¶ 1. The question presented is whether a child born out of wedlock who seeks to inherit from a putative father is constitutionally entitled to establish paternity through genetic testing after the twenty-one year limitations period for the bringing of a parentage action has expired. We hold that the statutory limit offends neither the Vermont nor the United States Constitutions. Accordingly, we affirm the superior court judgment.
¶ 2. Decedent Alan B. Murcury died intestate on July 5, 2002. One week later, petitioner Robin Morris filed a petition in the Franklin Probate Court to open an intestate estate, alleging that he was decedent’s son. The probate court appointed petitioner’s attorney as administrator of the estate. Shortly thereafter, defendants Ann L. Newitt and Jane Murcury filed a motion for relief from judgment, alleging that they were decedent’s sisters and that, to the best of their knowledge, decedent did not have any children. Following a hearing, the court issued a written decision, granting the
¶ 3. Petitioner also requested an opportunity to obtain and present evidence of genetic testing of decedent’s sisters to establish decedent’s paternity. The probate court ruled, however, that 14 V.S.A. § 553(b) provided the exclusive means of establishing paternity, and that the court was statutorily unauthorized to accept such evidence. The statute provides, in pertinent part, that “[a]n illegitimate child shall inherit from or through his father as if bom in lawful wedlock, under any of the following conditions: (1) The father has been declared the putative father of the child under 15 V.S.A. § 306. (2) The father has openly and notoriously claimed the child to be his own.” In the absence of proof of either circumstance, the court concluded that petitioner had failed to establish a right to inherit as the nonmarital child of decedent.
¶ 4. Petitioner appealed to the superior court on the question whether § 553 barred the introduction of genetic testing, and if so whether such a bar violated his constitutional rights. Petitioner subsequently filed two additional motions for genetic testing of decedent’s sisters, which the court denied. The parties then filed cross-motions for summary judgment. In October 2003, the court issued a written decision, granting defendants’ motion and denying petitioner’s. The court concluded that under § 553 proof that the decedent has either acknowledged paternity or been adjudicated the father through a timely action under 15 V.S.A. § 302 represent the exclusive means of establishing a nonmarital child’s right to inherit, and that the statute violates neither the United States nor the Vermont Constitutions. This appeal followed.
¶ 5. Petitioner frames the issue on appeal as “[wjhether the preclusion of genetic testing evidence by 14 V.S.A. § 553(b) discriminates against illegitimate children in violation of” the United States and Vermont Constitutions. The actual issue is more limited, however, as the intestate-succession statute, § 553(b), plainly does not prohibit nonmarital children from obtaining court-ordered genetic testing to determine paternity. Sec
¶6. The more narrow question presented by this case, therefore, concerns the constitutionality of the statutory requirement that a nonmarital child who seeks to inherit from a putative father must establish paternity through a timely parentage action and motion for genetic testing before the child reaches the age of twenty-one. Since petitioner was nearly thirty-eight years old when he filed the instant action, he is barred from establishing paternity unless — as he asserts — he is constitutionally entitled to a genetic determination of paternity beyond the statutory time limit. In addressing this issue, we are guided by a line of United States Supreme Court decisions subjecting statutory classifications based on illegitimacy to a heightened level of scrutiny under the Fourteenth Amendment. While not “suspect” or subject to the “most exacting scrutiny,” Trimble v. Gordon,
¶ 7. The seminal Supreme Court decisions on the right of nonmarital children to inherit from their putative fathers are Trimble and Lalli. Trimble invalidated an Illinois law that effected a complete disinheritance of children born out of wedlock who were not legitimated by the subsequent marriage of their parents. Of the two interests advanced by the state, the Supreme Court held that the first — the promotion of “legitimate” family relationships — could not validly be accomplished by penalizing the children born of the relationship, and the second — the “orderly distribution of property at death” — could be accomplished by means short of a “complete exclusion.” Trimble,
¶ 8. Just one year after Trimble, the high court was presented with just such a “legal framework.” The New York statute at issue in Lalli permitted nonmarital
¶ 9. Assessed in light of these decisions, Vermont’s statutory scheme plainly meets federal constitutional standards. Indeed, the means accorded nonmarital children to establish paternity in Vermont are broader than those provided under the New York statute upheld in Lalli in two ways: parentage actions may be commenced in some circumstances after the death of the putative father, and paternity may be independently established through proof that the father “openly and notoriously claimed the child to be his own.” 14 V.S.A. § 553(b)(2). This alternative means of proof was the very method advocated by the Lalli dissenters as necessary to the New York statute’s validity. Petitioner argues, nevertheless, that the rationale on which the Court relied in Lalli — ensuring accuracy by affording the putative father an opportunity to deny paternity in a judicial forum — does not apply to these additional methods. This is correct, but irrelevant. The state is obviously free to broaden the class of nonmarital children entitled to inherit where, as here, it has evidently determined that the state’s interests in accuracy and fairness are adequately served. As Justice Brennan observed, when a father has openly acknowledged a child to be his own, there is little “difficulty of proof [or] opportunity for fraud or error.” Lalli,
¶ 10. Petitioner’s principal argument is that advances in genetic testing have rendered obsolete any justification for a limit on the inheritance rights of non-marital children based on an interest in preventing the bringing of stale or fraudulent claims. Petitioner claims that genetic testing of the nonmarital child, the putative father, or relatives of the father can establish to a statistical certainty the issue of paternity. Thus, he asserts that the statutory time limit bears no “reasonable and just relation to the governmental purpose,” as required by the Common Benefits Clause of the Vermont Constitution, and must be declared constitutionally invalid. Baker v. State,
¶ 11. In applying the Common Benefits Clause, we look to “that part of the community disadvantaged by the law,” id. at 213,
¶ 12. We are not persuaded, however, that the statutory time limit fails, on balance, to promote reasonable and just governmental objectives. The twenty-one year limit provides ample opportunity for a child or the child’s representative to file a parentage action while simultaneously enhancing the likelihood that it will be brought during the putative father’s lifetime. We perceive several interests advanced by this policy, including the obvious one of ensuring the putative father’s availability for genetic testing. While the court may possess the authority to order genetic testing in a case where the putative father dies before expiration of the statutory limit by means of an order of disinterment if necessary, the state surely has a legitimate interest in seeing that such orders are not routinely required by establishing a statute of limitations that requires parentage actions while the
¶ 13. Petitioner claims that such unseemly expedients may be easily avoided through the testing of a decedent’s relatives (petitioner here sought to test the decedent’s two sisters), a procedure that allegedly yields equally accurate test results. Even assuming that petitioner’s claim of accuracy is correct, and that a court could order the testing of decedent’s relatives absent express legislative authority,
¶ 14. Petitioner’s argument also oversimplifies the potential evidentiary issues that might arise in a parentage action. There may, for example, exist facts known only to the father that undermine the genetic test; he could claim that a brother with similar genetic markings is the true father; or that he was merely an anonymous sperm donor; or that his parental rights had been terminated years earlier in another jurisdiction. Thus, even with advances in genetic testing it remains the case that the putative father’s availability represents “a substantial factor contributing to the reliability of the fact-finding process.” Lalli,
Affirmed,
Notes
Section 302 provides, in its entirety, as follows:
(a) An action to establish parentage in cases where parentage has not been previously determined either by an action under this subchapter or by adoption, may be brought by a child who has attained the age of majority; the personal representative of a minor child; a person alleged or alleging himself or herself to be the natural parent of a child or that person’s personal representative if he or she is a minor, incompetent, or has died; or the office of child support when an assignment of the right to support is in effect pursuant to section 3902 of Title 33 or when a parent has applied for IV-D services.
(b) An action to establish parentage may be brought at any time after birth, but shall not be brought later than three years after the child reaches the age of majority.
Petitioner suggests in passing that the statute of limitations for bringing a parentage action is unconstitutionally truncated as applied to him, because 15 V.S.A. § 302(b) went into effect in 1984, when he was nineteen. Petitioner overlooks the fact that the statutory predecessor to § 302(b), 15 V.S.A. § 331, enacted in 1967, generally authorized paternity actions against a putative father, and while it contained no specific limitations period, the general six-year statutory period would have applied. See 1926-28 Op. Att’y Gen. 45 (opining that “proceedings in bastardy must be instituted within six years after the cause of action accrues”). Petitioner makes no effort to explain the failure to bring any action during this initial six-year period, or under the additional two-year period provided by the amended statute, or at any time during the next twenty years when his putative father was still alive and might have acknowledged paternity, or voluntarily submitted to genetic testing. Accordingly, we discern no merit to the claim.
See In re Estate of Stowers,
Compare William M. v. Superior Court,
