Commonwealth v. Bell

23 Pa. D. & C.3d 140, 1982 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 325
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Washington County
DecidedJune 18, 1982
Docketno. 1084 D.R. 1981
StatusPublished

This text of 23 Pa. D. & C.3d 140 (Commonwealth v. Bell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Washington County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Bell, 23 Pa. D. & C.3d 140, 1982 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 325 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1982).

Opinion

SWEET, P.J.,

The higher courts have held that we cannot juggle the money from one relief client to the other in pursuance of support.1 If the issue between husband and wife is [141]*141“who gets the relief check for the child?”, that is a custody matter, not a support one.2

In this case Thomas B. Bell has been charged with the paternity of Tracie Locy’s baby, Matthew Charles Locy, born July 13, 1981. The hearing was held on January 7, 1982.3

At the February 16, 1982 hearing, defendant sought a free blood test.

We do not have a specific rule in this county for the time when blood tests must be requested. However, it should be apparent to anyone who wants to keep the wheels of justice turning that the first day set for the hearing in open court on the merits would surely be the last opportunity. Accordingly, we can and do reject this belated plea as untimely. Since, however, the practice has not been uniform in this respect and defendant seeks to bring a test case here, we may as well go all the way on the thing.

There are in use, in Southwestern Pennsylvania, two blood tests; the ABO test or Blood Group, is authorized by a specific statute.4 For more than a dozen years this test has been routinely sought and routinely granted on the payment of $50 which [142]*142covers the costs of this simple, accurate and now almost uniformly accepted test. It might be noted that defendant did not request the ABO test at any time.

There is also in the world, and out here now, the HLA test, described rather more fully in our recent opinion in the case of Com. v. Bruce Macbeth, at 22 D. & C. 3d 179 (1981). In this case we decided that it is now the law of Washington County that such tests may be used, not only negatively as the ABO can be used, but also affirmatively, to determine a matter of paternity.

As far as I am aware, no one has sought a free ABO test here. The relatively modest charge is apparently within the reach of the putative fathers of bastards. In this one, although his circumstances as described in the oral testimony do not lead to conclusive exoneration, he wants to go the full route before taking the first step. He has even stipulated that if the test is unfavorable to him, he will agree that it can be admitted into evidence.

This furnishes a second reason for denying his petition. In addition to its untimeliness, it represents overkill. If he cannot be the father of her child, the ABO test will likely exclude him and the result he seeks can be obtained at a rather modest expense.

The main drawback of the HLA test is its expense, which until recently was $600.1 am advised that our Domestic Relations Office has arranged an HLA day and that a number of these tests are going to be given at once with the equipment and material being brought out here for a single, mass performance. This brings the cost down to $300 under those circumstances.

As far as I know, no decision of the higher courts in Pennsylvania compels us to grant this petition [143]*143for a free HLA test. It is argued however, that a Connecticut case, heard and appealed on a rather different body of statutory and case law than we have developed, has resulted in an adverse decision from the Supreme Court of the United States, set forth in Little v. Streater, 101 Supreme Court 2202, (1981), 68 L.Ed. 2d. 627, (1981) Little v. Streater held that the Connecticut statute, which provided that in paternity actions, the cost of blood grouping tests is to be borne by the party requesting them, denied due process when applied to deny such tests to an indigent defendant. Our defendant is probably indigent for $600.1 might observe at the beginning, in distinguishing the Connecticut law from Pennsylvania’s on this point, that Chief Justice Burger in writing the Little opinion, said that due process standards,

“ . . . govern appellant’s due process claim, which is promised on the unique quality of blood grouping tests as a source of exculpatory evidence, the State’s prominent role in the litigation, and the character of paternity actions under Connecticut law.’’(Emphasis supplied.)

Justice Burger rightly points out the ability of blood grouping tests to exonerate innocent putative fathers. The gist of the distinction between Connecticut law and ours is made apparent by the following quotation from the Little opinion:

“Moreover, the defendant in a Connecticut paternity action faces an unusual evidentiary obstacle. Connecticut’s original ‘bastardy’ statute was enacted in 1672 ... if such mother or expectant mother continues constant in her accusation, it shall be evidence that the respondent is the father of such child . . . ‘the mother still has the right to [144]*144rely upon prima facie case made out by constancy in her accusation. . . The prima facie case so made out places upon the reputed father the burden of showing his innocence of the charge, and under our practice he must do this by other evidence than his own.’. . . Under Connecticut law, therefore the defendant in a paternity suit is placed at a distinct disadvantage in that his testimony alone is insufficient to overcome the plaintiffs prima facie case.”

In Pennsylvania this is not so. The burden of proof is upon the prosecutrix in a civil proceeding to establish by a mere preponderance of the testimony that the child is the defendant’s. His denial may be deemed by the trier of fact, the more oathworthy of the two. There are few judges in Pennsylvania who have not, at some time, found in a bastardy case, in favor of defendant.

The Supreme Court opinion, itself, cites Pa. Cons. Stat. Ann. Section 42-6135 (Purdon Supp. 1981), to provide that the expense could be “advanced by the state and then taxed as costs to the parties.” Obviously, therefore, our procedural, evidentiary, substantive, and cost provisions are different from those of Connecticut. While the Little case can be, and perhaps will be, held at some time in the future, to authorize the payment of costs in bastardy by a kindly Commonwealth, on behalf of any indigent defendant, no matter how frivolous his request, it must be recognized that the Little case does not automatically apply to us.5

[145]*145In Mangus v. Britton, 16 D. & C. 3d (1980), Judge Caldwell of Dauphin County awarded “blood tests” in a case procedurally very like our own. However, he conditioned this upon the defendant to furnish: “affidavits . . . that plaintiff was having sexual relations with other men besides defendant.” I view the Mangus case as authority that the judge may award a belated blood test to defendant whose request is not frivolous, if he chooses so. I note that Judge Caldwell says, “These actions on our part, however, did not invalidate or suspend in any way our determination of paternity . . . The determination is still in effect and it was incumbent upon defendant to obtain the affidavits and/or the test if he wished the court to reconsider its determination of paternity.”

Now, let’s look at the public policy implications. According to Poverty in Pennsylvania, 3d. Ed., Jan., 1979, upwards of 15 percent of the births in Pennsylvania are illegitimate. We have 168,000 births a year. 15 percent of that is 25,872.

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Related

Commonwealth Ex Rel. Valentine v. Valentine
405 A.2d 933 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1979)

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Bluebook (online)
23 Pa. D. & C.3d 140, 1982 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-bell-pactcomplwashin-1982.