¶ 1 During divоrce proceedings, Christopher Marc Pettit (Father) admitted that the parties had “one minor child of the marriage.” The decree of dissolution contained a similar finding and ordered Father to pay monthly child support. Two years later, Father moved for orders requiring paternity testing and stopping an order of assignment of his wages to pay child support. The family court denied these requests and Father appealed. We conclude that Father’s paternity was established by the dissolution decree and that he is precluded from now claiming that he is not the biological father of the minor child.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶ 2 The child who is the subject of this case (Daughter) was bom in 1996 while Father and Bonnie Sue Pettit (Mother) were living together. Three years later, Father and Mother married. On August 29, 2002, Mother filed a petition for dissolution of marriage. In the petition, Mother alleged that Daughter was a child of the marriage, and Father admitted that аllegation in his response, in which he also requested that the parties be awarded joint legal custody and that he be granted primary physical custody. The decree of dissolution filed October 19, 2004 found that Daughter was a child of the marriage, ordered Father’s name be added to Daughter’s birth certificate, awarded sole custody of Daughter to Mother, gave Father supervised parenting time, and ordered Father to pay child support. When Father did not appeal from the decree, it became a final judgment.
¶3 In October 2006, while Mother’s request to enforce child support was pending, Father filed a motion for an order requiring paternity testing and a motion for an order stopping the wage assignment. After both motions were summarily denied, Father filed another motion for an order requiring paternity testing in which he asserted that “[i] nformation has come to light to give [Father] reasonable doubt as to his рaternity of [Daughter],” and another petition to stop the wage assignment “until such time as [Father] is or is not deemed to be the natural father of the parties’ minor child.” These motions were also denied in a signed order filed February 6, 2007. The court explained its denial of Father’s motions as follows:
These parties were married at the time of the child’s birth; paternity is therefore presumed and this Court proceeded through the dissolution with no party raising the issue of paternity; presumably Respondent is the only father this child knows and it would not be in the child’s best interest to disturb the status quo.
Father timely appealed. We have jurisdiction pursuant to Arizona Revised Statutes (A.R.S.) section 12-2101(C) (2003).
DISCUSSION
¶ 4 Father argues that the presumption of paternity relied on by the family
Under the doctrine of res judicata, a judgment on the merits in a prior suit involving the same parties or their privies bars a second suit based on the same cause of action. This doctrine binds the same party standing in the same capacity in subsеquent litigation on the same cause of action, not only upon facts actually litigated but also upon those points which might have been litigated.
¶ 5 Father asserts that the doctrine of claim preclusion is inapplicable for three reasons: (1) the family court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction tо make determinations regarding Daughter because she was not bom during the marriage; (2) dissolution of marriage and the establishment of paternity are separate and distinct causes of action; and (3) the issue of paternity was not raised in the dissolution proceedings. We address each argument in turn.
¶ 6 Father asserts that the family court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction to enter orders regarding custody and child support because Daughter was not bom during the marriage. Therefore, according to Father, the court was not a “competent jurisdiction” and its rulings have no preclusive effect. 3 We disagree.
¶ 7 The premisе of Father’s argument— that a trial court’s subject-matter jurisdiction
¶ 8 Father next asserts that the dissolution decree does not prevent him from contesting his paternity of Daughter because his request for paternity testing is a separate and distinct cause of action from the divorce proceedings. To determine whether a second cause of action is the
same
as the first, Arizona follows the “same evidence” test from the Restatement of Judgments § 61 (1942) (“[T]he plaintiff is precluded from subsequently maintaining a second action based upon the sаme transaction, if the evidence needed to sustain the second action would have sustained the first action.”).
Phoenix Newspapers, Inc.,
Only such matters are adjudicated in a former judgment which appear upon its face to have been adjudicated or which were actually and necessarily included therein or necessary thereto. Rights, claims, or demands — even though they grow out of the same subject matter— which constitute separate or distinct causes of action not appearing in the former litigation, are not barred in the latter action because of res judicata.
¶ 9 Applying the “same evidence” test here, we readily conclude that Father’s re
quest
¶ 10 Finally, Father’s argument that he is not barred from litigating his paternity of Daughter because it was not actually litigated in the divorce proceeding is flawed. Unlike issue preclusion, which applies only to issues that were actually litigated,
see Hullett v. Cousin,
CONCLUSION
¶ 12 The dissolution decree necessarily established that Daughter was the biological child of Father. Accordingly, the doсtrine of claim preclusion bars Father from pursuing a second action to disprove his paternity. We, therefore, affirm the family court’s order denying Father’s request for paternity testing.
Notes
. Section 25-814(A) provides:
A man is presumed to be the father of the child if:
1. He and the mother of the child were married at any time in the ten months immediately preceding the birth or the child is born within ten months after the marriage is terminated by death, annulment, declaration of invalidity or dissolution of marriage or after the court enters a decree of legal separation.
2. Genetic testing affirms at least a ninety-five per cent probability of paternity.
3. A birth certificate is signed by the mothеr and father of a child bom out of wedlock.
4. A notarized or witnessed statement is signed by both parents acknowledging paternity or separate substantially similar notarized or witnessed statements are signed by both parents acknowledging paternity.
. The term "res judicata” is now understood as encompassing both claim preclusion and the related concept of issue preclusion.
See
Restatement (Second) of Judgments, introductory note to ch. 3 (1982);
see also Doe v. Doe,
. Father’s request for paternity testing pursuant to A.R.S. § 25-807 (2007), which requires a court to order testing if requested by a pаrty to paternity proceedings, constituted a collateral attack on the dissolution decree.
See Dockery v. Cent. Ariz. Light & Power Co.,
. All issues regarding Daughter were resolved by the parties' agreement placed on the record at a hearing to comply with Arizona Rule of Civil Procedure 80(d), during which Mother also provided jurisdictional testimony and clarified that Daughter was born before the parties married and that "both (Mother] and Mr. Pettit acknowledge that he is her father.”
Cf. In re Gen. Adjudication of All Rights to Use Water in the Gila River Sys. & Source,
