Commonwealth, DSS v. James Flaneary

469 S.E.2d 79, 22 Va. App. 293, 1996 Va. App. LEXIS 273
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedApril 16, 1996
Docket2528943
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 469 S.E.2d 79 (Commonwealth, DSS v. James Flaneary) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth, DSS v. James Flaneary, 469 S.E.2d 79, 22 Va. App. 293, 1996 Va. App. LEXIS 273 (Va. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

COLEMAN, Judge.

The Department of Social Services, Division of Child Support Enforcement (DCSE), appeals the trial court’s order finding that the evidence failed to prove that James Flaneary is the father of Gerald Lee Overby and dismissing DCSE’s petition for child support. DCSE contends that Code § 20-49.1(B) requires that when DNA test results show a probability of paternity of 98% or greater, the trial court must treat the results as the equivalent of a judgment finding paternity and, therefore, the trial court erred by finding nonpaternity despite DNA test results showing a 99.92% probability of paternity.

We hold that Code § 20-49.1(B) applies only when the parties have signed a voluntary acknowledgement of paternity under oath, or after having signed such an acknowledgement have obtained a “subsequent” genetic test that affirms at least a 98% probability of paternity. Because the parties had not executed an acknowledgement of paternity, Code § 20-49.1(B) does not apply. Therefore, Code § 20-49.4 is the applicable statute by which we review the trial court’s decision that DCSE failed to prove by clear and convincing evidence that Flaneary is the biological father of Gerald Lee Overby.

*297 Upon our review, and applying the provisions of Code § 20-49.4, we hold that the unimpeached DNA test results showing a 99.92% probability of paternity and the uncontroverted evidence that Debra Overby and Flaneary had sexual intercourse during the period of conception proved paternity, as a matter of law, by clear and convincing evidence. Thus, because the trial court’s finding that Flaneary is not Gerald Lee Overby’s father is plainly wrong, we reverse the trial court’s decision and remand the matter for the court to enter an appropriate order of paternity and to determine child support.

I. FACTS

On March 17, 1987, Debra Overby gave birth to a son, Gerald Lee Overby. Because Debra Overby received public assistance for her son’s support, she assigned the right to child support from the father to DCSE. In 1992, DCSE required Debra Overby to identify the child’s father and she named Willard Edward Stump as the biological father. Stump voluntarily agreed to paternity testing, and the test results positively excluded him as the child’s father.

After Stump was excluded, DCSE again requested that Debra Overby identify the father. This time, she identified James Flaneary, the appellee, as the father. DCSE filed a petition against Flaneary to establish paternity and to assess and order the payment of child support. The court ordered that DNA blood tests be conducted on Debra Overby, Gerald Lee Overby, Flaneary, and Flaneary’s brother.

The DNA test results excluded Flaneary’s brother as the father. In testing Flaneary, the laboratory probed six genetic systems from the child and parents for comparison. Five of the six systems probed from Flaneary matched those of Gerald Lee Overby and, according to the laboratory’s calculations, these phenotype comparisons established a probability of paternity for Flaneary of 99.92%. According to the lab’s report, the calculations were based upon accepted guidelines established by the American Association of Blood Banks. A second mismatch between the child’s and Flaneary’s pheno *298 types would have excluded Flaneary as the father. However, each phenotype of the child’s that matched Flaneary’s significantly increased the statistical probability that he is the child’s father.

At the evidentiary hearing, Debra Overby acknowledged that she had previously signed an affidavit naming Willard Stump as the child’s father and that she told a representative of DOSE that Flaneary was not Gerald’s father. Overby testified that she had first named Stump as the father because he and Flaneary were the only two men she had sexual relations with during the period of conception and Flaneary had told her that he could not father a child. She testified that she first had sexual intercourse with Flaneary on July 6, 1986.

Dr. Daniel B. Demers, an expert in DNA testing, gave two possible explanations why the failure of one of Gerald Over-by’s genetic systems to match that of Flaneary did not exclude paternity: “(1) The rare likelihood that James Flaneary had the same genetic material as an unknown man in the population or (2) Mr. Flaneary was the biological father but a rare mutational even[t] occurred during spermatogenesis.” Demers testified that, in his opinion, the second explanation was the most likely of the two.

Demers further explained that Stump and Flaneary’s brother were only probed three times, while Flaneary was probed six times, because Stump and the brother did not match Gerald after three probes and, thus, were excluded. He explained that the percentage of probability of paternity increases each time the blood is probed and a match is found between the child’s and putative father’s genetic systems or genetic markers. On cross-examination, Demers explained that because five phenotypes matched, it was highly probable, but not definite, that Flaneary was the child’s father, and that had there been a second inconsistent probe, Flaneary would have been excluded as the father.

Flaneary testified that Overby told him that she was already pregnant when they first had sexual intercourse. He *299 also denied that he was the father and denied that he told anyone that he was the father. Furthermore, in light of Overby’s testimony that she first had sexual intercourse with Flaneary on July 6, 1986, he introduced medical records from Overby’s obstetrician which indicated that her pregnancy could have begun in early June 1986.

In holding that Overby and DCSE had failed to carry the burden of proving paternity, the trial court found that Over-by’s testimony was “equivocal [and] confused,” that Flaneary denied paternity, and that the DNA testing “ha[d] at least one joker.” Accordingly, the trial court ruled that Flaneary was not Gerald Lee Overby’s father and dismissed DCSE’s petition.

II. ANALYSIS

DCSE, citing Code § 20-49.1(B), contends that when DNA testing affirms at least a 98% probability of paternity, the test results are conclusive as to paternity and the trial court need not consider other evidence of paternity. Code § 20-49.1(B) provides that

[t]he parent and child relationship between a child and a man may be established by a written statement of the father and mother made under oath acknowledging paternity or subsequent scientifically reliable genetic tests, including blood tests, which affirm at least a ninety-eight percent probability of paternity. Such statement or blood test result shall have the same legal effect as a judgment entered pursuant to § 20-49.8. In the absence of such acknowledgment or if the probability of paternity is less than ninety-eight percent, such relationship may be established as otherwise provided in this chapter.

Thus, DCSE argues that either a sworn acknowledgement of paternity or a genetic test result showing the requisite probability of paternity has the same legal effect as a judgment of paternity.

Flaneary asserts that Code § 20-49.4, not Code § 20-49.1, controls contested paternity proceedings.

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Bluebook (online)
469 S.E.2d 79, 22 Va. App. 293, 1996 Va. App. LEXIS 273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-dss-v-james-flaneary-vactapp-1996.