OPINION
The Texas Department of Human Resources [TDHR] sued Juan Hernandez [defendant] under the provisions of Section 13.01 et seq. of the Texas Family Code to establish a parent-child relationship between defendant and an illegitimate child whose mother had assigned support rights to TDHR. 1 Defendant filed a motion for summary judgment asserting that the suit was barred by the statute of limitations set forth in Section 13.01 of the Texas Family Codе, which provides that a suit to establish the parent-child relationship between an illegitimate child and the alleged natural father must be brought within one year from the birth of the child. 2 The trial court granted the mоtion for summary judgment, it being undisputed that, while the child was born March 30, 1976, suit was not filed until March 6, 1979. We affirm.
Disposition of this cause requires us briefly to review the history of paternity suits, and support rights of illegitimate children in the Statе of Texas. Prior to January 17,
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1973, the law in Texas imposed duties on fathers to support legitimate children but denied that right to illegitimates. Compare
Gully v. Gully,
“Once a State posits a judicially enforceable right on behalf of children to needed support from their natural fathers there is no constitutionally sufficient justification for denying such an essential right to a child simply because its natural father has not married its mother.” (409 U.S. at 538 ,93 S.Ct. at 875 ).
Implicit in the
Gomez
decision was the notion that an illegitimate has a common law right to institute a proceeding for the purpose of showing that the alleged father is the biological father as a necessary requisite to establish a judicially enforceable right otherwise accorded to legitimate children generally.
Wynn v. Wynn,
After
Gomez
the legislature enacted Title 2 of the Family Code governing the parent-child relationship. Tex.Laws 1973, ch. 543 at 1411. Understandably, in drafting Title 2, the legislature considered comprehensive provisions regulating the legal aspects of children born out of wedlock. Despite the
Gomez
decision, however, such comprehensive provisions were not passed. Instead, the legislative “response” to
Gomez
was found in Chapter 13 of the Family Code which provided for voluntary legitimatiоn proceedings. Smith, Commentary on Title 2 of the Family Code, 5 Tex.Tech.L.Rev. 389, 418 (1974). It was later held, however, that when the legislature provided judicial relief against the father on behalf of a legitimate child fоr support, due to
Gomez
it necessarily provided the same relief on behalf of an illegitimate child.
In the Interest of
R_ V_ M_,
Remaining in a state of flux, the statutory rights of illegitimates were brought into sharper focus by amendmеnts to Chapter 13 of Title 2 of the Family Code, the effective date of which was September 1, 1975. The result was the present involuntary legitimation proceeding found in Sections 13.01 through 13.09 of the Family Code.. By enаcting Section 13.01 et seq. of the Family Code, the legislature attempted to provide a practical framework within which the rights of the alleged father as well as the rights of the illegitimate child are protected. Wynn v. Wynn, supra. The United States Supreme Court said in Gomez that there are
“. . lurking problems with respect to proof of paternity. Those problems are not to be lightly brushed aside, but neither can they be made into an impenetrable barrier that works to shield otherwise invidious discrimination.”
Section 13.01 of the Family Code, which requires that paternity suits be filed at least one year from the birth of the child, first came under judicial scrutiny with regard to the issue of retroactivity. In
Alvarado
v.
Gonzales,
In
Alvarado
we were not called upon to determine the constitutionality of Section 13.01 as it applies to children born after the effective date of the statute. This issue did
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not come before an appellate court until
Texas Department of Human Resources v. Chapman,
Thе issue of tolling was both considered and decided shortly after
Chapman
in
Texas Department of Human Resources v. Delley,
TDHR’s points of error on appeal in the case at bar present to this Court the issues of whether Section 13.01 is constitutional and, if so, whether it is tolled during the minority of a child born after the effective date of the law. Regarding the constitutionality of Section 13.01, wé, as an intermediate appellate court choose to follow Chapman, since a writ or error was refused “no reversible error” by the Texas Supreme Court. TDHR’s constitutional arguments in the case at bar are virtually the same as its arguments made in Chapman. Section 13.01 is not unconstitutional. We overrule the points of error dealing with alleged violations of equal protection and due process.
We next turn to the argument of TDHR that Section 13.01 should be tolled during the minority of the child. The action аt bar was brought by TDHR, pursuant to an assignment to it by the child’s mother of her rights to child support. This assignment was made pursuant to Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat. Ann. art. 695c, § 18-B(c) (Supp.1979). Nevertheless, it is a “suit affecting the parent-child relationship” because the suit was brought under the Family Code to legitimate the child in order to require support by the biological father. Tex.Family Code Ann. § 11.01(5) (1975). It may be brought by “any person with an interest in the child, including the child (through а representative authorized by the court), any agency of the state . . . and any authorized agency.” Tex.Family Code Ann. § 11.03 (1975). Since, however, the essential concern in any case is the best interest оf the child, Tex.Family Code Ann. § 14.07(a) (1975), we may assume that, although the action at bar was brought by TDHR, the real party in interest is the child. See Texas Dept. of Human Resources v. Delley, supra.
Although the child is the real party in interest in this action, however, it would be both illogical and unreasonable for this Court to hold that Section 13.01 is tolled on account of minority. The purpose of this lawsuit is to establish the duty of the biological father to support a child fathered by him and bоrn out of wedlock. Tolling the statute of limitations would simply allow the child to bring suit for child support once he is no longer a child. Furthermore, tolling the statute of limitations would but constitute a disingenuous way of holding Section 13.01 unconstitutional, a conclusion we are not willing to reach in light of the Supreme Court’s decision to refuse a writ of error in
Chapman
for want of reversible error. Moreover, we note that Section 13.-
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01 is an integral part of the same statutory scheme which created the involuntary legitimation proceeding. Where a statute creates a right and also incorporates a limitation upon the time within which the suit is to be brought, the limitation qualifies the right so that it becomes a part of the substantive law rather than the procedural law.
Franco v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
There is a vast difference between the duties imposed upon a biological father of an illegitimate child and the rights acquired by the child in a successful suit for legitimation, and those duties imposed and rights acquired in a suit for child support only. The points of error before us in this appeal relate solely to Chapter 13 of the Family Code, although, arguendo, the child may have a common law right for support because, when the legislature provided a judicial right against the biоlogical father on behalf of a legitimate child for support [Tex.Family Code Ann. §§ 4.02, 12.04 and 14.05 (1975 and 1980 Supp.)], it necessarily provided the same relief on behalf of an illegitimate child. See Wynn v. Wynn, supra; In the Interest of R_ V_ M_, supra. The only difference is that the illegitimate child must first prove biological fatherhood.
We cannot decide this case on legal theories which are not asserted by the appellant, are not based upon prоper pleadings and are not before this Court on proper points of error. Therefore, insofar as this appeal is concerned, it is immaterial whether a common law cause of action for child support which stops short of actual legitimation exists on behalf of an illegitimate child. That issue was not before the trial court, is not before us, and we express no opinion thereon.
The judgment of the trial court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. This suit is distinguishable from a bastardy, or filiation, suit. While the successful prosecution of a suit to establish the parent-child relationship pursuant to Section 13.01 et seq. of the Family Code would entail legitimatiоn of the child, Tex.Family Code Ann. §§ 12.02(c), 13.09 (1975) (Supp.1980), filiation would not necessarily import legitimacy.
See Rodrigues v. Rodrigues,
. Section 13.01. Time Limitation of Suit
“A suit to establish the parent-child relationship between a child who is not the legitimate child of a man and the child’s natural father by proof of paternity must be brought before the child is one year old, or the suit is barred.” Tex.Family Code Ann. § 13.01 (Supp.1980).
