Commonwealth ex rel. Hall, Appellant, v. Hall
Superior Court of Pennsylvania
September 11, 1969
215 Pa. Super. Ct. 24
We therefore find that the claimant was injured on the premises of his employer and is entitled to recover.
The judgment is reversed and the record is remitted to the Board with instructions to enter a proper award in favor of the claimant.
WATKINS, J., dissents.
Commonwealth ex rel. Hall, Appellant, v. Hall.
Harry J. Oxman, with him Silverberg and Oxman, for appellant.
Henry N. Fineman, for appellee.
OPINION BY WRIGHT, P. J., September 11, 1969:
This appeal arises as the result of a petition filed by Mildred Hall requesting that an order be entered against her former husband, Albert S. Hall, for the support of a child, Lisa, born July 14, 1965. Albert filed an answer denying paternity, together with a petition requesting blood grouping tests. On January 29, 1969, the court below entered an order requiring these tests, and Mildred has appealed.
The record discloses that Albert and Mildred were married on July 22, 1961. Thereafter they lived together until January, 1965, at which time Mildred left the home. Three months later there was a reconciliation, and the parties resumed marital cohabitation. As previously indicated, Lisa was born July 14, 1965. The
Albert‘s petition requesting blood grouping tests was filed under the Uniform Act on Blood Tests to Determine Paternity.
Our analysis of appellate decisions dealing with the requirement of blood grouping tests in actions for child support properly commences with the case of Commonwealth ex rel. O‘Brien v. O‘Brien, 182 Pa. Superior Ct. 584, 128 A. 2d 164. We therein held, in an opinion by the writer affirming an order of the Municipal Court entered by our present colleague, the Honorable THEODORE O. SPAULDING, that the husband did not have the right to demand blood grouping tests under the
The next case to come before us was Commonwealth ex rel. Goldman v. Goldman, 199 Pa. Superior Ct. 274, 184 A. 2d 351. In the meantime, the legislature had repealed the Act of 1951, and had adopted the Uniform
One year later we were presented with the appeal in Commonwealth ex rel. Weston v. Weston, 201 Pa. Superior Ct. 554, 193 A. 2d 782. Two children were born to Mr. and Mrs. Weston while they were living together as husband and wife. There was no suggestion that the husband did not accept these children as his own. An order requiring blood tests was reversed on the ground that the husband was estopped from denying paternity. In his opinion for this court Judge WOODSIDE made the following statement: “There is something inherently repulsive about a man questioning the paternity of children who were conceived by his wife and born to her while he was living with her and who were accepted and held out to the world by him as his children until his and his wife‘s personal differences led to a support action“. The present writer filed a dissenting opinion on the ground that insertion of the doctrine of estoppel in the statute was judicial legislation.
We are of the opinion that the present appeal is ruled by the Weston case. Lisa was conceived while Albert and Mildred were living together as husband and wife. She was born more than two years before her parents separated. During that period her paternity was never challenged, and there is no suggestion that Albert did not accept Lisa as his own child. Indeed, he executed a separation agreement by the terms of which he acknowledged that Lisa was his daughter, provided for her future support, and made extensive arrangements for visitation rights. Since the doctrine of estoppel has been written into the Uniform Act, it should be applied in the instant factual situation.
Order reversed.
DISSENTING OPINION BY HOFFMAN, J.:
I dissent on two grounds.
I
In my opinion this appeal is interlocutory and should be quashed.
I recognize, of course, that in Commonwealth ex rel. Goldman v. Goldman, 199 Pa. Superior Ct. 274, 184 A. 2d 351 (1962), and in Commonwealth ex rel. Weston v. Weston, 201 Pa. Superior Ct. 554, 193 A. 2d 782 (1963), we allowed appeals from orders of a lower court requiring that a wife submit to a blood test in a support case. Nonetheless, I believe that our prior rulings in this regard are in error.
In Weston we stated “that the motion to quash should be dismissed under the authority of Myers v. Travelers Ins. Co., 353 Pa. 523, 46 A. 2d 224 (1946),” at 558. In Myers the lower court made absolute a rule by defendant to stay proceedings until plaintiff submitted to a physical examination. We held that, “(t)he effect of making the rule absolute was to preclude plaintiff from further action.” At 525. Consequently, this appeal was allowed. This decision was based on the general principle of law that “(u)nless an appeal from an interlocutory order is allowed by statute, a decree to be final and appealable must preclude the complaining party from further action in the court making such decree (citing cases).” At 525.
There is nothing in the instant case, however, which precludes further action by either party. Merely because the wife must submit to the test does not bar the proceedings from continuing nor does it deny her the opportunity to win an award of support for her child.
Moreover, there would appear to be little possibility that an appeal as to this question will be necessary.
Should the court find for the mother, any further appeal as to correctness of its prior ruling requiring
In light of the probability that no appeal will be taken in such a case, therefore, there would appear to be little need to interrupt the proceedings in the lower court and seek a decision from us as to a matter which may be moot at the conclusion of the trial. The woman, who brought the petition for support should be prepared to submit to the test immediately, after noting her objection, and allow the proceedings to proceed in normal fashion. Only after it is determined that the results of the blood test are adverse to her position, and an order for the husband has been entered in the lower court, should she be permitted to appeal this matter.
An additional consideration raised in Myers is that an appeal should be allowed at this time because a person‘s body is inviolate and should not be subjected to the insertion of a needle.
This concept, however, was rejected by the legislature in enacting the blood test acts. This legislation does not consider a blood test to constitute a serious invasion of a person‘s body. Thus, the considerations in Myers, as expressed in 1946, have now been repudiated.
We now recognize that the minimal discomfort arising out of such scientific tests will often allow the court to reach results based on a greater knowledge of the facts. Similarly, in Schmerber v. California, 384 U.S. 757 (1966), the Supreme Court of the United States held that the drawing of blood from an accused in a criminal case does not violate his right to due process or his right against self-incrimination.
The blood test is, in effect, no more than another useful means of discovery. We would ordinarily not
II
Since the court feels obliged to reach the merits in this case, however, I believe it advisable to express my views in the matter.
First, I believe that President Judge WRIGHT‘S dissenting opinion in Weston is entitled to greater weight than he accords it here. In that opinion, Judge WRIGHT correctly pointed out that the Uniform Act on Blood Tests to Determine Paternity, which replaced the prior Act, allowed blood tests in actions for support for children born during wedlock. Judge WRIGHT concluded, at that time, that the insertion of the doctrine of “estoppel” constituted judicial legislation. In my opinion, Judge WRIGHT‘S evaluation was correct and accurately reflects my view of the matter.
In the revised Act the legislature clearly attempted to change the law and allow a husband to overcome the presumption of legitimacy of a child born during wedlock. This trend may also be noted in decisions of our Supreme Court. See Commonwealth ex rel. Leider v. Leider, 434 Pa. 293, 254 A. 2d 306 (1969). Thus our holding in Weston served to resurrect past doctrine and subvert the obvious intention of the legislature.
The tendency in our age is to seek scientific proof, both in the criminal and civil area. We now realize that decisions made on the basis of a judge‘s determination as to the credibility of the parties is inexact. Particularly in paternity cases, where the parties themselves may not know the actual identity of the father,
Finally, the doctrine of estoppel, as applied in these cases, is based on a misconception of the doctrine. Estoppel is found where one party, acting in reliance on the actions of another, has altered his position to his detriment.
The alleged detriment which underlies the estoppel notion in these paternity cases was explained in Judge WOODSIDE‘S majority opinion in Weston. Judge WOODSIDE there stated:
“There is something inherently repulsive about a man questioning the paternity of children who were conceived by his wife and born to her while he was living with her and who were accepted and held out to the world by him as his children until his and his wife‘s personal differences led to a support action. . . .”
“The children of this case are relatively young, but if a compulsory blood test may be ordered in this case it may be ordered in a case involving older children. It is unfortunate for a child when circumstances cause it to doubt its paternity, but it is cruel for the law to inject such doubts into a child‘s mind when there are no circumstances to support the doubts except an allegation by an irate man who previously had been known to the child and the world as its father.”
“It is the taking of a blood test, and not the result of it, which does the harm. The test cannot prove paternity. Pricking the skin to get the blood is an act which plants indelibly upon the mind of a child the doubt as to its paternity which it will carry thereafter forever.”
I believe that the consideration set forth in Judge WOODSIDE‘S opinion cannot serve as the basis for an estoppel.
Moreover, Judge WOODSIDE‘S great concern with older children would seem to be relatively unimportant. Virtually all paternity cases involve children who are young and unaware. Thus, in Weston, Judge WOODSIDE admitted that the child, being under four, would probably not suffer psychologically from the test. In Goldman, the children whose paternity was questioned were both under the age of four when the tests were requested. In the instant case, the child is barely four.
In those few cases involving older children, I sincerely doubt that the “pricking of the skin,” to which Judge WOODSIDE attached great psychological significance, is significant at all. Certainly, if the child is old enough to understand that the issue of his paternity is involved, a blood test itself would not seem to be particularly important. In short, I believe that the court has denied the very valuable use of blood tests in paternity cases out of an undue regard for the improbable reaction of an imaginary child. I suggest that the court‘s fears in this regard are groundless.
Finally, the fact that the husband in this case remained at home for a period of two years after the birth of the child does not, standing by itself, prejudice the child in whose favor an estoppel must be found. Proof of the child‘s paternity, which is the basis
Here, the court has not found that the child, if determined to be illegitimate, would be unable to obtain support from its putative father. Only in such instances, however, would the child be harmed by the failure of the husband to contest his support obligation at an earlier date. Thus, no harm has been established on which an estoppel can be raised. Edelman v. Boardman, 332 Pa. 85, 96, 2 A. 2d 393 (1938).
In summary, I believe that the court‘s reference to estoppel is founded on faulty doctrine and seeks to create a bar against overcoming the presumption of legitimacy where none was intended to exist. It forces us to disregard valid scientific testimony and rely on guesswork. It denies courts full access to all information which will allow them to reach a conclusion based on all of the facts. Such a rule, in my opinion is unwise and should be discarded.
I would affirm the lower court‘s decision.
SPAULDING and CERCONE, JJ., join in this dissenting opinion.
WRIGHT, P. J.
PRESIDENT JUDGE
