M.M. v. D.V.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 19, 2021
DocketD077468
StatusPublished

This text of M.M. v. D.V. (M.M. v. D.V.) 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
M.M. v. D.V., (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 7/19/21

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

M.M., D077468

Plaintiff and Appellant,

v. (Super. Ct. No. EFL002133)

D.V. et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Imperial County, L. Brooks Anderholt, Judge. Affirmed. Law Offices of Ben Aguilar and Benjamin Aguilar, for Plaintiff and Appellant. Stephen Temko, for Defendants and Respondents.

M.M. appeals from a judgment denying his petition to establish a parental relationship with his biological son (Child). M.M. filed the petition after he learned, when Child was two years old, that he was Child’s biological father. M.M. alleged that he was entitled to status as a presumed father under the principles of due process and equal protection set forth in Adoption of Kelsey S. (1992) 1 Cal.4th 816 (Kelsey S.) for unwed fathers who are prevented by the mother or by a third party from establishing presumed father status. M.M. does not dispute the parental status of T.M., who is married to Child’s mother (Mother), is listed on Child’s birth certificate as the father, and signed a Voluntary Declaration of Parentage at the Child’s birth. However, M.M. contends that he should be accorded status as Child’s third

parent pursuant to Family Code section 7612, subdivision (c).1 For the purpose of our analysis, we assume without deciding that M.M. is entitled to presumed parent status as a Kelsey S. father, making him eligible to be adjudged a third parent to Child. However, even assuming that M.M. is entitled to presumed parent status, we conclude that the trial court properly determined that M.M. should not be adjudged a third parent due to his lack of an existing relationship with Child. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment. I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND M.M. and Mother were in a relationship in 2015, which overlapped

with the time period during which Mother began a relationship with T.M.2 Mother discovered a pregnancy in December 2015 and informed M.M. that he might be the father. However, after a doctor’s visit in January 2016, Mother

1 Unless otherwise indicated, all further statutory references are to the Family Code.

2 The trial on M.M.’s petition was not transcribed by a court reporter. Accordingly, the parties arrived at a settled statement, which sets forth the testimony presented at trial, and the trial court certified the settled statement. Our factual recitation is based on the settled statement, the trial court’s factual findings, and the content of the trial exhibits that are included in the appellate record. Although those exhibits are not specifically identified in the settled statement, the exhibit list and a notation on each exhibit indicate that the exhibits were admitted into evidence at trial. 2 told M.M. that based on the doctor’s estimate of the date of conception, M.M. could not be the father. The Child was born in July 2016. At the time, T.M. believed he was Child’s father. T.M. therefore signed a voluntary declaration of parentage and was listed as Child’s father on the birth certificate. T.M. and Mother got married when Child was seven months old. In July 2017, a daughter was born to T.M. and Mother. Because the couple’s daughter was discovered to have a rare genetic condition that was not present in Child, Mother and T.M. decided to reach out to M.M. to find out if he was Child’s father, rather than T.M. M.M. agreed to submit to DNA testing. The results of the DNA test established in January 2019 that M.M. is the biological father of Child. At the time, Child was two years old. After discovering that M.M. was Child’s biological father, Mother permitted M.M. to meet with Child on several occasions for brief periods of

time.3 However, as the trial court found, “there have been no real visits nor was there evidence of any type of bonding between [M.M.] and [Child].” Mother permitted contact between M.M. and Child for a few weeks or

months,4 but she then cut off contact after deciding that “it would be

3 As shown by exhibits presented at trial, and as reflected in the settled statement, in January 2019, Mother sent a text message to M.M., in which she stated that she was sorry that she previously told M.M. that he was not the father of Child. According to the settled statement, Mother testified that she sent the text message because she was experiencing a manic episode and “did not know what she was saying.”

4 The record of the evidence presented at trial does not reflect the exact time period during which Mother allowed M.M. to have contact with Child. According to M.M.’s appellate brief, Mother cut off contact in May 2019. That timeline is consistent with Mother’s statement in her responsive declaration

3 confusing and traumatizing to try to introduce a stranger into the child’s life and to take away some of his time with the person he viewed as his father.” According to the parties’ settled statement, M.M. testified that if he had “known prior to January 2019 that [Child] was his biological son, he would have assumed his obligations. But he testified he never offered to pay nor has [h]e paid any child support.” As reflected in the settled statement, “The actions [M.M.] took to establish a relationship with [Child] once he was informed by Mother she would not allow him to have a relationship with the minor, was to retain counsel and open a case to establish his parental rights.” Specifically, on September 16, 2019, M.M. filed a petition to establish a parental relationship with Child. Mother filed a response, and T.M. was joined in the action due to his status as Child’s father based on, among other things, his execution of a Voluntary Declaration of Parentage at Child’s birth. In connection with a motion to dismiss filed by T.M. and Mother, M.M. clarified that he was not attempting to challenge T.M.’s status as Child’s father and was not seeking to set aside the Voluntary Declaration of Parentage signed by T.M. Instead, M.M. was seeking to be recognized as a third parent to Child pursuant to section 7612, subdivision (c). A trial was held on February 4, 2020, at which M.M., Mother, and T.M. testified. The trial court issued a ruling on February 24, 2020, denying M.M.’s petition. The trial court concluded that M.M. was not eligible to be adjudged a third parent under section 7612, subdivision (c), because he could obtain such a ruling only if he first established that he was a presumed

to M.M.’s petition that “[i]n May, after a couple of months of contemplating the decision, I informed [M.M.] that I decided it would be best for [Child] to grow up knowing about him, but to not have ongoing contact and/or visitation until [Child] was older.” 4 parent. M.M. sought presumed parent status under the principles of equal protection and due process set forth in Kelsey S., supra, 1 Cal.4th 816 applicable to unwed biological fathers who are thwarted in voluntarily

undertaking a parental role.5 The trial court held that M.M. did not meet the requirements to be identified as a Kelsey S. father because M.M. did not do enough to come forward promptly and assume parental responsibilities: “It would have been incumbent upon [M.M.] to have demanded testing when first informed he might have been the father should he have truly wished to take his position as [Child’s] father. Instead, he was satisfied with the representations made to him at the time. He chose to waive any rights he might have had at the time by not taking affirmative steps to confirm what he was told. The court would be justified in ending its analysis with this finding but goes further by fully analyzing the applicable Family Code sections in connection with [M.M.’s] argument he was misled and his notice was delayed.

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Bluebook (online)
M.M. v. D.V., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mm-v-dv-calctapp-2021.