Opinion
In March 2010, six-year-old P.A. came to the attention of the San Diego County Health and Human Services Agency (Agency) as a result of domestic violence between her mother, Patricia H., and stepfather, Roger S. The juvenile court found Roger was P.A.’s presumed father under Family Code section 7611, subdivision (d). (Statutory references are to the Family Code unless otherwise specified.) When genetic testing showed Alvaro A. was RA.’s biological father, the court entered a judgment of paternity in his favor, and found that judgment necessarily rebutted Roger’s presumed father status. Roger appeals, contending the court erred by entering a judgment of paternity for Alvaro without considering Roger’s competing paternity interests under section 7612, subdivision (b). Roger asserts this denied him his due process right to a fair hearing on his paternity status. We conclude that where, as here, a child has both a presumed and a biological father, the court must hold an evidentiary hearing at which it reconciles the competing paternity interests to determine which of those interests are founded on the weightier considerations of policy and logic. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of paternity in favor of Alvaro and remand the case for a hearing under the standard articulated in section 7612, subdivision (b).
Patricia came to San Diego from Mexico when she was pregnant with P.A. She met Roger when P.A. was two months old, and married him several months later. Roger provided a home, food and clothing for P.A., and told everyone he was her father. P.A. considered Roger to be her father. The relationship between Patricia and Roger was marred by domestic violence. P.A. told the social worker she did not feel safe when her “dad” was at home because she twice saw him push her mother to the floor.
In March 2010 Agency filed a petition in the juvenile court under Welfare and Institutions Code section 300, subdivision (b), alleging P.A. was at substantial risk of harm as a result of domestic violence between Patricia and Roger. Patricia identified Alvaro as P.A.’s father and said he lived in Mexico City. A parent search was initiated for him. Alvaro was eventually located in Canada, and he requested a paternity test. On a paternity form, he stated he had never lived with P.A., but she had been in his home two times. The court appointed counsel for Alvaro and ordered paternity testing for him. Alvaro said he was not seeking custody of P.A. and was not interested in receiving services from Agency. He intended to return to Mexico.
The court sustained the allegations of the petition, declared P.A. a dependent and placed her with Patricia. The court found Roger was P.A.’s presumed father under section 7611, subdivision (d), but deferred entry of a paternity judgment until proper notice was given to Alvaro so that he could request a hearing “to rebut the presumption or establish his own paternity.” The court ordered reunification services for Roger, including supervised visits with P.A.
When genetic tests showed Alvaro was P.A.’s biological father, he requested a judgment of paternity. Patricia and P.A. supported Alvaro’s request, noting P.A. was enjoying frequent telephone calls from Alvaro, and she no longer wanted visits with Roger. Roger opposed the request for a paternity judgment in favor of Alvaro and asked for a hearing to allow the court to balance the interests of the two fathers, and ultimately, to have a judgment of paternity entered in Roger’s favor. The court, however, found it was unlikely that Roger could disprove Alvaro’s biological paternity, and Alvaro’s status as P.A.’s biological father entitled him to a judgment of paternity, thereby rebutting Roger’s presumed father status. The court entered a judgment of nonpaternity as to Roger, but nevertheless gave Agency discretion to allow Roger to visit P.A. if she wanted visits.
The issue presented in this appeal, which implicates the rights of a presumed father and a biological father, is whether the court can use evidence of biological paternity to enter “a judgment establishing paternity” under section 7612, subdivision (c), for the purpose of rebutting the presumption of paternity under section 7611, subdivision (d), without weighing the competing interests of a statutorily presumed father. “The resolution of this issue depends solely on statutory interpretation and is subject to our independent review.” (In re Liam L. (2000)
A
Before we begin our analysis, we address the issue of mootness raised by Alvaro in his request for judicial notice, which we grant. (Evid. Code, § 452, subd. (d).) According to a March 24, 2011 minute order, the juvenile court placed PA. with Patricia and terminated its jurisdiction. Although P.A. is no longer a dependent child, the issue on appeal—whether Roger was entitled to a hearing to have the court weigh competing paternity claims—is not moot because Roger’s rights were adversely affected by the court’s judgment of paternity for Alvaro, which may have consequences for Roger in the future. (See In re A.R. (2009)
B
There are three types of fathers in juvenile dependency law: presumed, biological, and alleged. (In re Kobe A. (2007)
“Presumed father status ranks highest.” (In re Jerry P. (2002)
A man’s status as biological father based on genetic testing does not entitle him to the rights or status of a presumed father. (In re Joshua R. (2002)
C
The Uniform Parentage Act (§ 7600 et seq.) (the Act) establishes the framework by which California courts make paternity determinations. The Act “provides for conclusive and rebuttable presumptions of paternity.” (In re Kiana A. (2001)
Section 7612, subdivision (b), sets forth the procedures for reconciling competing interests when two or more men claim paternity of a child; “If two or more presumptions arise under [s]ection . . . 7611 that conflict with each other, or if a presumption under [sjection 7611 conflicts with a claim pursuant to [s]ection 7610, the presumption which on the facts is founded on the weightier considerations of policy and logic controls.” (Italics added.) When presented with conflicting claims of paternity under section 7612, subdivision (b), the court must make factual findings as to each claim, and then determine which one is entitled to greater weight. (See Craig L. v. Sandy S. (2004)
D
The evidence here is undisputed that Roger qualified as P.A.’s presumed father. Alvaro does not and cannot claim to be P.A.’s presumed father. Instead, he asserted a parent and child relationship under section 7610, subdivision (b)—“[b]etween a child and the natural father”—thus creating conflicting claims of paternity between a presumed father and a biological father, which require the weighing of “considerations of policy and logic” in order to resolve the conflict. (§ 7612, subd. (b).)
Because P.A. already had a presumed father, the juvenile court should have made factual findings and applied a balancing test to reconcile the competing paternity interests presented here. The court declined to do so, and instead apparently accorded determinative weight to Alvaro’s biology, which it found was sufficient to preclude any paternity claim by Roger. This was error. As a matter of statutory construction, had the Legislature intended that evidence of a man’s biological paternity would always trump another man’s presumed father status, it would not have required the weighing process of section 7612,
E
The respondents in this appeal—Patricia, Alvaro, county counsel and P.A.—cite no authority for the proposition that biological paternity alone is a proper basis for rebutting the presumption of section 7611, subdivision (d), and our research has uncovered none. Instead, the respondents rely on section 7612, subdivision (c), to argue the court was entitled to use evidence of Alvaro’s genetic test results to enter a “judgment establishing paternity” for him, which would then rebut Roger’s presumption of paternity.
Section 7612, subdivision (c), provides that a paternity presumption under section 7611 “is rebutted by a judgment establishing paternity of the child by another man.” The plain language of that subdivision refers to a judgment, not merely & finding regarding biological tests used to determine if a man is the child’s natural father. (In re A.A. (2003)
Here, a scientific finding that Alvaro is P.A.’s biological father is not the same as a paternity judgment. There was no prior judgment establishing Alvaro’s paternity. “Rather, the determination was made in this very case.” (In re A.A., supra,
This court’s recent opinion in In re Levi H. (2011)
Unlike the father in Levi H., Alvaro presented no judgment of paternity arising from a voluntary declaration of paternity. Consequently, the court could not find Alvaro’s biological paternity necessarily rebutted Roger’s presumed father status.
Contrary to Agency’s argument, the court had no “discretion” to use evidence of biology to enter a paternity judgment for Alvaro. In any event, a paternity judgment in favor of Alvaro would merely establish he is RA.’s biological father, not her presumed father. (In re E.O. (2010)
F
Section 7612, subdivision (b), required a hearing for the purpose of resolving the conflicting paternity interests of Roger as a presumed father and Alvaro as a biological father. The court failed to make any factual findings or
G
Respondents assert any error was harmless because even had the court weighed the competing paternity claims, it “would have in all likelihood entered a paternity judgment in favor of Alvaro,” given that P.A. wants to develop a relationship with him and no longer wants visits with Roger. P.A.’s stated wishes in this regard, however, are not relevant to the legal issue of whether the court was required, in the first instance, to hold a hearing under section 7612, subdivision (b). Moreover, this argument ignores undisputed evidence that Alvaro had no relationship with P.A. before these dependency proceedings began. He saw P.A. only twice since she was bom, never supported her, and never made any effort to forge a parent-child bond or even contact her for the first six years of her life. Alvaro is seeking neither custody of P.A. nor services to reunify with her. His commitment to P.A. consists of establishing his biological paternity. As we previously discussed, rights generally given to a father are based not on biology, but on the father’s connection to the mother and child, or on the father’s commitment to the child. (In re Zacharia D., supra,
Further, the paternity judgment for Alvaro, based solely on evidence of genetic testing, deprived Roger of the opportunity to present evidence of the nature of the relationship he had with P.A. as the only father she had ever known, and to assert his interests as a presumed father to maintain that relationship. Determining prejudice in this context would require “ ‘a speculative inquiry into what might have occurred . . .’ ” because it is impossible to
Although we do not speculate on the outcome of the hearing on remand, we note the juvenile court’s exercise of discretion in resolving the conflicting paternity interests will be constrained by “considerations of policy and logic,” and in making its decision, the court “must evaluate a number of factors and in the end protect the well-being of the child.” (Craig L. v. Sandy S., supra,
DISPOSITION
The judgment is reversed and the matter is remanded to the juvenile court for a hearing to resolve the competing paternity interests as required by section 7612, subdivision (b).
McDonald, Acting P. J., and Irion, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied September 22, 2011.
