Commissioner of Social Services v. Louis T.

126 Misc. 2d 731, 483 N.Y.S.2d 920, 1984 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3697
CourtNew York City Family Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1984
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 126 Misc. 2d 731 (Commissioner of Social Services v. Louis T.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York City Family Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commissioner of Social Services v. Louis T., 126 Misc. 2d 731, 483 N.Y.S.2d 920, 1984 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3697 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1984).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Gertrud Mainzer, J.

On August 9, 1983, petitioner, Commissioner of Social Services, as assignee of Juliana C., commenced this proceeding under Family Court Act article 5 for an order of filiation and support naming respondent as the father of Nicholas James C., born to Juliana C. on August 9, 1981. Respondent Louis T. denied paternity. Hearings were held on June 26,1984, September 11, 1984, September 13,1984 and September 17, 1984. The court heard testimony of Juliana C., the mother of the child, Grace S., a cousin of the mother, Dr. S. Schechter, the mother’s gynecologist and obstetrician, respondent Louis T. and Prof. Richard L. Borowsky, Associate Professor of Genetics at New York University. In addition, the results of the human leucocyte antigen (HLA) test performed on the parties and the child by Dr. Leon N. Sussman of the Lindsley F. Kimball Research Institute of the New York Blood Center (NYBC) were introduced into evidence in accordance with Family Court Act § 532.

[732]*732At the close of the hearing, respondent moved to dismiss the proceeding because of petitioner’s failure to establish paternity by clear, convincing and entirely satisfactory evidence, based on the testimony adduced at the hearing as well as his challenge of the accuracy of the mathematical computation of the results of the HLA test.

Based on the testimony presented during the hearing with regard to the relationship between the parties as well as the expert’s unrebutted findings of miscalculations of the probability of paternity of the HLA results obtained by the NYBC, the court agrees with respondent’s contentions and dismisses the petition for the reasons stated hereafter.

THE HLA TEST RESULTS

Since March 2, 1981, Family Court Act § 532 authorizes the use of the results of the HLA test in paternity proceedings as evidence of the likelihood of paternity of an alleged father. In addition to a statement that a respondent is “not excluded as a father,” the results of the HLA test are introduced together with a statement of “probability of paternity,” synonymous with “plausibility of paternity” and of “Hummel’s Predicate,”1 which purports to quote the odds in favor of an individual’s paternity. Most courts consider these results admissible and use them as positive proof of paternity giving them such weight as the court sees fit to aid the determination of paternity.

In the case at bar, the results of the HLA test submitted by NYBC showed:

Alleged father, Al, A3, B7, B18 Mother, A2, B18, B49 Child, A2, A3, B7, B18

HLA: Paternity Index = 11.5 (odds)

Plausibility of Paternity = 93% = “likely”.

In order to explain the extraordinary challenge to the accuracy of the HLA test results in the present case, it is necessary to indicate the difference between this case’s specific challenge and prior challenges of the HLA evidence.2

[733]*733The Family Court in Matter of Alicia C. v Evaristo G. (115 Misc 2d 564 [Fam Ct, Queens County 1983]) declined to admit the results of the HLA test on account of an arbitrary, subjective determination of race by the examiner, and dismissed the petition. The Appellate Division, Second Department, reversed the case and granted the petition holding that the issue of admissibility of the test results has been settled by the Legislature and that any criticism of the test results can only go to the weight but not the admissibility of the evidence. (Matter of Alicia C. v Evaristo G., 93 AD2d 820 [1983].) Since Matter of Alicia C. v Evaristo G. (supra), various other challenges have been presented to the courts and the courts in those cases have essentially found that the results of the test as submitted by NYBC indicating a high percentage of probability of paternity together with the testimony obtained during the-trial established respondent’s paternity.3 Of course, in those cases the degree of reliance by the lower courts on the HLA results can never be determined.

As far as this court knows, the first decision which refused to give any weight to the HLA results and challenged basic concepts relating to their reliability is the decision by Honorable Stanley Gartenstein in Matter of Angela B. v Glenn D. (126 Misc 2d 646 [Fam Ct, NY County 1984]). In that case, Judge Gartenstein gave no weight at all to the HLA results which indicated a 99% probability of paternity. He found the testimony of the petitioner completely unreliable, contradictory and fabricated for the purposes of the litigation. Despite the HLA test’s high probability of paternity and the almost overwhelming acceptance of HLA test results as strong evidence of paternity, he found that a judge need not accept as ultimate proof of paternity the laboratory results where they contradict completely the trial testimony. In this case the probability computation itself was accepted and not challenged by the respondent. However, the court, paraphrasing testimony by Dr. Sussman, the director of the NYBC, which performs and evaluates the tests, convinced Judge Gartenstein that the results of the HLA tests “did not, could not, positively state that respondent or anyone else was the father of petitioner’s child”4 (p 652). In order to illustrate [734]*734further his conclusion that the HLA test “in contradistinction to a procedure yielding definitive results, is rather an impersonal analysis which, by its very nature, cannot mesh with the factual underpinnings of each individual case” (p 653), Judge Gartenstein summarized testimony by Dr. Sussman which ácknowledged “that Dr. Alexander Weiner, his mentor, had conducted blood tests in contested litigation where the mother of the infant in issue had been having sexual intercourse with two men. HLA testing of the first man conjectured a 99.7% plausibility of paternity, results which were reported to the court, and, in turn presumably formed the basis of an adjudication of paternity against the accused putative father. Because of procedural facts peculiar to that case, the second male was tested 21/2 years later. His tests results yielded an even higher probability of paternity, viz., 99.8%. In litigation where s,o much is at stake, the possibility of a miscarriage of justice such as that just illustrated is simply intolerable.” (Supra, at p 653.)

Judge Gartenstein was even more puzzled by “Dr. Sussman’s admission on the witness stand that despite his enthusiastic advocacy on behalf of the HLA test whose results are always issued in conjunction with ‘Hummel’s predicate’, he had no idea of Hummel’s methodology other than his belief that Hummel was ‘universally accepted.’ ” (Supra, at p 656.)

In the case at bar, the testimony offered by the mother is not as unbelievable as in Judge Gartenstein’s case, but it does not by itself reach the level of clear and convincing evidence which is required to prove paternity. Therefore, the results of the HLA test, if added as strong evidence of paternity, might turn the scale in favor of petitioner. However, the respondent here has produced unrebutted testimony by an expert geneticist challenging for the first time in a paternity case the mathematical correctness of the computation of the probability of paternity which was calculated by Dr. Sussman as 93% or “likely” by Prof. Hummel’s interpretation.5

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Tamara B. v. Pete F.
185 A.D.2d 157 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1992)
State Ex Rel. Coyle-Reite v. Reite
728 P.2d 625 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 1986)
State v. Howe
723 P.2d 452 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 1986)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 Misc. 2d 731, 483 N.Y.S.2d 920, 1984 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3697, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commissioner-of-social-services-v-louis-t-nycfamct-1984.