Ptaszek v. Michalik

606 N.E.2d 115, 238 Ill. App. 3d 72, 179 Ill. Dec. 283, 1992 Ill. App. LEXIS 1591
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 30, 1992
Docket1-91-1151
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 606 N.E.2d 115 (Ptaszek v. Michalik) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ptaszek v. Michalik, 606 N.E.2d 115, 238 Ill. App. 3d 72, 179 Ill. Dec. 283, 1992 Ill. App. LEXIS 1591 (Ill. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinions

JUSTICE LINN

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff, Robert G. Ptaszek, seeks post-judgment relief from an agreed order of paternity that was entered on December 16, 1986. That paternity declaration was the result of Ptaszek’s action to have himself declared the natural father of Erik Robert Michalik. Because the petition to vacate the 1986 order was filed more than two years after its entry, Ptaszek must establish that the ground he asserts for relief from the 1986 order was fraudulently concealed from him. Ill. Rev. Stat. 1989, ch. 110, par. 2 — 1401(c).

The trial court denied the petition to vacate the order of paternity, finding that Ptaszek failed to establish that Karen Michalik, Erik’s mother, had fraudulently concealed the fact that he may not be the child’s biological father. In addition, the court found that Ptaszek, who had actively sought and maintained a father-son relationship with Erik for seven years, had failed to exercise due diligence with respect to challenging paternity.

On appeal, Ptaszek urges this court to reverse, claiming that the court’s ruling was against the manifest weight of the evidence. He also claims that the trial court erred in refusing to admit into evidence the results of blood tests that were obtained following the filing of his petition to vacate.

For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

Backgbound

Ptaszek and Michalik began a sexual relationship in May or June of 1981. When she became pregnant in August of that year, she told him she was certain that he was the father. They discussed the possibility of marriage but at that time the relationship had already deteriorated and it terminated altogether in 1982. The baby was born on April 1, 1982. Two or three months thereafter, Michalik introduced Ptaszek to the man she later married. From the beginning, however, Ptaszek acted as Erik’s father and contributed support.

Ptaszek continued to enjoy regular visitation with Erik until 1984, when Michalik tried to put a stop to it. In March 1984 Ptaszek filed a paternity action to establish that he was Erik’s natural father and to establish a visitation and support schedule. The complaint asserted that he was Erik’s natural father, had developed a close relationship with the child, and that Erik believed him to be his natural father.

Michalik’s answer to the complaint admitted Ptaszek’s allegation of paternity. She contested his continued visitation, however. In a pleading she filed on December 12, 1986, seeking a mental examination of Ptaszek, she alleged that he had an unstable temper, drank to excess, and abused their son. Her petition also stated that Erik, who would have been more than four years old at that time, “refuse[d] to see [Ptaszek].”

On December 16, 1986, the parties entered into an agreed order that identified Ptaszek as the natural father. The order set out his obligation to pay child support and to provide health insurance while Michalik retained custody of the child. The visitation issue was reserved pending evaluation and counseling of the parties by the social services department.

The record indicates that the parties participated in additional or supplemental court proceedings on the visitation issues and that Ptaszek believed Michalik was impeding his visitation with Erik.

On August 3, 1989, Ptaszek filed the pending petition, pursuant to section 2 — 1401 of the Illinois Code of Civil Procedure, seeking vacation of the agreed order of paternity that had been entered almost three years earlier. (This was seven years after Erik’s birth and 31 months after Ptaszek had obtained the judicial declaration of fatherhood.) In the petition he denies paternity, relying solely on a May 30, 1989, conversation with Michalik in which she stated he was not Erik’s father. In support of his section 2 — 1401 petition, Ptaszek submitted an affidavit stating that he had “had no reason to doubt” Michalik’s earlier statements “that acts of intercourse engaged in by [him and Michalik] resulted in her conceiving a child.” (In now asserting his nonpaternity as “fact” in the petition to vacate, Ptaszek presumably took Michalik’s statement once again at face value.)

According to Ptaszek’s testimony at the 1991 hearing on the section 2 — 1401 petition, he was first told that Erik was not his son on May 30 when Michalik telephoned and asked Ptaszek why he mistreated her and hit her. His testimony on this point is vague, but apparently the May 30 conversation related to an incident or argument of a day or two before in which Ptaszek had hit Michalik. She called to ask why he “beat her up” and treated her the way he did. According to Ptaszek, this was the first time she told him Erik was not his son.

In her response to the petition to vacate, Michalik stated that at the time of Erik’s conception Ptaszek had “no reason to believe that he was the exclusive sexual partner of Karen Michalik” and that he had notice or knowledge of the circumstances surrounding Erik’s paternity at the time of birth and at the time of his action to establish paternity. She did not testify at the hearing.

At the hearing, Ptaszek attempted to introduce into evidence blood tests the parties and child had taken pursuant to his request to clarify paternity. Ptaszek had sent the results of the tests to Michalik with a request to admit facts and genuineness of documents. She did not file a response thereto. The trial court ruled that the results of blood tests would not be admitted into evidence, however, on grounds of relevance. The court noted that Ptaszek filed his section 2 — 1401 petition alleging fraudulent concealment before any such tests were taken and that the petition was not based on the results of the tests.

Ptaszek admitted that he was seeking a reduction of his child support payments in a separate action.

The court then asked Ptaszek a series of questions relating to the circumstances of the parties’ 1981 sexual liaison. Ptaszek said that he had believed Michalik when she told him she had not engaged in sexual relations with anyone else during their affair. Ptaszek conceded, however, in response to the court’s final question, that “when a lady is engaging in sex with two different men during the period of conception, she really doesn’t know who is the father, either.”

The court ruled that the facts presented did not justify a finding of fraudulent concealment, noting that Ptaszek had been represented by counsel in the paternity proceedings he had instituted in 1984, two years after Erik’s birth. The court also remarked that Ptaszek was aware that Michalik had married within six months after Erik’s birth. Ptaszek’s paternity action did not conclude until 1986, and he waited more than two years after that before he attacked the judgment and sought blood tests, based solely on a telephone conversation in which Michalik stated that he was not Erik’s father. Accordingly, the trial court denied Ptaszek’s section 2 — 1401 petition to set aside the 1986 agreed declaration of paternity.

Opinion

Ptaszek’s brief ignores his own conduct and the passage of time in urging this court to set aside a final judgment of paternity that he actively pursued.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
606 N.E.2d 115, 238 Ill. App. 3d 72, 179 Ill. Dec. 283, 1992 Ill. App. LEXIS 1591, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ptaszek-v-michalik-illappct-1992.