OPINION OF THE COURT
In this paternity proceeding, petitioner appeals, by permission, from an order of the Family Court which denied her motion for a protective order and granted respondent’s cross motion to compel her attendance at an examination before trial on the ground that special circumstances exist.
Prior to the establishment of the Family Court in 1962, jurisdiction over paternity proceedings was lodged in the Children’s Court outside New York City, and in the Court of Special Sessions within the city. Pretrial examinations were typically unavailable in both courts. Denial in the Children’s Court was premised on the fact that the Civil Practice Act provided for pretrial depositions only in a court of record, which the Children’s Court was not (see Matter of Wurtzel,
Although the Family Court is a court of record whose procedure, where not otherwise prescribed in the Family Court Act, is governed by the provisions of the CPLR "to the extent that they are appropriate to the proceedings involved” (Family Ct Act, § 165, subd [a]), the general rule which has evolved is that a showing of special circumstances is required before pretrial disclosure will be allowed in paternity proceedings. In Matter of "Doe” v "Roe” (
However, it appears that the Family Court has recently taken a more liberal view as to the propriety of pretrial examinations in paternity proceedings. With the special circumstances rule either being ignored or accorded mere lip service, the pretrial examination is now simply viewed as enabling the parties to better prepare for trial and thereby expediting the proceeding and advancing the search for truth (see, e.g., Matter of Lascaris v Hyatt,
If, as appears, the granting of pretrial examinations of the petitioners in paternity proceedings has expedited these suits and aided the court in arriving at a just determination, without deleterious effects, this alone would justify their appropriateness.
It is also our view that exemption of paternity proceedings from the general class of civil actions in which discovery is freely granted has always been questionable. The analogy to matrimonial actions is very attenuated since the protection of confidential relationships and the reconciliation of families have never been important considerations in paternity proceedings and the parties have always been competent to testify to adultery in the Family Court. The recent liberalization of disclosure in matrimonial actions has been limited to the area of finances (Domestic Relations Law, § 250) and, thus, does not properly constitute a precedent for liberalization of disclosure on the merits in paternity proceedings. By the same token, however, it may be assumed that a matrimonial respondent is almost always able to prepare an adequate defense without such discovery, while a respondent in a paternity proceeding, who may, for example, have spent only one night
The fact that the petitioner in a paternity proceeding carries a heavier burden of proof than the typical civil plaintiff, it being required that the evidence of paternity be more than preponderant, and be convincing " 'to the point of entire satisfaction’ ” (Matter of Morris v Canfield,
Finally, we do not believe that the lack of reciprocity in discovery rights, arising out of the respondent’s statutory privilege against being compelled to testify (Family Ct Act, § 531), renders pretrial examination of the petitioner inappropriate.
Accordingly, the order appealed from should be affirmed.
Mollen, P. J., Damiani and Titone, JJ., concur.
Order of the Family Court, Nassau County, dated December 22, 1977 (upon an appeal by permission), affirmed, without costs or disbursements.
The examination shall proceed at a mutually convenient time within 20 days after entry of the order to be made hereon.
