I. INTRODUCTION
A complaint to establish the paternity of then ten-year old C.J.W. was filed against Marc Grober. Grober argues that the action was time barred. Because actions are tolled during a child’s minority, we hold that the action was timely filed. Grober also appeals the order requiring him to submit to blood testing, and the court’s retroactive application of a newly enacted statute. We hold that Grober’s due process rights were not violated, and that the court did not err in retroactively applying a procedural statute. Thus, we affirm.
II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
D.W. gave birth to C.J.W. on February 16, 1982. D.W. claims that she had unprotected sexual intercourse with Grober nine months before C.J.W. was bom, and that she did not have intercourse with anyone else at that time. Grober denies having intercourse with D.W. in 1981.
D.W. wished to establish C.J.W.’s paternity when C.J.W. started asking questions about his father. She sought help from the Child Support Enforcement Division (CSED) in May 1992. CSED filed a paternity action against Grober on August 11, 1992, and amended its complaint in September 1992. Grober denied the allegations in the complaint, and filed a motion to dismiss. The superior court denied the motion.
Presiding Judge Richard Saveli had previously issued a standing order in January 1991, pursuant to Alaska Civil Rule 35 and AS 25.20.050(e), ordering the mother, child and putative father to submit to blood tests in any paternity action in which the State is a party and the putative father has denied paternity. In August 1992, a copy of this order was served on Grober along with the summons and complaint. Grober filed a motion to stay blood testing, arguing that the standing order violated his constitutional rights by permitting searches and seizures without a finding of probable cause, and that the testing should be stayed until after the motion to dismiss had been decided. Superi- or Court Judge Mary E. Greene stayed the blood testing for two months to consider the motion to dismiss. Upon denial of the motion to dismiss, Grober was required to submit to blood testing pursuant to the standing order.
Prior to trial, the judge ruled that AS 09.25.051, 1 as amended by Chapter 7, SLA 1995, effective July 11, 1995, applied to the present case. Grober argued that it did not apply because it became effective after the case was filed, and because the legislature *1232 did not include a provision expressly making the bill retroactive. The trial court found that issues regarding admissibility of evidence do not arise until the evidence is proffered, and thus, no issue of retroactivity existed. Alternatively, the trial court found that if an issue of retroactivity did exist, the statute would still apply, since it is procedural and does not affect substantive rights.
The case was tried before the judge. The judge found that the evidence gave rise to a presumption of paternity as set out in AS 25.20.050(d). Grober, therefore, had the burden to rebut the presumption with clear and convincing evidence. The judge found that Grober had not met his burden, and declared that Grober is C.J.W.’s father.
Grober appeals.
III. DISCUSSION
A. Does the Statute of Limitations for Paternity Actions Toll During the Child’s Minority ?
Alaska Statute 09.10.140 provides:
(a) If a person entitled to bring an action mentioned in this chapter is at the time the cause of action accrues ... (1) under the age of majority, ... the time of a disability identified in (1) ... of this subsection is not a part of the time limit for the commencement of the action. Except as provided in (b) of this section, the period within which the action may be brought is not extended in any case longer than two years after the disability ceases.
C.J.W. was under the age of majority when the cause of action arose. Therefore, the statute of limitations tolls during his minority.
See Truesdell v. Halliburton Co.,
Grober makes two arguments to explain why the tolling provision should not apply. 2 First, he argues that C.J.W. is not “authorized to bring a paternity action”; only CSED is authorized. This is incorrect.
Alaska Statute 25.20.050 refers to judicial proceedings for the determination of paternity, but does not delimit the plaintiffs in such proceedings. Subsection .050(a) provides in relevant part: “A child born out of wedlock is legitimated and considered the heir of the putative parent when ... (3) the putative parent is judged by a superior court, upon sufficient evidence, to be a parent of the child.” Subsection (e) assumes that the State may be a party without implying that the State is the only possible plaintiff, and subsection (f) similarly assumes that CSED may be a party without implying that the agency is the only possible plaintiff. 3 Given that the potential plaintiffs in paternity actions are not delimited by statute, we join those jurisdictions which hold that a child, upon reaching the age of majority, may bring a paternity action, and that prior to the age of majority a parent or guardian ad litem may maintain a paternity action on behalf of a child. 4
*1233 Further, CSED is not limited to appearing in its own name or that of the State, but may appear on behalf of the child or the child’s mother or legal custodian. Thus, AS 25.27.040(a) provides: “The agency may appear on behalf of minor children or their mother or legal custodian or the state and initiate efforts to have the paternity of children bom out of wedlock determined by the court.”
Grober next argues that C.J.W. was not under a disability due to his minority because CSED could file a paternity action. This court has previously addressed a similar argument. In
Hanson v. Kake Tribal Corp.,
[Alaska Statute 09.10.140(a) ] applies to minors, even those with guardians. While it is true that a custodian may sue on behalf of a minor, who is in turn not legally able to sue, a similar state of affairs exists for injured minor children. Their parents may sue for them....
... It can be regarded as fundamentally unfair to a minor to saddle the minor with the consequences of a custodian’s neglect.
Id.
at 1326 (emphasis added) (citing
Haakanson v. Wakefield Seafoods, Inc.,
Grober would distinguish this case because CSED must take an action to establish paternity. AS 25.27.020(a)(11) (“The agency shall ... establish ... through court action, the paternity of a child.”). However, the Hanson rule is designed to protect children from the consequences of the negligence of those entitled to take the action on their behalf. Such individuals may negligently fail to file an action, even where they are under a duty to do so. A rule that tolls the limitations period if the custodian is entitled to take the action, but does not toll the cause of action where the custodian has a duty to take the action, does not protect the minor from the “consequences of a custodian’s neglect.”
B. Did the Standing Order Requiring Grober to Submit to Blood Tests Violate His Constitutional Rights?
Grober argues that the standing order requiring putative fathers to submit to blood tests in any action where the State is a party and the putative father denies paternity is unconstitutional. 6 We agree. However, the use of the standing order in this case was harmless; Grober’s rights were not violated.
1. The standing order violates a putative father’s due process rights.
Civil Rule 35 permits the court to order a party to submit to a physical or mental examination, including a blood test, if the mental or physical condition of the party is “in controversy” and there is “good cause shown.” An order may only be entered upon motion and “upon notice to the person to be examined and to all parties.” Alaska R. Civ. P. 35. The United States Supreme Court has found the federal counterpart to Civil Rule 35 to be “free of constitutional difficulties],” even when applied to defendants.
Schlagenhauf v. Holder,
*1234 The standing order was entered pursuant to Civil Rule 35 and AS 25.20.050. However, it does not meet the requirements of Civil Rule 35. There was no motion, no notice to Grober, and no determination that the matter was both “in controversy” and with “good cause.”
These deficiencies violate both the federal and state constitutions. In
Etheredge v. Bradley,
An intrusive procedure such as blood testing requires no less.
7
Before a blood test may be ordered, there must be notice to the party and an opportunity to be heard. The party seeking the order must make a showing that there is reasonable cause to order the testing.
See Schlagenhauf,
A hearing will not always be required. A plaintiff who seeks redress for personal injury places her physical condition in controversy and provides good cause to enter an order.
Sibbach v. Wilson & Co.,
Neither of these exceptions is present in the instant case. Grober denied paternity, but did not affirmatively raise a defense which placed his physical condition in controversy. 8
2. The reliance on the standing order was harmless.
Grober’s due process rights were not violated by the superior court’s reliance on the standing order. D.W.’s affidavit stating that Grober is C.J.W.’s father constituted a showing of reasonable cause to order the blood testing. Grober successfully obtained a stay of the blood testing while the superior *1235 court considered Ms motion to dismiss. The motion was denied. Grober’s evidence did not defeat D.W.’s showing of reasonable cause. After denying the motion to dismiss, the court did not enter a “new” order for blood testing, because the standing order was still in effect. The constitutional standard was satisfied.
C. Does AS 09.25.061 Apply to Paternity Actions Filed before Its Effective Date?
We have held that scientific evidence cannot be admitted without a showing that it is “generally accepted in the scientific community.”
See Contreras v. State,
“Procedural changes in the law wMeh do not affect substantive rights may be applied retroactively.”
Rice v. Rice,
D. The Trial Court Did Not Err by Adopting the Scientific Evidence Presented by CSED.
Both experts agree that the procedures used m DNA testing are generally accepted m the scientific commumty. The defendant’s expert “agreed he could find nothing to criticize in the laboratory’s performance” of the testing procedures. The experts disagreed as to the correct paternity indices and probability of paternity. Having reviewed the transcripts, exhibits and briefs, we conclude that the trial court did not err in its conclusion that the evidence was sufficient to give rise to a presumption of paternity. 9 TMs conclusion is supported by Dr. Cutter’s testimony and is not clearly erroneous.
Grober argues that the court erred in adopting the State’s scientific evidence because he is an Ashkenazic Jew and therefore the paternity index should not have been based on frequencies for North American Caucasians in general. He argues that the patermty analysis conducted in this case failed to compare his genetic markers solely to those of the Ashkenazic Jews. Dr. Cutter testified that population substructuring is not statistically significant for the locus tested, and is not statistically significant if numerous loci are tested. This is consistent with the academic material presented to the trial judge. However, the judge reduced the calculations by one and two orders of magmtude m reaching her conclusion. Grober’s evidence directly supports the conclusion that there will be no greater margin of error than two orders of magnitude.
The court discarded the patermty indices for the locus which Grober’s expert stated was inconclusive. This was not error. Dr. Cutter testified that one mismatch would not exclude paternity, and that it was accepted practice in patermty testmg to require two mismatches to find an exclusion. Dr. Frel-inger was not familiar with the protocols concemmg how many mismatches are required before an exclusion is declared. Thus, even accepting Dr. Frelinger’s testimony that the results of one locus were inconclusive, this does not establish an exclusion of patermty. Dr. Cutter also testified why it was not inconclusive.
Grober’s remaimng arguments are unpersuasive. We conclude that the trial court did *1236 not err in its calculation of the probability of paternity based on the scientific evidence presented.
E. Did the Trial Court Err in Its Evaluation of the Evidence?
Grober believes that the trial court erred when it found that the prior probability of paternity, without reference to the scientific evidence, was forty percent. He argues that if the prior probability was zero or ten percent, then the appropriate equation (using his expert’s interpretation of the blood testing) would produce a probability of paternity of only 91.74 percent. This would be insufficient to raise a presumption of paternity.
This argument fails. The judge found that it was more likely than not that D.W. and Grober had unprotected sexual intercourse around the time of conception. The evidence concerning whether D.W. and Grober had sexual intercourse was in conflict.
10
We defer to the trial court’s determination of credibility. Alaska R. Civ. P. 52(a);
Wasserman v. Bartholomew,
Had D.W. engaged in intercourse with only Grober, the prior probability of paternity would be one hundred percent. The judge held that the prior probability of paternity was forty percent, because D.W. was dating another man at the same time. If this is error, it benefits Grober. If D.W. in fact had intercourse with both men around the time of conception, it would be equally likely that either of the men is C.J.W.’s father, producing a prior probability of fifty percent that Grober is C.J.W.’s father.
Next, Grober argues that the court incorrectly determined that he did not produce clear and convincing evidence that he is not C.J.W.’s father. Having reviewed the record, we do not believe that this finding is clearly erroneous.
Grober’s remaining argument that CSED did not have standing to bring this action is meritless. CSED does not need to plead that the action is in the child’s best interest, nor does it need to seek a support order in a paternity action. See AS 25.27.040.
IV. CONCLUSION
We AFFIRM the judgment below.
Notes
. AS 09.25.051 provides:
(a) In a civil action or proceeding, evidence of a DNA profile is admissible to prove or disprove any relevant fact if the court finds that the technique underlying the evidence is scientifically valid. The admission of the DNA profile does not require a finding of general acceptance in the relevant scientific community of DNA profile evidence.
(b) In this section,
(1) "deoxyribonucleic acid” means the molecules in all cellular forms that contain genetic information in a patterned chemical structure for each individual;
(2) "DNA profile”
(A) means an analysis of blood, semen, tissue, or other cells bearing deoxyribonucleic acid resulting in the identification of the individual’s patterned chemical structure of genetic information;
(B) includes statistical population frequency comparisons of the patterned chemical structures described in (A) of this paragraph.
. "A ruling on the appropriate statute of limitations is a question of law,” subject to de novo review.
Jenkins v. Daniels,
. These subsections provide in relevant part:
"(e) On request of a party in an action in which paternity is contested and to which the state is a party, the court shall order “(f) If the child support enforcement agency is a party in an action in which paternity is contested, the agency shall request....”
. The right has been grounded in paternity and filiation statutes,
see, e.g., J.W.L. by J.L.M. v. A.J.P.,
. Grober argues that CSED had notice of C.J.W.’s "illegitimacy shortly after his birth,” and therefore C.J.W. was not under a disability. However, the case law does not distinguish between custodians who are aware that there is a cause of action and those who are not.
See Hanson,
. We apply our independent judgment to questions of constitutional law.
Snyder v. State,
. To determine what "due process” is required, “[t]he conflicting interests must ... be balanced to determine whether or not those interests supporting the contested procedures outweigh those opposed.”
Etheredge,
. Grober also argues that the order violated his Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures. In
Schmerber v. California,
. This court applies a clearly erroneous standard of review when reviewing findings of fact and defers to the trial court’s determination of credibility. Alaska R. Civ. P. 52(a);
Wasserman v. Bartholomew, 923
P.2d 806, 817 n. 29 (Alaska 1996);
Lee v. Cox,
. Grober presented the testimony of Ms. Riley. Riley is the wife of the client Grober worked for during the period of conception. Her testimony indicated that she did not believe that Grober went to Anchorage in May 1981. Grober argues that the trial court erred by not believing this testimony and by holding that Grober engaged in sexual intercourse with D.W. in Anchorage in May 1981. The trial judge was not clearly erroneous in finding that it was unlikely that Riley could accurately remember if her husband’s lawyer traveled to Anchorage fourteen years earlier.
