Strayer v. Ryan

725 A.2d 785, 1999 Pa. Super. 27, 1999 Pa. Super. LEXIS 119
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 16, 1999
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 725 A.2d 785 (Strayer v. Ryan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Strayer v. Ryan, 725 A.2d 785, 1999 Pa. Super. 27, 1999 Pa. Super. LEXIS 119 (Pa. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

BECK, J.:

¶ 1 This is an appeal from an order granting a petition for DNA/blood tests to determine the paternity of a one and a half-year-old child. We affirm.

¶2 Appellant mother, Jody L. Ryan, and appellee putative father, Barry L. Strayer, were involved in a sexual relationship in the summer of 1996. Shortly after their relationship ended in September 1996, mother suspected that she was pregnant and informed appellee of that fact. They purchased a home pregnancy test, which confirmed the pregnancy. Appellee accompanied mother to prenatal testing early in the pregnancy, but had only occasional telephone contact throughout the rest of the *786 pregnancy. Mother gave birth to a son, Logan Joshua-Stuart Ryan, on June 3, 1997.

¶ 3 In August 1997, appellee requested visitation rights with the child. Mother replied that she would consider his request, but no visitation was ever permitted. Appellee also offered to contribute to the financial support of the child, but Mother refused to accept the support offered. Appellee then retained counsel and in January 1998, when the child was seven months old, filed a complaint for custody. A scheduled custody conciliation conference was continued pending resolution of the paternity issue.

¶ 4 On February 3, 1998, appellee filed a Petition for DNA/Blood Tests to Determine Paternity. At the hearing on the petition, mother testified that she did have sexual relations with appellee during the time when she conceived the child, but could not recall if she had had sexual relations with anyone else during the time of possible conception. She stated that she opposed appellee’s petition for paternity testing and his attempt to secure partial custody of her child because she was presently involved with another man who had established a relationship with the child and whom she regarded as the “father” of her child. Mother admitted, however, that her new boyfriend was not the child’s biological father. She also testified that she thought that permitting appellee to have a relationship with her child would be disruptive for the child.

¶ 5 Further testimony at the hearing revealed that Mother’s new boyfriend did not live with her and the child and in fact held a job that required him to be out of town five days a week. He has not assumed responsibility for the financial support of the child and mother has never held him out as the biological father.

¶ 6 On March 3, 1998, the trial court entered an order granting the petition for paternity tests. In its opinion in support of this order, the trial court concluded that based on mother’s own testimony it would appear that appellee is the only man who could possibly be the child’s biological father. Therefore, the trial court framed the issue as simply whether Mother’s allegation that the child has developed a relationship with her new boyfriend and that appellee’s participation in the child’s life would be disruptive is enough to preclude appellee from obtaining paternity tests to confirm his paternity as a precursor to obtaining partial custody of the child. In the trial court’s view, the standard to be applied in answering this question was whether it would be in the child’s best interests to allow appellee to confirm his paternity and, presumably, to enter into a paternal relationship with the child. Since the trial court concluded that such would be in the child’s best interests, it allowed the paternity testing to go forward.

¶ 7 Although we agree with the trial court’s ultimate disposition of this case and find that appellee is unquestionably entitled to have paternity tests conducted to confirm his paternity, we find no support in the law for the trial court’s analysis based on the best interests of the child. We hold that where, as here, a man who has reason to believe that he is the father of a newborn child comes forward within months of the child’s birth and attempts to establish his paternity so that he will be able to engage in a full paternal relationship with the child, and where the facts do not give rise to any countervailing presumption of paternity or to a claim of estoppel, blood testing to establish paternity should be ordered.

¶ 8 Unlike many cases wherein the paternity of a child is at issue, this case does not involve any presumptions concerning the identity of the child’s father. Mother was not married when the child was conceived or born. Nor does this case involve questions of estoppel such as are raised in paternity cases where a man has held a child out as his own and supported the child and then attempts to deny his paternity or where a mother seeks and accepts support of a child from one man who she claims is the father and then seeks to establish that another is the child’s father. See, e.g., Martin v. Martin, 710 A.2d 61, 62-63 (Pa.Super.1998) (reviewing principles of presumption of paternity and estoppel). Rather, this case presents a much more straightforward scenario.

*787 ¶ 9 As the trial court noted, although Mother has assiduously avoided admitting that appellee is the child’s biological father, she could not recall having sexual relations with anyone else during the time of possible conception. In addition, she has not suggested that anyone else is the father, having left the father’s name blank on the child’s birth certifícate. She has not sought or received child support from any other man.

¶ 10 Appellee, the putative father, has acted in a consistent manner with respect to this child. Appellee strongly suspects that he is the child’s father and, if he is, he wants to fulfill his paternal obligations. His attempts to confirm his own paternity, and even to contribute to the child’s support, have been thwarted by Mother, who simply argues that appellee would be a disruptive presence in the child’s life and that she would prefer to have her current boyfriend assume a fatherly role. She believes that as between her current boyfriend and appellee, the former will be better for the child and has already established a relationship with him. She contends that this alone is legally sufficient to thwart appellee’s attempt to ascertain and act upon his biological paternity.

¶ 11 In support of this position, mother cites to a single authority, C.T.D. v. N.E.E. and M.C.E., 439 Pa.Super. 58, 653 A.2d 28 (1995). Her reliance is misplaced. In C.T.D., mother was involved with three men at the time of conception. One was C.T.D. and another was M.C.E. Mother and C.T.D. terminated their relationship during the pregnancy but mother and M.C.E. continued their relationship and, after the child’s birth, married. The child’s birth certificate was then amended to indicate that M.C.E. was the father. When the child was two years old, C.T.D. filed a custody complaint and petition for blood tests. On appeal from the grant of the latter, mother and M.C.E. argued that they had now established a family unit including the child and that C.T.D.’s attempt to establish paternity, occurring when the child was already two years old, should be denied.

¶ 12 The C.T.D. Court recognized that the case before it involved no presumption of paternity, since the child was not born or conceived during marriage, and that no traditional estoppel principles applied.

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Bluebook (online)
725 A.2d 785, 1999 Pa. Super. 27, 1999 Pa. Super. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strayer-v-ryan-pasuperct-1999.