M.B. v. District of Columbia
This text of 478 A.2d 1087 (M.B. v. District of Columbia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
This appeal is taken from an order of the Superior Court, Family Division, entered May 17, 1983, which determined appellant to be the natural father of a minor child and ordered that he pay fifty dollars each month to the natural mother for the support and maintenance of the child. The petition to establish paternity was brought by Corporation Counsel on behalf of the child despite the fact that the natural mother was not a recipient of public assistance either prior to or at the filing of the suit1 as is prescribed under D.C.Code § 16-2341(a) (1981).2 No challenge is raised to the sufficiency of the evidence establishing paternity. Instead, appellant attacks the validity of the court’s order on the theory that § 16-2341(a) permits Corporation Counsel to file such an action only “[w]here a public support burden has been incurred or is threatened” and, he asserts, neither condition was met. Upon review before us is whether the trial court properly denied appellant’s motion to dismiss the petition. We affirm.
The mandate of § 16-2341(a) clearly provides that Corporation Counsel “shall bring a civil action” in a parentage proceeding where there is or may be a public support burden. Thus appellant contends that where there is no existing or threatening public support burden the statute conversely operates to preclude such actions. Ap-pellee, on the other hand, points to D.C. [1088]*1088Code § 1-861 (1981),3 under which Corporation Counsel is obligated to “have charge and conduct of all law business” of the District of Columbia, and argues that it confers upon Corporation Counsel broad authority to represent the District whenever such representation is deemed appropriate to advance the public interest. To support its position, appellee cites District of Columbia v. Pryor, 366 A.2d 141 (D.C.1976) in which this court stated, “nothing in the statutes precludes the Corporation Counsel from undertaking the representation of a private, moving party ... when it is deemed proper or necessary .... ” Id. at 143. Pryor was decided under § 1-301, the predecessor to § 1-361, which was substantially the same. We held therein that a superior court judge lacks power to appoint Corporation Counsel to represent the parental petitioner in an involuntary commitment proceeding. Thus, the language seized upon by appellee was not, strictly speaking, vital to the court’s ruling.
We need not, however, address these arguments or determine whether, under the aegis of § 1-361, the Corporation Counsel may initiate parentage proceedings where no public support burden exists or is threatened.4 The record at bar indicates that appellant’s motion to dismiss was premised, in relevant part, upon the failure to allege that a public support burden existed or was threatened. Thus, at issue was whether the petition was fatally defective, not whether the Corporation Counsel exceeded its statutory authority. We conclude the petition was not defective. Moreover, on the basis of the record before us, we cannot say that the Corporation Counsel did not consider a public support burden to be threatening, thereby making the natural mother eligible for representation under § 16-2341(a).
Affirmed.
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478 A.2d 1087, 1984 D.C. App. LEXIS 492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mb-v-district-of-columbia-dc-1984.