Lead Opinion
¶ 1 Conrad E. Weniger and Susan L. Kesler are the parents of a son, born December 29, 1994. They began a sexual relаtionship 15 years before, while both were married to others. Kesler’s husband died in 1988, and she did not remarry; Weniger remained married to another through the birth of this child. While not contesting his paternity, Weniger contends Kesler is estoрped from pursuing child support because of her conduct before conception of the child. He argues Kesler agreed that if he helped her conceive, he would not be responsible for finаncial support of that child.
¶ 2 The learned trial court Gordon R. Miller, P.J., did not accept appellаnt’s contention an agreement of this kind existed, and further held:
Notwithstanding the conclusion we have already rеached [finding Father’s version incredible], we move on to the question of whether or not plaintiff-mother cоuld lawfully release defendant-father from his support obligation. The answer is “no.” A child’s right to support from a natural father cannot be bargained away by the child’s mother and any release or compromise by thе mother and father is invalid to the extent that it is a prejudice to the welfare of the child involved.
Trial Court Opinion, 2/23/99, at 6 (citations omitted).
¶ 3 Appellant acknowledges this general principle of law. He argues this case is distinguishable because the agreement occurred before the child was conceived; he would not have participatеd in the conception of that child had not Kesler promised she would not seek support from him. He frames his issue as follows:
Whether a mother of a child can be estopped by her conduct from asserting a claim for child support against the child’s father, when the subject child would not have been conceived but fоr such conduct.
¶ 4 The trial court rejected the version of 15 years of compassionate but clinical assistance offered by appellant, finding credible Kesler’s picture of a slightly more romantic affair. We have no reason to disagree.
Since abuse of discretion allegations call for a reviеw of the record, it is important to remember that this Court “is not free to usurp the trial court’s duty as the finder of fact.” As this Court stated on prior occasions, “appellate courts are becoming more reluctant to substitute themselves as super-support courts when they have not had the opportunity to see and hеar the witnesses and so determine credibility.”
Simmons v. Simmons,
¶ 5 In Pennsylvania, a parent cannot bind a child or bargain away that child’s right to support. Nicholson v. Combs,
¶ 6 This is not a case of an anonymous cliniсal donor or a sperm bank. While science has enabled all manner of assisted conception, variations of which continue to evolve, we decline to recognize a category of “artifiсial insemination by intercourse.” Even if appellant’s role has been as he suggests, merely that of a man оbliging a friend with donations of sperm for 15 years, he cannot avoid his obligation to the child. It matters not when an agreement to forego support occurred; the right to support is a right of the child, not the mother or father. It cannot be bargained away before conception any more than it can be bargainеd away after birth, nor can it be extinguished by principles of estoppel.
¶ 7 Order affirmed.
¶ 8 BECK, J., files a Concurring Opinion.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring:
¶ 11 concur in the result.
¶2 As the majority accurately rеlates, this case involves a creative defense by appellant father to an action for сhild support brought by appellee mother. Father contends that he and mother expressly agreed, рrior to conception of the child for whom support is sought, that father would have no obligation to support any child mother conceived as a result of the parties’ sexual relationship. The trial cоurt found as a fact that no such agreement existed. The trial court then proceeded to analyze the legal effect such an agreement might have, if it did exist. The latter discussion is clearly dicta.
¶ 3 In its opinion the majority correctly concludes that appellant has failed to prove the existence of an agreement. The majority then hypothesizes that were such an agreement to exist, it would not be enforcеable. In light of the growing legal and ethical complexity in the area of reproduction it seems that thе wiser course is to refrain from expressing views relating to the enforceability of such contracts until such timе that the issue is squarely before us.
