Opinion
Charisma R. (Charisma) and Kristina S. (Kristina) were a same-sex couple who began dating in July 1997, moved in together in August 1998, and registered as domestic partners with the State of California in January 2002. 1 In December 2001, the couple decided they wanted to have children and Kristina would be the first to try to become pregnant. Following *366 several months of effort, Kristina became pregnant by artificial insemination and gave birth to Amalia in April 2003. In July 2003, Kristina moved out of the home she shared with Charisma, taking Amalia with her. Kristina appeals from the trial court’s orders declaring Charisma a presumed parent of Amalia and establishing a schedule for reunification of Charisma and Amalia. Among other things, we reject Kristina’s contentions that Charisma did not parent Amalia for a sufficient period of time to be declared a presumed parent under Family Code section 7611, subdivision (d) (hereafter section 7611(d)), 2 and we hold Kristina has not shown the trial court’s orders violate her constitutional rights to equal protection and due process. In a cross-appeal, Charisma contends the court misunderstood the scope of its authority with respect to allocation of her travel expenses for the reunification process. The cross-appeal has merit. We affirm the trial court’s orders except as to allocation of the travel expenses, which we reverse and remand to provide the court an opportunity to exercise its discretion. 3
BACKGROUND
After deciding they wanted children, Charisma and Kristina contacted a sperm bank, jointly filled out the required paperwork to obtain sperm from an anonymous donor, and pursued their goal of Kristina becoming pregnant through in-home artificial insemination. Charisma assisted Kristina in the insemination process. The couple kept a joint journal regarding the process, in which Kristina was referred to as “mommy” and Charisma was referred to as “momma.”
After five months of attempts at in-home insemination, Charisma ordered two additional vials of sperm in early July 2002. On the evening of July 8, Charisma used one vial to inseminate Kristina at home; the next morning Kristina took the second vial to a doctor who inseminated her through intrauterine insemination. One of these two inseminations resulted in Kristina becoming pregnant.
Amalia was bom in April 2003. Charisma was present for the birth and cut the umbilical cord. On the birth certificate, signed by Kristina, Amalia was given a hyphenated last name that was a combination of Charisma’s and Kristina’s last names. The couple brought Amalia into their home and shared parenting responsibilities for the first six weeks of her life. At that point, Kristina returned to work and Charisma cared for Amalia full time during the day; she also provided care at night.
*367 In July 2003, approximately seven weeks after Kristina returned to work, she moved out of the home she shared with Charisma, taking Amalia with her. Since then, and before the trial court ordered reunification in 2008, Kristina allowed Charisma to see Amalia on only two occasions in the summer of 2003. In the summer of 2005, Kristina moved to Texas with Amalia. 4
In May 2004, Charisma filed a petition to establish a parental relationship with Amalia. The trial court denied the petition, concluding that Charisma lacked standing to bring the action under the Uniform Parentage Act (UPA) (§ 7600 et seq.).
(Charisma R. v. Kristina S.
(2006)
On remand, the trial court found that Charisma is a presumed parent and that the presumption had not been rebutted. The court appointed custody evaluators who reported that adoption of a reunification plan would be appropriate. In May 2008, the court adopted a plan for gradual reunification of Charisma and Amalia through joint therapy sessions in Texas with a court-appointed therapist.
DISCUSSION
I. Substantial Evidence Supports the Trial Court’s Finding That the Section 7611(d) Parentage Presumption Is Applicable
Under the UPA, an “interested person” may bring an action to determine the existence or nonexistence of a mother and child relationship. (§ 7650, subd. (a).) Section 7611(d) provides that a man is presumed to be the father of a child if he “receives the child into his home and openly holds out the child as his natural child.” As explained in
Adoption of Michael H.
(1995)
*368
In
Elisa B.,
the El Dorado County District Attorney filed a complaint to establish that Elisa was the parent of twins bom to her former partner, Emily, and to order Elisa to pay child support. Elisa denied she was the children’s parent.
(Elisa B., supra,
On remand from
Charisma I, supra,
A. Kristina’s Evidentiary Objections
Kristina objected below to aspects of declarations filed by Charisma, on the grounds of lack of personal knowledge and lack of foundation. However, the trial court never ruled on her objections. Where a party fails to obtain a ruling from the trial court, the objections generally are not preserved on appeal.
(Bussard v. Minimed, Inc.
(2003)
*370 In any event, the specific evidentiary objections asserted on appeal are either without merit or relate to evidence unnecessary to support the trial court’s judgment. Kristina argues there is no basis to conclude she authored or authorized a birth announcement e-mail, but the announcement is relevant to show that Charisma held out Amalia as her child, regardless of Kristina’s participation or knowledge. Kristina argues there was inadequate foundation to admit various e-mails and postings from Internet chat rooms, mostly related to the efforts to conceive Amalia, and that various declarants made assertions about care Charisma provided for Amalia without personal knowledge. However, as discussed below, the record provides overwhelming support for the trial court’s findings that Charisma actively participated in Amalia’s conception and cared for Amalia following her birth, including averments in Charisma’s declaration and Kristina’s own admissions. Accordingly, Kristina was not prejudiced by any error in admitting the challenged evidence below.
B. Charisma’s Claim to Presumed Parent Status Is Not Defeated by the Limited Duration of Her Parenting of Amalia
Kristina argues that Charisma did not parent Amalia for a sufficient period of time to satisfy section 7611(d).
Whether section 7611(d) requires Charisma to show she parented Amalia for an extended duration is a question of statutory interpretation we decide de novo.
(California Teachers Assn. v. San Diego Community College Dist.
(1981)
*371
Without deciding the issue before this court, prior decisions have addressed the durational issue in defining the term “receives.” The use of “receives” in section 7611(d) has its origins in Civil Code former section 230, which addressed the adoption of an illegitimate child by the father. That section provided: “The father of an illegitimate child, by publicly acknowledging it as his own, receiving it as such, with the consent of his wife, if he is married, into his family, and otherwise treating it as if it were a legitimate child, thereby adopts it as such; and such child is thereupon deemed for all purposes legitimate from the time of its birth.” (Civ. Code, former § 230, repealed by Stats. 1975, ch. 1244, § 8, p. 3196.) When the Legislature enacted the UPA in 1975, it replaced the concept of legitimacy with the concept of parentage and replaced Civil Code former section 230 with the language now in section 7611(d).
(Adoption of Kelsey S.
(1992)
The court in
Kelsey S.
addressed the “receiving” requirement, both preUPA and post-UPA. In that case, the alleged father
8
did not physically receive the child into his home because the birth mother sought to put the child up for adoption.
(Kelsey S., supra,
*372
Kelsey S.
also pointed out that under the pre-UPA scheme there was a policy of liberal construction in favor of finding legitimation, so that children did not end up without a legal father.
(Kelsey S., supra,
1 Cal.4th at pp. 828-829.) The court stated there was no need to “strainQ” to find a father through the doctrine of constructive receipt because in the case before it there were two competing fathers, so the child would end up with a legal father in any event.
(Ibid.)
Although the court declined to liberally construe the requirement in the case before it,
9
the court did not suggest that actual receipt of a child
for a significant duration
is required. To the contrary, the court discussed
Michael U. v. Jamie B.
(1985)
Moreover, as previously mentioned, the use of the term “receives” in section 7611(d) originates in the use of the term “receiving” in Civil Code former section 230. As
Kelsey S.
explained, under the pre-UPA cases it was sufficient if the alleged father “briefly” received the child into the home.
(Kelsey S., supra,
1 Cal.4th at pp. 827-828.) We presume the Legislature was aware of the judicial interpretations of the receiving element at the time it adopted the UPA.
(People v. Harrison
(1989)
None of the cases Kristina cites suggests section 7611(d) imposes a durational requirement to obtain presumed parent status. In
Brian C. v. Ginger K.
(2000)
In re
A.A. (2003)
*374
Lacking authority supporting her interpretation, Kristina essentially asks us to “judicially rewrite the statute” to impose a durational requirement that is absent from the plain language of section 7611(d); that we cannot do.
(Kelsey S., supra,
C. Substantial Evidence Supports the Trial Court’s Findings That Charisma Received Amalia into Her Home and Openly Held out Amalia As Her Natural Child
In addition to arguing that Charisma did not parent Amelia for a sufficient duration, Kristina more generally challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support the trial court’s findings that Charisma received Amalia into her home and openly held out Amalia as her natural child, as required to establish presumed parentage under section 7611(d).
As relevant to the “receives” element, after Amalia’s birth in April 2003, Charisma and Kristina brought Amalia into their apartment and shared parenting responsibilities for the first six weeks of her life. For the next seven weeks, Charisma cared for Amalia full time during the day, and also provided care at night. Kristina seems to suggest that the apartment was not Charisma’s home because there is no evidence both of their names were on the lease. However, she presents no authority or reasoned argument that Charisma *375 needed to present such proof to satisfy section 7611(d). Substantial evidence shows the apartment was Charisma’s home: Kristina in her declaration averred they shared an apartment for almost five years and the apartment was “our common residence”; Charisma referred to the apartment as their “shared” home and averred they obtained renter’s insurance in both their names; and the apartment manager averred they lived there together. Kristina disputes the amount and quality of Charisma’s care of Amalia and contributions to the household. But, as the trial court reasoned, “there may be disagreements or discrepancies between the parties as to how much care was given by [Charisma] or the quality of that care. The court does not particularly find that to be relevant in terms of whether or not she, in fact, received the child into her home. It is clear to the court from the evidence that was submitted that [Charisma] did care for the child after the child was bom.” 11
The following evidence showed that Charisma openly held Amalia out as her natural child: 12 Charisma was present during Amalia’s birth and cut the umbilical cord; she gave Amalia a hyphenated last name including her name on Amalia’s birth certificate; she brought Amalia into her and Kristina’s shared home; she held herself out as Amalia’s mother in a birth announcement, a baby shower, a gift registry, an online message board for women trying to conceive, and communications with various people, including the nurse at a “well baby” visit, a visiting former coworker, and strangers in the street; she shared in the care of Amalia until Kristina went back to work; and she cared for Amalia after Kristina returned to work until Kristina moved out with Amalia.
Clearly, Kristina is mistaken in asserting the evidence showed only that Charisma “told a few people that [Amalia] was ‘her baby.’ ” The evidence showed that Charisma openly and publicly asserted her parentage in various forums and to numerous people. Kristina points to no evidence demonstrating any equivocating on the part of Charisma regarding her parentage (cf. Spencer W., supra, 48 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1651, 1653-1654), and she presents no authority or reasoned argument that any particular number or sorts of public acknowledgements are necessary to satisfy section 7611(d).
*376
Instead of discussing the particular facts showing that Charisma received Amalia into her home and held her out as her natural child, Kristina argues broadly that Charisma failed to present sufficient evidence of a parental relationship to qualify as a presumed parent under section 7611(d). She cites
In re
T.R., where the court stated: “In determining whether a man has ‘receiv[ed] a child into his home and openly h[eld] out the child’ as his own [citation], courts have looked to such factors as whether the man actively helped the mother in prenatal care; whether he paid pregnancy and birth expenses commensurate with his ability to do so; whether he promptly took legal action to obtain custody of the child; whether he sought to have his name placed on the birth certificate; whether and how long he cared for the child; whether there is unequivocal evidence that he had acknowledged the child; the number of people to whom he had acknowledged the child; whether he provided for the child after it no longer resided with him; whether, if the child needed public benefits, he had pursued completion of the requisite paperwork; and whether his care was merely incidental. [Citations.]”
(In re T.R., supra,
Kristina’s attempt to analogize this case to
Spencer W.
fails. In that case, the alleged father, Leonard, lived with the mother at the time of the birth but not at the time of conception.
(Spencer W., supra,
*377 “[t]he evidence permitted the conclusion that Leonard did not receive the child into his home, but instead that mother permitted Leonard to reside in her home, and that Leonard’s residence with [the child] was not demonstrative of Leonard’s commitment to the child but reflected that Leonard acted out of personal convenience and self-interest.” (Id. at p. 1653.) The court also concluded that “a trier of fact could conclude Leonard’s actions, as a whole, were not sufficient to satisfy the requirement that Leonard ‘openly and publicly admit paternity.’ [Citation.]” (Id. at pp. 1653-1654.) The present case is unlike Spencer W. The record overwhelmingly supports the trial court’s findings that Charisma welcomed Amalia into her shared home with Kristina and consistently acknowledged her parental relationship and responsibilities to the child.
We also reject Kristina’s attempt to analogize this case to
In re Sarah C.
(1992)
It is important to note that in the two cases Kristina principally relies upon,
Spencer W.
and
Sarah C.,
the Courts of Appeal were reviewing trial court decisions
rejecting
presumed parentage claims.
(Spencer W., supra,
48 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1653-1654;
Sarah C., supra,
*378 II. The Trial Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion in Concluding There Is No Basis to Rebut the Parentage Presumption in This Case
Section 7612, subdivision (a), provides that “a presumption under Section 7611 is a rebuttable presumption affecting the burden of proof and may be rebutted in an appropriate action only by clear and convincing evidence.” Thus, Kristina bore the burden below of rebutting the presumption that Charisma was Amalia’s parent with clear and convincing evidence.
(Comino v. Kelley
(1994)
In an appropriate case, clear and convincing evidence that an alleged parent has no biological tie to the child may defeat presumed parent status. (See
Elisa B., supra,
In
Charisma I,
this court instructed the trial court that, if it found Charisma is a presumed parent of Amalia under section 7611(d), it should then determine whether the facts identified in
Elisa B.
on the rebuttal issue are true. We explained: “If the trial court finds that Charisma is a presumed parent and finds true all of the facts outlined in
Elisa B.
on the rebuttal issue, those findings support a conclusion that this is not an appropriate case to allow rebuttal of the presumption of Charisma’s parenthood; in other words, the evidence that she has no biological tie to Amalia does not rebut the presumption. Absent other facts justifying rebuttal of the presumption [citation], any other conclusion would be an abuse of discretion. [Citation.]”
(Charisma I, supra,
*379 A. Substantial Evidence Supports the Trial Court’s Determination That the Elisa B. Factors Are Present in This Case
The trial court made findings on the Elisa B. factors to support its conclusion that Kristina had failed to rebut the presumption of parenthood under section 7611(d). 16 Substantial evidence supports the trial court’s finding that Charisma actively participated in Amalia’s conception with the understanding she would parent Amalia with Kristina. Charisma and Kristina were in a romantic relationship and registered domestic partners in California at the time Amalia was conceived. After the couple decided to have children, they contacted a sperm bank and jointly filled out the required paperwork to obtain sperm from an anonymous donor. The sperm bank’s “Patient Registration Form” lists Kristina as the patient and Charisma as her “Spouse[]/Partner[],” and indicates they are registered domestic partners. The couple provided Charisma’s credit card information for billing purposes and both women signed the form. Both Charisma and Kristina signed a consent form for therapeutic insemination and a release form for home insemination. Charisma completed the sperm bank’s “Donor Selection Form” listing donor choices and both women’s physical characteristics. Charisma placed two of the orders for sperm (there were three orders in total), one of which included the sperm that impregnated Kristina.
For five months, Charisma actively participated in Kristina’s in-home artificial insemination efforts. 17 The couple kept a joint journal regarding the process, in which Kristina was referred to as “mommy” and Charisma was referred to as “momma.” In the journal both women describe their excitement at the prospect of parenthood. The journal also contains statements such as “We decided to try to inseminate today.” In another entry, Charisma describes in detail her effort to learn how to perform the insemination and how she “blundered” the first attempt. After Kristina became pregnant, her mother addressed e-mails to Charisma and Kristina to “the mommies.” Charisma communicated with her coworker, a coworker of Kristina’s, an online community of other women trying to conceive, and others regarding her and Kristina’s efforts to have a child.
*380
Kristina disregards this overwhelming body of evidence in asserting that “the trial court substantially relied upon statements in emails made and postings from online chat rooms” without evidence of Kristina’s authorship. And, despite Kristina’s protestations, even these postings are relevant to Charisma’s understanding and intentions. Even absent these postings, substantial evidence plainly supports the trial court’s finding. As in
Elisa B., supra,
Substantial evidence also supports the trial court’s finding that Charisma voluntarily accepted the rights and obligations of parenthood after Amalia was bom: She was present during Amalia’s birth and cut the umbilical cord; she gave Amalia a hyphenated last name including her name; she brought Amalia into her home; she held herself out as Amalia’s mother to various people in various forums; she shared in the care of Amalia until Kristina went back to work; and she cared for Amalia after Kristina returned to work until Kristina moved out with Amalia. Kristina concedes that Charisma “watched” Amalia after she returned to work, but she disputes the amount and quality of Charisma’s care and contributions to the household. We must accept the trial court’s resolution of this factual dispute. (Howard v. Owens Corning, supra, 72 Cal.App.4th at pp. 630-631.)
Again, an underlying theme of Kristina’s argument is that the trial court should have found tire parentage presumption rebutted because Charisma did not parent Amalia for a long period of time. While the duration of parenting could be relevant to the rebuttal analysis, there is no specific durational requirement. Kristina points out that in Elisa B., supra, 37 Cal.4th at pages 114—115, 123, the alleged parent played a substantial parental role for years. However, the court did not suggest it would be appropriate to rebut the parentage presumption solely because there is no lengthy period of parenting. In fact, the court’s holding omits any reference to a durational requirement. Of the three factors outlined by the court, only the “voluntarily accepted the rights and obligations of parenthood” factor (id. at p. 125) is one in which duration could arguably be of any relevance. But, despite the fact that Elisa had parented the children for years, the Supreme Court elected not to describe the factor with language including a temporal dimension, such as “for a significant period of time.” 18 Moreover, it is undisputed that it was Kristina’s unilateral conduct in moving out with Amalia that prevented *381 Charisma from parenting Amalia for a longer period of time. Accordingly, this is not a case where the short duration of parenting reflects negatively on an alleged parent’s commitment to establishing a parental relationship. The relatively short period that Charisma parented Amalia is not alone a basis to rebut the parentage presumption. 19
The trial court’s decision is well supported by the evidence.
B. The Trial Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion in Concluding That No Other Facts Justified Rebuttal of the Parentage Presumption
In
Charisma I,
supra,
Kristina argues the trial court erred in failing to find the presumption rebutted based on a single photograph of Amalia that Charisma posted online. The claimed objectionable photograph is one of dozens included in an online photo album. It depicts a newborn, naked Amalia from the neck down, apparently in the hospital because of the presence of monitors and cords. The baby’s genitalia are visible, although the photograph does not emphasize the *382 genitalia. Kristina also refers in passing to two other photographs posted online, which depict her breastfeeding Amalia; one of Kristina’s breasts is partially visible in both photographs. The circumstances of the online posting of the photographs are unclear. In a declaration, Charisma averred that she and Kristina jointly agreed to create an online photo album after the birth of Amalia, and that album was “the only place where we kept on-line photos of Amalia.” The link to the album was shared only with family and friends, although others could find it if they searched by name. 20 Kristina averred that she was upset when she learned that the photographs were online and that she contacted the Newark Police Department, which requested that Charisma remove the pictures from the Internet. Charisma complied. The breastfeeding photographs are not graphic and the photograph of Amalia is not child pornography. 21 At most Charisma demonstrated an isolated instance of poor judgment in including those photographs in a large group of appropriate photographs posted online. 22
The evidence presented by Kristina is not comparable to the evidence justifying rebuttal of the parentage presumption in
In re T.R., supra,
Finally, Kristina contends extending presumed parent status to Charisma is not consistent with “the purposes of the parentage presumption.” Kristina principally relies on
Elisa B., supra,
*384 Kristina also contends it is inconsistent with the purposes of the presumption to extend presumed parent status to an individual who has not “demonstrated a commitment to creating a substantial familial relationship with a child.” Assuming that to be true, the trial court found Charisma did demonstrate such commitment, and the court’s findings are supported by substantial evidence. Kristina’s additional argument that an extended period of parenting is necessary to demonstrate that commitment is not supported by section 7611(d) or the case law, as explained previously.
ITT. Kristina’s Constitutional Claims Are Without Merit
A. This Court Will Exercise Its Discretion to Decide the Constitutional Claims
In
Charisma I, supra,
Typically, courts exercise their discretion to allow issues to be raised for the first time on appeal when “the issue is purely legal and presented to [the court] on undisputed facts, and involves a matter of public interest . . . .”
(Bialo
v.
Western Mutual Ins. Co.
(2002)
Because Kristina’s constitutional claims are a matter of substantial public interest in this rapidly evolving area of family law, we exercise our discretion to decide the claims presented by Kristina on appeal in light of the trial court’s factual findings.
B. Kristina’s Equal Protection Claim Is Without Merit
Kristina contends the trial court’s order violates the federal and state constitutional guarantees of equal protection because she was accorded disparate treatment on the basis of gender. “Broadly stated, equal protection of the laws means ‘that no person or class of persons shall be denied the same protection of the laws . . . enjoyed by other persons or other classes in like circumstances in their lives, liberty and property and in their pursuit of happiness.’ [Citation.] In determining whether such a deprivation has occurred, the court’s ultimate task is to examine the validity of the underlying purpose, and the extent to which the disputed statutory classification promotes such purpose. [Citations.]”
(People v. Wutzke
(2002)
*386
Kristina’s argument she was accorded disparate treatment on the basis of gender rests on two Court of Appeal decisions in which men were denied presumed parent status,
Spencer W., supra,
We have already rejected Kristina’s attempt to analogize this case to Spencer W. and Sarah C. To summarize, in Spencer W., the alleged father did not have his name placed on the birth certificate, he was “equivocal” in acknowledging his paternity, and he abandoned the child when the mother stopped supporting him. (Spencer W., supra, 48 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1650-1651.) In Sarah C., the alleged father did not assist the mother during the pregnancy, did not seek to have his name listed on the birth certificate, and did not inform the mother’s husband of his paternity claim. (Sarah C., supra, 8 Cal.App.4th at pp. 972-973.) For the reasons stated previously, the present case is distinguishable from Spencer W. and Sarah C.
Kristina has not shown that a similarly situated biological mother opposing a petition to establish presumed parentage would be treated differently under the law if the alleged parent, lacking a biological connection to the child, were a man instead of a woman. In other words, Kristina has not shown that a case involving a man in Charisma’s circumstances would be decided any differently under the law. (See
Elisa B., supra,
C. Kristina’s Due Process Claim Is Without Merit
Kristina contends the trial court’s ruling, declaring Charisma a presumed parent “over [Kristina’s] objections as the fit biological mother,” violated her federal and state constitutional rights to due process. In particular, citing
Troxel v. Granville
(2000)
In
Troxel,
the United States Supreme Court struck down on due process grounds a visitation order under a Washington statute that allowed “ ‘[a]ny person’ to petition a superior court for visitation rights ‘at any time’ ” and authorized the court “to grant such visitation rights whenever ‘visitation may serve the best interest of the child.’ ”
(Troxel, supra,
Troxel
is inapposite. There, the court considered a nonparental visitation statute
(Troxel, supra,
Although Kristina fails to frame the issue in this fashion, her true complaint is that the state has seen fit to declare a person without a biological connection to Amalia a parent. This involves a different liberty interest than those at issue in
Troxel
and other cases cited by Kristina; in those cases, the identity of the parents was not in dispute.
(Troxel,
supra,
*389
Not only has Kristina failed to present relevant authorities and analysis regarding the actual asserted liberty interest at issue, but she fails to address the “complex balancing of competing interests”
(Glucksberg, supra,
We point out these competing interests and considerations to elucidate the fallacy of Kristina’s simplistic analogy to
Troxel, supra,
We conclude Kristina has failed to meet her burden of showing that the order declaring Charisma to be Amalia’s second parent was an unconstitutional infringement of her state and federal rights to substantive due process. (See
Dawn D., supra,
*390 IV., V *
VI. Charisma’s Cross-appeal
The court-appointed custody evaluators recommended a gradual process to reestablish Charisma’s relationship with Amalia, including joint therapy sessions in Texas with a court-appointed therapist. In its tentative order following the April 2008 trial regarding custody and visitation, the trial court ordered the parties to equally share the costs of the reunification process, including the therapist’s fees and Charisma’s airfare costs to travel to Texas. After Kristina objected, the court concluded it lacked authority to require Kristina to pay a share of Charisma’s travel costs because there was no child support order and Kristina was not technically a “move away” parent. The court also stated that forcing Kristina to bear a portion of the travel costs would be “punitive,” which was a reference to Kristina’s argument that forcing her to bear a portion of the costs would be a “punitive penalty against” her “exercise of her constitutional right to travel.” The court required Charisma to bear 100 percent of the travel costs.
In her cross-appeal, Charisma contends the trial court erred in concluding it lacked authority to order the parties to share the travel expenses. She argues the court had broad discretion to apportion the costs of visitation in the best interests of the child. We agree. In the proceeding at issue, to determine custody and visitation issues in a UPA action (§ 3021, subd. (f)), the court had “the widest discretion to choose a parenting plan that is in the best interest of the child” (§ 3040, subd. (b)). (See also
In re Marriage of Burgess
(1996)
In
Burgess, supra,
Kristina, in her briefing on the cross-appeal, does not dispute that the trial court had authority to order the parties to share travel expenses and does not argue that such an order would have violated her constitutional right to travel. Instead, she asserts that the trial court actually exercised its discretion and concluded it would be inappropriate to require Kristina to share the travel costs. That argument is without merit. The court’s final order on the issue states that it initially “was inclined to order that [Charisma’s] travel costs to Texas be split 50/50, but [Kristina] objected to this provision.” The court then noted that the issue sometimes comes up in the context of child support orders and in the context of “move aways.” The court concluded: “Here there is no child support order or request for one, and [Kristina] moved away at a time when under the then-current state of the law [Charisma] had no standing to object and the court no power to impose conditions on the move. Under these circumstances, the court concludes that forcing [Kristina] to bear a portion of [Charisma’s] travel costs would be ‘punitive’ and, more importantly, without authority.” The order is unambiguous; the trial court concluded it lacked authority to require the parties to share the travel expenses.
We remand for the trial court to exercise its discretion to determine whether, in the best interests of Amalia, the parties should share Charisma’s travel costs to Texas for the reunification process.
*392 DISPOSITION
The trial court’s orders are affirmed, except as to allocation of Charisma’s travel expenses for the reunification process. On that issue, we reverse and remand with directions that the court exercise its discretion. Costs on appeal are awarded to Charisma.
Needham, J., and Bruiniers, J., * concurred.
The petition of appellant Kristina S. for review by the Supreme Court was denied September 9, 2009, S175253.
Notes
In order to protect the confidentiality of the minor child, we refer to the parties by their first names.
(Kristine H.
v.
Lisa R.
(2005)
All further undesignated section references are to the Family Code.
On December 15, 2008, Charisma filed a motion for sanctions against Kristina on the ground Kristina’s appeal is frivolous. That motion is denied.
Kristina also terminated her domestic partnership with Charisma in July 2003, rendering inapplicable section 297.5, subdivision (d), which gives domestic partners rights and responsibilities with respect to each other’s children. (§ 299.3, subd. (a); see also
K.M. v. E.G.
(2005)
Section 7612, subdivision (a), provides that “a presumption under Section 7611 is a rebuttable presumption affecting the burden of proof and may be rebutted in an appropriate action only by clear and convincing evidence.”
Kristina asserts she asked the trial court for a written ruling at the December 2006 hearing. In fact, her counsel simply asked whether there would be a written ruling regarding the court’s findings in general; there was no specific request related to the evidentiary objections.
Kelsey S., supra,
“A man who may be the father of a child, but whose biological paternity has not been established, or, in the alternative, has not achieved presumed father status, is an ‘alleged’ father. [Citation.]”
(In re Zacharia D.
(1993)
We need not decide whether liberal construction would be appropriate in the present case, where Amalia will be left without a second legal parent if Charisma is not a presumed parent.
Because Charisma received Amalia into her home within the meaning of section 7611(d), we need not address Charisma’s argument that section 7611(d) would violate her constitutional rights to the extent it allowed Kristina to prevent Charisma from becoming a presumed parent where Charisma has demonstrated as well as she can under the circumstances a full commitment to her parental responsibilities. (See
Kelsey S., supra,
1 Cal.4th at pp. 837, 844, 849;
In re Jerry P.
(2002)
Charisma’s averments on this issue are corroborated in part by a declaration from the apartment manager who had personal knowledge of the care provided by Charisma during the day because she visited with Charisma and Amalia in her apartment after Kristina returned to work.
Notably, Charisma’s lack of biological connection to Amalia does not mean that she could not hold Amalia out as her “natural” child.
(Elisa B., supra,
Kristina’s citations to
Michelle W. v. Ronald W.
(1985)
It is frivolous for Kristina to assert that extending presumed parent status to Charisma would justify extending such status to babysitters, nannies, or other home caretakers. Among other things, such persons would not have engaged in a joint effort to conceive a child in a committed romantic relationship, would not have their last name attached to the child on the birth certificate, and would not be able to hold themselves out as the child’s mother without strenuous objection from the biological mother and her relatives.
We also cautioned that “If not all the facts outlined by
Elisa B.
are present, then the trial court should exercise its discretion with regard to the rebuttal issue based on the evidence and arguments. It may be that not all of the facts emphasized in
Elisa B.
are necessary to a finding that the presumption cannot be rebutted by the lack of a biological tie to the child. Or it may be that there are different facts that justify such a finding.”
(Charisma I, supra,
Kristina does not dispute that there are no competing claims to being Amalia’s second parent.
The trial court found it was impossible to determine whether Amalia’s conception occurred due to one of the home insemination attempts or due to a final attempt at the doctor’s office, because the final home attempt occurred the evening before the doctor’s attempt. In the circumstances of this case, it is not important to our analysis whether actual conception occurred during one of the home attempts with Charisma’s assistance.
In re Nicholas H., supra,
Kristina asserts a two-year cohabitation standard to establish parentage is adopted in the American Bar Association Model Act Governing Assisted Reproductive Technology (Feb. 2008) section 604 (<http://www.abanet.org/family/committees/artmodelact.pdf> [as of June 26, 2009] ) (hereafter Model Act). In fact, the Model Act is consistent with this decision. It provides: “An individual who provides gametes for, or consents to, assisted reproduction by a woman as provided in Section 604 with the intent to be a parent of her child is a parent of the resulting child.” (Model Act, § 603.) Section 604 of the Model Act specifies that “an individual who intends to be a parent of a child bom by assisted reproduction” should sign a written consent, but that failure to sign such consent does “not preclude a finding of parentage if the woman and the intended parent, during the first two years of the child’s life, resided together in the same household with the child and openly held out the child as their own.” In light of the trial court’s findings, there is no basis to conclude that Charisma would have failed to sign a consent to Kristina’s assisted reproduction, had the legal regime embodied in the Model Act been in effect at that time. In fact, Charisma did sign the sperm bank’s “Patient Consent Form for Therapeutic Insemination,” which may be sufficient to render her a parent under section 603 of the Model Act.
Kristina asserts that Charisma linked to the photograph or album in an online chat room, but the cited portions of the record only reflect the posting on a message board of two unobjectionable photographs.
Kristina’s argument that Charisma’s conduct is similar to the parents in
In re Ulysses D.
(2004)
Kristina also refers in passing to evidence she presented below suggesting that Charisma did not provide good care to Amalia. In her reply, Kristina specifically refers to a declaration from her mother, in which her mother avers that “one time” she saw Charisma attempt to feed Amalia by putting a tube down her throat and that she saw Charisma yelling angrily at Kristina while holding Amalia. The trial court described this evidence as differences of opinion regarding the quality of care provided by Charisma.
For example, the minor’s older sister observed the minor lying over Marvin’s lap with her pants and underwear around her anides.
(In re T.R., supra,
The other cases cited by Kristina, all of which involve the presumption that a man is the father of a child conceived by his wife during the marriage, are inapposite.
In re Lisa R.
(1975)
The due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment provides that “[n]o state shall . . . deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law . . . .” (U.S. Const., 14th Amend., § 1.)
Troxel
did not hold that the Washington statute was unconstitutional per se or that the due process clause requires “all nonparental visitation statutes to include a showing of harm or potential harm to the child as a condition precedent to granting visitation.”
(Troxel, supra,
It is not appropriate “to define a fundamental constitutional right or interest in so narrow a fashion that the basic protections afforded by the right are withheld from a class of persons . .. who historically have been denied the benefit of such rights."
(In re Marriage Cases
(2008)
See footnote, ante, page 361.
Judge of the Contra Costa Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
