Opinion
This case considers the simple question of whether a paternity blood test may be judicially compelled at the behest of a father who is seeking to vacate a three-year-old paternity judgment. Appellant City and County of San Francisco (City) contends that the court abused its discretion in ordering paternity blood testing at the behest of respondent Jose Cartagena, the judicially determined father, prior to a ruling on Cartagena’s motion to set aside the paternity judgment. The City claims that the blood
I. Facts and Procedural History
On April 24, 1990, the City brought a complaint under Welfare and Institutions Code sections 11350.1 and 11475.1 for child support, reimbursement of public assistance, and establishment of paternity against Cartagena. The action alleged Cartagena was the father of a baby boy named Emmanuel Cartagena bom in September 1989. Cartagena, who was not represented by counsel, entered into a stipulation on June 28, 1990, wherein he acknowledged being Emmanuel’s father. In the documents signed by Cartagena, he was advised that if he denied being Emmanuel’s father he had “the right to have blood tests and to have a court trial.” Pursuant to the stipulation, a judgment issued establishing Cartagena’s paternity on July 2, 1990. It appears of record that Cartagena has established a father-son relationship with Emmanuel, holding him out as his child, exercising regular visitation privileges, and providing him with material items such as clothing.
Three years after the stipulated judgment of paternity was entered, Cartagena for the first time questioned Emmanuel’s paternity. On August 5, 1993, Cartagena, represented by counsel, sought to vacate the stipulated judgment. In supporting affidavits, it was asserted that the custodial parent, Ursula Thomas, had told various mutual acquaintances that Cartagena was not Emmanuel’s father. Cartagena asked the court to relieve him of the legal effect of his stipulation to paternity because it was induced by the fraudulent misrepresentation of the child’s mother that Cartagena was Emmanuel’s father. He also asked the court to order blood testing of the mother and child in order to verify his paternity.
The parties stipulated that a superior court commissioner could hear the matter and make recommendations to the presiding judge of the superior court. A hearing was held in which Poneva Knox, Cartagena’s present girlfriend, was the sole witness. She testified that on two separate occasions she had heard Thomas say that Cartagena was not Emmanuel’s father. On cross-examination, Poneva Knox admitted that there was ill will between her and Thomas, which, at one point, had escalated to a physical altercation.
At the conclusion of the hearing, the commissioner took the matter of vacating the judgment of paternity under submission and recommended to the presiding judge that blood testing be ordered in the interim. The purpose
Counsel for the City vigorously opposed the proposed blood testing, repeatedly arguing that as long as the final judgment establishing Cartagena’s paternity was in existence an order for blood testing was inappropriate. The presiding judge adopted the commissioner’s recommendations and granted Cartagena’s blood testing request. The City took a timely appeal.
II. Discussion
At the outset, the posture of this case bears emphasizing. The challenged blood testing order was made at the same time that the legal issue of vacating or setting aside the paternity judgment was taken upder submission. Consequently, this case comes before us with a judgment of paternity that is challenged but is still in effect. 1 The precise and controlling issue presented by the appeal was aptly framed by Cartagena, albeit in the form of an assertion: “Ordering blood tests was within the statutory authority of the trial court and did not require an implicit vacating of the existing [paternity] judgment.”
By the arguments advanced on appeal, it is clear Cartagena seeks admission of blood test results in the hope that it will substantiate his claim that he is not the natural father of Emmanuel and to help prove that he was fraudulently induced by the child’s mother to stipulate to paternity. We consider each of these points individually.
A. Establishing Nonpaternity
As Cartagena points out, ordinarily a blood test is a proper aspect of discovery in a paternity action as being a highly accurate indicator of paternity. (See Fam. Code, § 7551;
County of El Dorado
v.
Schneider
(1987)
The court in
City and County of San Francisco
v.
Stanley
(1994)
B. Collateral Attack on Paternity Judgment
Notwithstanding the bar to a subsequent action that may result from application of the doctrine of res judicata, a party may still seek relief from a final judgment by appealing to the equitable power of the court. Under certain limited circumstances a court, sitting in equity, can set aside or modify a valid final judgment obtained by fraud, mistake, or accident. (For a complete discussion of this topic, see our prior opinions in
In re Marriage of Stevenot
(1984)
Cartagena seeks blood test results in the hope this evidence will help prove that he was fraudulently induced by the child’s mother to stipulate to paternity. Whatever the outcome of the blood testing, it will not be persuasive on the type of fraud necessary to set aside the paternity judgment. The type of fraud necessary to vacate a final judgment is extrinsic fraud, not fraud which is intrinsic to the trial of the case itself.
(Stevenot, supra,
The recent case of
In re Marriage of Grissom
(1994)
By contrast, fraud is intrinsic and not a valid ground for setting aside a judgment when the party has been given notice of the action and has had an opportunity to present his case and to protect himself from any mistake or fraud of his adversary but has unreasonably neglected to do so.
(Stevenot, supra,
As illustrated by these cases, in demonstrating extrinsic fraud, it is insufficient for a party to come into court and simply assert that the judgment was premised upon false facts. The party must show that such facts could not reasonably have been discovered prior to the entry of judgment.
Cartagena argues that Thomas’s misrepresentations he was Emmanuel’s father constituted extrinsic fraud, which would justify the court vacating the 1990 paternity judgment, and that the “blood test evidence is crucial in determining the question of fraud.” In
Brown
v.
Superior
Court (1979)
From the remarks made on record, it appears the commissioner considered the ordering of blood tests to be in Emmanuel’s best interest in learning the identity of his biological father. In the unique circumstances of this case, the best interest analysis is a double-edged sword. It is true that the blood tests ordered by the court could “play a crucial role in the accurate determination of paternity.”
(Schneider, supra,
C. Conclusion
In this case, there was no judicial determination on whether Cartagena had proven the requisite evidentiary basis to vacate the judgment of paternity. Before Emmanuel and his mother may be forced to undergo blood testing, the issue of vacating the paternity judgment must be resolved. If the court rules Cartagena has met his burden of proof and sets aside that judgment, the paternity of the child is then placed directly in issue and the blood test becomes a proper subject of discovery. If the court rules Cartagena is not entitled to set aside the judgment, he is barred from challenging the paternity determination and blood test evidence would provide him no legal recourse. Consequently, the order requiring Emmanuel and his mother to take blood tests at this juncture was premature and an abuse of the court’s discretion.
III. Disposition
The judgment is reversed.
King, J., and Haning, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied July 13, 1995, and respondent’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied August 31, 1995. Mosk, J., Kennard, J., and Werdegar, J., were of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
Notes
We refuse to indulge in the presumption, advanced by the City, that by ordering the blood tests, the court implicitly granted Cartagena’s motion to vacate the paternity judgment.
Stanley, supra,
A stipulation to paternity is also voidable if a parent who was unrepresented by counsel can establish that he was not advised of his right to trial; that he was unaware of that right; and that if he had been properly advised, he would not have executed the agreement. (See
County of Los Angeles
v.
Soto
(1984)
