Opinion
Respondents Joan R. and Frank R. were married in May 1961. They remained married, and cohabited as man and wife until separation and divorce in 1974. A boy, respondent Z. R., was born to the marriage on May 11, 1970, and lived with Joan and Frank until the separation. Joan has custody of the child.
In May 1977 appellant Vincent B. filed this action “To Establish Father and Child Relationship and for Visitation.” He alleged that he, not Frank, is Z.’s father, and sought a declaration to that effect, and visitation rights.
Joan and Frank opposed appellant’s action and have maintained throughout these proceedings that Frank is Z.’s father. The trial court granted summary judgment against appellant on the ground, in part, that under Evidence Code section 621, Z. is conclusively presumed to be the child of Frank and Joan. Appellant appeals from the judgment of dismissal.
Evidence Code section 621, subdivision (a), provides: “(a) Except as provided in subdivision (b), the issue of a wife cohabiting with her husband, who is not impotent or sterile, is conclusively presumed to be a child of the marriage.” 1
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The conclusive presumption is actually a substantive rule of law based upon a determination by the Legislature as a matter of overriding social policy, that given a certain relationship between the husband and wife, the husband is to be held responsible for the child, and that the integrity of the family unit should not be impugned.
(Kusior
v.
Silver
(1960)
The conclusive presumption of section 621 applies to the present case. Contrary to appellant’s contention, there are no triable issues of fact as to the conditions for application of the presumption.
There is no issue as to the status of Joan and Frank as husband and wife. Cohabitation was shown by the declarations of Joan and Frank that at the time of conception they “resided and lived together and cohabited in every sense of the word ... as husband and wife.” Joan and Frank declared that during the period of conception they had sexual intercourse. In addition, Frank declared: “During the year 1969, I was not sexually impotent or sterile. I have never been told that I am or have been impotent or sterile. In addition to [Z.], I have fathered another child, [K. R]. [K.] was born on November 7, 1959, during a previous marriage of mine.”
We find nothing in the counterdeclarations submitted by appellant which raises a triable issue of fact. Cohabitation means simply to live or dwell together in the same habitation; evidence of lack of sexual relations is irrelevant.
(S. D. W.
v.
Holden
(1969)
Thus there is no triable issue of fact as to the application of the conclusive presumption of Evidence Code section 621. There is also no merit to appellant’s contention that the court should have deferred ruling on summary judgment until blood tests could be taken.(Blood test results are not admissible to contradict the conclusive presumption of Evidence Code section 621.7(S.
D. W
v.
Holden, supra,
Appellant next contends that if Evidence Code section 621 prevents appellant from trying to prove that he is Z.’s father, then application of the statute unconstitutionally denies him due process and equal protection. He cites
Stanley
v.
Illinois
(1972)
In
Lisa R.
the mother and her husband, the presumed father, were dead. The question was whether the juvenile court had jurisdiction to determine that another man was Lisa’s father and whether he had standing to assert his paternity. Lisa’s mother had not been cohabiting with her husband and thus the rebuttable presumption of former Evidence Code section 661, now Civil Code section 7004, subdivision (a)(1), rather than the conclusive presumption of Evidence Code section 621, was involved. The presumption was conclusive in effect, however, against the putative father because former Evidence Code section 661, like present Civil Code section 7006, subdivision (a), did not include such a man among the persons entitled to rebut the presumption.
(Id.,
As in Stanley and unlike the present case, there were no competing private interests against the putative father’s claims, since both the mother and the presumed father were dead. The mother had been separated from her husband and the putative father had actually lived with the mother before and after the birth and contributed to the child’s support. (I d., at p. 649.) He was deprived of her custody only when Lisa’s mother returned to her husband. (Id.)
Appellant’s interest in the instant case is not as great, nor entitled to as much constitutional consideration, as the interests of the putative fathers in Stanley and Lisa R. According to appellant’s declaration, appellant had a long-standing affair with Joan and they had intercourse many times between September 1967 and October 1975, including the period of Z.’s conception. According to the declarations of appellant and a housekeeper at the R. residence, after the birth appellant would visit the R. home two to three times per week when Frank was not at home. Appellant would play and talk with Z. on these visits. After Joan and Frank separated, and Joan moved, appellant continued to visit Joan and Z. two to three times per week. Appellant sometimes took Z. out on Saturday afternoons, and on occasion Z. spent the night at appellant’s *626 home with Joan’s permission. Appellant told some of his friends that he was Z.’s father. Even after appellant and Joan terminated their relationship in 1975, Joan permitted appellant to continue to visit Z. until March 1977, after which she refused appellant any further contact with Z.
Thus, unlike the putative fathers in
Stanley
and
Lisa
i?., appellant has never lived with the mother and child, nor has he ever supported the child. The mother has at all times retained custody of the child, and opposes appellant’s petition. (See
Adoption of Rebecca B.
(1977)
Moreover, there are competing private interests in this case which were not present in
Stanley
and
Lisa R.
As indicated, the mother, who has custody of Z., opposes this action and does not desire that Z. be visited by appellant. Z. was born into, and for the first four years of his life lived with and was supported by the family unit whose integrity the conclusive presumption was designed to protect. (See Note (1979) 12 U.C. Davis L.Rev. 452, 469.) Although Frank is no longer living with the family, due to the divorce, he likewise opposes this action and continues to assert his fatherhood of the child. This protects the child against the social stigma of being branded the child of an adulterous relationship. Frank has supported and raised the child in the past, which appellant never did. In
Quilloin
v.
Walcott
(1978)
As each case must be decided upon its own facts
(In re Lisa R., supra,
There is likewise no merit to appellant’s equal protection argument. Appellant erroneously asserts he is the victim of a distinction based on gender. Mothers are bound by the conclusive presumption also.
(S. D. W.
v.
Holden, supra,
Appellant also contends that even if Frank is conclusively presumed to be Z.’s father, appellant is nevertheless entitled to a determination that appellant is Z.’s “biological” father, as distinguished from “legal” father. We find no merit to this contention. In enacting a conclusive presumption, the Legislature must have intended that only one man can be adjudicated a child’s father. Z. already has a father, Frank. Appellant is not entitled to an adjudication of a status of biological father.
Finally, appellant contends that even if Frank is conclusively presumed to be Z.’s father, appellant should be allowed visitation rights, since Civil Code section 4601 gives discretion to grant visitation rights to “any other person having an interest in the welfare of the child.” We think it obvious that in the circumstances of this case such court-
*628
ordered visitation would be detrimental to the best interests of the child. Appellant’s interest in visiting the child is based on his claim that appellant is Z.’s father. Such claim is now determined to be legally impossible. The mother does not wish the child to be visited by appellant. Confusion, uncertainty, and embarrassment to the child would likely result from a court order that appellant, who claims to be Z.’s biological father, is entitled to visitation against the wishes of the mother.
(Petitioner F.
v.
Respondent R, supra,
The judgment is affirmed.
Stephens, Acting P. J., and Hastings, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied February 17, 1982.
Notes
Subdivision (b) permits a husband, under limited conditions, to challenge the presumption that he is the father.
The Legislature recently amended section 621 to permit the husband, but only the husband, to use blood tests to contradict the conclusive presumption if he acts in a timely manner. (Evid. Code, § 621, subd. (b); see
In re Marriage of B., supra,
