S.M. v. E.C. CA5

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 27, 2014
DocketF065817
StatusUnpublished

This text of S.M. v. E.C. CA5 (S.M. v. E.C. CA5) 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
S.M. v. E.C. CA5, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 6/27/14 S.M. v. E.C. CA5

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

S.M., F065817 Plaintiff and Appellant, (Super. Ct. Nos. VFL241005 & v. VFL239539)

E.C., OPINION Defendant and Respondent,

Y.M. et al.,

Respondents.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Tulare County. Jennifer Shirk, Judge. Law Office of Marcus A. Torigian, Marcus A. Torigian for Plaintiff and Appellant. Allen Law Firm, David W. Allen for Defendant and Respondent. National Center for Lesbian Rights, Catherine P. Sakimura; Hatherley Law, Dale J. Hatherley for Respondent Y.M. No appearance on behalf of Respondent Tulare County Department of Child Support Services. -ooOoo-

1 Appellant S.M. appeals from a trial court order finding that E.C. and Y.M. are the two parents of P.C.-M. (the minor). E.C. is the minor’s biological mother, Y.M. was E.C.’s registered domestic partner when E.C. conceived and gave birth to the minor, and S.M. is the minor’s biological father. After determining that Y.M. and S.M. each met a statutory presumption of parentage, the trial court found that considerations of policy and logic weighed in favor of Y.M.’s parentage claim over S.M.’s parentage claim under Family Code section 7612, subdivision (b).1 On appeal, S.M. contends the court erred in resolving the competing claims for parental status under section 7612. He also argues the trial court judge should have recused herself pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 170.1. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY Y.M. and E.C. entered into a domestic partnership registered with the State of California in October 2006. They decided to have a child together. According to Y.M., they spent “two years off and on planning and trying to conceive [a] child.” They asked S.M. to be their sperm donor. Y.M. and E.C. found a sample sperm donor contract on the Internet, made some edits and deletions, and printed two copies of their edited contract. Y.M., E.C., and S.M. signed both copies of the contract. According to S.M., Y.M. and E.C. paid him $300 for his semen samples. Y.M. assisted E.C. in artificial insemination on two occasions in October 2008, and Y.M. believed this was how E.C. became pregnant. During the time period Y.M. and E.C. were trying to conceive, however, E.C. and S.M. were in a secret romantic relationship.2 E.C. began having sex with S.M. in June 2008, and she believed she had conceived prior to the two artificial insemination attempts. At the time E.C. became pregnant, S.M. did not intend to be the father of the minor.

1Subsequent statutory references are to the Family Code unless otherwise indicated. 2Y.M. did not become aware of E.C. and S.M.’s 2008 affair until September 2010.

2. The minor was born in June 2009. Her birth certificate lists the parents as Y.M. and E.C. The minor’s last name is hyphenated, combining the last names of E.C. and Y.M. Y.M. and E.C. separated about six months after the minor was born. S.M. moved in with E.C. in July 2010, and he began holding out the minor as his child. S.M. and E.C. originally met at work; he was a sales associate and she was a loss-prevention manager at the same store. According to S.M., he and E.C. began a serious relationship in March 2010. They did not tell anyone that the minor was S.M.’s child until E.C. transferred to a different store in the summer of 2010 because there was a rule against coworkers dating and they could have lost their jobs. In September 2010, Y.M. initiated Tulare County Superior Court case No. 239539 (dissolution action) by filing in pro. per a “Petition for Custody and Support of Minor Children” (capitalization omitted) naming E.C. as the respondent and the minor as the subject of the action. Y.M. alleged that she and E.C. were both mothers of the minor, and Y.M. sought joint legal and physical custody and proposed a visitation schedule. A month later, E.C. filed a petition for dissolution of domestic partnership.3 She named the minor as a child of the relationship. E.C. also filed with the court a handwritten declaration by S.M. In the declaration, S.M. requested “a D.N.A. test to prove that [he was] the biological father of [the minor].” He wrote:

“Although I donated my sperm to [E.C. and Y.M.] in [October] 2008 to [conceive] a child, I believe that [E.C.] was pregnant a month prior because we engaged in sexual relations. [E.C. and I] have been in a serious relationship since March 2010 and we [are pursuing] our relationship further in hopes of being married by next year. I have [actively] been in [the minor’s] life since March and I am determined in having my parental rights established. I love both [E.C.] and [the minor] and we both want to

3E.C.’s petition is not included in the clerk’s transcript, but the trial court referred to the petition in its ruling, and the parties do not dispute its existence.

3. give [the minor] a normal and healthy [sic] with both [the minor’s] biological parents.” In December 2010, the court entered an order awarding E.C. physical custody of the minor and awarding legal custody to E.C. and Y.M. jointly. At a hearing on the matter, Judge Jennifer Shirk noted that S.M. had filed a request for visitation and paternity but it was not in the proper form. Judge Shirk explained, “He’s not a party to the action at this point. A joinder needs to be filed.” In February 2011, the court ordered a division of property between Y.M. and E.C. The court also ordered the child custody and visitation order from December 2010 to remain in effect and ordered a holiday visitation schedule. Also in February 2011, S.M. initiated a separate action, Tulare County Superior Court case No. 11-241005, filing in pro. per a motion for child custody, visitation, and an injunctive order (paternity action). He named E.C. but not Y.M. as the respondent. He sought to establish paternity and requested joint physical and legal custody of the minor. Judge Kathryn Montejano ordered genetic testing through the Department of Child Support Services and joined Y.M. as a party to the action. Y.M. obtained counsel and filed a motion to quash S.M.’s petition and summons in the paternity action on the ground that he was not a presumed father. In December 2011, Judge Shirk issued an order to show cause why the dissolution action and paternity action should not be ordered related. The judge later ruled the two actions were related and should be assigned to her pursuant to California Rules of Court, rule 3.300(a) and (h)(1). In January 2012, the court heard testimony from the parties regarding Y.M. and E.C.’s efforts at artificial insemination, E.C.’s sexual relationship with S.M. in 2008, and the sperm donor agreement. The parties agreed that they all signed an agreement regarding the sperm donation, but they were unable to locate a copy of the document. Y.M. recalled that the agreement stated S.M. would have no parental rights, he would not

4. be asked for child support, and he could not seek parental rights after the child was born. S.M. acknowledged that he signed an agreement that he would provide semen samples to E.C. until she became pregnant, and he would provide her semen again for up to two more children. He believed the agreement provided that E.C. and Y.M. would raise the child and they would not request child support from him. E.C. remembered that the agreement provided she would not collect child support from S.M. She did not remember a paragraph stating that S.M. would not be part of the child’s life.

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