Elizabeth Ann WADE, Appellant,
v.
Stevan Allan WADE, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.
John Paul Howard, Jacksonville, for appellant.
Rudy Hernandez, Jacksonville, for appellee.
WENTWORTH, Judge.
Appellant, the former wife, seeks review of a final judgment of dissolution of marriage *1159 in which the trial court held that the former husband is not required to support a nine-year-old child who was born during the marriage, but is neither the natural nor adopted child of the former husband. Appellant contends that the former husband is estopped from repudiating the child after having established a father/son relationship with the child since the child's birth, and representing to the child and to others that he is the child's father. We find sufficient evidence in the record to support the defense of estoppel, and therefore reverse.
The parties were married in 1975, and separated in 1984. A child was born during the marriage in April, 1979. The parties agree that the child was not the biological child of the husband, but was conceived while the parties were stationed in Iceland on active duty in the Navy, and the wife became pregnant by another man. Testimony established that when the former husband was advised of the pregnancy, he agreed to accept the child as his own. Following the child's birth, the former husband signed the child's birth certificate as his father and gave the child his surname, presented the child at church for baptism as his son, carried the son as his for all purposes as a military dependent and as a dependent on his joint income tax returns, listed the child as his son in his will, represented to the child that he is his father from the time of the child's birth up to and including the time of the hearing on the petition, and fully supported the child until 1988. The former husband in 1984 filed a petition for dissolution of marriage, publicly alleging at that time that he was not the biological father of the child. The parties in October 1984 signed a stipulation of dismissal of the petition for dissolution of marriage, and reunited. When the parties again separated in August 1985, the former wife and the child returned to Florida to reside in the marital home while the husband remained in the military service in California. The former husband filed a second petition for dissolution of marriage in 1988, alleging therein that he was not the biological father of the child. The former wife counterpetitioned for dissolution, alleging that although the child was not the former husband's biological child, the former husband had assumed responsibility for the child since the child's birth. The former wife alleged that the former husband should be estopped from repudiating the child after nine years, and, by virtue of his acceptance of the child, should be required to pay support for the child. The former husband alleged that following his first petition for dissolution of marriage, he had a conversation with the wife in the presence of the child, age five at the time, regarding the filing of the petition for dissolution and his denial of parental responsibility for the child, and that the child learned at that time that the former husband was not his father. The former husband stated that after dismissing the first petition for dissolution in 1984, he tried to maintain a relationship with the child, but that the relationship was never the same as it had been prior to the parties' confrontation regarding the paternity of the child.
Following a hearing, the trial court, relying on Hippen v. Hippen,
Courts have applied the doctrine of equitable estoppel to preclude a person from maintaining inconsistent positions to the detriment of another in cases where a parent disavows paternity. See Marshall v. Marshall,
Facts somewhat analogous to those in this case were presented to support a defense of estoppel against a former wife in T.D.D. v. M.J.D.D.,
THE ORDER IS REVERSED.
MILLS and SHIVERS, JJ., concur.
