Opinion on Appellee’s Motion for Rehearing
Opinion by:
On rеhearing, we withdraw our prior opinion and judgment and substitute this opinion and judgment for the sole purpose of clarifying that Elsa was required to prove Chavana’s paternity by a preponderance of the evidence, not clear and convincing evidence, on her motion for summary judgment. We affirm the trial court’s granting of summary judgment in favor of Elsa.
This is an appeal from a ruling on cross-motions seeking a declaration of intestatе *313 heirship. The ruling attempted to resolve a dispute that has been ongoing since 1985 between the son (“Ricardo”) and two daughters (“Elsa” and “Gloria”) of Ricardo Chavana, Jr. (“Chavana”). The trial court held that laws in effect in 1985 unconstitutionally discriminate between legitimate and illegitimate children and cannot be used to deny Chavana’s daughters a share ■ of his estate. Ricardo appeals, arguing that an earlier decision by this court that рutatively dismissed the constitutional claims remains “the law of the case.” We affirm the trial court’s judgment.
Facts and Procedural History
When Chavana died in 1985, he left three children, none of whom were born to him during a marriage. Chavana married Ricardo’s mother some time after the boy was born, and this'marriage legally established Ricardo’s paternity. The marriage to Ricardo’s mother was brief, and Ricardo did not have much, if any, of a relationship with his father for the first ten years of his life.
Chavana never married the women who gave birth to his two daughters, Elsa and Gloria. 1 However, Chavana acknowledged all three as his children during his lifetime, and the record reveals no real dispute between the parties that they are half-brother and sisters, sharing Chavana as a father.
Each of the children asserted heirship rights at probate. Ricardo argued that, because he was the only child legally legitimated under the 1985 statutе, his sisters could not inherit. Elsa argued that the 1985 statute was unconstitutional. She also argued that she and Gloria had been equitably adopted. Although there was no proof that Chavana had not left a will, the trial judge held that he had died intestate. The judge also ruled against the daughters on both the constitutional and equitable adoption claims. Elsa appealed.
This court held that the trial court had been premature in determining that Chavana had died intestate.
See Guajardo v. Chavana,
In 1997, Judge Vasquez determined, after hearing evidence, that Chavana had died intestate. Judge Vasquez also declared that the three children were to share Chavana’s estate equally, apparently with his widow,
2
on the basis of a 1991 Texas Supreme Court decision that declared the 1985 provision on legitimacy unconstitutional.
See Dickson v. Simpson,
Ricardo’s Summary Judgment Motion
In 1985, the Texas Probate Code set forth three methods for establishing a right to inherit as a child of the deceased: (1) proof that the claimant was born or conceived before or during the marriage of her father and mother; (2) proof that the claimant was legitimized by court decree; and (3) a statement of paternity executed by the father. See Tex. Prob.Code Ann. *314 42(b) (amended by Acts 1987, 70 th Leg., ch. 464, § 1, eff. Sept. 1, 1987). Ricardo has established paternity under the first of these methods: his parents were married some time after his birth. Elsa and Gloria have not established paternity by any of these methods.
Generally, the statutory language in effect at the time of the death of the decedent governs the disposition of his estate.
Dickson v. Simpson,
As in our case, the appellant in
Dickson
could not prove paternity by marriage or by a statement of paternity.
Dickson,
Ricardo makes two arguments for his proposition that Dickson does not control this case: first, he argues that the case is governed by the “law of the case” as set forth in our original opinion in Guajardo and the “writ denied” notation. Second, he argues that, in any event, Dickson was, in part, wrongly decided because a putative child had four years after the passage of the 1979 amendment of the Family Code to seek a court decree of paternity.
Law of the Case
Ricardo argues that this court affirmed the trial court’s determination of intestate heirship when it stated that all Elsa’s other points were “without merit.”
See Guajardo,
“The law of the case doctrine” provides that when a question of law is decided on appeal by a court of last resort,
*315
that decision governs the case throughout its subsequent stages.
Hudson v. Wakefield,
The law of the case either does not or should not apply here. This court completely reversed the trial court and sent the case back not only for a determination of whether Chavana died intestate, but also for a determination of his heirs, should the trial court find that he had any. A reversed judgment cannot create rights.
Gonzalez v. Texas Employers Ins. Assoc.,
Second, Dickson is supervening and controlling law. Even if the law of the case should be applied to our prior statement, Dickson overrules it. 6
*316
In
McCrea v. Cubilla Condominium Corp.,
The court of appeals agreed. “Where the decision on a former appeal was clearly,
or was later held to be,
erroneous or where, as here, a subsequent applicable standard has been established by the Texas Supreme Court, the ‘law of the case’ doctrine will not necessarily apply.”
McCrea,
In McCrea, there was a clear holding that was contrary to supervening Supreme Court law, and the court of appeals rejected the “law of the case” doctrine in favor of the supervening law. It would be incongruous to hold in the instant case that this court’s unsupported line of dicta shоuld control over an intervening supreme court case, especially where this court did not in any way affirm the trial court’s original determination of heirs. Judge Vasquez could not have ruled contrary to the Supreme Court in order to comply with this court’s putative holding.
The “writ denied” notation on our earlier opinion should not be given res judicata effect on any dicta in the case. ‘Writ denied” means that, whether the supreme court believed the appellate court was in all aspects correct, there is no error that requires reversal or that is of such importance to the jurisprudence of the state as to require correction.
Tarango v. Liberty Mut. Fire Ins. Co.,
Dickson
As Elsa points out, in 1979 when the probate code was amended to allow court-decreed heirship, a child could establish his or her rights viz-á-viz a putative father in two ways: the new heirship dеcree, provided by the amendment, under former Family Code chapter 13, and an action for child support under U.S. Supreme Court case law.
See Gomez v. Perez,
Ricardo argues that, in
Dickson,
the supreme court did not address the lower court’s reasoning that a child born
*317
before the 1979 statute governing court-decreed heirship was protected by the general four-year statute of limitations.
See Dickson v. Simpson,
In the appellate court’s opinion, the appellant in
Dickson,
even though born outside marriage before 1975 (the effective date of the non-retroactive chapter 13), could rely on the general four-year statute of limitations and establish heirship in the years between 1979 (the year the probate code allowed decrees as proof of heirship under chapter 13) and 1983 (fоur years later).
7
Dickson,
Ricardo claims that the supreme court in Dickson failed to address the possibility that the four-year statute applies. He claims that, if it does apply, Elsa and Gloria would have been able to establish paternity under the Family Code in the years between 1979 and 1983. Elsa argues that, in reversing the court of appeals and in holding that Chapter 13 completely barred the appellant from filing an heir-ship claim, the supreme court in fact did address the argument and rejeсted it.
A case from Corpus Christi,
In the Interest of Sicko,
However, the Corpus Christi court was compelled to respond to the appellant’s argument that its holding would deny him his right to heirship under the Probate Code, in contravention of Dickson. Id. at 866. The court stated that in the case before it, the appellant sought no judicially enforceable right, such as child support or inheritance. Id. The court concluded that Dickson and the amended probate code now provided a solution to the predicament the appellant claimed: illegitimate children may petition the probate court for a determination of a right to inherit without regard to a paternity action under the Family Code. Id. (emphasis added). Thе court stated that by barring his paternity claim, it was not automatically disinheriting the appellant. Id. Whether the four-year statute applies is irrelevant; to enforce a right to inherit, a claimant born to a single mother may seek relief in the probate court.
We find the analysis set forth in Sicko to be persuasive. The actions mandated by both Dickson and the amended Probate Code are independent from the paternity suit authorized by the Family Code. A child born to a single parent cannot be denied the judicially enforсeable right to lay claim to an estate on the basis of legitimacy unless the denial is substantially related to an important state inter *318 est. This enforceable right is separate from the right to establish paternity (a right that, in Texas, is not vested) and the right to seek support (which is enforced through different means). This right could not be asserted any earlier than it was, because heirship can only be determined once someone has died. The аction must be brought at the time of probate, and this is what Elsa has attempted to do. 8
Even if we were to hold that the four-year statute of limitations provided Elsa a reasonable opportunity to assert her claim under the Family Code, Ricardo would still have to meet the second half of the
Dickson
burden: provide proof that the classification is substantially related to the State’s interest in an orderly probate.
See also Clark v. Jeter,
Elsa’s Summary Judgment Motion
Having established that the trial court did not err in applying Dickson, we must still determine if summary judgment in favor of Elsa’s heirship claim was appropriate. In other words, assuming Dickson applies, has Elsa established, by summary judgment proof, that she and Gloria are rightful heirs to Chavana’s estate?
The amended probate code allows for two types of paternity for heirship purposes: presumed paternity and paternity found by clear and convincing evidence in the probate court.
See
Tex. Prob. Code Ann. § 42(b) (Vernon Supp.1998).
10
Although
Dickson
recognizes a constitutional right to a establish heirship via hearing, it does not require the court to retroactively apply section 42(b) to find heirship by clear and convincing evidence if the decedent died before the amendments to the Probate Code. Rather, the probate court may find heirship upon proof by a preponderance of the evidence under such circumstances.
See In the Interest of J.J.R.,
As summary judgment proof that she and Gloria are Chavana’s biological parents, Elsa submitted affidavits executed by the daughters, as well as an affidavit sworn to by Ricardo, stating that the three are the only biological descendants of Chavana. She also submitted an affidavit swearing to the same by Chavana’s sister. The motion lists many documents in which Ricardo had pleaded or acknowledged the girls’ biological relationship to Chavana. Finally, Elsa submitted a letter (signed “Tu Dad”) and newspaper article sent to her by Chavana, and copies of the checks Chavana mailed to each of the children *319 when, during his lifetime, he sold some property. The checks divide, equally among the children, the proceeds of that sale. The motion establishes paternity by a preponderance of the evidence.
In response to Elsa’s motion, Ricardo presented evidence supporting his claim that the case was governed by the 1985 Probate Code and the law of the case as established by this court. He did not argue or present any evidence that Gloria and Elsa were not Chavana’s children.
Because both the law of the case argument and the Probate argument fail in the light of Dickson, Ricardo did not rebut Elsa’s summary judgment evidence. The trial court was correct to grant her motion.
Conclusion
Ricardo’s arguments regarding the correctness of Dickson are without merit. The crux of this case is whether this court’s dicta in the earlier case, coupled with the “writ denied” notation by the supreme court, are sufficient tо require us to reach an unconstitutional result. They are not. The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Notes
. Elsa has brought all appeals in this case in her name, although this court held earlier that, because the case was in rem, all holdings would also apply to Gloria.
. The judgment did not recite the widow as an heir, but the parties agree that, under intestacy laws, she would inherit.
.Courts vary between and among themselves as to how strictly they apply the doctrine.
See Zavala v. State,
. In her Second Supplemental Response to Motion for Summary Judgment, Elsa states that she found only one case where the law of the case was attempted to be used to controvert the constitution.
See Goo v. Fat,
. Arguably, this court did not even have jurisdiction to issue the dicta, since we held that the trial court had no jurisdiction to determine heirship prior to a determination of intestacy.
. Our supreme court has stated:
The whole case is before us with no change of parties. It would be unthinkable for this Court, after having granted the writ, reconsidered the cаse, and arrived at the conclusion that the opinion on the former appeal was clearly erroneous, to hold that it is bound by considerations of consistency to perpetuate that error. Our duty to administer justice under the law, as we conceive it, outweighs our duty to be consistent.
*316
Connecticut General Life Ins. Co. v. Bryson,
. Some courts, addressing paternity suits (not heirship suits), have held this to be the case.
See Perry v. Merritte,
.The decision we reach today is factually distinguishable from our holding in
Cantu v. Sapenter,
. In
Jeter,
the U.S. Supreme Court held that when a state passes a statute allowing an heirship hearing at probate, it is impliedly admitting that the hearing does not interfere with orderly proceedings.
Id.
at 465,
. These amendments are to apply prospectively only. However, Dickson, which declared the earlier statute unconstitutional, was issued in 1991, after the 1987 and 1989 amendments effecting the change. Dickson thus created a constitutional right to establish heirship via hearing.
