Laurel S. v. Sanders

2 Cal. App. 4th 462
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 7, 1992
DocketNo. D012616
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 Cal. App. 4th 462 (Laurel S. v. Sanders) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Laurel S. v. Sanders, 2 Cal. App. 4th 462 (Cal. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

Opinion

TODD, J.

Christine S. (Christine), as guardian ad litem for her daughter Laurel, appeals an order denying a petition for heirship filed on behalf of Laurel in the probate of the estate of Laurel’s putative father, Raymond Denis Sanders (Sanders). The order also rejected a request by Christine that DNA (genetic) tests be ordered to establish Sanders was Laurel’s father.

Facts

In his will dated December 12, 1975, Sanders, an educator and filmmaker, bequeathed all of his property in equal shares to his three children: [466]*466Victoria Sanders; Peter N. Sanders, and Juliette Sanders. Sanders died on December 11, 1987. At the time, Sanders was married to Sherri Warren-Sanders. Their marriage occurred after the will was executed, making her a pretermitted heir. (See Prob. Code,1 § 6560.) Sanders’s will was admitted to probate, and his brother, Terry Sanders, was appointed personal representative.

Laurel was born September 4, 1978. Her mother, Christine, claims Laurel’s father was Sanders.

On March 24, 1989, Christine, as guardian ad litem for Laurel, filed a request for special notice in the probate proceeding. Subsequently, on May 10, 1989, Christine filed a petition for heirship and determination of entitlement to distribution of the estate under former section 1080,2 which claimed Laurel is the natural daughter of Sanders and entitled to a portion of his estate as a pretermitted heir. (See § 6570.) Included in the prayer of the petition was “subsequent discovery orders necessary to prove the paternity of Laurel ... by the deceased.”3 On June 6, 1989, the executor filed an objection to the petition for heirship filed on behalf of Laurel “on the grounds that no convincing credible evidence has been offered to substantiate Laurelfs] . . . claim to be the natural daughter of decedent.” Also in connection with the petition for heirship filed on behalf of Laurel, Victoria Sanders, a daughter of Sanders, filed a declaration on August 24, 1989, requesting evidence to support the alleged parent-child relationship. In her declaration, Victoria stated that in May 1989 the attorney for Victoria and her brother and sister sent a letter containing 34 questions to Christine and that the answers to those questions could help the estate and Sanders’s children evaluate the paternity claim of Christine and Laurel. The declaration stated that Christine had not responded to the 34 questions.

On October 6, 1989, in connection with a status conference scheduled for October 13,1989, Christine filed the following documents: (1) a declaration by an expert in DNA testing; (2) a letter from her attorney to counsel for the [467]*467executor and counsel for the Sanders children answering the 34 questions posed by the Sanders children; (3) a copy of Laurel’s birth certificate showing the father as “not stated”; and (4) a May 28, 1980, check from Sanders marked as a “loan.” The expert, Daniel D. Garner, declared that if blood samples from Laurel, Christine, the three Sanders children and the mothers of the three Sanders children were analyzed for DNA polymorphisms, his laboratory could verify whether Sanders was the father of Laurel.

In the letter answering the 34 questions, Christine related, among other things, she and Sanders met in April 1977 when she was a student at UCLA film school. Christine said they had an intimate relationship from late July 1977 through January 1, 1978, and that he was the only person with whom she was having sexual relations from July 1977 through May 1978. Christine stated she believes Laurel was conceived on either the 8th or 9th of December 1977. Christine said to her knowledge Sanders did not know she was pregnant with Laurel as he did not return her phone calls after they broke up in January 1978. Christine said that after Laurel was born Sanders admitted to her that he was Laurel’s father, but that “he did not want to make more emotional and time commitments to another child.” Christine said she did not ask Sanders for child support nor bring an action for paternity while he was alive because “I was afraid of possible reprisal from him regarding custody.” Christine said the only time she asked Sanders for money occurred around 1980 after she was injured during a mugging and out of work for a while; Sanders loaned her $100.

The executor responded by filing, on January 8,1990, a supplement to his objections to the petition for heirship filed on behalf of Laurel. In this filing, the executor claimed (1) there was insufficient evidence to establish a parent and child relationship under section 6408 and (2) the requested DNA tests of Sanders’s surviving children and their mothers cannot fulfill and are not relevant to the requirements of section 6408.

On February 16,1990, the probate court heard the matter, rejecting an oral request by Christine for a continuance.4 The court found the evidence did not establish a parent and child relationship under section 6408 and Civil Code sections 7004 and 7006 and ordered Laurel is not entitled to be considered a child of Sanders. The court also denied the request for DNA tests. The order [468]*468denying the petition for heirship was filed March 19, 1990. Christine, as guardian ad litem for Laurel, appeals this order.

Discussion

I

Christine contends the trial court erred in failing to order DNA genetic testing.

At the outset we note there were two implicit5 proposals by Christine for genetic testing before the court: (1) The first, which can be inferred from papers filed October 6, 1989, called for blood samples to be taken from Christine, Laurel, Victoria Sanders, Peter Sanders and Juliette Sanders, as well as the mothers of Victoria, Peter and Juliette; (2) The second, suggested in papers filed February 16,1990, called for blood samples to be taken from Christine, Laurel, Victoria Sanders, Peter Sanders and Juliette Sanders. Inasmuch as the second proposal was filed on the day of the determinative hearing in connection with a motion for a continuance, it was within the trial court’s discretion whether to consider the papers. Since the trial court denied the oral request for a continuance and the order denying the petition for heirship includes language referring to the “DNA tests of the decedent’s surviving adult children and their mothers,” we conclude the trial court did not consider the second proposal for DNA testing—i.e., the proposal that would not have required blood samples be taken from the mothers of Sanders’s surviving adult children. Nonetheless, we shall consider both proposals.

First, the trial court’s refusal to order DNA testing of Sanders’s surviving adult children along with their mothers clearly was correct. There can be no doubt the court lacked authority to order the mothers of Sanders’s surviving adult children to give blood samples. (See William M. v. Superior Court (1990) 225 Cal.App.3d 447 [275 Cal.Rptr. 103] [in paternity action, parents of deceased putative father not subject to order requiring them to submit to blood tests].) Here, these mothers are not parties to the probate [469]*469proceeding; hence, Code of Civil Procedure section 2032,6 which provides a procedure by which a party

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Related

Estate of Sanders
2 Cal. App. 4th 462 (California Court of Appeal, 1992)

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Bluebook (online)
2 Cal. App. 4th 462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laurel-s-v-sanders-calctapp-1992.