Ryan Matzuk, s/k/a Walter Ryan Matzuk v. Christina Price and Ryan Bedell

828 S.E.2d 252, 70 Va. App. 474
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJune 11, 2019
Docket1635182
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 828 S.E.2d 252 (Ryan Matzuk, s/k/a Walter Ryan Matzuk v. Christina Price and Ryan Bedell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ryan Matzuk, s/k/a Walter Ryan Matzuk v. Christina Price and Ryan Bedell, 828 S.E.2d 252, 70 Va. App. 474 (Va. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Russell, Malveaux and Senior Judge Clements Argued at Richmond, Virginia PUBLISHED

RYAN MATZUK, S/K/A WALTER RYAN MATZUK OPINION BY v. Record No. 1635-18-2 JUDGE MARY BENNETT MALVEAUX JUNE 11, 2019 CHRISTINA PRICE AND RYAN BEDELL

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF HENRICO COUNTY Richard S. Wallerstein, Jr., Judge

Misty D. Whitehead (Whitehead & Graves, PLLC, on brief), for appellant.

Taylor B. Stone (Brice E. Lambert, Guardian ad litem for the minor child; Janus & Stone, P.C.; Lambert & Associates, on brief), for appellee Christina Price.

Michael P. Tittermary (Brice E. Lambert, Guardian ad litem for the minor child; The Witmeyer Law Firm, PLC; Lambert & Associates, on brief), for appellee Ryan Bedell.

Walter Ryan Matzuk appeals a final order of the circuit court granting Christina Price’s

petition to disestablish his paternity and her petition to establish the paternity of Ryan Bedell.

Matzuk argues that the circuit court erred in finding that a material mistake of fact existed with

regard to paternity. For the following reasons, we affirm. I. BACKGROUND

Price’s son, W.M., was born in April 2012. According to the parties’ pleadings, upon the

child’s birth, Matzuk signed an acknowledgement of paternity in which he affirmed, under oath,

that he was the “natural parent of the child.”1

In 2017, five years after the child’s birth, Price filed two petitions related to the paternity

of W.M. On April 3, 2017, Price filed a petition to establish paternity for her son, W.M. The

petition alleged that Price “reasonably believe[d]” that W.M. “may be the biological product of a

union” between herself and Bedell and that Matzuk’s endorsement of the acknowledgement of

paternity was an intentional misrepresentation of a material fact under Code § 20-49.1.2 On

September 6, 2017, Price filed a petition to disestablish paternity. The petition moved the circuit

court to order genetic testing pursuant to Code § 20-49.3 and Code § 20-49.10.3 Price

specifically asked the court to order genetic testing of herself, Matzuk, Bedell, and W.M., to

1 A copy of the acknowledgment of paternity was not included as part of the record in this case. 2 Code § 20-49.1, titled “How parent and child relationship established,” provides several ways to establish a legal parent-child relationship between a man and a child. One of the methods to establish parentage, as discussed in more detail infra, is by a voluntary acknowledgment of paternity which is “binding and conclusive” on the man acknowledging paternity, “unless, in a subsequent judicial proceeding, the person challenging the statement establishes that the statement resulted from fraud, duress or a material mistake of fact.” Code § 20-49.1(B)(2). 3 Code § 20-49.3(A), titled “Admission of genetic tests,” authorizes a court to order the alleged parents and the child to submit to “scientifically reliable genetic tests” in “the trial of any matter . . . in which the question of parentage arises.” Code § 20-49.10, titled “Relief from legal determination of paternity,” establishes a mechanism for individuals to obtain relief from a legal determination of paternity. The statute provides that a court “may set aside a . . . legal determination of paternity if a scientifically reliable genetic test performed in accordance with [Chapter 3.1 of Title 20 of the Code] establishes the exclusion of the individual named as a father in the legal determination.” However, the court is not permitted to do so if “the individual named as father . . . acknowledged paternity knowing he was not the father.” Code § 20-49.10. -2- “disestablish paternity of Matzuk, establish the paternity of Bedell, and enter an [o]rder of

[p]arentage.”

The court ordered that Price, Matzuk, Bedell, and W.M. submit to genetic testing.4 The

results, filed with the court on December 13, 2017, established that Bedell could not be excluded

as the biological father of W.M.5

On May 29, 2018, at a hearing held on Price’s petitions, Price testified that when W.M.

was born, she was not aware of the identity of W.M.’s biological father. At that time, she

thought that the biological father could have been either Matzuk or Bedell. Prior to W.M.’s

birth, Price had told Matzuk that either he or Bedell was W.M.’s biological father. She did not

know for certain that Matzuk was not W.M.’s biological father until a genetic test was completed

in March 2015. She testified that Matzuk had not wanted to undergo genetic testing regarding

W.M.’s paternity.

Matzuk initially testified that when he signed the birth certificate at the hospital following

W.M.’s birth, he was aware that he was not W.M.’s biological father. However, he did

acknowledge at the hearing that he had previously testified under oath that when Price informed

him that she was pregnant, she had told him that W.M.’s biological father could be either himself

or Bedell. He testified that at the time he signed the birth certificate, he “felt that [W.M.] was

not mine.” When asked if he “felt that, but . . . didn’t know that,” Matszuk replied, “I don’t think

that anybody knew that.” He then testified that, when he signed the birth certificate, he “knew it

in my heart that this was not my child.” He acknowledged that he did not “do any kind of

scientific research at that moment to find out if [W.M.] was [his] child or not [his] child.”

4 Matzuk never completed the genetic testing ordered by the court. 5 A certificate of analysis showing the results of the genetic testing revealed that Bedell’s “relative chance of [p]aternity” of W.M. was 99.9999%. -3- At the hearing, counsel for Price and Bedell argued that the petition to disestablish

paternity should be granted because the voluntary acknowledgment of paternity was the result of

a material mistake of fact under Code § 20-49.1. Counsel for Matzuk contended that appellees

had not established that a material mistake of fact had existed at the time of the acknowledgment

of paternity.

On August 13, 2018, the circuit court held another hearing on the matter. The court

asked counsel for Matzuk whether denying the petition to disestablish paternity “[w]ould . . . be

tantamount to eliminating Mr. Bedell’s parental rights?,” and counsel replied in the negative.

The court then asked if Bedell would have “those rights, under Troxel [v. Granville, 530 U.S. 57

(2000),] and the line of cases, if he has not been legally determined to be the biological father?,”

to which counsel for Matzuk replied, “Yes.” Counsel for Bedell then argued that denying the

petition to disestablish paternity would be tantamount to eliminating his client’s rights because

Bedell would not be listed on the child’s birth certificate and because this determination would

affect his custody rights.

In addition, counsel for Bedell argued that the petition to disestablish Matzuk’s paternity

should also be granted under Code § 20-49.10. He contended that genetic testing had established

that Bedell was W.M.’s biological father and that Code § 20-49.10 “controls” and “stands

independent” of Code § 20-49.1.

After hearing argument, the circuit court made several findings. First, it concluded that

an unpublished opinion of this Court, Wooddell v. Lagerquist, No. 2121-11-3 (Va. Ct. App. Nov.

20, 2012), indicated that the two paternity statutes at issue, Code §§ 20-49.1 and -49.10, “should

be read with the idea in mind that they should be and could be harmonized.” In regard to Code

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828 S.E.2d 252, 70 Va. App. 474, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ryan-matzuk-ska-walter-ryan-matzuk-v-christina-price-and-ryan-bedell-vactapp-2019.