Brock v. Kepl

155 Wash. 2d 374
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 2005
DocketNo. 75563-9
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 155 Wash. 2d 374 (Brock v. Kepl) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brock v. Kepl, 155 Wash. 2d 374 (Wash. 2005).

Opinion

¶1 Madsen, J.

Petitioner Teresa Brock challenges the Court of Appeals’ decision reversing the trial court’s summary judgment determining the paternity of her two boys. Michael Kepi, the biological father, signed a paternity affidavit for the older child but not for the younger child. The trial court determined that the biological father was the legal (natural) father for both boys. The Court of Appeals reversed, agreeing with the biological father that, as a matter of law, the former artificial insemination statute shielded him from legal fatherhood status with regard to both boys. At issue is whether, under former parentage statutes,1 a biological father is the legal father of [378]*378two boys conceived by means of assisted reproductive technology by a woman to whom the man was not married. We hold that Kepi is the legal father of both boys and affirm the trial court’s summary judgment determination of paternity.

FACTS

¶2 Michael Kepi, the respondent, had a long-term romantic relationship with Teresa Brock, the petitioner, while he was married to another woman. Brock was not married during her relationship with Kepi. The parties met in the late 1980s at work and shortly thereafter began a sexual relationship that continued for approximately one year, ending in 1990 or 1991. Kepi’s wife gave birth to his daughter, AK, in 1991. The parties renewed their sexual relationship in the early- to mid-1990s (1992-1994) which lasted nearly 10 years. The parties dispute whether their sexual relationship ended by January or March 2001.

¶3 In 1995, the parties began to try actively to conceive a child. The parties first had unprotected sexual intercourse. Brock then sought help from doctors and fertility clinics in Tacoma and Seattle. Brock used fertility drugs and the parties timed intercourse. These processes were unsuccessful. Brock then asked Kepi to donate sperm which he did multiple times. Brock then underwent multiple artificial insemination procedures using Kepi’s sperm when the parties were not able to time intercourse. Although the parties at times inaccurately refer to the fertility process as “artificial insemination,” the record indicates that Brock eventually conceived her children using in vitro fertilization, a type of assisted reproduction involving the implantation of preembryos in Brock created with Kepi’s sperm. Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 30, 67, 147, 196; Report of Proceed[379]*379ings (RP) at 20-21 (May 21, 2002); RP at 13 (Aug. 27,2001).2 Currently, seven frozen preembryos owned by Kepi and Brock remain at a fertility clinic in Seattle.

¶4 Brock gave birth to her first son, JMK, on December 30, 1998. Apparently, Brock was induced a week earlier at Kepi’s request so that he could attend the birth given his other commitments. When the first inducement was not successful, Brock was induced again and gave birth approximately one week later. Kepi was present at the hospital the day she gave birth and Kepi was the first person other than hospital staff to hold JMK.

¶5 Photographs in the record show Kepi at the hospital holding JMK and with Brock. Kepi gave Brock flowers and cards, including messages of “It’s a Boy — Finally!” and “Bunches of love to you [Brock] and our bundle of joy” with Kepi signing with both his first name and as “Dad.” CP at 155-59. At the hospital, Kepi completed and signed a paternity affidavit with Brock, and Kepi’s name was placed on JMK’s birth certificate. A number of Brock’s friends were present in the hospital room when Kepi and Brock completed and signed the paternity affidavit. The paternity affidavit provided at the top of the document:

This Document Establishes Paternity Pursuant to RCW 26-.26.040
NOTE: Notarized signatures of the parents below establish legal paternity and the responsibility to support this child. This document becomes binding sixty (60) days after it is filed with the Department of Health. After 60 days, paternity can not be changed without a court order.

[380]*380CP at 12. Both their signatures were notarized. Under former RCW 26.26.040(l)(e) (1997), after the 60-day period has passed, the acknowledgement of paternity may be challenged in court only on the basis of fraud, duress, or material mistake of fact, with the burden upon the challenger. Kepi did not challenge paternity of JMK within 60 days after the filing of the acknowledgment.

¶6 Kepi visited JMK weekly. Kepi took Brock and JMK on vacation and participated in holiday events with Brock and JMK. The record contains numerous photographs of Kepi holding and playing with JMK, including Kepi and JMK at Woodland Park Zoo in 2000, at Mount Rainer Park in 2001, and at his home and at Brock’s home. Photographs also show Kepi attending JMK’s first and second birthday parties. The record also contains professional photographs of Kepi, Brock, and JMK posed as a traditional family taken in April 1999.

¶7 In April 1999, when JMK was four months old, Kepi applied for a $100,000 life insurance policy identifying JMK as his son and primary beneficiary and identifying Brock as his significant other and contingent beneficiary. Kepi had a separate life insurance policy in effect for his daughter, AK, for $500,000. Kepi’s insurance policy application was approved in May 1999 for $100,000 coverage requiring annual payments of $749 for 20 years.

¶8 In February 2001, Brock conceived a second child, again using in vitro fertilization. Brock claims that having a second child, a sibling for JMK, was Kepi’s idea and that Kepi paid Brock $700 to help pay for the medical procedure. Kepi claims that he had no input into the decision to conceive a second child. Brock gave birth to a second son, DRK, on October 27, 2001. Kepi visited the hospital while Brock was in labor and the day after DRK was born. However, Kepi did not sign a paternity affidavit for DRK.

¶9 Prior to the first child’s birth, Kepi and Brock set up a joint savings account for JMK. Kepi paid approximately $400-600 a month, which was briefly increased to $1,000 after the second child was born. The record contains bank [381]*381records indicating that Kepi made child support payments until January 2002, when JMK was three years old and DRK was three months old. According to both parties, Kepi stopped making the payments after Kepi’s wife found out about his extramarital affair in January 2002.

¶10 Kepi claims he paid child support payments in order to continue his sexual relationship with Brock and due to blackmail, to keep Brock from telling his wife about their relationship. Kepi also claims that he was under a lot of stress during the time Brock gave birth to her first child and signed the paternity affidavit under blackmail, duress, and/or fraud. Additionally, Kepi claimed he donated sperm only as a friend and did not intend to be a parent. In contrast, Brock claims that Kepi voluntarily made child support payments and purchased the life insurance policy for JMK, consistent with his involvement and visitation with her first son, and voluntarily signed the paternity affidavit.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶11 On February 20, 2002, Brock filed a petition to establish JMK’s and DRK’s parentage in the Superior Court of Pierce County.

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Bluebook (online)
155 Wash. 2d 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brock-v-kepl-wash-2005.