Defendant Raymond Chandler appeals from a jury verdict finding him to be the father of a child of plaintiff Kathy Borland. The jury also awarded Kathy Borland and the State Department of Social Services damages for support of the minor child. Chandler asserts that the trial court erred in allowing the child to be exhibited to the jury so that it might determine whether the child resembled him. He also argues that the action was barred by laches. We hold that the action was not barred by laches, but reverse and remand because an inadequate foundation was laid for allowing the jury to see the child in person.
Beginning in January or February of 1973, Chandler and Kathy Borland began dating. They saw each other for several *145 months and regularly had sexual intercourse. In the late summer or early fall of 1973, Chandler left Utah to work on a construction site in Rock Springs, Wyoming. Borland discovered she was pregnant in October of 1973. On June 8, 1974, Borland bore the child whose paternity is at issue here.
This action was begun by Borland and the Utah State Department of Social Services in 1980. Trial was held in 1983, at which time Borland testified that she had sexual intercourse with Chandler when he returned to Utah from Rock Springs, Wyoming, on weekends during August and September of 1973. She also testified that she did not have sexual intercourse with men other than Chandler from June of 1973 until the birth of the child. Borland testified that after she informed Chandler of her pregnancy, he offered at various times to pay for an abortion, marry her, support her and the child, and at one time offered her $100 to tell the State that he was not the father. Borland also asserted that Chandler acknowledged his paternity when he visited her at Christmas in 1974. Bor-land’s mother testified that Chandler told her that he had offered to marry Borland. Results of an HLA test established that Chandler was not excluded as a possible biological father of the child.
Chandler testified that although he returned to Utah upon occasion after moving to Rock Springs, he did not have sexual intercourse with Borland after July of 1973. He denied having offered to pay for an abortion or to marry Borland. One witness testifying on Chandler’s behalf stated that he had seen Borland with a number of other male companions in September and October of 1973, after Chandler left Utah.
At the beginning of the trial, Chandler sought an order prohibiting the child’s exhibition. The motion was argued at length. The State’s attorney represented to the court that the child would be exhibited only while Borland pointed out specific physical similarities between Chandler and the child. The court then dismissed Chandler’s motion. During trial, the child was allowed in the courtroom for about five minutes during which time his mother identified him. No testimony was introduced relating to specific resemblances between Chandler and the child. At the conclusion of the trial, the jury returned a verdict against Chandler. This appeal followed.
Chandler first argues that the child should not have been exhibited to the jury. He urges this Court to adopt the rule of
Almeida v. Correa,
The rules governing the exhibition of a child to establish paternity vary widely from one jurisdiction to another. Some prohibit exhibition altogether, while others allow a child of any age to be exhibited.
See generally
Annot.,
The identification of a physical characteristic, whether that characteristic is in fact hereditary, what other factors may have helped shape it, and how the characteristic in question is linked to a similar characteristic possessed by the alleged parent are all questions for experts....
*146
Id.
at 570. While the
Almeida
rule has been followed in a few states,
see, e.g., People in re R.D.S.,
The issue, then, is whether the trial court properly allowed the child to be exhibited to the jury under
Anderson.
We conclude that it did not. There is no indication in the record that the trial court found that the child had the necessary “settled features.”
State v. Anderson,
Chandler next argues that a new trial would be improper because the paternity action, instituted seven years after the child’s birth, is barred by laches. He asserts that the State’s failure to prosecute the action in a more timely fashion was prejudicial because the lapse of time has prevented him from gathering and producing documents and witnesses essential to his defense. The State and Borland, relying upon
Zito v. Butler,
The principle relied upon by the plaintiffs here has its roots in the common law distinction between law and equity. At common law, an equitable defense could not be raised to a legal action, and because a statutory action was legal in nature, equitable defenses would not apply.
See
27 Am.Jur.2d
Equity
§ 154 (1966). This seems to be the theory behind
Zito,
a per curiam opinion. However, Utah long ago abolished any formal distinction between law and equity.
See
Utah R.CÍV.P. 2. It is well established that equitable defenses may be applied in actions at law and that principles of equity apply wherever necessary to prevent injustice.
Hilton v. Sloan,
*147
To successfully assert a laches defense, a defendant must establish both that the plaintiff unreasonably delayed in bringing an action and that the defendant was prejudiced by that delay.
Papanikolas Brothers Enterprises v. Sugarhouse Shopping Center Associates,
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
.
Zito’s
analysis of the legal principles applicable to the time within which a paternity action must be instituted is weak. A better reasoned and more recent statement of the law may be found in
Szdrak v. Sandoval,
