Opinion
Rhonda Scott appeals from the trial court’s entry of judgment dismissing her claims for wrongful death, negligence, and dangerous condition of public property stemming from a traffic accident in which an intoxicated driver killed her half brother, Michael Thompson, as he rode his bicycle in the designated lane along the Pacific Coast Highway. The trial court consolidated Scott’s suit with a similar one already filed by the decedent’s presumed father, Russel Thompson, 1 against the driver, Tammy Jo Booth, the vehicle’s owner, Christine R. Booth, and the City of Dana Point (collectively, defendants). After consolidation, Scott amended her complaint to seek a declaratory judgment rebutting Thompson’s status as Michael’s presumed father, which would leave Scott, under various statutory provisions including the rules of intestate succession, as Michael’s sole heir entitled to sue for his wrongful death and related actions.
The trial court granted Scott’s motion to compel blood testing, which revealed Thompson was not Michael’s biological father. Thompson nevertheless sought summary adjudication of Scott’s plea for declaratory judgment, contending he remained Michael’s presumed father despite the test results. Scott did not dispute Michael was bom during Thompson’s marriage to Michael’s mother or that Thompson received Michael into his home, provided for him for a number of years before and after Thompson’s eventual divorce from Michael’s mother, or that Thompson held Michael out as his own son.
I
DISCUSSION
Because our introduction disclosed the pertinent facts and procedural history, we turn immediately to the appeal’s legal issues. Scott asserts the trial court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of respondents. We review the summary judgment motions de novo to determine whether there is a triable issue as to any material fact and whether the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. (Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subd. (c); see
Hailey v. California Physicians’ Service
(2007)
Thompson contends Scott lacked standing to challenge his role as Michael’s presumed father, and therefore lacked standing to pursue a claim for Michael’s wrongful death. We agree.
“In California, an action for wrongful death is governed solely by statute, and the right to bring such an action is limited to those persons identified therein.”
(Jackson v. Fitzgibbons
(2005)
The Probate Code provides that, absent a surviving spouse, domestic partner, or issue, the decedent’s intestate estate passes “to the decedent’s parent or parents equally” (Prob. Code, § 6402, subd. (b)) or, “[i]f there is no surviving . . . parent, to the issue of the parents” (Prob. Code, § 6402, subd. (c))—in other words, to the decedent’s siblings. Surviving heirs are “those who outlive the decedent.”
(Chavez
v.
Carpenter
(2001)
It is undisputed that Michael’s mother predeceased him. A “stepparent” or “foster parent” may qualify as a parent for purposes of intestate succession in some instances (Prob. Code, § 6454), but no party asserted Thompson or another man or woman played these roles in Michael’s life. As pertinent here, the Probate Code provides that “for the purpose of determining intestate succession,” “a relationship of parent and child exists ... in the following circumstance[]: [][]... between a person and the person’s natural parents, regardless of the marital status of the natural parents.” (Prob. Code, § 6450.) Probate Code section 6453 specifies in relevant part: “For the purpose of determining whether a person is a ‘natural parent’ as that term is used in this chapter: [f] (a) A natural parent and child relationship is established where that relationship is presumed and not rebutted pursuant to
As our Supreme Court has explained, the UPA “provides the framework by which California courts make paternity determinations.”
(Dawn D.
v.
Superior Court
(1998)
Specifically, Michael was bom in October 1972 during Thompson’s marriage to Michael’s mother—five months into that marriage to be exact—and Scott does not dispute Thompson thereby qualified as Michael’s presumed father under section 7611(a). (See generally Dawn D., supra, 17 Cal.4th at pp. 937-938, 942-944 [husband qualified by marriage as presumed father; court held that, absent relationship with child, biological father had no statutory standing or due process right to challenge husband’s presumed father status].) Also, Scott does not dispute that Thompson received Michael into his home and held him out as his natural son during Michael’s early years, thereby qualifying as his presumed father under section 7611(d). Instead, she asserts Thompson provided little or no financial support to Michael after his mother married Raymond Rothweiler when Michael was six or seven years old. Scott contends Thompson had limited contact with Michael as he grew older and that Rothweiler, more than Thompson, acted as a true and consistent father figure for Michael, though she admits Rothweiler did not hold Michael out as his son. She also points to the results of the blood test the trial court ordered upon her motion to compel.
The issue may appear to be whether a triable issue of fact exists on whether Thompson, in effect, “lost” his presumed father status, i.e., whether Scott successfully rebutted the dual paternity presumptions arising in Thompson’s favor under section 7611. (But see
In re Nicholas H.
(2002)
To resolve the standing issue, we turn to the express provisions the Legislature has made in the UPA for challenges to a man’s presumed paternity, codified at section 7630. In evaluating section 7630, as with any other enactment, “[i]f the terms of the statute are unambiguous, we presume the lawmakers meant what they said, and the plain meaning of the language governs.”
(Estate of Griswold
(2001)
Here, section 7630, subdivision (b) provides: “Any interested party may bring an action at any time for the purpose of determining the existence or nonexistence of the father and child relationship presumed under subdivision (d) or (f) of [s]ection 7611.” By its terms, this provision applies to challenges to paternity presumed under section 7611(d), not under section 7611(a). As to the former, the parties do not discuss whether Scott qualified as an “interested party” to attack the presumption that arose when Thompson held himself out as Michael’s father and received him into his home. But even if we were to determine Scott qualified as an interested party to make this attack, based on her interest in unseating Thompson as Michael’s presumed father to displace him in the chain of intestate succession, the issue of whether she had standing to rebut Thompson’s paternity arising under the marital presumption in section 7611(a) would remain.
Section 7630, subdivision (a) vests standing to determine paternity under the marital presumption in a “child, the child’s natural mother, a man presumed to be the child’s father . . . , an adoption agency to whom the child has been relinquished, or a prospective adoptive parent of the child” to challenge presumed fatherhood established under section 7611(a)’s marital
Jotham,
while not controlling, is instructive. There, in rejecting a sibling’s probate challenge concerning a half sister’s intestacy share, the court observed; “We do not believe that the legislature, which has unmistakably expressed its desire to foster and protect a child’s legitimacy, meant in [the UFA] to permit an individual to challenge a sibling’s parentage more than 50 years after her birth. Such belated challenges would be destructive of family harmony and stability and would undermine familial relationships long presumed to exist.”
(Jotham, supra,
In any event, apart from the limitations period prescribed in section 7630, subdivision (a)(2), Scott’s lack of standing to challenge Thompson’s paternity under the marital presumption eviscerates her claim (§ 7630, subd. (a)). In sum, because the wrongful death statute incorporates the Probate Code’s intestacy chain of succession to determine proper plaintiffs, and the intestacy statutes in turn incorporate the UFA to determine presumed fatherhood, and Scott has no standing under the UFA to deny or rebut that Thompson is Michael’s presumed father, her action for a declaratory judgment rejecting Thompson’s paternity fails as a matter of law. Consequently, there is no basis to reverse the trial court’s entry of judgment against her. 4
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed and the stay is dissolved. Respondents are entitled to their costs on appeal.
Rylaarsdam, Acting P. J., and Ikola, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied June 25, 2010, and the opinion was modified to read as printed above. Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied September 1, 2010, S184168.
Notes
For clarity, ease of reference, and without intending any disrespect, we subsequently refer to the decedent, Michael Thompson, by his first name because he shared the same surname with his presumed father. (See
In re Marriage of Olsen
(1994)
(All further statutory citations are to the Family Code unless noted; for convenience, we will refer to § 7611 subdivisions as follows, for example, § 7611(a).)
In full, section 7630, subdivision (a) provides: “A child, the child’s natural mother, a man presumed to be the child’s father under subdivision (a), (b), or (c) of [sjection 7611, an adoption agency to whom the child has been relinquished, or a prospective adoptive parent of the child may bring an action as follows: [fj (1) At any time for the purpose of declaring the existence of the father and child relationship presumed under subdivision (a), (b), or (c) of [sjection 7611. HQ (2) For the purpose of declaring the nonexistence of the father and child relationship presumed under subdivision (a), (b), or (c) óf [sjection 7611 only if the action is brought within a reasonable time after obtaining knowledge of relevant facts. After the presumption has been rebutted, paternity of the child by another man may be determined in the same action, if he has been made a party.”
Scott asserts in a petition for rehearing that she has a constitutional right to challenge Thompson’s paternity under the marital presumption, in order to displace him as the proper
