Smith v. Lane

101 Misc. 2d 615, 421 N.Y.S.2d 786, 1979 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2732
CourtNew York Family Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1979
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 101 Misc. 2d 615 (Smith v. Lane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Family Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Lane, 101 Misc. 2d 615, 421 N.Y.S.2d 786, 1979 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2732 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1979).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Irene Duffy, J.

This is an unusual contested paternity suit. The petitioner is male.

[616]*616The Legislature has only recently recognized the right of the male person to proclaim and prove his fatherhood of a child born out of wedlock. (Family Ct Act, § 522.) Many legal questions arising in this case have perhaps heretofore lay unresolved, providing merely exercises for classroom discussion.

Prior case law in paternity actions dealing with situations where the female is the petitioner, leave difficult burdens for the male petitioner in this case. For example, the respondent (here the mother) cannot be forced to testify and the petitioner (here the male) must prove by "clear and convincing” proof the date of conception and the respondent’s "nonaccess” to other men during the conception interval. The statutory privilege not to testify for the male respondent in a paternity case is grounded in public policy in view of the economic and social burdens incident to the finding of paternity. But where, as here, the male petitioner seeks to assume those burdens and there exists no such public policy rationale, should the standard of proof be lessened and may the court draw an inference against the mother by her failure to testify or controvert the petition?

It is with these issues in mind and the thorny factual questions ever present in a paternity proceeding that this court proceeds to consider the case before it.

This paternity proceeding was commenced on January 5, 1979 pursuant to article 5 of the Family Court Act. The petitioner is a 19-year-old man who seeks an order of filiation naming him the father of a female child born December 12, 1978, who has since been surrendered by her mother for adoption. The respondent has opposed this paternity action, and unsuccessfully moved for dismissal of this petition at the outset, specifically challenging petitioner’s standing to file the instant petition under section 522 of the Family Court Act where the child in question has been surrendered for adoption by the mother. (See John J. S. v Theresa L., 99 Misc 2d 578.) Accordingly, a fact finding was held on August 3, 1979 and August 7 and 8, 1979. Thereafter, posttrial briefs were submitted by both counsel, the last having been received on September 21, 1979.

As with most contested paternity matters, the court’s assessment concerning the credibility of the witnesses is of critical importance and the court has carefully observed the wit[617]*617nesses’ demeanors and manners of testifying and listened to the substance of their testimony, with this in mind.

The salient testimonial evidence adduced at trial is as follows:

The petitioner ("Jackie”) testified that he and the respondent ("Terry”) lived about 10 blocks from each other and attended different high schools when they were first introduced to each other by Jackie’s younger sister in early February, 1978. After meeting, romance ensued, and Jackie and Terry began dating regularly, seeing each other almost every day both after school and on each weekend. They frequently spent their evenings together in the homes of their respective families.

Jackie further testified that he and Terry began having sexual intercourse with each other in March, 1978, a couple of times per week until their relationship ended in July, 1978. In May, 1978, Terry told Jackie she believed she was pregnant and the couple discussed marriage. The relationship continued until mid-July, 1978 when Terry decided to end it due in part to Jackie’s heavy drinking. A few months after the breakup, Jackie left home and entered the Marine Corps.

Jackie did not tell his parents about Terry’s pregnancy until sometime in the early fall of 1978.

Peter O’Rourke, a 21-year-old friend of Jackie’s, who managed the beer distributor outlet where Jackie worked after school, testified as to his knowledge of the ongoing relationship between Jackie and Terry. Most importantly, Mr. O’Rourke testified that in mid-June, 1978 he met Terry on a street corner and she asked him if he had heard what happened, adding that Jackie and she had a problem, that she was pregnant and had missed two menstrual periods.

Jackie’s older sister Jean, a 21-year-old college student, also took the stand. She testified that Jackie had told her of Terry’s pregnancy in July, 1978. Jean further testified that she met Terry in a local restaurant sometime in mid-September, 1978 at which time she asked Terry if she was still pregnant, and whether it was Jackie’s baby. Terry answered "yes” to both questions.

Jackie’s mother, Mrs. Smith, also testified as to her knowledge of the "romance” between her son and Terry. She stated that Terry spent many evenings at the Smith home and that [618]*618Terry stopped by the house virtually on a daily basis to leave notes for Jackie.

The court found petitioner and his witnesses to be very credible. Petitioner, in particular, was forthright and direct in his testimony, and the substance of the testimony was candid, credible and devoid of meaningful inconsistency. Petitioner’s sister, Jean, also struck the court as particularly credible. She obviously felt very compassionate about Terry’s "toughing it out”, through the entire pregnancy without the help of her brother, Jackie.

Respondent, on her case in rebuttal, called three witnesses —her current boyfriend, Richard Gorman ("Ricky”), her father, and Sister Rosemarie, director of Rosalie Hall (the prenatal clinic of Misericordia Hospital).

Ricky testified that he had a romantic relationship with Terry which began in the latter part of 1977; that he began having sexual intercourse with her in October, 1977; that Terry ended their romance in February of 1978; and that they nonetheless continued to have sexual intercourse one or two afternoons per week in Ricky’s father’s car during the period when Terry was dating and having sexual relations with the petitioner.

The court finds Ricky’s testimony to be incredible and unworthy of belief. The court must state at the outset that Ricky, although a man of 21 years, impressed as an innocent —unaccustomed to lying or even exaggerating. He appeared very uneasy and apprehensive throughout his testimony, testified haltingly, and generally conveyed an impression of contrivance rather than forthrightness. His evident uneasiness at having to tell his fanciful story — his intonations, his demeanor —all bespoke his misplaced motivation and his obvious love and affection for Terry.

However, I discredit Ricky’s testimony not only because of his demeanor and manner of testifying but also because of several inconsistencies and because of the inherent incredibility of his testimony.

As regards the inconsistencies, one example will suffice. While claiming that he had sexual relations with Terry since October, 1977, Ricky nonetheless denied having such relations until after Terry’s 16th birthday. Terry did not turn 16 until June 10, 1978.

More importantly, Ricky’s version of the facts is inherently [619]*619unbelievable. It greatly strains this court’s common sense and imagination to believe that a man, then 20 years of age, burning with love for Terry would accept rejection by his beloved for another man yet continue to see her twice a week in the afternoons only as a sex object.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
101 Misc. 2d 615, 421 N.Y.S.2d 786, 1979 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2732, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-lane-nyfamct-1979.