Court Opinion

ID: 9689321
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-24 18:27:44.08568+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T18:18:46.955039
License: Public Domain

R. I. Cooper, J.
(dissenting). The court has a responsibility to take into consideration social and technological changes which may occur since a statute was originally promulgated where those changes affect the original purpose of the statute. *532In the present case I agree with the majority to the extent that the six-year statute of limitations in paternity matters had a valid legislative purpose to avoid stale claims when promulgated. However, due to the advances in technology through the development of blood tests which can show the probability of parentage to a degree of over 95% certainty, the possibility of prejudice because of a stale claim wanes substantially and becomes insignificant when compared to the need for providing support to illegitimate children who are not presently receiving the same equal protective right to support as that enjoyed by legitimate children.
A legitimate child has the right to support until he becomes 18. An action to enforce this right can be started at any time until the child reaches it 18th birthday. Although an illegitimate child presumptively has the same right to support until it reaches its 18th birthday, the practical effect of the Paternity Act limitation is to restrict the right to a 6-year period. If, in other words, an action is not taken on behalf of the illegitimate child to perfect the right to support within six years of birth, the right to support is lost. Plaintiff validly argues that this disparate treatment between illegitimate and legitimate children clearly violates an illegitimate child’s federal and state constitutional right to equal protection of the law.
The case of O’Brien v Hazelet & Erdal, 410 Mich 1, 13; 299 NW2d 336 (1980), summarizes the scope of judicial review of equal protection challenges to social economic legislation as follows:
"' "Under traditional equal protection analysis, a legislative classification must be sustained, if the classification itself is rationally related to a legitimate governmental interest.” ’ ”
*533The defendant is correct when he states that statutes of limitations should be construed to advance the policies they are designed to promote. The defense provides a respectable list of cases and purposes of such statutes of limitations to the effect that they are intended to prevent stale and fraudulent claims, to require expeditious filing by a complainant and to allow the presentation of witnesses whose memories have not faded or to locate witnesses who may have knowledge of a mother’s intimacy with someone other than the purported father who could have sired the child in question. For the above reasons, various states have upheld statutes of limitations pertaining to the initiation of paternity actions. In re People in Interest of L B, 179 Colo 11; 498 P2d 1157 (1972), Thompson v Thompson, 285 Md 488; 404 A2d 269 (1979), State ex rel Krupke v Witkowski, 256 NW2d 216 (Iowa, 1977), Texas Dep’t of Human Resources v Chapman, 570 SW2d 46 (Tex Civ App, 1978).
However, the overriding purpose of Michigan’s Paternity Act is to see that minor illegitimate children are supported and cared for. This conclusion is clearly enunciated by our Michigan Supreme Court as follows:
"Patently, these provisions seek to express society’s concern with the support and education of the 'child born out of wedlock.’ In terms of need for support and education, we see no difference between children born in or out of wedlock.” Whybra v Gustafson, 365 Mich 396, 400; 112 NW2d 503 (1961).
This enunciation was reaffirmed and reiterated by our Michigan Court of Appeals as follows:
"The purpose of the Paternity Act is to provide for *534the support of an illegitimate child. The announced public policy of this state is to treat children born out of wedlock as no less deserving of support than those born in wedlock.” Smith v Robbins, 91 Mich App 284, 289; 283 NW2d 725 (1979), citing Boyles v Brown, 69 Mich App 480; 245 NW2d 100 (1976).
As stated in Robbins, 288:
"An individual is entitled to equal protection under the law. US Const, Am XIV; Const 1963, art 1, § 2. A legislative classification may not be arbitrary. There must be a rational relation between the classification and the purpose of the act in which it is found. United States Dep’t of Agriculture v Moreno, 413 US 528, 533; 93 S Ct 2821; 37 L Ed 2d 782 (1973), Fox v Employment Security Comm, 379 Mich 579, 588; 153 NW2d 644 (1967).”
Various states have found that there was not a substantial relationship between the setting of a statute of limitations and the state’s asserted interest of providing support for illegitimate children. In State Dep’t of Health v West, 378 So 2d 1220, 1227 (Fla, 1979), the Supreme Court stated:
"The arbitrary determination that paternity can only be proved in four years creates an impenetrable barrier to an illegitimate child’s right to seek support without considering alternatives which deal directly with the problem of proof. Although proof of paternity may become more difficult with the passage of time, this mere possibility cannot be allowed to work an unconstitutional discrimination against illegitimate children.”
Further, the Florida Court observed that the right to support is a continuing one which never becomes dormant. Id.
"This duty of future support cannot be barred for *535illegitimate children if it is allowed for legitimate children.” Id., 1228.
The above conclusion was also reached in Stringer v Dudoich, 92 NM 98; 583 P2d 462 (1978), to the effect that if there is no limitation on the right of a legitimate child to seek support then there can be no such limitation on the same right for an illegitimate child. Id., 100. The North Carolina Court of Appeals also applied a substantial relationship standard of review and held that their statute was not substantially related to any permissible state interest but that it discriminated against illegitimate children in violation of the Equal Protection Clause. The North Carolina statute provided a three-year limitation. The North Carolina Court of Appeals reasoned that, because a child is entitled to paternal support throughout its minority, it cannot be said that a claim for such support brought at any time during the child’s minority is stale. Further, the court observed that the mere passage of time would not bear a direct relationship to the truth of the claim asserted; thus, the statute was not substantially related to the objective of preventing fraudulent claims. The court found that the child’s interest in receiving adequate support manifestly outweighed the relation the statute may have to the prevention of fraudulent claims. Further, the North Carolina court viewed the statutory limitation provision as inconsistent with the state’s interest in preventing illegitimate children from becoming public charges. County of Lenoir ex rel Cogdell v Johnson, 46 NC App 182; 264 SE2d 816 (1980).
Although Michigan allows the results of blood tests by a defendant to prove that he could not be the father of a child, the state Legislature has not yet amended the statute so as to allow blood tests *536to prove that defendant could be the father of the child. Certainly there have been significant advances in the state of technology which, however, have not been adopted by the Legislature to allow such evidence to be used in litigation to prove paternity. Nevertheless the potential of such a change in Michigan law adds support to the position that our statutes’ purpose of preventing stale claims may be significantly mitigated by the accuracy of modern blood tests. Further, the present admissibility of exclusionary blood test evidence certainly ameliorates concern of a stale claim. This reasoning found recent support in Montana Dep’t of Revenue v Wilson, — Mont —; 634 P2d 172 (1981), in which a three-year statute of limitations was held unconstitutional as applied to illegitimate children. The Montana Supreme Court stated:
"Classifications of this nature are invalid under the Fourteenth Amendment, if they are not substantially related to a permissible state interest. * * *
"Recently, we examined the scientific advances in blood testing in determining paternity and the discretionary power of the District Court. Rose v Dist Court of Eighth Judicial Dist, 628 P2d 662 (Mont, 1981). The newly-developed, greater percentage of accuracy in determining paternity allows greater protections for the alleged father from fraudulent claims. In light of these advances, the standard of proof required in paternity actions and the discretion granted to the District Court in pretrial hearings, it is concluded that the purpose of section 40-6-108(3), MCA, as applied to the child through a guardian ad litem or other representative, is minimal or nonexistent compared to the interest of the child in obtaining support from his paternal parent. Id., 634 P2d 172, 174.
The above stated cases have all applied a "substantial relationship” standard. This standard has *537been upheld in Michigan in O’Brien v Hazelet & Erdal, supra, 13. Further, the Supreme Court in United States v Clark, 445 US 23; 100 S Ct 895; 63 L Ed 2d 171 (1980), found that classification based on illegitimacy is unconstitutional unless it bears an evident and substantial relation to the particular interest the statute is designed to serve. For the reason set out in the above described cases, it is clear the limitation provision of the Michigan Paternity Act is unconstitutional because a limitation of six years bears at best a tenuous relationship to the state’s interest of preventing stale claims whereas the overriding and predominate purpose of the Paternity Act is to see that minor illegitimate children are supported. This right of support exists for the full 18 years of a child’s minority and an illegitimate child is clearly disadvantaged by the 6-year limitation as compared to a legitimate child. In applying O’Brien v Hazelet & Erdal, supra, it cannot be said such a tenuous relationship would be "rationally related to a legitimate government interest”.
In evaluating the question whether Michigan’s Paternity Act satisfies constitutional requirements of due process, there must be a showing that the plaintiff has a "property” or "liberty” interest which is protected by the Fourteenth Amendment. Further, pursuant to Mathews v Eldridge, 424 US 319, 332; 96 S Ct 893; 47 L Ed 2d 18 (1976), the Court must then determine, if such an interest is found, whether the statutory procedure promulgated was adequate by weighing three factors:
(1) the magnitude of the private interest affected by the official action;
(2) the risk of erroneous deprivation of such interest through the procedure used and probable value of additional safeguards; and
*538(3) the governmental interest furthered by the procedure used, considering the additional fiscal and administrative burdens that additional or substitute procedures would impose. Id., 424 US 319, 335.
Although there is no Michigan case on point holding that the illegitimate child’s right to support is a vested property interest, it may be argued that a child has a valid claim of entitlement from his mother and father and therefore has a property interest at stake. Certainly the father has to be identified in order to pursue such a property interest. The Michigan Paternity Act provides that the mother of an illegitimate child or the Department of Social Sérvices may file a complaint on behalf of the illegitimate child to obtain an order of filiation so that child support may be determined. MCL 722.714(a), (h); MSA 25.494(a), (h). Number one above is satisfied in that there would be a property interest entitling an illegitimate child to receive child support from a putative father. Under number two, there is serious concern whether a child would be deprived of its right of support through the risk of an error. It is certainly foreseeable that a mother of an illegitimate child might have significant resentment toward a putative father and not desire to have any contact at all with him. However, after six years she may find herself in financial difficulties and yet the six-year statute of limitations would prevent the best interest of the child from being fulfilled by barring the mother from being able to seek child support. Further, if the mother then sought aid from the Department of Social Services in the form of ADC payments, the Department of Social Services would only have been alerted to the child’s needs at a time after which the six-year statute of limitations had expired. Thus the Department of Social Services also *539would be barred from filing a complaint against a putative father on behalf of the illegitimate child. Although the Michigan Paternity Act does provide access to the courts on behalf of an illegitimate child by its mother or by the Department of Social Services, there is nevertheless a serious substantial risk of erroneous deprivation of such a right to child support pursuant to Mathews v Eldridge. In the present case it is not clear why the mother or the Department of Social Services did not initiate an action for paternity prior to the expiration of six years.
In conclusion, it is clear that illegitimate children do not receive the same protection as legitimate children; that advances in technology have substantially ameliorated the concern surrounding the original legislative desire to avoid stale claims and thus the original substantial relationship to the purpose of the Paternity Act’s statute of limitations no longer exists; and that the risk of error also shows a valid challenge to the sufficiency of an illegitimate child’s right to due process under the paternity statute.
I would affirm the result reached by the trial court based on the reasons described above.