COMMONWEALTH vs. DANIEL MACKENZIE.
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts
September 22, 1975
368 Mass. 613
Bristol. January 8, 1975. — September 22, 1975. Present: TAURO, C.J., REARDON, QUIRICO, BRAUCHER, HENNESSEY, KAPLAN, & WILKINS, JJ.
To the extent that proceedings under
COMPLAINT received and sworn to in the Fourth District Court of Bristol on October 12, 1971.
On appeal to the Superior Court the case was tried before Faraci, J., a District Court judge sitting under statutory authority.
After review was sought in the Appeals Court, the Supreme Judicial Court, on its own initiative, ordered direct appellate review.
Louis J. Ostric, Special Assistant District Attorney, for the Commonwealth.
WILKINS, J. The defendant was found guilty under
Relying on traditional equal protection standards, the defendant contends that the distinction made by § 11 denies equal protection of the laws because it is not substantially and rationally related to a permissible legislative purpose. Furthermore, he argues that, even if there were a valid legislative purpose for the distinction, any sex-based classification would be inherently suspect and could be upheld only if necessary to achieve a compelling State interest. From this, the defendant asserts that there is no compelling State interest in distinguishing between males and females in assigning criminal responsibility for conceiving a child out of wedlock.
Since 1913 the statutes of the Commonwealth have expressed in a criminal context a father‘s responsibility for fathering an illegitimate child. St. 1913, c. 563. As to
The Commonwealth argues that in practice § 11 is used only (a) to determine the paternity of the child, (b) to impose on the father the obligation to contribute toward the expenses of the pregnancy and of the confinement (see
The judicial scrutiny required in cases involving distinctions based solely on sex is stricter than that required under traditional equal protection standards. The application of this stricter standard of review has led the Supreme Court to reject many sex-based classifications.1 A sex-based classification “must rest upon some ground of difference having a fair and substantial relation to the
Judging § 11 by this standard, we discern no permissible legislative goal which rationally is achieved by making a father, but not a mother, guilty of conceiving a child out of wedlock. The statutory purposes advanced by the Commonwealth support a paternity and child support statute, but not a criminal sanction directed solely against the father and addressed expressly to the act of begetting. We are aware of no other possible justification for the distinction in § 11 between men and women in a criminal context which would satisfy the appropriate equal protection test. The imposition of a criminal sentence on the father alone for begetting the child violates the equal protection of the laws.3
We are satisfied, then, that the paternity and child support provisions of § 11 rest on more than a sex-based
We conclude that the defendant‘s motion to dismiss the complaint was properly denied. A complaint under § 11 may be used to initiate a proceeding to adjudicate paternity. See
So ordered.
BRAUCHER, J. (concurring in the result). I agree with the court that there are “significant circumstantial differences between unwed fathers and unwed mothers,” and that the paternity and child support provisions of
