Source: http://www.dna-testing-paternity.com/paternity-laws/oregon-state-paternity-laws
Timestamp: 2017-05-25 10:30:00
Document Index: 625619737

Matched Legal Cases: ['§1', '§2', '§11', '§2', '§3', '§37', '§37', '§7', '§20', '§17', '§136', '§11', '§1']

Oregon State Paternity Laws
« West Virginia State Laws
Virginia State Paternity Laws »
posted by DNA Identifiers @ 12:35 PM	Friday, July 24, 2009	The below information is a general guide to Oregon State Paternity Laws. Please conduct further research on your state laws for current or updated information or contact a family attorney for professional legal advice. For information on state collection locations, click here.
Link: Paternity Information for Mothers and Fathers Link: Oregon Department of Justice Division of Child Support Forms
Link: Oregon Child Support Program – Establish Paternity
Link: Oregon Child Support Program – Parents and Families
Link: Oregon State Bar Paternity FAQ
Link: Oregon State Change Vital Records – Paternity FAQ
Required Probability of Paternity for Oregon Courts: 99% Required Paternity Index: None at this time – If the court finds, based on blood test evidence, that the man may be the biological father of the child and that the cumulative paternity index based on the blood test evidence is 99 or greater, the court shall deny the petition.(109.072.9)
Current Oregon Paternity Law: Section 109
109.060 Legal status and legal relationships when parents not married. The legal status and legal relationships and the rights and obligations between a person and the descendants of the person, and between a person and parents of the person, their descendants and kindred, are the same for all persons, whether or not the parents have been married. [1957 c.411 §1]
109.070 Establishing paternity. (1) The paternity of a person may be established as follows:
(c) By the marriage of the parents of a child after the birth of the child, and the parents filing with the State Registrar of the Center for Health Statistics the voluntary acknowledgment of paternity form as provided for by ORS 432.287.
(e) By filing with the State Registrar of the Center for Health Statistics the voluntary acknowledgment of paternity form as provided for by ORS 432.287. Except as otherwise provided in subsections (4) to (7) of this section, this filing establishes paternity for all purposes.
(C) The Department of Human Services or the administrator, as defined in ORS 25.010, if the child named in the acknowledgment is in the care and custody of the department under ORS chapter 419B and the department or the administrator reasonably believes that the acknowledgment was signed because of fraud, duress or a material mistake of fact.
(6) Within one year after a voluntary acknowledgment of paternity form is filed in this state and if blood tests, as defined in ORS 109.251, have not been completed, a party to the acknowledgment, or the department if the child named in the acknowledgment is in the care and custody of the department under ORS chapter 419B, may apply to the administrator for an order for blood tests in accordance with ORS 416.443.
(b) Notwithstanding any provision of subsection (1)(c) or (e) of this section or ORS 432.287 to the contrary, an acknowledgment signed by a party described in this subsection and filed with the State Registrar of the Center for Health Statistics does not establish paternity and is void. [1957 c.411 §2; 1969 c.619 §11; 1971 c.127 §2; 1975 c.640 §3; 1983 c.709 §37; 1995 c.79 §37; 1995 c.514 §7; 1999 c.80 §20; 2001 c.455 §17; 2003 c.576 §136; 2005 c.160 §§11,17; 2007 c.454 §1]
Link: Oregon Laws
on Friday, July 24th, 2009 at 12:35 pm	and is filed under Paternity Laws.
One Response to “Oregon State Paternity Laws”
Barrett Clint says:	May 30, 2010 at 9:44 am	Hi,Excellent blog dude!