629 N.E.2d 1086 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1993
This is an appeal from a decision of the Erie County Probate Court which found appellee Marsha Metcalfe to be the biological daughter of Dan Hicks and his sole heir at law. Because we find the decision to be contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence, we reverse.
Dan Hicks died intestate. His sister, appellant Susie Wright, was appointed temporary administrator of his estate.1 Appellee Marsha Metcalfe, age thirty-seven, claimed to be the biological daughter of Dan Hicks and his sole heir. Accordingly, she applied for appointment as administrator of the estate. After a hearing on the merits, the trial court found appellee to be the biological daughter of Dan Hicks.
Evidence at the hearing showed that appellee's mother, Norma Whitfield, was married to one Vernon Eagy when appellee was conceived. Appellee's birth certificate lists Eagy as the father of appellee. Nevertheless, based on the testimony of Whitfield and others, the trial court found that Dan Hicks was biological father of appellee. As a result of that finding, the trial court determined appellee to be Dan Hicks's sole heir. Appellee was then appointed administrator of the estate. *485
Appellant has appealed the trial court's decision, setting forth the following three assignments of error:
"I. The decision of the trial court is contrary to the law of Ohio.
"II. The statute of limitations (O.R.C.
"III. The decision of the trial court is against the manifest weight of the evidence."
In order to fully understand the holding in Beck and its relationship to the present case, a brief history of the inheritance rights of children born to unmarried parents is necessary. Under the common law, a child born out of wedlock was not entitled to inherit from anyone, either mother or father. In addition, such a child could not be legitimized in any way. Original interpretations of R.C.
Over time the term "child" in R.C.
(1) intermarriage with the mother;
(2) providing for the child in a will;
(3) adopting the child;
(4) acknowledging paternity (R.C.
(5) designating the child as his heir at law (R.C.
All of these methods clearly required affirmative action on the father's part that logically had to occur prior to the father's death.
Constitutional questions then surfaced as to whether such limitations can be placed on children born out of wedlock. Arguments were raised that it was a violation of the Equal Protection Clause to distinguish between a child born within a marriage and one born outside a marriage. However, it is clear by the conclusions of Trimble v. Gordon (1977),
The Ohio Supreme Court first addressed the equal protection argument as it concerns the provisions of R.C. Chapter 2105 inWhite v. Randolph (1979),
"Clearly, the Ohio classification scheme is rationally related to the legitimate state purpose of assuring efficient disposition of property at death while avoiding spurious claims. Moreover, the Ohio provisions do not discriminate between legitimate and illegitimate children per se." White v. Randolph,supra, at 10-11, 13 O.O.3d at 6,
R.C.
It was upon this background that the Beck court reached the conclusion that the term "child" in R.C.
"The juvenile court has original jurisdiction of any action authorized under sections
We conclude that parentage actions under R.C. Chapter 3111 therefore may be brought even when "the alleged father is deceased."
Therefore, the statement in Beck that parentage must be determined prior to the death of the father is correct to the extent that the parent-child relationship is being established under R.C. Chapter 2105; it, however, is erroneous as to actions establishing paternity under R.C. Chapter 3111.2 Accordingly, appellant's first assignment of error is not well taken.
It is a well-established rule that statutes of limitation defenses must be affirmatively raised; if not, they are waived. See Civ.R. 8(C); Mills v. White-house Trucking Co. (1974),
In order for appellee to inherit as a "child" under R.C.
Appellee sought to establish her right to heirship by applying to be administrator of the estate of Dan Hicks and seeking a ruling by the trial court that she was the child of Dan Hicks. Assuming, arguendo, that the court's finding that appellee was Dan Hicks's "biological child" was supported by competent, credible evidence, the court, nevertheless, erred in concluding that appellee had a right to his estate.
In order to prove the right to inherit, appellee bore the burden of demonstrating that she was "legitimized" in one of the recognized manners. The only one of these methods by which appellee could affirmatively seek relief would be under the Ohio Parentage Act, R.C. Chapter 3111. Under R.C. Chapter 3111, a parentage action must be brought in a juvenile court. The Erie County Probate Court's judgment that appellee was Dan Hicks's daughter was not such an action because the probate court has no jurisdiction to make such a decision. Martin v. Davidson (1990),
We note that the probate court and the juvenile court are separate courts in Erie County. "Juvenile court" according to R.C.
Because appellee failed to establish an essential element of her claim, the legitimization of herself under one of the accepted methods for purposes of obtaining the status of "child" under R.C.
Judgment reversedand cause remanded.
GLASSER, P.J., and HANDWORK, J., concur.
"Nevertheless, whichever means are utilized to enable the child to inherit from his natural father, the required acts must be completed prior to the death of the father." (Emphasissic.) Id. at 275,
It is our belief that the court in Hunter-Martin incorrectly relied on the holding of Beck. As we stated, R.C. Chapter