute simplicity of this clause of Catch-22 and let out a respectful whistle.
"That’s some catch, that Catch-22,” he observed.
"It’s the best there is,” Doc Daneeka agreed.
These are not fanciful or imaginary hypothetical situations. A situation precisely analogous to one noted in the text occurred in In re Paternity of Flynn, 130 Mich App 740; 344 NW2d 352 (1983). In that case, Susan Flynn, while married to David Flynn, gave birth to a daughter, Jessica. Susan also had a sexual relationship with Alan Castle, who, as eventually alleged by himself and Susan, was Jessica’s biological father. Susan and David each filed for divorce. They were each granted temporary custody of Jessica part-time. When the divorce became final, however, permanent custody was awarded to David. Susan and Alan then absconded with Jessica and lived under assumed names for several years. David discovered their whereabouts and reclaimed physical custody of Jessica. Meanwhile, Susan and Alan were married and filed a joint petition for custody of Jessica. *264Alan also filed a paternity claim. See id. at 746-748. The Court of Appeals held that Alan had no standing under the Paternity Act, although not for the reasons relied upon by the majority in this case. See id. at 752-755. The Court of Appeals held that Alan could press his paternity claim under the Child Custody Act, however, because paternity was a "fact of consequence” under the latter act in light of the presumption in favor of parental custody of MCL 722.25; MSA 25.312(5). See id. at 761. Judge Hood, in a persuasive opinion, dissented from the Court of Appeals holding with regard to the Paternity Act, but concurred with regard to the Child Custody Act. Id. at 764-766.
The United States Supreme Court treated the concept of standing in these cases in light of the federal jurisdictional requirement of an actual "case or controversy” under US Const, art III, §2. Michigan law embodies a similar requirement of an "actual controversy.” See Shavers v Attorney General, 402 Mich 554, 588-589; 267 NW2d 72 (1978).
For a summary of the rather convoluted facts in Flynn, see n 13.
One policy argument which the majority does articulate is that its reading of the Paternity Act "comports with the traditional preference for respecting the presumed legitimacy of a child born during a marriage.” Ante, p 246. Finding that Girard has standing in this case would not conflict in any way, however, with the rebuttable presumption of marital paternity under Serafín. What Girard seeks is precisely the opportunity to rebut that presumption. Unlike amicus curiae the Family Law Council, I do not understand Girard to be *270claiming the right to establish his paternity over the husband’s by a mere preponderance of the evidence, rather than under the "clear and convincing” evidentiary burden established by Serañn.
Given the high degree of certainty permitted by modern-day paternity testing procedures, such subtle distinctions between burdens of proof are moot in any event. See Mark D. Kolins, M.D., The role of paternity testing in cases of disputed parentage, 63 Mich B J 1169 (1984) (human leukocyte antigen [hla] test capable of disproving paternity with certainty and of proving paternity with up to 99.9 percent accuracy).
Mathews v Eldridge, 424 US 319, 333; 96 S Ct 893; 47 L Ed 2d 18 (1976).
See n 20.
The Attorney General argues that Syrkowski somehow fits within his narrow conception of a permissible support action under the Paternity Act, but this cannot be plausibly maintained. The mother in Syrkowski had no need to seek child support from the biological father in that case because the mother did not even have — or claim any interest in having — custody of the child. Syrkowski involved a collusive, cooperative arrangement in which the mother had already voluntarily relinquished custody to the biological father and his wife, pursuant to a "surrogate mother” agreement. Thus, the father was already supporting the child voluntarily, without any need for legal action. While the Attorney General rejects the notion that the Paternity Act could properly be used for the "sole purpose” of legally determining the putative father’s paternity, that is, in effect, precisely what this Court approved in Syrkowski. Were it not for their desire to secure a legal determination of paternity, as such, the parties in Syrkowski would never have commenced their collusive lawsuit in the first place. Syrkowski is indisputably just as remote — if not more so— from the Attorney General’s conception of a permissible support action as is the instant case.
The majority appears to adopt the Attorney General’s argument that the sole purpose of MCL 722.714(6); MSA 25.494(6), traced back to its ancestor provision, 1941 PA 316, § 12, is to enable the father to beat the mother to the courthouse by filing his claim first, thereby avoiding the embarrassments and legal complications of being a defendant to the mother’s claim. Before 1986, such embarrassments and complications included possible issuance of a warrant for the father’s arrest. Such quasi-criminal aspects of the Paternity Act were eliminated by 1986 PA 107, however, and the statute now provides for issuing a summons "in the same manner as ... in civil actions.” MCL 722.714(5); MSA 25.494(5). The rationale proposed by the majority and the Attorney General makes no sense in any event. If a father wants to avoid being named a defendant in a paternity claim brought by the mother, and thereby, under the archaic version of the statute, "forestall a warrant upon the action of the mother,” ante, p 249, he does not need to file any preemptive claim of his own. He can simply acknowledge his paternity and provide support voluntarily, obviating the need for any contested legal action at all.
The majority reads far too much into the text of the archaic 1941 enactment. The majority would convert a logically necessary and unremarkable consequence of the father’s filing of his claim — that it "shall be a bar to the issuance of a warrant or prosecution thereof,” 1941 PA 316, § 12 — into the underlying goal of the father’s claim. But if the mother herself asserts the father’s paternity and seeks support from him, the father, under the very terms of the 1941 enactment, can forestall the mother’s complaint by acknowledging his paternity and agreeing voluntarily to an "order or arrangement for the support of [the] child,” id. The 1941 enactment made the failure of the mother to seek paternal support an actual prerequisite to the father’s standing, by barring his claim where an order at the mother’s instigation "has [already] been made or proceedings instituted therefor,” id. The *275present version of the statute, of course, places no restrictions or limitations whatsoever on a good-faith complaint by a "putative father of a child born out of wedlock” seeking "an order of filiation declaring paternity and providing for the support of the child.” See MCL 722.714(6); MSA 25.494(6), MCL 722.717(1); MSA 25.497(1). Under either the archaic or the modern version of the statute, by the simple process of logical elimination, the father’s independent standing becomes most useful and important precisely in those cases where he truly wants to claim paternity and provide support but where the mother, for whatever reason, denies his paternity and wants to have nothing to do with him.
The Attorney General suggests that when a putative father brings a paternity claim regarding a child born to a married woman, the circuit court should first, as a prerequisite to finding that the claimant has standing to litigate the issue of paternity itself, "make a preliminary determination of whether there is a true issue of support of the child.” This puts the cart before the horse, however, and would be cumbersome and unworkable in practice. The issue of paternity is capable of far simpler and more expeditious resolution than the issue of financial support needs. It would be unthinkable to subject the mother and her husband to the inconvenience of litigating the latter issue before it has even been determined that the claimant is indeed the natural father. Furthermore, the natural father’s interest, even in providing support, is presumably not limited to simply meeting the child’s objective material needs, but would include establishing a meaningful emotional relationship, whether through support, visitation, actual custody, or some combination of the three. The natural father’s potential interest in such a relationship, whatever weight it may be entitled to in light of the child’s best interests, bears little or no relationship to whether the child’s objective material needs are already being adequately met by the mother and her husband.
Such a statutory scheme could hardly be said to protect children in any consistent manner from "the stigma of illegitimacy,” a goal often cited in support of such statutes. Compare Michael H v Gerald D, 491 US 110, 119-120; 109 S Ct 2333; 105 L Ed 2d 91 (1989) (opinion of Scalia, J.) with id., pp 161-162 and n 4 (White, J., dissenting).
See, e.g., Little v Streater, 452 US 1; 101 S Ct 2202; 68 L Ed 2d 627 (1981).
See Michael H v Gerald D, n 22 supra; Lehr v Robertson, 463 US 248; 103 S Ct 2985; 77 L Ed 2d 614 (1983); see also part m.
In view of my conclusions with regard to the Paternity Act, I need not discuss the Child Custody Act at any length. I agree with the majority that paternity actions should generally be brought under, and governed by, the Paternity Act. I also agree that if the majority were correct in its construction of the Paternity Act, Girard would not qualify as a “parent” under the Child Custody Act. I note, however, that Ruppel v Lesner, 421 Mich 559; 364 NW2d 665 (1984), on which the majority relies, does not by itself have any bearing whatsoever on the issues raised in this case, because there was simply no dispute in Ruppel as to the identity of the "parents.”
Given my construction of the Paternity Act, I would conclude that a man who has been properly adjudicated to be the natural father of a child under that statute qualifies as a "parent” under the Child Custody Act, and may as such litigate custody and visitation thereunder. Again, as I have already noted, it cannot be emphasized too *277strongly that nothing in this conclusion suggests or prejudges what the outcome of any such custody or visitation claim would or should be on the merits. That would be governed by "the best interests of the child.” MCL 722.25; MSA 25.312(5).
But see Stanley v Illinois, 405 US 645; 92 S Ct 1208; 31 L Ed 2d 551 (1972), and Caban v Mohammed, 441 US 380; 99 S Ct 1760; 60 L Ed 2d 297 (1979).
The majority correctly notes that the constitutional validity as such of the Paternity Act, under either the United States or Michigan Constitution, is outside the scope of this appeal and, therefore, not decided in this case. See ante, p 234, n 3. The correct interpretation of the Paternity Act as a statute is most assuredly within the scope of this appeal, however, and in construing that statute we are obliged to follow that basic rule of statutory construction, cited above, which requires us to interpret statutes in a manner avoiding potential constitutional problems. It is in that regard that I raise the constitutional concerns discussed above. These concerns cannot be brushed aside as easily as the majority suggests.