Court Opinion

ID: 2748023
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2014-11-04 22:11:41.171117+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:00:33.060860
License: Public Domain

This opinion is subject to revision before final
                     publication in the Pacific Reporter

                                2014 UT 51

                                   IN THE
      SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF UTAH
                          ———————
        In the Matter of the Adoption of J.S., a minor child.
                          ———————
                        WILLIAM E. BOLDEN,
                     Appellant and Intervenor,
                                      v.
                       JOHN and JANE DOE,
                     Appellees and Petitioners.
                         ———————
                          No. 20120751
                     Filed November 4, 2014
                         ———————
                   Fourth District, Provo Dep‘t
                  The Honorable Lynn W. Davis
                          No. 114402317
                         ———————
                            Attorneys:
   Mark W. Wiser, Scott B. Wiser, Salt Lake City, for appellant
   Larry S. Jenkins, Lance D. Rich, Salt Lake City, for appellees
                         ———————
 JUSTICE LEE announced the judgment of the court and authored
 the opinion of the court as to Parts I, II.A.1, II.A.2.a–b, and II.B,
 and a plurality opinion with respect to Parts II.A.2.c and II.A.3.
   CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT joined JUSTICE LEE‘s opinion in full.
 JUDGE ORME concurred in the judgment and joined JUSTICE LEE‘s
    opinion with respect to Parts I, II.A.1, II.A.2.a–b, and II.B.
   ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE NEHRING filed a dissenting opinion.
            JUSTICE PARRISH filed a dissenting opinion.
   Having recused herself, JUSTICE DURHAM did not participate
         herein; DISTRICT JUDGE GREGORY K. ORME sat.
                        ———————

 JUSTICE LEE, opinion of the Court in part:
  ¶1 William Bolden is the putative father of a child (J.S.) born in
2011. The case before us on appeal is an adoption proceeding in-
                       In re Adoption of J.S.
                       Opinion of the Court

volving John and Jane Doe, the would-be adoptive parents of J.S.
Bolden tried to intervene in and object to the Does‘ adoption of
J.S. He was barred from doing so because he failed to preserve his
legal rights as a father by filing a paternity affidavit within the
time prescribed by Utah Code section 78B-6-121(3).
  ¶2 This provision of the Utah Adoption Act prescribes the re-
quirements that an unwed father must meet in order to secure the
right to assert his parental rights and object to an adoption. It is
aimed at protecting the best interests of children born out of wed-
lock—to ensure that such children have the benefit of a parent
committed to preserving their well-being. Unwed mothers acquire
parental rights—and the accompanying right to object to an adop-
tion—as a result of the objective manifestation of the commitment
to the child that is demonstrated by their decision to carry a child
to term. An unwed father‘s legal obligation to file the paternity
affidavit is a rough counterpart to the mother‘s commitment.
When a child is born out of wedlock, the mother, the father, or
both may assert their parental rights and thereby foreclose an
adoption. But if the mother and father choose to waive that
right—or, in the case of a father, fails to assert the right by filing
the paternity affidavit in a timely fashion—then the child may be
placed for adoption.
  ¶3 Utah law is roughly in line with the adoption laws of all
states across the country. In every state unwed fathers are re-
quired to fulfill legal requirements not imposed on unwed moth-
ers—most commonly, a filing aimed at establishing the father‘s
paternity. See infra ¶ 79 n.35. In Utah and elsewhere, the failure to
fulfill such requirements in the timeframe required by law
amounts to a waiver of the unwed father‘s right to object to an
adoption. This consequence is essential to the goal of protecting
children by facilitating adoption. Without a requirement of a time-
ly paternity filing, adoptions would be inhibited by being left in
limbo.
  ¶4 The affidavit requirement in Utah law takes the matter of a
paternity filing a minor step further—by requiring the father not
just to assert and establish paternity, but also to attest under oath
that he is able and willing to provide for the child. UTAH CODE
§ 78B-6-121(3). But this is a simple, straightforward hurdle—one
that countless unwed fathers have cleared, in a manner preserving
their parental rights and their prerogative of foreclosing adoption.

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                       Opinion of the Court

  ¶5 Bolden failed to fulfill this requirement, and in this case he
challenges it as unconstitutional. We reject his constitutional chal-
lenges and therefore affirm the district court‘s denial of his motion
to intervene in the Does‘ adoption of J.S.
  ¶6 First, we uphold the affidavit requirement against Bolden‘s
due process challenge. Bolden does not claim that the Adoption
Act infringes his procedural due process right to notice and an
opportunity to be heard; nor could he, as his failure to file the af-
fidavit is a result of his own procedural misstep (allegedly in ac-
cordance with the misadvice of counsel) and not some procedural
defect in the law. And Bolden fails to establish an infringement of
a fundamental right of substantive due process, as he fails to
present evidence that the right he asserts (to preserve his rights as
an unwed father without filing an affidavit) is a matter deeply
rooted in established history and tradition.
  ¶7 Second, we also uphold the affidavit requirement against
Bolden‘s equal protection challenge. We do so by recognizing the
importance of the state‘s interests in protecting children by facili-
tating the adoption process, and by concluding that those interests
are substantially advanced by the statutory affidavit requirement.
We likewise reject Justice Nehring‘s assertion that this require-
ment is an indication of invidious discrimination or sex-based ste-
reotyping. See infra ¶¶ 93-98, 111.
  ¶8 There is doubtless room for disagreement about whether
our legislature has struck the best balance as a matter of policy.
But we see no basis for deriding our law as a product of ―invi-
dious gender stereotypes.‖ Infra ¶ 88. At some level all adoption
laws discriminate against unwed fathers—by requiring of them
some legal filing not required of unwed mothers. Such require-
ments are not an indication of stereotype or discrimination. They
are simply an element of a legal scheme aimed at assuring that
any parent who would block an adoption has manifested a com-
mitment to the child‘s best interests. And we uphold the Utah
Adoption Act as constitutional on the basis of its advancement of
those important interests.
                                  I
  ¶9 In the summer of 2010, Bolden was involved in a sexual re-
lationship with S.B. The two were not married. S.B. eventually got
pregnant. Approximately two weeks before the baby was born,

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                        Opinion of the Court

Bolden filed a petition in the district court seeking to adjudicate
paternity and to establish custody, parent time, and child support.
  ¶10 Bolden‘s unsigned, unverified petition asserted that he was
―a fit and proper parent.‖ It sought ―sole physical and legal care,
custody, and control of [his] unborn child should [S.B.] decide not
to raise the child and attempt to put the child up for adoption.‖ In
the petition Bolden also asserted that ―a child support order
should enter, effective immediately,‖ consistent with statutory
guidelines, including an obligation to obtain health insurance for
the child.
  ¶11 One week later, Bolden filed in Utah‘s putative father regi-
stry a sworn and notarized notice that he had commenced pater-
nity proceedings regarding S.B.‘s unborn child. But he did not file
a separate affidavit asserting his willingness to assume custody of
the child and to submit to a child support order, or disclosing his
childcare plans, as required by Utah Code section 78B-6-121(3)(b).
Bolden attributes his deficiency in this regard to his attorney‘s
failure to advise him that such an affidavit was required. Though
Bolden offered—both before and after the birth of the child—to
pay S.B.‘s pregnancy-related medical expenses, S.B. refused to ac-
cept anything from Bolden, believing that her insurance would
cover all costs.
  ¶12 The child, a boy, was born on March 26, 2011. Bolden in-
itially visited the child in the hospital twice, but was thereafter re-
fused access and thus prevented from having any further contact.
Three days after the birth, S.B. determined that she wanted to pro-
ceed with an adoption and executed a consent to adoption before
Judge Lyon of the Second District Court.1 S.B. relinquished the
child to the prospective adoptive parents (the Does), who com-
menced an adoption proceeding that same day. Though their
adoption petition acknowledged that they knew the identity of
the child‘s father and that the father had made some effort to es-
tablish parental rights, they asserted that the father‘s failure to file

   1 The paternity and adoption actions originally proceeded sep-
arately—the former in Second District Court before Judge Lyon,
the latter in Fourth District Court before Judge Davis. They were
consolidated before Judge Davis upon joint stipulation and mo-
tion of the parties.

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                       Opinion of the Court

an affidavit along with his paternity petition was determinative of
his rights—in short, that he had none.
  ¶13 The Does thereafter notified Bolden of their intent to adopt
J.S. without Bolden‘s consent. Bolden moved to intervene in the
adoption proceeding, seeking to prevent the adoption and to as-
sert his parental rights. Between receiving the Does‘ Notice of
Adoption Proceedings and filing his motion to intervene, Bolden
also filed the affidavit required by section 78B-6-121(3).
  ¶14 The adoptive parents opposed Bolden‘s motion to inter-
vene, arguing that Bolden could not prevent the adoption because
he had not complied with the statute by filing an affidavit before
S.B. relinquished the child. Bolden acquired new counsel and
challenged the constitutionality of section 78B-6-121(3)‘s affidavit
requirement, moving for summary dismissal of the adoption peti-
tion on federal and state constitutional grounds. Bolden also
sought dismissal on the ground that he was the undisputed father
of J.S., that he did not consent to the adoption, and that he had
strictly and timely complied with most of the applicable statutory
requirements.
  ¶15 The district court heard oral argument on the motions and
issued a memorandum decision rejecting Bolden‘s constitutional
challenges. It concluded that Bolden had no right to contest the
adoption because he had not filed the affidavit required under
Utah Code section 78B-6-121(3). In rejecting Bolden‘s constitution-
al claims, the district court found that the affidavit requirement
related directly to the state‘s interests in requiring unwed fathers
to demonstrate a full commitment to their parental responsibili-
ties, in minimizing the risk of disrupting adoptions, and in pro-
tecting the rights of unwed mothers.
 ¶16 Upon issuance of a final order dismissing Bolden‘s inter-
vention and summary judgment motions, Bolden filed this appeal.
Bolden‘s appeal challenges the district court‘s judgment on legal
grounds. Our review is accordingly de novo. See Manzanares v.
Byington (In re Adoption of Baby B.), 2012 UT 35, ¶ 41, 308 P.3d 382.
                                 II
  ¶17 Under our Adoption Act, the consent of an unmarried bio-
logical father is not generally required for the adoption of a child
who is six months of age or less at the time of placement. See
UTAH CODE § 78B-6-121(3). Yet the statute prescribes an important

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                        In re Adoption of J.S.
                        Opinion of the Court

exception to the general rule. An unmarried biological father‘s
consent is required if, before the time the mother executes consent
for adoption or relinquishes the child for adoption, the father:
        (a) initiates proceedings in a district court of Utah to
        establish paternity under Title 78B, Chapter 15, Utah
        Uniform Parentage Act;
        (b) files with the court that is presiding over the pa-
        ternity proceeding a sworn affidavit:
            (i) stating that he is fully able and willing to
            have full custody of the child;
            (ii) setting forth his plans for care of the child;
            and
            (iii) agreeing to a court order of child support
            and the payment of expenses incurred in connec-
            tion with the mother‘s pregnancy and the child's
            birth;
        (c) consistent with Subsection (4), files notice of the
        commencement of paternity proceedings, described
        in Subsection (3)(a), with the state registrar of vital
        statistics within the Department of Health, in a con-
        fidential registry established by the department for
        that purpose; and
        (d) offered to pay and paid, during the pregnancy
        and after the child‘s birth, a fair and reasonable
        amount of the expenses incurred in connection with
        the mother's pregnancy and the child‘s birth, in ac-
        cordance with his financial ability . . . .
Id. § 78B-6-121(3).
  ¶18 Bolden acknowledges his failure to comply with the affida-
vit requirement of subsection (b) above. Yet he seeks to excuse
such failure by challenging the constitutionality of the statutory
requirement, asserting that it violates his rights to due process,
uniform operation of laws, and equal protection. We find no merit
in any of Bolden‘s constitutional claims2 and accordingly affirm.

   2  Bolden does not cleanly distinguish between federal and
state constitutional claims. He frames his arguments in terms of
state constitutional protections, yet frequently relies on caselaw
interpreting federal rights. E.g., Lehr v. Robertson, 463 U.S. 248
(1983) (analyzing federal due process and equal protection);

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                        Opinion of the Court

                           A. Due Process
  ¶19 In addressing Bolden‘s due process arguments, we first cla-
rify the distinction between procedural and substantive due
process and identify the nature of the claim before us here. After
classifying Bolden‘s due process challenge as substantive, we then
establish the governing legal framework and standard of scrutiny,
and finally proceed to reject Bolden‘s arguments under the appli-
cable standards.
                     1. Substance v. Procedure
  ¶20 The Due Process Clause has been construed to encompass
both a procedural and a substantive component. Under the pro-
cedural component, the courts have long recognized a general
right to notice and an opportunity to be heard. See United Student
Aid Funds, Inc. v. Espinosa, 559 U.S. 260, 272 (2010); Long v. Ethics &
Discipline Comm. of the Utah Supreme Court, 2011 UT 32, ¶ 29, 256
P.3d 206. Thus, for rights the law deems subject to formal process
(in courts or other adjudicative bodies), due process requires no-
tice reasonably calculated to inform parties that their rights are in
jeopardy3 and a meaningful opportunity to be heard in the course
of such proceedings.4 See Wells v. Children’s Aid Soc. of Utah, 681
P.2d 199, 204 (Utah 1984) (explaining that procedural due process
requirements encompass the ―notice and opportunity to be heard‖

Thurnwald v. A.E., 2007 UT 38, 163 P.3d 623 (analyzing both feder-
al and state due process in constitutional avoidance); Wells v.
Children’s Aid Soc’y of Utah, 681 P.2d 199 (Utah 1984) (analyzing
both federal and state due process rights). And he makes little or
no effort to identify anything in the text or history of the Utah
Constitution dictating an analysis that is distinct from that called
for under federal precedent. We accordingly analyze Bolden‘s due
process argument under federal standards and his uniform opera-
tion of law arguments under our precedent applying equal protec-
tion doctrines.
   3 See Mullane v. Cent. Hanover Bank & Trust Co., 339 U.S. 306,
314 (1950); Jackson Constr. Co. v. Marrs, 2004 UT 89, ¶ 10, 100 P.3d
1211.
   4 See Turner v. Rogers, 131 S. Ct. 2507, 2517 (2011); Chen v. Ste-
wart, 2004 UT 82, ¶ 68, 100 P.3d 1177.

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                        In re Adoption of J.S.
                        Opinion of the Court

that ―must be observed in order to have a valid proceeding affect-
ing life, liberty, or property‖) (emphasis added).
   ¶21 The due process right to an opportunity to be heard may be
lost due to a procedural misstep, however. A statute of limita-
tions, for example, may foreclose a cause of action before it is ever
litigated on its merits.5 A procedural bar prescribed by statute has
a similar effect.6
  ¶22 Such limitations may be challenged on either procedural or
substantive due process grounds. A procedural due process attack
on a statute of limitations or procedural bar would take the form
of an assertion that such a limitation forecloses any meaningful
opportunity for the plaintiff to protect its rights.7 A substantive
challenge would take a different form. It would involve a broad-

   5 See Davis v. Provo City Corp., 2008 UT 59, ¶ 27, 193 P.3d 86
(right to bring an action may be foreclosed by statutes of limita-
tions, which ―cut off the right to bring an action after a particular
period of time‖).
   6 See UTAH CODE § 63G-7-401(2) (containing the Utah Govern-
ment Immunity Act provision that any claimant with a right of
action must, as a prerequisite to filing suit, file written notice of
the claim with the government entity before maintaining the ac-
tion).
   7   See Logan v. Zimmerman Brush Co., 455 U.S. 422, 437 (1982)
(explaining due process requires ―an opportunity . . . granted at a
meaningful time and in a meaningful manner . . . for [a] hearing ap-
propriate to the nature of the case‖ (alteration in original) (internal
quotation marks omitted)); Terry v. Anderson, 95 U.S. 628, 632–33
(1877) (upholding a nine-month and seventeen-day statute of limi-
tations on the ground that ―[t]his court has often decided that sta-
tutes of limitation affecting existing rights are not unconstitution-
al, if a reasonable time is given for the commencement of an ac-
tion before the bar takes effect‖); Burford v. State, 845 S.W.2d 204,
207, 208 (Tenn. 1992) (holding that a three-year limitation on pre-
senting post-conviction claims ―provides a reasonable opportuni-
ty‖ for doing so, but striking the requirement as applied to a de-
fendant whose post-conviction claim did not accrue until after the
limitation had passed, as he was ―deprive[d] . . . of such a reason-
able opportunity‖).

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                       Opinion of the Court

side attack on the fairness of the procedural bar or limitation, on
the ground that the right foreclosed is so fundamental or impor-
tant that it is protected from extinguishment.8
  ¶23 Bolden‘s claim is of the latter variety. He nowhere claims
that the Adoption Act forecloses his meaningful access to the jus-
tice system.9 Nor could he. The affidavit requirement is simple

   8  See Montagino v. Canale, 792 F.2d 554, 557–58 (5th Cir. 1986)
(discussing framework for substantive due process challenge to
statute of limitations); Crier v. Whitecloud, 496 So. 2d 305, 308–09
(La. 1986) (upholding a medical malpractice statute of limitations
against a due process challenge on rational basis review); Valen-
tine v. Thomas, 433 So. 2d 289, 293 (La. Ct. App. 1983) (establishing
framework for substantive due process challenges under state
constitution to statute of limitations); State v. Egdorf, 77 P.3d 517,
521–22 (Mont. 2003) (―Substantive due process bars arbitrary go-
vernmental actions regardless of the procedures used to imple-
ment them . . . .‖).
   9  Applicable standards of procedural due process do not yield
free-wheeling authority for the courts to second-guess the wisdom
or fairness of legislative policy judgments. As the dissent indi-
cates, the courts have long held that ―an unwed father who ‗de-
monstrates a full commitment to the responsibilities of parent-
hood by ‗com[ing] forward to participate in the rearing of his
child,‘ acquires ‗substantial protection‘ under the due process
clause.‖ Infra ¶ 123 (Nehring, J., dissenting) (quoting Lehr v. Ro-
bertson, 463 U.S. 248, 261 (1983)). But that interest is a substantive
interest in an inchoate fundamental right. And that inchoate right
is perfected only when the father follows reasonable state laws re-
gulating the manner in which he is to demonstrate his ―full com-
mitment to the responsibilities of parenthood.‖ Infra ¶ 123 (Nehr-
ing, J., dissenting) (internal quotation marks omitted). A failure to
do so, moreover, means that the inchoate right is lost.
    Nothing in the cases Justice Nehring cites yields a judicial pre-
rogative to second-guess the wisdom of state law standards for a
father‘s perfection of his inchoate rights under the guise of proce-
dural due process. The courts are in no position to second-guess
the proper length of a particular statute of limitations under a
procedural due process balancing test. And we are likewise in no
position to second-guess the wisdom of the legislature‘s policy

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                        Opinion of the Court

and straightforward. And Bolden failed to fulfill it not because it
was difficult but because his counsel allegedly gave him bad legal
advice. See infra ¶ 63.
  ¶24 Thus, Bolden‘s argument is framed as a substantive chal-
lenge to the fairness of the affidavit requirement.10 Throughout his
opening and reply briefs, Bolden repeatedly characterizes his
claim as one challenging the statutory affidavit requirement as
―substantively unconstitutional‖ and as aimed at establishing a
―fundamental,‖ ―substantive right‖ of an unwed father as a par-
ent.
  ¶25 Justice Nehring‘s dissent portrays Bolden‘s case differently.
It insists that Bolden‘s arguments encompass both procedural and
substantive due process, while conceding that Bolden briefed only
the latter. Infra ¶¶ 114, 116. And it contends that Bolden asserts
that the affidavit requirement may deprive him of the procedural
right ―to be heard ‗at a meaningful time and in a meaningful
manner.‘‖ Infra ¶ 117 (Nehring, J., dissenting) (quoting Mathews v.
Eldridge, 424 U.S. 319, 333 (1976)). But the argument put forward

decisions regarding statutory prerequisites to establish an unwed
father‘s parental rights.
   The In re Baby Girl T. case cited by the dissent, infra ¶ 124, is
not to the contrary. There we did not extend the Mathews balanc-
ing test to a matter that the legislature placed outside the bounds
of adjudicative process. Instead, in a matter directed precisely
within those bounds (of an unwed father seeking to assert his sta-
tutory right to participate in judicial proceedings), we engaged in
standard analysis of the procedural due process question of the
core right of notice and an opportunity to be heard. See R.C.S. v.
A.O.L. (In re Baby Girl T.), 2012 UT 78, ¶¶ 16–32, 298 P.3d 1251.
Thus, Baby Girl T. is not a case establishing the propriety of proce-
dural due process analysis of a substantive limit on access to an
adjudicative proceeding. It is a core application of procedural due
process analysis within such a proceeding, and as such it has no
application here.
   10  See Black v. Sec. of Health & Human Servs., 93 F.3d 781, 789
(Fed. Cir. 1996) (rejecting a procedural due process challenge and
declining to apply procedural analysis where ―what the petition-
ers [really] object to is not the denial of a hearing, but the substan-
tive rule of eligibility that has been applied to them‖).

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                        Opinion of the Court

by the dissent appears nowhere in Bolden‘s briefs. Bolden no-
where complains of the sufficiency of the notice he was given un-
der Utah law or of the adequacy of the opportunity he was pro-
vided to ―‗submit evidence‘‖ or to otherwise prepare or present
his case in court. See infra ¶ 121 (quoting Christiansen v. Harris, 163
P.2d 314, 317 (Utah 1945)). Thus, neither Mathews v. Eldridge nor
Christiansen v. Harris is anywhere cited by Bolden on appeal. Nor
are any of the other cases cited by Justice Nehring in support of
his concerns regarding the ―procedural protections‖ inherent in
the right to procedural due process. Infra ¶ 121.11
  ¶26 Bolden‘s only allusion to procedural due process in his
briefs is in a defensive response to arguments put forward by the
adoptive parents. In his opening brief, Bolden reiterated his claim
to a substantive right to a fair ―opportunity to develop a relation-
ship with his newborn and thereby convert his provisional rights
into vested parental rights,‖ while asserting that ―this opportunity
interest could easily be rendered illusory if the state was free to

   11  Tellingly, even Justice Nehring‘s analysis is ultimately fo-
cused on matters of substance, not procedure. Instead of question-
ing the extent of the notice to Bolden or of the opportunity to
present his case, the dissent ultimately asserts—in a section of the
opinion captioned ―Procedural Due Process‖—that the statutory
affidavit requirement is ―so onerous and arbitrary that [it] vi-
olate[s] . . . due process.‖ Infra ¶ 126. The basis for that conclusion,
moreover, bears no relation to the standards of procedural due
process outlined in the cases cited earlier in the dissenting opi-
nion. Compare infra ¶¶ 119–20 (citing Mathews v. Eldridge for a ba-
lancing test dictating the appropriate level of adjudicative proce-
dure based on a weighing of the ―private interest‖ affected and
the costs and value of additional procedures), with Montagino, 792
F.2d at 557–58 (noting that on substantive due process challenge
to statute of limitations the standard was one of ―whether the sta-
tute is arbitrary‖). Instead of weighing the costs and benefits of
additional adjudicative procedures, the dissent simply asserts that
the statutory affidavit requirement is ―so onerous and arbitrary‖
that it crosses a ―line‖ envisioned by the dissent as establishing
the bounds of ―fundamental fairness.‖ Infra ¶ 126. That conclusion
is indistinguishable from that set forth in the substantive due
process section of the dissenting opinion—a point that reinforces
the inherently substantive nature of the issue on appeal.

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                       Opinion of the Court

impose ‗any process‘ it wanted on a father‘s ability to perfect his
provisional interest.‖ The adoptive parents seized on this formu-
lation in their responsive brief on appeal. To the extent Bolden
claimed a violation of an opportunity to be heard, the adoptive
parents quoted our cases for the proposition that ―the test for
whether a provision of the Adoption Act‘s putative father provi-
sions passes due process muster is whether ‗[t]he Act [] give[s]
him a meaningful and adequate procedure to protect this inter-
est.‘‖ R.C.S. v. A.O.L. (In re Adoption of Baby Girl T.), 2012 UT 78,
¶ 20, 289 P.3d 1251. And under that standard, the adoptive par-
ents asserted that Bolden‘s claim failed as a matter of law because
the affidavit requirement was ―meaningful and adequate‖ and
because Bolden admittedly failed to comply with it.
  ¶27 Bolden responded in his reply brief by repudiating any re-
liance on procedural due process. While acknowledging the adop-
tive parents‘ argument ―that an unwed father‘s due process rights
are merely procedural‖ and are satisfied by ―whatever ‗process‘
the legislature offers him,‖ Bolden emphasized the substantive na-
ture of his due process claim. Specifically, Bolden confirmed that
his due process challenge was to the ―substantive constitutionality
of the affidavit requirement at issue,‖ while emphasizing that that
claim subsisted regardless of whether the statutory limitations in
question were ―applied in a procedurally fair manner.‖
  ¶28 Thus, in its content and its terminology, Bolden‘s claim
sounds only in substantive due process.12 We accordingly proceed
to establish the standard of scrutiny that applies to this claim.

   12 In any event, a procedural due process claim would fall flat
in this case even under the cases cited by Justice Nehring‘s dis-
sent. ―[T]he State certainly accords due process when it terminates
a claim for failure to comply with a reasonable procedural or evi-
dentiary rule.‖ Logan, 455 U.S. at 437 (first emphasis added); see
also Hammond Packing Co. v. Arkansas, 212 U.S. 322, 350–51 (1909)
(default judgment as discovery sanction for failure to produce
evidence not a violation of due process). Bolden failed to do just
that. He failed to present evidence (an affidavit) essential to his
claim, and he is accordingly in no position to complain that his
own failure amounted to a violation of procedural due process.
    The dissent‘s other cases are unavailing. This is not a case of a
claimant who is foreclosed from protecting his interests by an ina-
bility to comply with a procedural requirement in the first place.

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                       2. Standard of Scrutiny
  ¶29 The right to due process is principally about process—
procedure, not substance. Most of this court‘s caselaw in the field
is thus about the nature and extent of the notice required by the
constitution, and of the opportunity to be heard once such notice is
afforded. See Wells v. Children’s Aid Soc’y of Utah, 681 P.2d 199, 204
(Utah 1984) (noting that ―[m]ost due process cases concern proce-
dural requirements, notably notice and opportunity to be heard‖).
The same is true at the federal level. For the most part, the due
process precedent in the United States Supreme Court likewise is
aimed at clarifying the kind of notice and opportunity to be heard
that is guaranteed by the constitution.13

See Logan, 455 U.S. at 424–26, 435–36 (holding that a state labor
commission failed to convene a procedurally required hearing,
thus depriving litigant of future hearing); People v. Germany, 674
P.2d 345, 351–52 (Colo. 1983) (involving a three-year time bar on
all post-conviction collateral attack, the effect of which was to
―immediately cut off this right for all persons whose convictions
antedate the statute by an interval of time in excess of the statuto-
ry limitation period‖); Burford, 845 S.W.2d at 208 (three-year limi-
tation on presenting post-conviction claims ―provides a reasona-
ble opportunity‖ for doing so, but striking the requirement as ap-
plied to a defendant whose post-conviction claim did not accrue
until after the limitation had passed, as he was ―deprive[d] . . . of
such a reasonable opportunity‖); see also Lehr, 463 U.S. at 264 (―[I]f
qualification for notice [of an adoption] were beyond the control of
an interested putative father, it might be thought procedurally in-
adequate.‖ (emphasis added)); In re Baby Girl T., 2012 UT 78, ¶ 31,
(holding filing requirement violated due process as-applied to
putative father where he deposited notice of paternity with state
agency, but through agency‘s negligence notice was not filed until
after the mother had consented to an adoption).
   13 See, e.g., Swarthout v. Cooke, 131 S. Ct. 859 (2011) (holding that
prisoners up for parole received adequate process when given
opportunity to be heard and provided reasons for denial of pa-
role); Wilkinson v. Austin, 545 U.S. 209, 225–26 (2005) (holding that
informal, nonadversary procedures were adequate to safeguard
liberty interest inmates had in not being assigned to supermax fa-

                                  13
                        In re Adoption of J.S.
                        Opinion of the Court

   ¶30 On a few occasions, the courts have recognized new subs-
tantive rights under the umbrella of due process. See, e.g., Roe v.
Wade, 410 U.S. 113 (1973); Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479
(1965). But the Due Process Clause is not a license for the judicial
fabrication of rights that judges might prefer, on reflection, to
have been enshrined in the constitution. Our role in interpreting
the constitution is one of interpretation, not common-law-making.
Thus, the judicial recognition of new fundamental rights of subs-
tantive due process is the exception, not the rule. See Regents of
Univ. of Mich. v. Ewing, 474 U.S. 214, 225 (1985) (―Although the
Court regularly proceeds on the assumption that the Due Process
Clause has more than a procedural dimension, we must always
bear in mind that the substantive content of the Clause is sug-
gested neither by its language nor by preconstitutional history
. . . .‖ (internal quotation marks omitted)).
  ¶31 That said, the principle of substantive due process is in-
grained in both federal and state precedent. So although we pro-
ceed cautiously in this domain, we cannot repudiate the substan-
tive due process inquiry altogether. We should instead prescribe
carefully the grounds and the basis for the recognition of any al-
leged right of substantive due process. To do so, we start with
some general background in federal precedent, proceed to more
specific precedent as applied to parental rights of unwed fathers,
and conclude by articulating the standard of scrutiny applicable
here.
                       a. The lesson of Lochner
  ¶32 Substantive due process reached its apex in the so-called
Lochner era. During this period, in decisions like Lochner v. New
York, 198 U.S. 45 (1905), the United States Supreme Court routine-
ly struck down legislation infringing on economic rights (such as
the freedom of contract) that it deemed inherent in the guarantee

cility); Cleveland Bd. of Educ. v. Loudermill, 470 U.S. 532, 542 (1985)
(holding that due process protections require a hearing prior to
discharge of employee who has constitutionally protected proper-
ty interest in employment); Bell v. Burson, 402 U.S. 535, 542 (1971)
(holding that except in emergency situations, due process requires
notice and opportunity for hearing appropriate to the nature of
the case before revocation of a driver‘s license).

                                  14
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                        Opinion of the Court

of the Due Process Clause. In Lochner itself, for example, the court
held unconstitutional a labor law restricting the number of hours
that bakers were allowed to work in a day in New York (ten), con-
cluding that the law was an ―unreasonable, unnecessary, and arbi-
trary interference with the right of the individual‖ to contract. Id.
at 56; see also Adkins v. Children’s Hosp., 261 U.S. 525 (1923) (strik-
ing down federal minimum wage legislation as violative of subs-
tantive due process).
  ¶33 Such expansive use of the Due Process Clause was hardly
uncontroversial. Lochner-type invocations of substantive due
process sparked now-famous dissents from the likes of Justices
Holmes and Harlan, who decried the ―ever increasing scope‖ of
the substantive due process rights recognized by their colleagues,
and noted the tendency of the doctrine to ―give us carte blanche to
embody our economic and moral beliefs in its prohibitions.‖
Baldwin v. Missouri, 281 U.S. 586, 595 (1930) (Holmes, J., dissent-
ing); see also Lochner, 198 U.S. at 75 (Holmes, J., dissenting) (―Some
of these laws embody convictions or prejudices which judges are
likely to share. Some may not. But a Constitution is not intended
to embody a particular economic theory . . . .‖); id. at 68 (Harlan, J.,
dissenting) (―If the end which the legislature seeks to accomplish
be one to which its power extends, and if the means employed to
that end, although not the wisest or best, are yet not plainly and
palpably unauthorized by law, then the court cannot interfere.‖).
  ¶34 The dissenting view eventually carried the day. In cases
marking the beginning of the so-called Progressive Era, the court
began to disavow Lochner-style decisionmaking. See West Coast
Hotel Co. v. Parrish, 300 U.S. 379 (1937) (overruling Adkins, and
upholding minimum wage legislation). And by the mid-1950s, the
court categorically—and unanimously—concluded that ―[t]he day
is gone when this Court uses the Due Process Clause of the Four-
teenth Amendment to strike down state laws, regulatory of busi-
ness and industrial conditions, because they may be unwise, im-
provident, or out of harmony with a particular school of thought.‖
Williamson v. Lee Optical of Okla., 348 U.S. 483, 488 (1955). Thus,
with regard to substantive due process challenges to economic
regulations, ―[t]he almost universal‖ standard embraced by the
courts today is ―a rational basis test so tolerant that the substan-

                                  15
                         In re Adoption of J.S.
                         Opinion of the Court

tive content of economic statutes rarely violates due process.‖
Wells, 681 P.2d at 205.14

   14  Justice Nehring‘s dissent spurns the above discussion of the
Lochner era as a ―lengthy exposition‖ that has ―no place‖ in our
analysis. Infra ¶ 133. That critique is puzzling. Lochner is the key
bugaboo of substantive due process jurisprudence in the twen-
tieth century. The courts‘ experiment with Lochner-style decision-
making has had an enormous impact on our current approach to
this field of law. That is evident in the fact that Lochner is still often
raised—as it is here—in both state and federal precedent as a cau-
tionary reminder of the perils of over-exuberant invocations of the
judicial power to recognize new fundamental rights. See Wells, 681
P.2d at 205 (citing scholarly literature and cases addressed to the
―almost universal opinion that substantive due process was
abused in invalidating economic regulations in the first third of
this century‖ under Lochner and its progeny, while suggesting that
the judicial reaction to this era ―has culminated in a rational basis
test so tolerant that the substantive content of economic statutes
rarely violates due process‖); United Haulers Ass’n, Inc. v. Oneida-
Herkimer Solid Waste Mgmt. Auth., 550 U.S. 330, 347 (2007) (describ-
ing Lochner as ―a time when [the] Court presumed to make . . .
binding judgments for society under the guise of interpreting the
Due Process Clause,‖ and cautioning that it is ―[ground] we
should not seek to reclaim‖); McDonald v. City of Chicago, 561 U.S.
742, 130 S. Ct. 3020, 3062 (2010) (Stevens, J., dissenting) (stating
that the ―now-repudiated Lochner line of cases attests to the dan-
gers of judicial overconfidence in using substantive due process to
advance a broad theory of the right or the good‖); Powell v. State
ex rel. Or. Dep’t of Land Conservation & Dev., 243 P.3d 798, 802 (Or.
Ct. App. 2010) (beginning a substantive due process analysis by
putting caselaw in ―historical perspective‖ and repudiating the
―much-maligned ‗Lochner era‘ of Supreme Court jurisprudence‖).
We raise it with that in mind and place our understanding of the
law of substantive due process in the historical context of the
court‘s experiment with Lochner-style decisionmaking. This is no
mere ―academic pursuit.‖ Infra ¶ 133. It is an attempt to explain
our current law in light of its historical background and to add a
continuing voice of caution regarding the enticing, yet difficult-to-
restrain concept of substantive due process.

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                       Opinion of the Court

  ¶35 That approach has not been broadly extended beyond the
realm of economic rights. With respect to noneconomic rights, the
court has continued to uphold certain substantive rights under the
Due Process Clause. As noted above, for example, the court has
struck down, as violative of due process, restrictions on access to
contraception, see Griswold, 381 U.S. 479, and to abortion, see Roe,
410 U.S. 113.
  ¶36 But the anti-Lochner backlash of the Progressive Era has al-
so had an impact in the realm of noneconomic rights. See Wells,
681 P.2d at 205 (noting, in expressing reluctance to extend new
rights of substantive due process, ―[t]he almost universal opinion
that substantive due process was abused in invalidating economic
regulations in the first third of [the twentieth] century‖). In recent
decades, both this court and our federal counterparts have ex-
pressed a diminishing appetite for the judicial recognition of new
substantive due process rights in the social realm.
  ¶37 In Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702 (1997), for exam-
ple, the United States Supreme Court declined to recognize a
substantive due process right to assisted suicide. In so doing, the
court noted the uneasy status of the concept of substantive due
process, expressing concern for the slipperiness of the judicial
slope. Id. at 723 n.23 (noting the potential for judicial abuse, while
asserting that once recognized, there is ―no principled basis‖ for
confining the right).
          b. Substantive due process and parental rights
  ¶38 We expressed a parallel concern in In re J.P., 648 P.2d 1364
(Utah 1982). In J.P. we built on federal precedent in recognizing a
fundamental right for a mother not to lose her rights to her child
absent proof of unfitness, abandonment, or neglect. Id. at 1367. In
so doing however, we first acknowledged our discomfort with the
judicial recognition of new ―rights unknown at common law‖ and
―not mentioned in the Constitution,‖ particularly as to ―substan-
tive due process innovations undisciplined by any but abstract
formulae.‖ Id. at 1375 (citing Moore v. City of East Cleveland, 431
U.S. 494, 503, n.12 (1977)15).

   15 The Moore opinion, in turn, emphasized the crucial impor-
tance of a limitation ―grounded in history‖ and tradition, noting
that such limitation is much ―more meaningful than any based on

                                 17
                       In re Adoption of J.S.
                       Opinion of the Court

  ¶39 In recognizing the fundamental interest of a mother in re-
taining her parental rights absent proof of unfitness, abandon-
ment, or neglect, our J.P. opinion first established a narrow, limit-
ing principle. As a predicate to establishing such a right, we first
found that such right was ―‗deeply rooted in this Nation‘s history
and tradition,‘ and in the ‗history and culture of Western civiliza-
tion.‘‖ Id. (citations omitted). In support of that conclusion, we
cited extensive historical evidence of the ―deeply rooted‖ nature
of this right. See id. at 1374 (―The integrity of the family and the
parents‘ inherent right and authority to rear their own children
have been recognized as fundamental axioms of Anglo-American
culture, presupposed by all our social, political, and legal institu-
tions.‖). Because the statute at issue in J.P. infringed on the fun-
damental right recognized by this court, we found it unconstitu-
tional. We held, specifically, that ―a mother is entitled to a show-
ing of unfitness, abandonment, or substantial neglect before her
parental rights are terminated,‖ and that the statute that made ―no
provision for that showing‖ was ―unconstitutional on its face.‖ Id.
at 1377.
  ¶40 In reaching this conclusion, our decision in J.P. built upon
the United States Supreme Court‘s decision in Stanley v. Illinois,
405 U.S. 645 (1972). In J.P., we cited Stanley as establishing the un-
constitutionality of an Illinois statute ―presuming unwed fathers
to be unfit [as] a violation of the due process clause.‖ 648 P.2d at
1374 (citing Stanley, 405 U.S. at 651). In the context of an unwed
father who had lived with his children at least ―intermittently for
18 years,‖ we noted that Stanley had upheld the fundamental right
of ―‗a man in the children he has sired and raised,‘‖ a right that
was deemed to ―‗warrant[] deference and, absent a powerful
countervailing interest, protection.‘‖ Id. (quoting Stanley, 405 U.S.
at 651).
  ¶41 Our J.P. opinion was discussed and extended in our subse-
quent decision in Wells. In Wells, we considered the constitutional-
ity of a statute predicating an unwed father‘s establishment of his
parental rights on the statutory condition of the filing of an ac-
knowledgement of paternity prior to the child‘s placement for
adoption. 681 P.2d at 202–03 (considering the constitutionality of

the [mere] abstract formula‖ of judicial intuition or preference.
Moore, 431 U.S. at 503 n.12.

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                       Opinion of the Court

UTAH CODE § 78-30-4 (1953)). Building on United States Supreme
Court precedents culminating in Lehr v. Robertson, 463 U.S. 248
(1983), our opinion in Wells concluded that the standard of scruti-
ny under the federal Due Process Clause was a deferential stan-
dard of arbitrariness. Citing In re J.P. and Lehr, we acknowledged
the provisional right of an unwed father to parent his children
while also recognizing the state‘s interest in ―immediate and se-
cure adoptions for eligible newborns‖ providing ―justification for
significant variations in the parental rights of unwed fathers.‖ 681
P.2d at 203. And we noted that Lehr had upheld a New York pro-
vision requiring notice of an adoption proceeding to an unwed
father ―only if he had filed a notice of intent to claim paternity
with the putative father registry‖ on the ground that ―‗a more
open-ended notice requirement would . . . complicate the adop-
tion process, threaten the privacy interests of unwed mothers,
create the risk of unnecessary controversy, and impair the desired
finality of adoption decrees.‘‖ Id. (quoting Lehr, 463 U.S. at 249).
Because Lehr upheld the New York provision on the ground that it
was not ―arbitrary,‖ we applied an arbitrariness standard in Wells
in upholding the then-applicable requirement of Utah law of fil-
ing an acknowledgement of paternity as a prerequisite to an un-
wed father preserving his provisional rights as a parent. Id. (hold-
ing that the acknowledgement of paternity requirement was ―not
‗arbitrary‘‖ and was ―therefore constitutional under the Due
Process Clause of the United States Constitution‖).
  ¶42 Our Wells decision adopted a different standard under the
Utah Constitution, however. Although we upheld the acknowl-
edgment of paternity requirement under the state constitution as
well, we did so only after first adopting a standard of heightened
scrutiny. Id. at 206. That standard, we concluded, followed from
the J.P. opinion‘s recognition of ―parental rights as ‗fundamen-
tal,‘‖ and from a prior decision in which we had invoked heigh-
tened scrutiny in addressing a void-for-vagueness challenge to a
statute impinging on ―fundamental rights‖ (such as the right to
travel). Id. (citing In re Boyer, 636 P.2d 1085, 1087–88 (Utah 1981)).
Thus, under the Utah Constitution‘s Due Process Clause, we con-
cluded in Wells that ―the proponent of legislation infringing pa-
rental rights must show (1) a compelling state interest in the result
to be achieved and (2) that the means adopted are ‗narrowly tai-

                                 19
                       In re Adoption of J.S.
                       Opinion of the Court

lored to achieve the basic statutory purpose.‘‖ Id. (quoting Boyer,
636 P.2d at 1090).16
  ¶43 The standard invoked in Wells, however, is in some tension
with the standards employed in subsequent cases. Despite Wells,
for example, our more recent cases have held that an unwed fa-
ther‘s ―inchoate‖ right in his child may be lost if he fails to follow
reasonable state procedures for perfecting that right. And our re-
cent cases have done so in a manner foreclosing the sort of heigh-
tened scrutiny prescribed in Wells.
  ¶44 In T.M. v. B.B. (In re Adoption of T.B.), 2010 UT 42, 232 P.3d
1026, for example, we emphasized that the guarantee of due
process recognizes only ―an inchoate interest‖ of an unwed bio-
logical father. Id. ¶ 31 n.19. And we concluded that that interest
rises to the level of a fundamental right ―only when [the father]
‗demonstrates full commitment to the responsibilities of parent-
hood by [coming] forward to participate in the rearing of his
child.‘‖ Id. (second alteration in original). Because the father in
T.B. had failed to satisfy the statutory prerequisites to perfecting
his inchoate parental rights, we held that the ―natural mother‘s
relinquishment of [his] child‖ for adoption ―eliminate[d] his op-
portunity to acquire constitutionally protectable parental rights.‖
Id. ¶ 40. And we accordingly rejected the biological father‘s argu-
ment that there was ―no compelling need for the premature ter-
mination of [his] . . . parental rights based solely on procedural
noncompliance,‖ concluding that the fact that he ―could have
complied with the statutory scheme established by the Utah Leg-
islature for acquiring the right to withhold consent to an adop-
tion‖ foreclosed his alleged fundamental right. Id. ¶¶ 28, 41.

   16 See also Thurnwald v. A.E., 2007 UT 38, ¶¶ 28, 33, 44, 47, 163
P.3d 623 (reiterating this standard in identifying a potential consti-
tutional problem with applying the Adoption Act‘s requirement
of a paternity petition within twenty-four hours of the birth of a
child in a manner that would ―make it impossible for unwed fa-
thers of children born on weekends or holidays to preserve their
rights postbirth,‖ but interpreting the statutory filing deadline to
be subject to extension under Utah Rule of Civil Procedure 6 and
interpreting the statute to provide a ―minimum period of twenty-
four hours after the child‘s birth to file a paternity claim‖ in a
manner avoiding the constitutional question).

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                        Opinion of the Court

  ¶45 We reiterated a similar standard in In re Adoption of Baby
Girl T., 2012 UT 78. In that case, we explained that ―[u]nder both
federal and state law, an unwed biological father has an inchoate
interest in a parental relationship with his child that acquires full
constitutional protection only when he demonstrates a full com-
mitment to the responsibilities of parenthood by [coming] for-
ward to participate in the rearing of his child.‖ Id. ¶ 18 (alteration
in original) (internal quotation marks omitted). And we accor-
dingly held that an ―unmarried biological father‖ must only ―be
given an adequate opportunity to comply with the[] statutory re-
quirements of the Adoption Act in order to assert‖ a fundamental
interest in his parental rights. Id. ¶ 19 (alteration in original) (in-
ternal quotation marks omitted). In addition, we again empha-
sized that an unwed father‘s right is simply ―in the opportunity to
develop a substantial relationship‖ with his child, and thus con-
cluded that if the governing statute provides a ―meaningful
chance‖ for the father to protect his interests, ―he may not com-
plain of the termination of his interest when he fails to strictly
comply with its procedures.‖ Id. ¶ 20.
            c. The standard of scrutiny applicable here
  ¶46 The foregoing sets the stage for our statement of the appli-
cable standard of scrutiny. It also emphasizes the difficulty of so
doing, given the evident tension in our caselaw. Our cases have
consistently applied a deferential standard of federal due process
scrutiny of statutory prerequisites to the establishment of parental
rights of unwed fathers. See Wells, 681 P.2d at 206 (provision of
adoption statute was not ―arbitrary‖ and thus did not violate fed-
eral due process protections); In re Adoption of T.B., 2010 UT 42,
¶ 31 (adoption statute preserved ―meaningful chance‖ for puta-
tive father to preserve opportunity to develop relationship with
his child and thus satisfied due process). Our statement of the ap-
plicable state constitutional standard has been inconsistent, how-
ever. Wells calls for heightened scrutiny on the ground that a fa-
ther‘s parental rights are ―fundamental.‖ 681 P.2d at 205 (―fun-
damental rights of parenthood‖ require a ―higher level of scruti-
ny‖ under Utah‘s Due Process Clause). But our subsequent cases
apply a much more deferential standard—one in line with the
federal standard of scrutiny. See In re Baby Girl T., 2012 UT 78, ¶¶
11, 19 (due process requires that putative father ―have a meaning-
ful chance‖ to preserve opportunity of relationship with child).

                                  21
                       In re Adoption of J.S.
                       Opinion of the Court

  ¶47 The standard in T.B. and Baby Girl T. runs directly counter
to that set forth in Wells. Instead of applying a heightened stan-
dard of scrutiny, our T.B. opinion expressly rejected the biological
father‘s argument that showing a ―compelling‖ interest was ne-
cessary. See In re Adoption of T.B., 2010 UT 42, ¶ 29. And it applied
instead a standard turning only on a showing of a ―reasonable
opportunity [of a biological father] to preserve his chance to de-
velop a relationship with his child.‖ Id. ¶ 42. Baby Girl T. is to the
same effect. See In re Baby Girl T., 2012 UT 78, ¶¶ 11, 19.
  ¶48 This tension in our caselaw is nowhere reflected on the face
of our opinions. Perhaps the parties in our more recent cases were
unaware of the heightened standard applied in Wells; at a mini-
mum they appear not to have called it to our attention. But the
tension as to the state standard of scrutiny is front and center in
this case. It is reflected clearly in the briefing. Bolden expressly
invokes the Wells standard of heightened scrutiny. And the adop-
tive parents cite T.B. and Baby Girl T. in support of the deferential
―reasonable opportunity‖ or ―meaningful chance‖ standard.
  ¶49 We are therefore faced with the question of how to resolve
this tension—a question not directly confronted in any of our
prior cases. And we resolve it in favor of the deferential standard
of scrutiny set forth in our more recent cases. We do so, first, be-
cause T.B. and Baby Girl T. are our most recent pronouncements
on this issue. Because these cases appear to have overtaken Wells
on this point, they should control. Litigants in Utah are entitled to
rely on our explication of the law as definitive.17 And although
T.B. and Baby Girl T. do not expressly overrule Wells on the state
standard of scrutiny, the two lines of cases are unquestionably in-
compatible. That, without more, would suggest to a litigant that
our most recent pronouncement is the law, and has overtaken any
prior contrary statement. See Malan v. Lewis, 693 P.2d 661, 676
(Utah 1984) (noting ―[t]he general rule from time immemorial‖
that an opinion from this court ―is deemed to state the true nature
of the law both retrospectively and prospectively‖).
 ¶50 Second, and in any event, the Wells standard of scrutiny
was unnecessary to the outcome in that case, and may thus be

   17 See Carter v. Lehi City, 2012 UT 2, ¶ 15, 269 P.3d 141 (empha-
sizing that ―[l]itigants ought to be able to rely‖ on our opinions).

                                 22
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                        Opinion of the Court

viewed as over-enthusiastic dicta.18 Because the Wells decision
upheld the then-applicable acknowledgement of paternity filing
against a state constitutional due process challenge, the court
could easily have reached the same conclusion under a more defe-
rential standard. That renders the heightened standard of scrutiny
in Wells unnecessary to the result. We accordingly read T.B. and
Baby Girl T. as controlling. .19

   18 We use the term dicta in the sense of ―[a] court‘s stating of a
legal principle more broadly than is necessary to decide the case,‖
BLACK‘S LAW DICTIONARY 519 (so defining gratis dictum), or ―[a]n
opinion by a court on a question that is directly involved, briefed,
and argued by counsel and even passed on by the court, but that
is not essential to the decision,‖ id. (so defining judicial dictum). So
the disagreement with the dissent on this point is not a matter of
one of us speaking truth and the other falsity, see infra ¶ 140
(Nehring, J., dissenting) (disagreeing with the court‘s understand-
ing of obiter dictum); it is simply a matter of nuanced variations in
terminology. Thus, we acknowledge that the standard set forth in
the Wells opinion was not a matter of ―‗illustration, argument,
analogy, or suggestion‘‖ that was not part of the court‘s holding.
Infra ¶ 140. But it was dicta in the sense of being unnecessary to
the court‘s decision.
   19  The same thing holds for our decision in Thurnwald v. A.E.,
2007 UT 38, 163 P.3d 623, cited by the dissent as another instance
in which we employed the strict scrutiny standard to reform a
―provision of the Adoption Act.‖ Infra ¶ 136 n.166 (Nehring, J.,
dissenting). The Thurnwald opinion does include some language
invoking the strict scrutiny standard from Wells. Thurnwald, 2007
UT ¶¶ 28, 35. But the ultimate holding of Thurnwald is one of con-
stitutional avoidance—of statutory interpretation of the Adoption
Act in light of Utah Rule of Civil Procedure 6 in a manner avoiding
a potential problem of unconstitutionality. See id. ¶¶ 46–47 (em-
phasizing our approach of choosing one interpretation of a statute
over another, and specifically of selecting an interpretation that
avoided the result of striking down the Adoption Act as unconsti-
tutional). So our invocation of strict scrutiny in Thurnwald is even
more clearly an instance of dicta, and in any event a dictum again
at odds with our other recent opinions.

                                  23
                       In re Adoption of J.S.
                       Opinion of the Court

  ¶51 Third, the Wells opinion offers shaky support for its heigh-
tened standard of scrutiny, while our analysis in T.B. and Baby
Girl T. is in line with our current understanding of the law of
substantive due process. The linchpin of the analysis in Wells is
the assertion that parental rights are fundamental. From that pre-
mise the Wells court concluded that the standard was a heigh-
tened one. Thus, the Wells court reasoned ―[b]y analogy‖ to a case
implicating the fundamental right to travel (In re Boyer, 636 P.2d at
1087-88) that a statutory regulation of the right of an unwed father
was an infringement of a ―fundamental right.‖ Wells, 681 P.2d at
206. But that conclusion was circular, or at least a bit too facile.
Under the universal understanding in place at the time of Wells
(and still today), an unwed father‘s right was not necessarily fun-
damental; it was only provisionally so, subject to being perfected
by fulfillment of a state‘s statutory requirements for its establish-
ment. See Lehr, 463 U.S. at 261–62 (the ―mere existence of a biolog-
ical link does not merit equivalent constitutional protection,‖ a
putative father must ―grasp [the] opportunity and accept some
measure of responsibility‖); In re Adoption of T.B., 2010 UT 42, ¶ 26
& n.22 (putative father‘s parental rights are provisional rights he
―may acquire‖ by ―satisfying certain statutory requirements‖);
Wells, 681 P.2d at 206 (unwed father‘s right to a relationship with
his newborn is ―a provisional right‖ subject to statutory perfec-
tion). Thus, under long-settled law, the right of the unwed father
in Wells was not properly described as ―fundamental‖ at the thre-
shold point of identifying the applicable standard of scrutiny.
Deeming it so was question-begging. So to be true to the settled
understanding of the nature of the right of an unwed father, Wells
should have carefully considered whether the unwed father in
that case had established his fundamental right as a parent instead
of simply assuming that he had.
  ¶52 That careful analysis, moreover, should have followed the
approach modeled in J.P., as informed by the United States Su-
preme Court decisions culminating in Lehr. And that approach is
not simply to assume at the highest level of generality that an unwed
father‘s interests are fundamental. It is to ask instead the more
specific question whether the precise interest at stake is fundamental
in the sense of being justified not by the mere ―abstract formula[]‖
informed by a judge‘s instincts of fairness, but by a clear indica-
tion that that interest is ―deeply rooted in this Nation‘s history
and tradition and in the history and culture of Western civiliza-

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                       Opinion of the Court

tion.‖ In re J.P., 648 P.2d at 1374–75 (internal quotation marks
omitted); see also Glucksberg¸ 521 U.S. at 728 (statute prohibiting
assisted suicide constitutional because assisted suicide is not a
fundamental right deeply rooted in American tradition).
  ¶53 Absent such evidence, the right at stake is not fundamental,
and the applicable standard of scrutiny is a highly deferential in-
quiry into rationality or arbitrariness. That is the evident basis for
the standards we adopted in T.B. and Baby Girl T. In the absence
of any proof of a showing of ―deeply rooted‖ history and tradition
sustaining the unwed father‘s interests, we simply considered on-
ly the rationality or arbitrariness of statutory terms for an unwed
father‘s establishment of his parental rights. And we deemed that
deferential standard met where the statutory framework provided
a reasonable or meaningful opportunity for a father to establish
his rights. See In re Baby Girl T., 2012 UT 78, ¶ 11 (due process re-
quires only that unwed father have ―meaningful chance‖); In re
Adoption of T.B., 2010 UT 42, ¶ 31 (due process satisfied where
―meaningful chance‖ or ―reasonable opportunity‖ exists).
  ¶54 The required showing of ―deeply rooted‖ history and tradi-
tion was made in J.P., but not in Wells. J.P. concerned the question
of a mother‘s right to maintain her parental rights absent proof of
unfitness, abandonment, or neglect. 648 P.2d at 1375. And on that
point the evidence of a deeply embedded history and tradition
was powerful. Thus, as a predicate to recognizing a fundamental
right in J.P., the court relied on widespread historical evidence of
a longstanding tradition of respecting a parent‘s custodial rights
except upon proof of unfitness, abandonment, or neglect. Id. at
1374.
  ¶55 No such historical record was presented in Wells. The Wells
court cited no established tradition of recognizing an unwed fa-
ther‘s inherent right to his child without regard to any compliance
with statutory prerequisites such as a paternity filing. Instead the
court simply asserted, at the highest level of generality, that pa-
rental rights and familial bonds are significant, and thus that those
rights are ―fundamental‖ and accordingly subject to ―a more
stringent standard.‖ Wells, 681 P.2d at 202, 206. In so concluding,
moreover, the Wells court also acknowledged that the rights of an
unwed father are merely ―provisional,‖ and therefore subject to
forfeiture absent fulfillment of the preconditions to their eventual
fulfillment. Id. at 205–08 (citing Lehr, 463 U.S. at 249). And absent

                                 25
                        In re Adoption of J.S.
                        Opinion of the Court

evidence of a specific tradition of respecting the rights of unwed
fathers without fulfilling statutory prerequisites, the Wells opinion
essentially assumed away the problem by simply presuming that
the right in question was fundamental.20
  ¶56 The heightened standard in Wells was not justified by the
record and authority presented. Absent a record of a deeply em-
bedded tradition of protecting the unwed father‘s rights regard-
less of the fulfillment of any preconditions prescribed by statute,
our court was in no position to declare the right in Wells a ―fun-
damental‖ one. We should instead have simply concluded, as we
more recently have done in T.B. and Baby Girl T, that the standard
was the deferential, fallback standard of rationality or arbitrari-
ness.
  ¶57 For these reasons, we would repudiate the heightened
scrutiny standard announced in Wells. In our view, the standard
requires more than a broad, general assertion that parental rights

   20 The dissent commits a similar error. It broadly asserts that ―a
father‘s right to control his children has a strong basis in Ameri-
can and English history,‖ citing caselaw and other authority in
support of the general respect our society has ceded to parental
rights. Infra ¶ 134 (Nehring, J., dissenting). But that is insufficient.
A general tradition of respect for parental rights comes nowhere
close to establishing a fundamental right for unwed fathers to un-
fettered control of their offspring. That proposition is thoroughly
undermined by the United States Supreme Court‘s decisions in
Lehr and its antecedents and in our decision in J.P., and the dis-
sent‘s evidence of tradition and history is therefore inadequate.
    Thus, Hibbette v. Baines, 29 So. 80 (Miss. 1900), does not estab-
lish a ―deeply rooted‖ historical tradition of respecting the rights
of unwed fathers. Infra ¶ 134. Indeed, the father in Hibbette was
not unwed but married to the mother of his children, and the case
established only his rights to custody upon the death of the child-
ren‘s mother in a custody contest with ―collateral relatives‖ (a
grandmother and aunts). 29 So. at 81–82. So the ―presumption‖ of
a father‘s right to his children recognized in Hibbette says nothing
about such a right in a case of an unwed father like this one. And
it certainly doesn‘t undermine the long-settled understanding of
an unwed father‘s right as merely provisional.

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                        Opinion of the Court

are significant and traditionally respected. To trigger such a stan-
dard, a party would have to make the more specific showing pre-
sented in J.P.—to establish a specific showing that the precise in-
terest asserted by the parent is one that is ―deeply rooted in this
Nation‘s history and tradition and in the history and culture of
Western civilization.‖ In re J.P., 648 P.2d at 1374–75 (internal quo-
tation marks omitted).21
            3. Bolden‘s Substantive Due Process Claim
  ¶58 That leaves only the question of the viability of Bolden‘s
particular claim of an infringement of his rights of substantive due
process. We conclude that he has failed to make the kind of show-
ing rooted in settled history and tradition, and thus that his claim
is subject only to review for rationality or arbitrariness. And be-
cause we find the statutory gateway to establish his parental
rights to be a rational, meaningful opportunity, we reject his claim
and uphold the statute‘s constitutionality.
  ¶59 Bolden fails to present any historical basis for rooting the
right he asserts in ―this Nation‘s history and tradition‖ or in ―the

   21 That showing, moreover, cannot be made by bare citation to
Troxel v. Granville, 530 U.S. 57, 65 (2000), which the dissent cites in
support of the notion that the interest of parents ―in the care, cus-
tody, and control of their children is ‗perhaps the oldest of the
fundamental liberty interests‘ recognized by the United States Su-
preme Court.‖ Infra ¶¶ 86, 131 (Nehring, J., dissenting). The Troxel
opinion comes nowhere close to establishing a generalized, fun-
damental right of an unwed father. Instead, Troxel vindicates only
the established right of a mother to trump the visitation rights as-
serted by grandparents under a state statute granting such rights
upon proof that it is in ―‗the best interest of the child.‘‖ Id. at 60
(quoting WASH. REV. CODE § 26.10.160(3)). Troxel does so, moreo-
ver, only on the basis of established history, tradition, and
precedent supporting the principle of a fundamental right of an
established parent ―to make decisions concerning the care, custo-
dy, and control of their children.‖ Id. at 66. None of the cited his-
tory, tradition, or precedent sustains the right asserted by Bolden
and recognized by the dissent. Instead, for unwed fathers, the re-
levant history, tradition, and precedent establishes only a provi-
sional right, subject to reasonable regulation by the states.

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                        In re Adoption of J.S.
                        Opinion of the Court

history and culture of Western civilization.‖ In re J.P., 648 P.2d at
1375 (internal quotation marks omitted). His briefs make no effort
to identify any longstanding, widespread basis in our history and
culture for recognizing a perfected right in unmarried biological
fathers arising upon their mere filing of a paternity suit (and
without following other requirements set forth by law).22 Instead,
the right asserted by Bolden implicates the slippery slope prob-
lems associated with ―substantive due process innovations undis-
ciplined by any but abstract formulae.‖ Id.
  ¶60 Bolden insists that his interest is ―more than a mere biolog-
ical connection to his newborn son.‖ But he offers ―[no] principled
basis for confining the right‖ that he asserts. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. at
733, n.23. Endorsement of a substantive right in this case would
inevitably lead to a series of line-drawing problems going for-
ward, requiring the courts to make policy judgments about
whether the biological father before the court had done enough to
properly justify the recognition of his parental rights.
  ¶61 Those policy judgments are matters for legislative action.
Our legislature has spoken to this question, prescribing a series of
prerequisites to an unmarried biological father‘s perfection of his
inchoate interest in his child. Bolden asks us to second-guess those
requirements (at least one of them). He asks us to establish a subs-
tantive due process right to perfect his parental rights on some-
thing less than the grounds prescribed by the legislature—by fil-
ing a paternity action but not the affidavit called for by statute.
Doing so would put us in the problematic realm of making ―due

   22 The dissent complains that this formulation is not Bolden‘s.
Infra ¶ 129 (Nehring, J., dissenting). Fair enough. Bolden has not
deigned to frame his due process claim in these clear terms. But
that is just because he prefers to frame it at too-high a level of ge-
nerality, anticipating that a more general statement of his interest
might persuade us to embrace it. The question, however, is not the
terms that Bolden has chosen to articulate his asserted right. It is
the actual nature of the right in question. And there is no question
that to succeed, Bolden would have to do more than establish a
generic interest in parenthood. He would have to establish the
precise interest that he advocates for, which is that of assuring his
interests in his child without complying with the statute.

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                       Opinion of the Court

process innovations‖ dictated by ―abstract formulae‖ and without
any effective limiting principle.
  ¶62 Bolden‘s claim is thus subject only to deferential review of
the rationality or non-arbitrariness of the statutory scheme, or in
other words, of whether the statute preserves a meaningful op-
portunity for him to perfect his parental rights. Under that stan-
dard his claim fails, as he has made no attempt to suggest that the
affidavit requirement is arbitrary or that the opportunity afforded
to him by statute is not meaningful.
  ¶63 Instead he just claims that he ignored the statute on the
(bad) advice of counsel. If so, that is unfortunate. But bad legal
advice is no excuse for a failure to follow the law. For better or
worse, our legal system treats attorneys as agents for their clients.
And on that basis, we generally deem clients responsible for the
decisions they make on advice of counsel.
  ¶64 There is an exception to this rule: In criminal cases, defen-
dants convicted upon objectively deficient advice at trial may be
entitled to a new trial as a remedy on a constitutional claim for
ineffective assistance of counsel. See Strickland v. Washington, 466
U.S. 668, 691–92 (1984) (to prevail on ineffective assistance of
counsel claim defendant must show deficient performance by
counsel that was objectively unreasonable and prejudicial). But
the exception proves the rule. Except in these limited circums-
tances, a misstep on advice of counsel is still a misstep, and a
client‘s recourse is simply an action for malpractice. See Jennings v.
Stoker, 652 P.2d 912, 913 (Utah 1982) (general rule in civil cases is
that judgment of district or trial court will stand despite incompe-
tence or negligence of one‘s own counsel); Peterson v. Peterson,
2006 UT App 199U, para. 9 (memorandum decision) (malpractice
action is the ―appropriate remedy for the client whose counsel‘s
performance falls below the standard of professional competence‖
(internal quotation marks omitted)). That reality is less than ideal,
particularly in cases like this one where money damages are cold
comfort for the injury associated with the loss of parental rights.
But that is the law—and perhaps a reminder that our system is
imperfect, and that the remedies it affords may fall short of the
ideal of restoring the losses suffered by the wronged.

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                        In re Adoption of J.S.
                        Opinion of the Court

  ¶65 Bolden‘s due process claim accordingly fails under the ap-
plicable standard of scrutiny. We therefore affirm the district
court‘s denial of this claim.
            B. Uniform Operation and Equal Protection
  ¶66 The Uniform Operation Clause of the Utah Constitution
states that ―[a]ll laws of a general nature shall have uniform oper-
ation.‖ UTAH CONST. art I, § 24. As we explained in State v. Canton,
uniform operation provisions historically were understood to be
aimed ―not at legislative classification but at practical operation.‖
2013 UT 44, ¶ 34 & n.7, 308 P.3d 517. Thus, under this historical
approach, the uniform operation guarantee is ―not viewed as a
limit on the sorts of classifications that a legislative body could
draw in the first instance, but as a rule of uniformity in the actual
application of such classifications.‖ Canton, 2013 UT 44, ¶ 34. Bol-
den asserts no tenable infringement of this guarantee. His com-
plaint is with legislative classification, not practical operation.
  ¶67 Bolden‘s claim thus arises under the modern notion of
―uniform operation,‖ which is simply a ―state-law counterpart to
the federal Equal Protection Clause.‖ Id. ¶ 35. Under this formula-
tion, we employ a three-step test wherein we assess: (1) ―what
classifications,‖ if any, ―the statute creates,‖ (2) ―whether different
classes . . . are treated disparately,‖ and (3) if there is disparate
treatment, ―whether the legislature had any reasonable objective
that warrants the disparity.‖ Id. (alteration in original) (quoting
State v. Angilau, 2011 UT 3, ¶ 21, 245 P.3d 745).
  ¶68 Most classifications are presumptively permissible and
thus subject to rational basis review. Canton, 2013 UT 44, ¶ 36 (cit-
ing State v. Robinson, 2011 UT 30, ¶ 22, 254 P.3d 183). Other classi-
fications, however, ―are so generally problematic (and so unlikely
to be reasonable) that they trigger heightened scrutiny.‖ Id. Such
―suspect‖ classes include race, sex, and classifications implicating
fundamental rights. See Robinson, 2011 UT 30, ¶ 22.
 ¶69 Not all ―suspect‖ classifications are treated identically,
however. For one thing, sex-based classifications are evaluated
under a less-searching standard than that applied to race-based
ones. Thus, race-based classifications are evaluated under a stan-
dard of strict scrutiny (requiring a compelling governmental inter-

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                        Opinion of the Court

est advanced by the least restrictive means possible23), while sex-
based classifications are evaluated as a matter of intermediate
scrutiny (requiring only an important governmental interest that is
substantially advanced by the legislation).24
  ¶70 Second, not all sex-based classifications implicate the same
considerations under this intermediate standard of scrutiny. The
notion of a ―substantial‖ relation between means and ends implies
a threshold consideration of the nature and extent of the discrimi-
nation at issue. For ―official action that closes a door or denies op-
portunity to women (or to men),‖ it is difficult for the government
to show that its discriminatory policy ―substantially‖ advances an
important objective. United States v. Virginia, 518 U.S. 515, 532
(1996) (concluding that Virginia failed to carry this burden in fail-
ing to identify an ―exceedingly persuasive‖ justification for its
policy of excluding women from Virginia Military Institute). On
the other hand, for official action that is less imposing, the opera-
tive standard will be easier to satisfy. See Nguyen v. I.N.S., 533 U.S.
53, 70 (2001) (explaining, in upholding federal immigration rule
requiring unwed fathers of children born abroad to satisfy stan-
dards not imposed on unwed mothers, that the court is ―mindful‖
that the ―obligation‖ imposed on fathers ―is minimal‖). This is

   23   Parents Involved in Cmty. Schs. v. Seattle Sch. Dist. No. 1, 551
U.S. 701, 720 (2007) (―It is well established that when the govern-
ment distributes burdens or benefits on the basis of individual ra-
cial classifications, that action is reviewed under strict scruti-
ny. . . . In order to satisfy this searching standard of review, the
[government] must demonstrate that the use of individual racial
classifications . . . is narrowly tailored to achieve a compelling
government interest.‖ (internal quotation marks omitted)).
   24  See Nguyen v. I.N.S., 533 U.S. 53, 60 (2001) (―For a gender-
based classification to withstand equal protection scrutiny, it must
be established at least that the [challenged] classification serves
important governmental objectives and that the discriminatory
means employed are substantially related to the achievement of
those objectives.‖ (alteration in original) (internal quotation marks
omitted)); State v. Hererra, 895 P.2d 359, 384 (Utah 1995) (discrimi-
nation must ―substantially further a legitimate legislative interest‖
to comply with Uniform Operation Clause of the Utah State Con-
stitution).

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                       In re Adoption of J.S.
                       Opinion of the Court

particularly true where the differential treatment of men and
women is rooted in ―[i]nherent differences‖ between the sexes,
and where such differences translate not into an outright bar on
one of the sexes, see Virginia, 518 U.S. at 532–33 (internal quotation
marks omitted), but a regime preserving meaningful opportuni-
ties to both sexes, see Lehr v. Robertson, 463 U.S. 248, 267 (1983)
(holding that where a father had no established relationship with
his child and had failed to file with the putative father registry,
―nothing in the Equal Protection Clause [would] preclude[] the
State from withholding from him the privilege of vetoing the
adoption of that child‖ (alteration in original) (internal quotations
omitted)); Friehe v. Schaad, 545 N.W.2d 740 (Neb. 1996) (holding
that it was not a violation of equal protection to require a father to
file with the putative father registry within five days of his child‘s
birth or lose the right to object to an adoption).25
  ¶71 In any event, the intermediate standard of scrutiny does
not require a precise fit between means and ends. A simple ―sub-
stantial‖ relation will do, and that standard does not require proof
that the official action adopted by government is the ―least restric-
tive means‖ of accomplishing the government‘s objectives. See
Nguyen, 533 U.S. at 70 (―None of our gender-based classification
equal protection cases have required that the statute under con-
sideration must be capable of achieving its ultimate objective in
every instance.‖).
  ¶72 We apply this standard to the affidavit requirement in sec-
tion 78B-6-121(3). And we uphold it as constitutional. First, we ac-
knowledge that the statute discriminates on the basis of sex. With-
in the class of unmarried parents, the statute prescribes the re-
quirement of an affidavit only for men. That is a sex-based classi-
fication triggering an intermediate scrutiny standard of scrutiny.

   25  Our point is not to establish two distinct standards of inter-
mediate scrutiny. See infra ¶ 148 (Parrish, J., dissenting) (noting
that the United States Supreme Court ―has articulated only one
definition of intermediate scrutiny applicable in sex discrimina-
tion cases‖); infra ¶ 87 (Nehring, J., dissenting) (claiming that we
―fail[] to actually engage in a heightened scrutiny analysis‖). It is
simply to note, as the United States Supreme Court has, the relev-
ance of the degree of government discrimination in the applica-
tion of the standard of intermediate scrutiny.

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                       Opinion of the Court

  ¶73 That said, it is important to recognize the nature and extent
of the classification at issue. This is not a statute that ―closes a
door or denies opportunity‖ to men outright. Virginia, 518 U.S. at
532. Instead, this provision preserves meaningful opportunities
for both sexes, and the threshold basis for its differential treatment
of men and women stems initially not from an outmoded stereo-
type but from a straightforward matter of biology. It bears em-
phasizing, moreover, that the requirement the statute imposes on
men is straightforward and quite simple. See Nguyen, 533 U.S. at
70 (noting the relevance of the ―minimal‖ obligations imposed on
unwed fathers under federal immigration law). And we reiterate
that the standard of intermediate scrutiny does not require a
closely tailored fit between means and ends. Only a ―substantial‖
fit is required—a showing that the important ends of government
are substantially advanced by the statute.
  ¶74 We uphold the statute under this standard. The overarch-
ing, important governmental objective is clearly prescribed by sta-
tute—the preservation of the ―best interests‖ of children. See
UTAH CODE § 78B-6-102(1). That objective is among the most im-
portant of any in our society.26
  ¶75 To make this objective a reality, moreover, the government
has long pursued ancillary goals of great significance—of pre-
scribing laws and procedures aimed at establishing binding con-
nections between children and parents, either through a child‘s
natural parents or through adoption.27 In either setting, the State
has a twofold interest—of promptly identifying those who might
be designated as parents, and of reliably28 ensuring that such per-

   26See Palmore v. Sidoti, 466 U.S. 429, 433 (1984) (―The State, of
course, has a duty of the highest order to protect the interests of
minor children . . . .‖).
   27 UTAH CODE § 78B-6-102(5)(a) (―[T]he state has a compelling
interest in providing stable and permanent homes for adoptive
children in a prompt manner, in preventing the disruption of
adoptive placements, and in holding parents accountable for
meeting the needs of children‖).
   28 Our point is emphatically not to suggest that fathers are in-
herently unreliable or untrustworthy. Infra ¶ 87 (Nehring, J., dis-
senting) (contending that we ―embrace the stereotype that unwed

                                 33
                        In re Adoption of J.S.
                        Opinion of the Court

sons will fulfill their parental role.29 To further those goals, more-
over, the state has a subsidiary interest in giving voice to those
with a demonstrated commitment to the best interests of the
child—to allow them to either step forward to assert their interest
in parenting a child or, if not, to express their willingness to relin-
quish their rights of parenthood by consenting to an adoption.30

fathers are inherently less reliable‖ who must ―take extra steps to
ensure the State that their desire to parent (and ability to parent) is
reliable and genuine‖). It is simply that the affidavit requirement is
the state‘s attempt to create a procedure that reliably does the job of
indicating who has parental rights and standing to object to an
adoption.
   29  See Wells, 681 P.2d at 203 (stating that the state has a ―strong
interest in speedily identifying those persons who will assume the
parental role‖ and promptly ascertaining whether they will ―ful-
fill their corresponding responsibilities‖); UTAH CODE § 78B-6-
102(5)(f) (―[T]he state has a compelling interest in requiring un-
married biological fathers to demonstrate commitment by . . . es-
tablishing legal paternity in accordance with the requirements of
[the Adoption Act].‖).
   30  UTAH CODE § 78B-6-102(5)(b) (recognizing unmarried moth-
er‘s ―right to make timely and appropriate decisions regarding
her future and the future of the child‖ and ―to assurance regard-
ing the permanence of an adoptive placement,‖ given that she is
―faced with the responsibility of making crucial decisions about
the future of a newborn child‖); id. § 102(5)(c) (recognizing that
―adoptive children have a right to permanence and stability in
adoptive placements‖); id. § 102(5)(d) (recognizing that ―adoptive
parents have a constitutionally protected liberty and privacy in-
terest in retaining custody of an adopted child‖); id. § 102(5)(e)
(recognizing that ―an unmarried biological father has an inchoate
interest that acquires constitutional protection only when he de-
monstrates a timely and full commitment to the responsibilities of
parenthood, both during pregnancy and upon the child‘s birth‖);
id. § 102(5)(f) (recognizing that ―the state has a compelling interest
in requiring unmarried biological fathers to demonstrate com-
mitment by providing appropriate medical care and financial
support and by establishing legal paternity, in accordance with
the requirements of this chapter‖); see also Wells, 681 P.2d at 203

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                       Opinion of the Court

  ¶76 Justice Nehring‘s dissent rejects these interests as somehow
reflective of a ―stereotype‖ that ―exclude[s] or protect[s] members
of one gender because they are presumed to suffer from an inhe-
rent handicap or to be innately inferior.‖ Infra ¶ 94 (quoting Miss.
Univ. for Women v. Hogan, 458 U.S. 718, 725 (1982)). This analysis
misses the mark on several grounds: (a) the Adoption Act ex-
cludes no one; it preserves an unwed father‘s right to object to an
adoption upon fulfillment of straightforward statutory criteria;
(b) the statute employs no presumption in favor of women, as it
does not award custody to the mother, but establishes an orderly
adoption proceeding in circumstances where the sole parent rec-
ognized by law has elected to relinquish parental rights and give
up the child for adoption (to a couple, or even a single man or
woman); and (c) the dissent confuses the threshold question of the
legitimacy of the state‘s interests with the secondary question of
the degree to which the statute in question advances those inter-
ests.31

(recognizing state‘s strong subsidiary interest in ascertaining
―whether adoptive parents must be substituted‖).
   31  The Adoption Act neither elevates the status of women as
preferred parents nor diminishes the status of men in that capaci-
ty. It simply establishes a mechanism for facilitating adoption in
the circumstance in which the sole legal parent of a child (an un-
wed mother) elects to opt out of her right to parent and to waive
that right in favor of adoption. Because the adoptive parent(s)
may be a man, woman, or a married couple, see UTAH CODE
§§ 78B-6-117(2)(b), the legislative decision at issue is not to favor
mothers over fathers, but simply to clarify the framework neces-
sary to assure that the child‘s interests will be protected by a par-
ent of some sort.
    An unwed father‘s rights are fully protected under the Adop-
tion Act. A father who steps forward in a timely fashion and sub-
mits the required affidavit acquires more than just a seat at the
adoption table. He secures the right to assert his interest as a fa-
ther, and to preclude the planned adoption—regardless of wheth-
er the would-be adoptive parent is male, female, or a couple. See
id. § 78B-6-133 (stating that a father in compliance with the statu-
tory requirements to establish paternity may withhold consent to
an adoption); id. § 78B-6-117(2)(b) (stating that subject to some

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                        In re Adoption of J.S.
                        Opinion of the Court

  ¶77 For these and other reasons, there is no basis for Justice
Nehring‘s assertion that the affidavit requirement is ―actually
based on generalizations about men‘s inherent qualities as par-
ents‖—that ―they are uninterested in their offspring and ill-suited
or incompetent caregivers.‖ Infra ¶¶ 94–95.32 Those stereotypes
are nowhere found in the interests set forth by statute or in the
appellees‘ briefs in this case. Thus, we agree that the court is not
to proceed on the basis of ―justification[s] of its own invention.‖
Infra ¶ 93. But it is the dissent, and not the court, that commits that
mistake. The interests we analyze are those identified in our law—

conditions, ―any single adult‖ may adopt a child). Accordingly,
there is no basis for the supposed ―implication . . . that fathers are
inherently not reliable‖ or are somehow ―lesser parents.‖ Infra
¶ 87 (Nehring, J., dissenting). That implication is a product of the
dissent‘s imagination. And it is thoroughly undermined by the
above-explained structure of the adoption scheme in question.
   32 The stereotypes put forward by Justice Nehring‘s dissent are
imported wholesale from opinions of the United States Supreme
Court analyzing sex discrimination far removed from that at issue
here. See infra ¶ 93 (quoting Miss. Univ. for Women v. Hogan, 458
U.S. 718 (1982); United States v. Virginia, 518 U.S. 515 (1996)). The
matter of excluding men from a public nursing school (Hogan) or
of precluding women from participating in the ―adversative‖ citi-
zen-soldier program at Virginia Military Institute (Virginia) may
be properly understood as rooted ultimately in stereotypes—of
nursing as work unsuitable for men, Hogan, 458 U.S. at 729 (con-
cluding that the school‘s policy ―tends to perpetuate the stereo-
typed view of nursing as an exclusively woman‘s job‖), or of a
woman being ill-suited for combat training, Virginia, 518 U.S. at
550 (noting the school‘s position that ―while some women would
be suited to and interested in‖ the program, ―VMI‘s adversative
method would not be effective for women as a group‖ (internal qu-
otation marks omitted)). But no such stereotype is implicated
here. Instead, the threshold governmental interests at stake are
those set forth above. And these objectives implicate not a stereo-
type but an objective distinction between unmarried parents—
given that mothers are identified and legally designated as par-
ents by virtue of their biological connection, but fathers require
something more (both biologically and legally).

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                        Opinion of the Court

of protecting the best interests of children by giving voice in their
adoption to those who have established a demonstrated commit-
ment to their well-being prescribed clearly by statute. And those
interests (along with their substantial advancement by the affida-
vit requirement) are likewise echoed in the briefs filed by appel-
lees herein.33

   33 See Brief of Appellees 21–22 (asserting that unlike an unwed
father, a mother‘s legal commitment to her child matures at birth;
emphasizing that it is the mother who must ―decide whether she
will parent the child or whether an adoption plan will be pur-
sued‖; justifying discrimination in affidavit requirement on the
basis of these differences); id. at 25–26 (asserting that the affidavit
requirement ―advances the state‘s strong interest in avoiding dis-
ruptive placements and protecting the right of ‗an unmarried
birth mother, who is faced with the responsibility of making cru-
cial decisions about the future of the newborn child, . . . to make
timely and appropriate decisions regarding her future and the fu-
ture of the child‘‖) (quoting UTAH CODE § 78B-6-102(5)(b)); id. at
26 (emphasizing the ―courage‖ of a mother‘s decision to carry a
child and ―to place her child for adoption‖ while asserting that the
mother ―should not have to wonder whether the adoption may
later be undone by a putative father who has not sworn under
oath that he will ‗assume the parental role‘ and ‗fulfill the corres-
ponding responsibilities‘‖) (quoting Wells, 681 P.2d at 203); id. at
28 (asserting that the requirement of an affidavit puts unwed fa-
ther on rough par with unwed mother by indicating that father ―is
willing to assume the parental role and fulfill . . . corresponding re-
sponsibilities‖; also asserting that ―father who does not file an af-
fidavit does not acquire‖ the ―weight‖ afforded to a mother, who
have already ―assume[d] the parental role‖ by their decisions and
conduct); id. at 35–36 (contending that affidavit requirement sub-
stantially advances important interests and is ―‗narrowly tailored‘
because . . . ‗compliance . . . is a very simple, easily understanda-
ble, and narrowly tailored process‘‖). To some extent our analysis
expands upon the justifications identified in the law and by the
appellees, but we find nothing in the logic or terms of the govern-
ing caselaw to limit our thinking to the precise bounds and terms
of the parties‘ briefs. Such a restriction would be more than a little
troubling. On a matter as significant as judging the constitutional-
ity of a duly enacted statute, surely our judges are expected to ex-

                                  37
                        In re Adoption of J.S.
                        Opinion of the Court

  ¶78 The affidavit requirement in Utah Code section 78B-6-
121(3) can be upheld as substantially advancing these important
objectives. An unwed mother‘s connection to her child is objec-
tively apparent. It is also substantial. By electing to carry the child
to term (and not ending it by abortion or emergency contracep-
tion), a mother gives an objective indication of her commitment to
the best interests of her child.34 Our law has long-recognized the

ercise independent judgment and are not slaves to the precise
terms and analysis of the parties‘ briefs.
   34  Our point is different from the one Justice Nehring‘s dissent
addresses. Thus, we are not suggesting that the mother‘s acts are a
precise parallel to the unwed father‘s burden (of filing the affida-
vit), or that either parent‘s acts provide an ironclad assurance that
they will ―care for the child after it is born.‖ Infra ¶ 107. The degree
of parallelism between the mother‘s and father‘s commitment
does not exactly lend itself to precise mathematical comparison.
But we are unwilling to denigrate the level of commitment inhe-
rent in the decision to carry a child to term, or to gainsay the diffi-
culty of pregnancy or the availability of measures for ending a
pregnancy. See infra ¶ 108 (questioning whether ―a woman‘s so-
called ‗voluntary decision‘ to carry the baby to term ‗express[es]‘
anything about . . . her commitment to the child‘s best interest af-
ter it is born‖). And whatever level of commitment that decision
entails, it bears emphasizing that the unwed father‘s required
commitment is relatively minimal; the mere signing of an affidavit
containing a ―plan‖ for providing for a child is hardly onerous.
    It is easy to hypothesize ―examples of women who choose not
to have an abortion but who nevertheless failed to provide the ne-
cessary care for their children.‖ Infra ¶ 108, n.78. But again, the
point of our analysis is not that a mother‘s decision to bring a
child into the world is an effective guarantee. It is that the decision
provides some useful information. And the shortcomings of the
mother‘s commitment can also be extended to that of the father.
We likewise do not have to look far to find examples of men who
expressed a legal commitment to their children but nevertheless
failed to provide the necessary care. Neither problem renders the
attempt to secure a parent‘s commitment illegitimate. And the
shortcomings of the mother‘s commitment are not a sufficient ba-
sis for striking down the legal requirement for the father on

                                  38
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                       Opinion of the Court

significance of that commitment. It does so by deeming a mother‘s
parental rights and responsibilities as fully matured at the time of
the child‘s birth, in a manner giving her a voice in the child‘s up-
bringing—either to proceed as the child‘s parent or to relinquish
her rights in consenting to an adoption.
  ¶79 An unwed father‘s role is inherently different than a moth-
er‘s. His connection to his offspring may be unknown or at least
indeterminate. And unlike the mother, the father has not necessar-
ily given an objective manifestation of his commitment to the
child‘s best interests, as his contribution may be only fleeting and
incidental. This is why our law has long deemed the unwed fa-
ther‘s rights as only inchoate or provisional—as requiring the ful-
fillment of legal prerequisites before being granted the rights and
responsibilities of parenthood, and before being given a concomi-
tant voice in upbringing or a decision regarding adoption.35

grounds of unconstitutionality. The law imposes a rough-and-
ready tradeoff for unwed mothers and fathers. We find the mi-
nimal imposition of the affidavit requirement to be justified by the
substantial interests that it advances. See supra ¶ 70 (explaining
the applicable standard of scrutiny, and noting that this is not a
case requiring narrow tailoring, or an ―exceedingly persuasive
justification‖ for an outright bar to an opportunity for one of the
sexes).
   35  Justice Nehring‘s denunciation of the statutory scheme is
puzzling in light of the longstanding—and widespread—
acceptance of this general construct in the law across the country.
Our Adoption Act is hardly unique in requiring unwed fathers
(but not mothers) to step forward to fulfill statutory prerequisites
to the establishment of parental rights. Every state requires puta-
tive fathers to fulfill some formal requirement that is not imposed
on mothers, e.g., by registering with a putative father registry or
by taking some other affirmative act such as filing a paternity suit.
See Mary Beck, Toward a National Putative Father Registry Database,
25 Harv. J.L. & Pub. Pol‘y 1031, 1080, (2002) (detailing putative
father registries in 32 states, all of which place an onus on the put-
ative father not placed on the unwed mother); Children‘s Bureau,
U.S. Dep‘t of Health & Human Servs., The Rights of Unmarried
Fathers                  (2014),              available             at
https://www.childwelfare.gov/systemwide/laws_policies/statu

                                 39
                       In re Adoption of J.S.
                       Opinion of the Court

tes/putative.pdf (detailing paternity statutes in all fifty states and
various methods of establishing paternity whether by registration,
paternity action, or paternity affidavit). Granted, there are differ-
ences in the laws of the states as to the precise nature of the fa-
ther‘s legal duty. But the uniform rule throughout the United
States is that an unwed father is required to make a formal show-
ing—in some manner not required of unwed mothers—to estab-
lish his parental rights. Noticeably absent from the national legal
landscape is a requirement of a maternity declaration for unwed
birth mothers. And in that sense the discrimination that the dis-
sent complains of is hardly an obscure feature of Utah law; it is a
longstanding, well-settled element of the law across the country.
So if our law can accurately be denigrated as a product of sex-
based stereotyping, then the same is true of the law of essentially
every other state throughout the country. The dissent‘s dismissive
denigration of Utah law falls flat on that and other grounds.
   It is a fair question to ask whether the requirements of Utah
law (in particular, the filing of an affidavit) go further than neces-
sary. But that is at heart a policy question—a matter of line-
drawing, as to whether a paternity filing itself is sufficient to ad-
vance the state‘s interests, and to place an unwed father on equal
footing with the unwed mother.
    Justice Nehring takes no issue, in either his procedural or subs-
tantive due process analysis, with ―other requirements‖ the sta-
tute imposes to ensure that an unwed father has accepted the re-
sponsibilities of parenthood. See infra ¶¶ 121, 131. To that extent
he acknowledges that unwed fathers may properly be subjected to
requirements that unwed mothers are not. See infra ¶ 131 (con-
cluding that the statute‘s ―other requirements . . . suffice to ensure
that the unwed father has accepted responsibility and stepped
forward as a parent‖). As to another requirement that further ad-
vances this important objective, however, Justice Nehring con-
cludes that the legislature has taken things a step too far. Reason-
able minds can differ on the question whether that requirement
(of an affidavit) is substantially related to ensuring the objective
that all agree is important. But our disagreement on this matter
can hardly justify the loaded rhetoric—of outmoded stereotypes,—
employed by Justice Nehring infra ¶ 111.

                                 40
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                       Opinion of the Court

  ¶80 The fundamental differences36 between unwed mothers
and fathers explain the basis for our statute‘s requirement of an
affidavit for only the latter. The affidavit is defensible as an at-
tempt to put unwed parents on equal footing. Mothers express
their commitment to their offspring through the voluntary deci-
sion to carry a child to term—a decision that commits them to the
statutory responsibility of caring and providing for the child as a
legal parent. See UTAH CODE § 78B-15-201(1) (stating that the
mother-child relationship is established by a ―woman‘s having
given birth to the child‖); id. § 78B-12-105 (parents have legal duty
to ―support their children‖). With that in mind, the Adoption Act
requires unwed fathers to express a parallel commitment in the
form of a written affidavit. That parallelism may not be perfect or
immune from criticism as a policy matter, but it is not unconstitu-
tional.
  ¶81 We uphold the statutory affidavit requirement on that ba-
sis. Thus, we hold that the requirement in Utah Code section 78B-
6-121(3) substantially advances the important governmental inter-

   36  The relevant ―differences‖ are not mere matters of physiolo-
gy, or of any inference that ―a woman‘s physical characteristics‖
sustain ―generalizations about her feelings‖ sufficient to suggest a
―greater commitment to the best interest of her child.‖ Infra ¶ 111
(Nehring, J., dissenting). The point is much narrower—that a
mother‘s decision to carry a child to term is a rough parallel to the
minimal commitment expressed in a mere affidavit. Thus, we re-
ject the dissent‘s characterization of Utah law as ―founded in sex
stereotypes,‖ and its attempt to paint this opinion with the brush
of a ―long line of overruled laws and cases‖ evidencing such a
mindset. Infra ¶ 111.
    We can properly disagree about the wisdom of the legisla-
ture‘s policy decision to add a requirement of an affidavit to the
nearly universal requirement of a paternity filing. And we can
likewise disagree about whether our differences on that point rise
to the level of a constitutional problem. But our differences go on-
ly to the complex legal questions presented. With due respect to
our dissenting colleague, they are not a product of any form of
sex-based stereotyping, much less our agreement with the out-
moded thinking expressed in the precedent cited by Justice Nehr-
ing. Infra ¶ 111 & n.85.

                                 41
                        In re Adoption of J.S.
                        Opinion of the Court

ests identified above. It does so by assuring that any biological
parent who steps forward to assert an interest in a child has mani-
fested a commitment to the child‘s best interests. In light of the
fact that the mother does that as an objective result of her preg-
nancy and delivery, the statute requires the father to do so by ex-
pressing a commitment in writing and under oath.
  ¶82 Both commitments are important prerequisites to the ma-
turation of the parental right—and to the voice that accompanies
such a right in the context of an adoption. Where both mother and
father have provided the commitment that is legally necessary to
a mature parental right, they both are in a position to participate
in the decision whether to raise the child themselves or to place it
for adoption. If not, however, the law treats the decision as be-
longing only to the parent whose rights have matured. That is
constitutionally permissible, as it substantially advances the im-
portant goal of protecting the best interests of children, who are in
turn substantially interested in establishing binding connections
to committed parents (natural or adopted) based on informed de-
cisions of those who have shown to have their best interests at
heart.37

   37 As Justice Parrish notes in her dissent, the statute does not
hold an unwed mother to the same ―commitment‖ required of an
unwed father—of attesting under oath ―that he is fully able and
willing to have full custody of the child,‖ of ―set[ting] forth his
plans for care of the child,‖ and of ―agree[ing] to a court order of
child support and the payment of [pregnancy and child birth] ex-
penses.‖ Infra ¶ 155 (Parrish, J., dissenting) (quoting UTAH CODE
§ 78B-6-121(3)(third alteration in original)). But this is not a basis
for doubting the ―fit‖ between the governmental interest of pro-
tecting the best interests of children and the means prescribed by
statute. Infra ¶ 155 (Parrish, J., dissenting). It is simply a reflection
of the essence of an adoption proceeding. Of course the mother
who chooses to place her child with adoptive parents is not re-
quired to attest to her desire and ability to retain custody of the
child, to present a plan for its care, or to subject herself to a court
order to pay for its needs. We are dealing here with an adoption,
in which the mother has determined that she is not in a position to
do any of these things. So the lack of parallelism between father
and mother is not an indication of a lack of fit between means and

                                   42
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                        Opinion of the Court

  ¶83 Bolden questions the importance of these functions of the
statutory affidavit, asserting that the statutory requirement of a
paternity filing accomplishes approximately the same things. Jus-
tice Nehring‘s dissent echoes this assertion. Infra ¶ 102. But Bol-
den‘s paternity petition was unverified, and a signature under
oath is a matter of substantial legal significance. See State v. Gutier-
rez-Perez, 2014 UT 11, ¶¶ 14–20, 323 P.3d 1017 (describing the his-
tory and significance of the constitutional requirement of an ―oath
or affirmation‖). And in any event the prescribed elements of the
affidavit are not required components of a paternity petition.
Nothing in the Parentage Act imposes an unconditional require-
ment that a support order be entered, see UTAH CODE § 78B-15-
616, or requires that a father state that he will accept full custody.
Indeed, a determination of paternity may have nothing to do with
custody. And nothing in the Parentage Act asks for a childcare
plan.38

ends; it is just a reflection of the very different positions of unwed
mother and father in this setting.
    At the time of the child‘s birth, there can be no question that
the mother‘s demonstrated commitment to the child is dispropor-
tionate to the father‘s. And at that point, it cannot properly be said
that the mother has provided no indication of any ―forward-
looking commitment to her child,‖ or that the father has shown an
―identical level of commitment.‖ Infra ¶ 156 (Parrish, J., dissent-
ing). Surely the mother‘s sacrifice in carrying the child to term is
some indication of her commitment to the child‘s best interests.
See supra ¶ 78. And without some affirmative requirement of a
commitment by the father (through the statutory affidavit, for ex-
ample), it cannot properly be said that the mother and father are
on equal footing. We can disagree with the legislature about the
best place to draw the line. But our disagreements on line-
drawing do not establish the unconstitutionality of the statutory
scheme under a standard that does not require a precise fit be-
tween means and ends.
   38 Justice Nehring‘s dissent challenges the element of a child-
care plan in the affidavit requirement, noting that there is nothing
in a mother‘s commitment to her child that requires an explicit
plan. Infra ¶ 107 (Nehring, J., dissenting). Yet, that concern dis-
counts the fact that a mother‘s legal obligations as a parent neces-

                                  43
                       In re Adoption of J.S.
                       Opinion of the Court

  ¶84 Thus, the affidavit advances important functions that are
not addressed by the paternity action alone. We uphold the sta-
tute on that basis, and accordingly affirm the denial of Bolden‘s
motion to intervene in the adoption proceedings herein.

sitate some sort of plan as a practical matter. In any event, Bolden
is in no position to complain about the particular elements of the
affidavit requirement, as he failed to file any affidavit at all. And
ultimately, the dissent‘s argument again misperceives the govern-
ing legal standard. The question is not one of narrow tailoring; the
required fit between means and ends is only a matter of substan-
tiality, and we find the rough comparability between the mother‘s
expression of commitment and planning and that required of the
father to be sufficient.

                                 44
                           Cite as: 2014 UT 51
                      NEHRING, A.C.J., dissenting

   ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE NEHRING, dissenting:
                           INTRODUCTION
  ¶85      I dissent. First, Utah Code section 78B-6-121(3)(b) un-
constitutionally discriminates on the basis of gender stereotypes and
is thus repugnant to the principle of equal protection enshrined in
both the United States Constitution and the Utah Constitution.
Second, the majority refuses to analyze Mr. Bolden‘s claim under
procedural due process at all. Finally, the majority fails to employ
strict scrutiny review despite the fact that section 78B-6-121(3)(B)
Infringes upon Mr. Bolden‘s fundamental parental rights. Al-
though I believe the statute is unconstitutional primarily as a vi-
olation of equal protection, I also dissent because the affidavit re-
quirement violates the Due Process Clause where it infringes on
Mr. Bolden‘s fundamental parental rights but is not narrowly tai-
lored to serve a compelling government interest.
  ¶86 ―The relationship between parent and child is protected
by the federal and state constitutions.‖1 Among the persons en-
titled to protection are unmarried fathers.2 The liberty interest of
parents in the care, custody, and control of their children ―is per-
haps the oldest of the fundamental liberty interests‖ recognized
by the United States Supreme Court.3 Mr. Bolden challenges Utah
Code section 78B-6-121(3)(b)—the affidavit requirement—as a vi-
olation of both due process and equal protection under the United
States Constitution and the Utah Constitution. I would hold that
(1) Utah Code section 78B-6-121(3)(b) unconstitutionally discrimi-
nates on the basis of gender stereotypes and thus fails to survive
intermediate scrutiny under the Equal Protection Clause, (2) as
applied to Mr. Bolden, the process set forth in section 78B-6-121(3)
is fundamentally unfair and thus a deprivation of procedural due
process, and (3) section 121(3) infringes upon a fundamental right
and is unconstitutional under strict scrutiny review.

   1   Wells v. Children’s Aid Soc’y, 681 P.2d 199, 202 (Utah 1984).
   2 Lehr v. Robertson, 463 U.S. 248, 261 (1983); Caban v. Mohammed,
441 U.S. 380, 394 (1979); Stanley v. Illinois, 405 U.S. 645 (1972);
Thurnwald v. A.E., 2007 UT 38, ¶¶ 25, 28, 163 P.3d 623; Wells, 681
P.2d at 202.
   3 Troxel v. Granville, 530 U.S. 57, 65 (2000); see also Meyer v. Ne-
braska, 262 U.S. 390, 399, 401 (1923).

                                   45
                        In re Adoption of J.S.
                     NEHRING, A.C.J., dissenting

                             ANALYSIS
            I. UTAH CODE SECTION 78B-6-121(3)(b)
           UNCONSTITUTIONALLY DISCRIMINATES
                   ON THE BASIS OF SEX
  ¶87      I dissent because I believe the affidavit requirement vi-
olates equal protection. It does so primarily by discriminating be-
tween the sexes on the basis of gender stereotypes and failing to
satisfy the heightened scrutiny standard. To its credit, the majori-
ty acknowledges that section 78B-6-121(3)(b) discriminates on the
basis of sex. The majority accurately explains that sex is a suspect
class that is ―so generally problematic (and so unlikely to be rea-
sonable)‖ that it ―trigger[s] heightened scrutiny.‖4 Unfortunately,
the majority‘s successful application of the heightened scrutiny
standard ends there. Though the majority pays lip service to the
proper standard, it fails to actually engage in a heightened scruti-
ny analysis.5 I respectfully dissent because I believe the majority
(1) fails to conduct a searching inquiry into the actual purposes
behind the legislation and does not ferret out the stereotypes that
underlie it, (2) fails to require the Does to bear their burden to jus-
tify the discriminatory classification, and (3) fails to recognize that
the statute is not related to any important government purpose
where it both stems from gender stereotypes and is duplicative of
other statutory requirements.
  ¶88       The United States Constitution provides that ―[n]o State
shall . . . deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal pro-

   4  Supra ¶ 68; Nguyen v. I.N.S., 533 U.S. 53, 60 (2001); see also
Utah Safe to Learn-Safe to Worship Coalition, Inc. v. State, 2004 UT 32,
¶ 31, 94 P.3d 217 (―Where a legislative enactment implicates a
fundamental or critical right or creates classifications which are
considered impermissible or suspect in the abstract, we apply a
heightened degree of scrutiny.‖ (internal quotation marks omit-
ted)).
   5 As adeptly explained by Justice Parrish in her dissent, the
majority mangles the heightened scrutiny test by applying a lesser
standard that closely resembles rational basis review. See supra
¶ 90 (―[I]t appears to me that the majority opinion‘s formulation
of the lower level of intermediate scrutiny it applies is, in practice,
virtually indistinguishable from . . . rational basis review . . . .‖).

                                  46
                          Cite as: 2014 UT 51
                      NEHRING, A.C.J., dissenting

tection of the laws,‖6 and the Utah Constitution guarantees that
―[a]ll laws of a general nature shall have uniform operation.‖7
―[T]hese two constitutional provisions embody the same general
principle: persons similarly situated should be treated similarly
. . . .‖8 Although the uniform operation of laws provision of the
Utah Constitution ―establishes different requirements from the
federal Equal Protection Clause,‖ Utah‘s uniform operation of the
laws provision is ―at least as exacting, and in some circumstances,
more rigorous than the standard applied under the federal constitu-
tion.‖9 Therefore, any provision that fails to meet the federal
equal protection standard would likewise fail under article I, sec-
tion 24 of the Utah Constitution, and some provisions that survive
under federal law might fail under the Utah Constitution. Be-
cause Utah Code section 78B-6-121(3)(b) (the affidavit require-
ment) discriminates against men without adequate justification
and on the basis of invidious gender stereotypes, I would hold
that it violates the principles of equal protection enshrined in both
constitutions.
  ¶89     Utah Code section 78B-6-121(3)(b) states that an unmar-
ried father‘s infant may be adopted without his consent unless he
files a ―sworn affidavit‖ (1) ―stating that he is fully able and will-
ing to have full custody of the child,‖ (2) ―setting forth his plans
for care of the child,‖ and (3) ―agreeing to a court order of child
support and the payment of expenses incurred in connection with

   6   U.S. CONST. amend. XIV, § 1.
   7   UTAH CONST. art. I, § 24.
   8Gallivan v. Walker, 2002 UT 89, ¶ 31, 54 P.3d 1069 (internal
quotation marks omitted).
   9  Whitmer v. City of Lindon, 943 P.2d 226, 230 (Utah 1997) (em-
phasis added) (internal quotation marks omitted); see also State v.
Drej, 2010 UT 35, ¶ 34 n.6, 233 P.3d 476 (―Rather than conforming
to the federal rubric, we have developed two levels of scrutiny for
our analysis of the constitutionality of a statutory scheme under
the uniform operation of laws provision.‖); Greenwood v. City of N.
Salt Lake, 817 P.2d 816, 821 (Utah 1991) (stating that the test under
article I, section 24 of the Utah Constitution is ―somewhat more
restrictive than the federal test‖).

                                   47
                        In re Adoption of J.S.
                    NEHRING, A.C.J., dissenting

the mother‘s pregnancy and the child‘s birth.‖10          The unwed
mother is not required to file an affidavit.
  ¶90     Because Utah Code section 78B-6-121(3)(b) facially dis-
criminates on the basis of sex, it can be upheld only if the classifi-
cation (1) serves ―important governmental objectives‖ and (2) ―the
discriminatory means employed are substantially related to the
achievement of those objectives.‖11 Today the court completely
abandons this test in favor of a vision of equal protection that al-
lows discriminatory laws to be upheld when the court believes
that the discriminatory requirement is ―straightforward and quite
simple,‖ ―relatively minimal,‖ and ―hardly onerous.‖12 But a con-
sideration of the severity of the harm to the discriminated-against
class is an improper consideration that has no role in the equal
protection analysis.13 It does not matter how ―simple‖ or

   10 The unmarried father must also satisfy three other require-
ments: He must (1) initiate proceedings to establish paternity in a
Utah district court, (2) file notice of the commencement of paterni-
ty proceedings with the Department of Health, and (3) offer to
pay and pay (if possible) ―a fair and reasonable amount of the ex-
penses incurred in connection with the mother‘s pregnancy and
the child‘s birth.‖ UTAH CODE § 78B-6-121(3)(a), (c)–(d).
   11 Miss. Univ. for Women v. Hogan, 458 U.S. 718, 724 (1982) (in-
ternal quotation marks omitted); Nguyen, 533 U.S. at 60; United
States v. Virginia, 518 U.S. 515, 533 (1996).
   12 Supra ¶¶ 73, 78 n.34; see also supra ¶ 4 (describing the affida-
vit requirement as ―a minor step‖ and a ―simple, straightforward
hurdle‖ that ―countless unwed fathers have cleared‖).
   13 See, e.g., Baskin v. Bogan, 766 F.3d 648, 656 (7th Cir. 2014)
(―When a statute discriminates against a protected class[,] . . . it
doesn‘t matter whether the harm inflicted by the discrimination is
a grave harm . . . . [A] statute that imposed a $2 tax on women but
not men would be struck down unless there were a compelling
reason for the discrimination. It wouldn’t matter that the harm to
each person discriminated against was slight . . . .‖(emphasis added)).
The majority also misstates Nguyen, 533 U.S. 53, on this point. Su-
pra ¶ 73 (citing Nguyen for the proposition that ―it bears empha-
sizing . . . that the requirement the statute imposes on men is
straightforward and quite simple‖). Nguyen does not support the

                                  48
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                      NEHRING, A.C.J., dissenting

―straightforward‖ a discriminatory hurdle is—under the Equal
Protection Clause, the government may not place any hurdle in
front of a protected class without adequate justification. The ma-
jority also relies on an age-old justification for discrimination: that
everyone else is doing it14 —a claim which, even if it were true,
does not provide a legal basis for upholding an unconstitutional
law. Even if every state discriminated against men on the basis of
their gender, ―[m]inorities trampled on by the democratic process
have recourse to the courts; the recourse is called constitutional
law.‖15

notion that the ease with which one can comply with a discrimi-
natory requirement is somehow significant to the basic equal pro-
tection analysis. In Nguyen, the court first found that the discrimi-
nation was substantially related to two important governmental
objectives and was not based on stereotypes. 533 U.S. at 62–70.
Only then did the Court note that the challenged requirement was
also neither ―unnecessary,‖ ―harsh[],‖ ―rigid[],‖ nor ―inordinate.‖
Id. at 70–71. The implication is that even if a statute were substan-
tially related to an important government interest, it might still
fail to pass intermediate scrutiny if the means used were overly
harsh, rigid, or unnecessary. But the converse is not true: a statute
does not pass the primary test of equal protection simply on the
basis that the discriminatory requirement is easy to comply
with—and the simplicity of the burden imposed should not affect
the court‘s analysis of the primary questions of governmental in-
terest and substantial relation.
   14 Supra ¶ 79 n.35 (―[T]he discrimination that the dissent com-
plains of is hardly an obscure feature of Utah law; it is a
longstanding, well-settled element of the law across the country.
So if our law can accurately be denigrated as a product of unfair
sex discrimination, then the same is true of the law of essentially
every other state throughout the country.‖); supra ¶ 79 n.35 (―Jus-
tice Nehring‘s denunciation of the statutory scheme is puzzling in
light of the longstanding—and widespread—acceptance of this
general construct in the law across the country. Our Adoption
Act is hardly unique . . . .‖).
   15   Baskin, 766 F.3d at 671.

                                   49
                          In re Adoption of J.S.
                       NEHRING, A.C.J., dissenting

  ¶91      The United States Constitution‘s guarantee of equal pro-
tection of the laws is not subject to an exception for discrimination
that is ―minimal,‖ pervasive, nor which imposes a ―rough-and-
ready tradeoff.‖16 And the guarantee of equal protection applies
even to laws that do not create an ―outright bar‖ against a pro-
tected class.17 As the United States Supreme Court explained in
Mississippi University for Women v. Hogan ―the party seeking to
uphold a statute that classifies individuals on the basis of their
gender must carry the burden of showing an exceedingly persuasive
justification for the classification.‖18 The burden of justifying a
discriminatory law is ―demanding‖ and ―rests entirely‖ on the
party seeking to uphold it.19
  ¶92      When confronted by a statute that facially discriminates
on the basis of sex, the court‘s equal protection analysis should
consist of a rigorous inquiry that answers the following two key
questions. First: What is the governmental objective actually
served by the statute, and is it an important one? Second: If the
governmental objective is indeed important, is the discriminatory
classification directly and substantially related to that objective?20
The majority fails to properly analyze either of these questions. I

   16   See supra ¶ 78 n.34.
   17  Reed v. Reed, 404 U.S. 71 (1971) (striking down a law giving
preference to men over women in administering estates); Frontiero
v. Richardson, 411 U.S. 677 (1973) (striking down a law that pro-
vided that a woman could only claim her husband as a dependent
if she submitted certain proof, whereas a man could automatically
claim his wife as a dependent). Contra supra ¶ 78 n.34.
   18 458 U.S. 718, 724 (1982) (emphasis added) (internal quotation
marks omitted); see also J.E.B. v. Alabama ex rel. T.B., 511 U.S. 127,
136 (1994); Virginia, 518 U.S. at 533.
   19   Virginia, 518 U.S. at 533.
   20 Miss. Univ. for Women, 458 U.S. at 725, 729–30 & n.16 (strik-
ing down a nursing school‘s policy of excluding men from admis-
sion under both parts of the equal protection test: (1) because the
―actual purpose underlying the discriminatory classification‖ was
based on an archaic and overbroad stereotype and (2) ―also be-
cause,‖ in any event, the classification was not ―substantially and
directly related‖ to the state‘s ―proposed‖ objective).

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would hold that the statute fails to survive heightened scrutiny
under both parts of the equal protection test.
        A. The Government Objective Served by Utah Code Section
         78B-6-121(3)(b) Is Illegitimate Because it Is Based on the
           Stereotype That Men Are Inherently Inferior Parents
  ¶93     By now it is well established that legislative objectives
based on gender stereotypes are not legitimate under any stan-
dard of scrutiny.21 To determine whether the government objec-
tive is important, the court must engage in a ―searching‖ in-
quiry.22 It must take great care to ascertain ―whether the statutory
objective itself reflects archaic and stereotypic notions.‖ 23 If it
does, ―the objective itself is illegitimate.‖24 Yet, instead of taking
―[c]are‖ to ―ascertain[] whether‖ the claimed statutory objective
―itself reflects archaic and stereotypic notions‖25 or ―perpe-
tuate[s]‖ stereotypes about men‘s presumed ―inferiority‖26 as ca-
retakers, the majority not only accepts the Does‘ asserted legisla-
tive purpose but goes so far as to provide a justification of its own
invention.27 This is impermissible under any formulation of
heightened scrutiny. Although under the rational basis inquiry a
court may uphold a law based on any conceivable legitimate gov-
ernment interest, under heightened scrutiny it is the proponent of
the legislation‘s burden to articulate an important government in-
terest and show a substantial relationship between the interest
and the discriminatory means. The ―mere recitation‖28 that the

   21   Id., 458 U.S. at 725; Stanton v. Stanton, 421 U.S. 7, 17 (1975).
   22   Miss. Univ. for Women, 458 U.S. at 728.
   23   Id. at 725.
   24   Id. (emphasis added).
   25   Id.
   26   Virginia, 518 U.S. at 534.
   27  See supra ¶ 75 (―[T]he state has a subsidiary interest in giving
voice to those with a demonstrated commitment to the best inter-
ests of the child.‖). This argument is found nowhere in the Does‘
brief, nor can it be found in the Adoption Act‘s statement of legis-
lative intent. UTAH CODE § 78B-6-102. See also infra Part I.B.
   28   Frontiero, 411 U.S. at 690.

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                      NEHRING, A.C.J., dissenting

legislative objective is important is not enough. Here, the majority
simply accepts that the government goal served by Utah Code
section 78B-6-121(3)(b) is the ―preservation of the best interests of
children‖ by ―establishing binding connections between children
and parents.‖29 But this cannot simply be accepted at face value.30
―[B]enign justifications proffered in defense of categorical exclu-
sions [based on sex] will not be accepted automatically; a tenable jus-
tification must describe actual state purposes, not rationalizations
for actions in fact differently grounded.‖31
  ¶94     I dissent because even the most minimally ―searching‖32
inquiry reveals the impermissible stereotyping at the root of Utah
Code section 78B-6-121(3)(b). The majority simply accepts that the
purpose of Utah Code section 78B-6-121(3)(b) is to serve the
State‘s ―compelling interest‖ in ―holding parents accountable for
meeting the needs of children.‖33 But Utah Code section 78B-6-
121(3)(b), by its plain terms, does not apply to ―parents‖—it ap-
plies to fathers. And the reason it does this is because the statute
is actually based on generalizations about men‘s inherent qualities
as parents. A statutory objective that aims to ―exclude or ‗protect‘
members of one gender because they are presumed to suffer from
an inherent handicap or to be innately inferior‖ is an ―illegiti-
mate‖ objective.34

   29   Supra ¶¶ 74–75 (internal quotation marks omitted).
   30Frontiero, 411 U.S. at 690; see also supra ¶¶ 92–93 (Parrish, J.,
dissenting).
   31 Virginia, 518 U.S. at 535–36 (emphasis added) (internal quo-
tation marks omitted); see also Gallivan, 2002 UT 89, ¶ 37 (―[I]t is
unconstitutional to single out one person or group of persons
from among the larger class on the basis of a tenuous justification
that has little or no merit.‖(internal quotation marks omitted)).
   32   Miss. Univ. for Women, 458 U.S. at 728.
   33 UTAH CODE § 78B-6-102(5)(a); cf. id. at 78B-6-102(5)(f) (stating
that the Adoption Act aims to protect the compelling interest in
children‘s welfare by ―requiring unmarried biological fathers to
demonstrate commitment‖(emphasis added)).
   34   Miss. Univ. for Women, 458 U.S. at 725.

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  ¶95      The affidavit requirement reflects a negative stereotype
that is commonly wielded against unwed fathers: that they are
uninterested in their offspring and ill-suited or incompetent care-
givers. Telling language in the Does‘ brief captures this attitude:
―The requirement to set forth his plans for the child‘s care shows
that [the unwed father] has at least thought through what he
would need to do to fulfill his parental responsibilities‖ (emphasis
added). More insight can be gleaned from the Does‘ quotation of
In re Adoption of Baby Boy Doe for the proposition that the State has
a legitimate interest in getting a ―glimpse into how [the unwed
father] will meet daily care-giving responsibilities‖35 so that the
State can be assured that the unwed father will adequately fulfill
the parental role.36 The idea that men are inherently ill-suited for
caregiving and at greater risk of failing to ―fulfill‖ basic parental
responsibilities is a stereotype and thus an entirely inappropriate
legislative objective. Indeed, this stereotype is precisely the flip
side of the same generalization that has long been applied to
women—i.e., that they are naturally well-suited for the responsi-
bilities of childcare and the home.37

   35 N.T. v. Doe (In re Adoption of Baby Boy Doe), 2008 UT App 449,
¶ 5, 199 P.3d 368.
   36 See also supra ¶ 83. The majority defends the plan element of
section 78B-6-121(3)(b) by asserting that a mother has ―legal obli-
gations as a parent‖ that ―necessitate some sort of plan as a prac-
tical matter.‖ Supra ¶ 83 n.38. It is not clear why the majority be-
lieves every woman—as a mother—develops a plan to care for her
child ―as a practical matter‖ but a present, identified father who
has filed for a declaration of paternity does not, and instead must
set his plan out in a sworn court document. Supra ¶ 83 n.38. It is
certainly not true that fathers are not legally liable for neglect of
their children. See UTAH CODE § 76-5-109 (crime of ―child aban-
donment‖ includes a ―parent[‘s]‖ ―intentional[] fail[ure]‖ to
―make reasonable arrangements for the safety, care, and physical
custody of the child‖ or to ―provide the child with food, shelter, or
clothing‖).
   37For another example of this stereotype, see Bradwell v. Illinois,
83 U.S. 130, 141 (1872) (―[T]he domestic sphere [is] that which
properly belongs to the domain and functions of womanhood.‖).

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                         In re Adoption of J.S.
                      NEHRING, A.C.J., dissenting

  ¶96     The court of appeals‘ reasoning in In re Adoption of Baby
Boy Doe is a perfect illustration of the improper stereotypes that
infect Utah Code section 78B-6-121(3)(b). There, the court held
that an unwed father had failed to comply with Utah Code section
78B-6-121(3)(b)(ii)‘s requirement that he ―set[] forth his plans for
care of the child.‖38 The court found that the father had not satis-
fied the planning requirement because he did not provide a
―glimpse‖ into his plan for day-to-day life with the child.39 The
court clarified its holding in a footnote: ―[W]e believe the legisla-
ture intended that the putative father at least specify that he has a
source of income and identify who will care for the child while he
is working to earn that income.‖40 This reasoning captures the ―ac-
tual purposes underlying‖ section 78B-6-121(3): to wit, to protect
children on the basis of entrenched, inaccurate, and offensive ste-
reotypes about men‘s and women‘s innate qualities and proper
roles.41 As the United States Supreme Court has repeatedly reaf-
firmed, government policies cannot reflect ―archaic and over-
broad generalizations about gender,‖ ―outdated misconceptions
concerning the role of females in the home,‖ or ―outmoded no-
tions of the relative capabilities of men and women.‖42
  ¶97     The majority‘s own phrasing is telling: ―[T]he statutory
affidavit requirement . . . assur[es] that any biological parent who
steps forward to assert an interest in a child has manifested a

   38   In re Adoption of Baby Boy Doe, 2008 UT App 449, ¶ 5.
   39   Id.
   40   Id. ¶ 5 n.2 (emphasis added).
   41   Miss. Univ. for Women, 458 U.S. at 728.
   42 J.E.B., 511 U.S. at 135 (internal quotation marks omitted); see
also Virginia, 518 U.S. at 533 (explaining that the state‘s justifica-
tion ―must not rely on overbroad generalizations about the differ-
ent talents, capacities, or preferences of males and females‖); City
of Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Ctr., 473 U.S. 432, 441 (1985); Wein-
berger v. Wiesenfeld, 420 U.S. 636, 643 (1975); Stanton, 421 U.S. at
14–15 (1975); cf. Pusey v. Pusey, 728 P.2d 117, 119–20 (Utah 1986)
(―Discontinu[ing] our support‖ for ―gender-based preferences in
child custody cases‖ and holding that the maternal preference
rule ―lacks validity because it is unnecessary and perpetuates
outdated stereotypes‖).

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commitment to the child‘s best interests.‖43 Of course, because
under the majority‘s reasoning a mother‘s commitment is simply
assumed when the child is born,44 when the majority says ―biolog-
ical parent,‖ it can only mean ―biological father.‖ Thus, the major-
ity holds that the affidavit requirement is justified as a way of en-
suring that fathers ―reliably‖ indicate their ability to ―fulfill their
parental role.‖45 But there is no rational reason to assume that a
father‘s ability to fulfill the parental role is any less reliable than a
mother‘s. The only way to accept such an assumption is to em-
brace the stereotype that unwed fathers are inherently less reliable
parents. It is only by accepting the stereotypes underlying section
78B-6-121(3)(b) that the majority is able to justify its conclusion
that fathers may be required to take extra steps to ensure the State
that their desire to parent (and ability to parent) is reliable and ge-
nuine. For this reason, the majority‘s affirmation that an unwed
father may be required to ―reliably‖ manifest a commitment to
―fulfill[ing] [his] parental role‖—via sworn affidavit containing a
written parenting plan—perpetuates the stereotyping at the heart
of the statute.46

   43   Supra ¶ 81.
   44 See supra ¶¶ 78, 80 (―An unwed mother‘s connection to her
child is objectively apparent. . . . Mothers express their commit-
ment to their offspring through the voluntary decision to carry a
child to term . . . .‖).
   45   Supra ¶ 75 (footnote omitted).
   46 The majority states that it ―emphatically‖ does not intend to
suggest that fathers are inherently unreliable or untrustworthy.
Supra ¶ 75 n.28. I do not doubt that my colleagues eschew such
beliefs. But the point remains that section 78B-6-121(3)(b) exploits
those unfair stereotypes. The majority misses the point when it
describes the affidavit requirement as aimed at ―indicating who
has parental rights and standing,‖ supra ¶ 75 n.28,—as I will ex-
plain, the affidavit requirement is not aimed at identifying fathers.
By its own plain terms, the purpose of the affidavit requirement is
specifically to require unwed fathers to (1) swear that they ―are
fully able and willing to have full custody,‖ (2) ―set[] forth . . .
plans for care of the child,‖ and (3) ―agree[] to a court order of

                                   55
                          In re Adoption of J.S.
                       NEHRING, A.C.J., dissenting

  ¶98     The government policy represented by Utah Code sec-
tion 78B-6-121(3) reflects the invidious and outdated stereotype
that fathers are not only generally less interested in parenting than
mothers, but in fact possess inferior abilities and instincts in that
realm. I would strike down section 78B-6-121(3)(b) on that basis
and would thereby affirm ―what, by now, should be axiomatic:
Intentional discrimination on the basis of gender by state actors
violates the Equal Protection Clause, particularly where, as here,
the discrimination serves to ratify and perpetuate invidious, arc-
haic, and overbroad stereotypes‖ about the innate characteristics
of men and women.47
        B. The Affidavit Requirement Is Not Substantially Related
                  to the Proposed Government Interest
   ¶99     Although I would strike down the statute as based on an
illegitimate underlying purpose,48 I write further to note that the
statute is also unconstitutional because there is no ―direct, sub-
stantial relationship between objective and means.‖49 Thus, even
accepting the legislative purpose in its most favorable light, the
discriminatory classification is not substantially related to that ob-
jective.50 I disagree with the majority‘s conclusion that the affida-
vit requirement ―can be upheld as substantially advancing‖ im-
portant government interests for three reasons. First, instead of
requiring the Does to satisfy their ―demanding‖ burden to justify
the discrimination, the majority instead supplies a justification for
them—this is impermissible under heightened scrutiny. Second,
the discriminatory affidavit requirement is redundant and thus
cannot be ―substantially related‖ to the goal of ensuring a father‘s
commitment to assuming a parental role. Third and finally, the

child support and the payment of expenses.‖ UTAH CODE § 78B-6-
121(3)(b).
   47   J.E.B., 511 U.S. at 130–31.
   48   See supra Part I.A.
   49   Miss. Univ. for Women, 458 U.S. at 725.
   50 See, e.g., id. at 730 (―The policy is invalid also because it fails
the second part of the equal protection test, for the State has made
no showing that the gender-based classification is substantially
and directly related to its proposed . . . objective.‖).

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physical fact of pregnancy and birth does not ―express‖51 any-
thing about a woman‘s inherent attitudes, intentions, or feelings.
In other words, biological differences, while real, do not justify
stereotypes and generalizations about women‘s supposedly inhe-
rent feelings toward their infants. Biological differences cannot be
used to perpetuate the gender stereotypes inherent in the majori-
ty‘s notion that the mother, simply because she is the mother, has
a special ―voice‖52 that the father lacks, to decide the fate of the
child.53
1. The Majority Fails to Require the Does to Bear Their Burden to
   Justify the Discriminatory Classification
  ¶100 Despite the fact that under heightened scrutiny the
―burden of justification is demanding and it rests entirely on the
State‖54 (or in this case, on the proponent of the legislation, the
Does), the majority, sua sponte, supplies a justification that the
Does did not proffer: that the physical differences between men
and women indicate a mother‘s inherently greater ―commitment‖
to her child at birth and therefore justify requiring a father to ―ex-
press a parallel‖ commitment by swearing that he has the money,

   51   Supra ¶ 80.
   52   Supra ¶ 75 (state has interest in ―giving voice to those with a
demonstrated commitment‖); ¶ 78 (―[a] mother‘s parental rights
. . . give[] her a voice in the child‘s upbringing‖); ¶ 82 (commit-
ment, which mother shows simply by giving birth, is an ―impor-
tant prerequisite[] . . . to the voice that accompanies [the parental
right] in the context of an adoption‖).
   53  As I point out above, the stereotype that women are inhe-
rently well-suited and competent parents implicates the mir-
ror stereotype that men are inherently less caring, less skilled, and
less invested parents.
   54 Virginia, 518 U.S. at 533; Miss. Univ. for Women, 458 U.S. at
724; Utah Safe to Learn-Safe to Worship Coalition, Inc., 2004 UT 32,
¶ 24, (stating that under Utah‘s heightened scrutiny test ―the bur-
den of proof shifts to the State to show that a challenged provision
actually and substantially furthers a valid legislative purpose and
is reasonably necessary to further a legitimate legislative goal‖
(internal quotation marks omitted)).

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                       NEHRING, A.C.J., dissenting

the desire, and the know-how necessary to raise his child.55 In so
doing, the majority employs a rational basis standard under the
guise of heightened scrutiny. Under rational basis review, the
burden is on the one ―attacking‖ the law to show that there is no
―conceivable‖ legitimate interest that justifies the classification,
and thus the court will uphold the law if there is any ―conceivable
basis which might support it.‖56 Not so for heightened scrutiny.
Under heightened scrutiny, the burden is on the proponent of the
legislation to show that the actual—not merely conceivable—
underlying purpose is an important one.57
  ¶101 The majority writes that the important legislative objec-
tive underlying Utah Code section 78B-6-121(3)(b) is the ―preser-
vation of the best interests of children,‖ which it says is pursued
through State efforts to establish ―binding connections between
children and parents‖—a goal which, in turn, is accomplished by
―giving voice to those with a demonstrated commitment to the
best interest of the child.‖58 The majority then reasons that be-
cause a mother, by virtue of her physical role in the birth, has au-
tomatically demonstrated her commitment, the government‘s fa-
thers-only affidavit requirement is justified.59 Although the Does
listed a number of ―compelling reasons‖ that they believe justify
the affidavit requirement, ―biological differences between men
and women‖ was not one of them. Nor is the majority‘s biologi-
cal-differences justification found anywhere in the Adoption Act‘s

   55   Supra ¶ 80; UTAH CODE § 78B-6-121(3)(b).
   56   Armour v. Indianapolis, 132 S. Ct. 2073, 2082 (2012).
   57   Virginia, 518 U.S. at 533, 535–36.
   58 Supra ¶ 74–75 (internal quotation marks omitted). The ma-
jority also describes the State‘s interest as an interest in ―giving
voice to those with a demonstrated commitment to the best inter-
ests of the child.‖ Supra ¶ 75.
   59 Supra ¶ 78 (―By electing to carry the child to term (and not
ending it by abortion or emergency contraception), a mother gives
an objective indication of her commitment . . . . giving her a voice
in the child‘s upbringing . . . .‖).

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statement of legislative intent.60 The justifications that the Does
actually proffered are worth noting. They are:
         The State has a ―compelling interest in identifying
         unwed fathers who will actually assume the parental
         role and fulfill the corresponding responsibilities.‖
         (Emphasis added.).
          ―[I]t is usually best for the child if the mother de-
         cides soon after the child‘s birth whether she will . . .
         allow the father to raise the child . . . . To aid the mother
         in making this crucial decision, it is completely un-
         derstandable that the Legislature would require an
         unwed father to make the sworn statements.‖ (Em-
         phasis added.).
         ―[I]t is commonplace for an unwed mother to be
         lulled into deciding to parent her child by false
         promises made by the father, only to find out too
         late that she alone must shoulder the entire burden
         . . . . A mother who has the courage to place her child
         for adoption should not have to wonder whether the
         adoption may later be undone by a putative father.‖
         (Emphasis added).
         ―[I]f a man is not willing to legally commit to the
         mother and her future children by marrying her
         prior to the child‘s conception, it is not unduly harsh
         to require him to file a sworn affidavit.‖
         ―The affidavit requirement serves the further pur-
         pose of ferreting out those cases were [sic] the puta-
         tive father truly does not want to be responsible for the
         child, but has been put up to filing a paternity action
         to obstruct the adoption by someone else.‖ (Empha-
         sis added).
Given the quality of these assertions, perhaps it is unsurprising
that the majority chose to come up with its own justification for
the government interest underlying the discrimination in section
78B-6-121(3)(b). However, under heightened scrutiny, the burden
is on the proponent of the discriminatory legislation to show the

   60   UTAH CODE § 78B-6-102.

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                      NEHRING, A.C.J., dissenting

actual purpose behind the legislation.61 The majority cannot step
in and attempt to relieve the Does of their burden to justify Utah
Code section 78B-6-121(3)(b)—yet, the majority does exactly this
by supplying the ―fundamental differences‖ rationale.62 I believe
that the reasons proffered by the Does successfully showed the
actual purpose of the legislation—though not in the way they in-
tended. All of the Does‘ proffered justifications are based on
speculation, generalization, and stereotyping. The majority im-
properly attempts to reform the justifications put forward by the
Does by coming up with, at best, a conceivable government objec-
tive. Under heightened scrutiny, the majority may not do this.63
2. Utah Code Section 78B-6-121(3)(b) Is Not Substantially Related
   to an Important Government Interest Because It Is Redundant
  ¶102 Even if one ignores the fact that the majority itself comes
up with a government rationale justifying the discrimination and
thus impermissibly relieves the proponents of the legislation of
their burden to do so, and even if one accepts that the govern-
ment‘s interest is legitimate and important, the affidavit require-
ment is nonetheless unconstitutional because it is redundant and
unnecessary. The affidavit requirement does not provide any
meaningful additional assurance that the father is ―commit[ted] to
the best interests of the child‖64 beyond what is readily ascertain-
able by the fact that he has stepped forward, identified himself,
paid expenses (or offered to do so), and filed a legally binding
document in a Utah district court declaring himself the father and
expressing a corresponding willingness to assume all of the legal
duties and responsibilities that come with that status. The other
requirements of Utah Code section 78B-6-121(3) already show the
unwed father‘s commitment to his baby. Under Utah Code sec-
tion 78B-6-121(3)(a), (c), and (d), the father must file a paternity
petition requesting custody and explicitly expressing his com-
mitment to his child and desire to parent that child; he must file

   61   Virginia, 518 U.S. at 535–36.
   62  Supra ¶ 80. And even if this were proper, as I explain in Part
I.B.3 infra, the majority‘s biological differences justification fails.
   63Virginia, 518 U.S. at 533; Miss. Univ. for Women, 458 U.S. at
724–25.
   64   Supra ¶ 75.

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notice of that petition with the Department of Health; and he must
pay or offer to pay expenses relating to the pregnancy and birth.
These actions indicate the father‘s commitment. Further demon-
stration of that commitment by the discriminatory means of the
affidavit requirement does not present an ―exceedingly persua-
sive‖ justification for the discrimination, especially when the affi-
davit is based entirely on invidious stereotypes about men‘s inhe-
rent parental inferiority.65
  ¶103 It is not disputed that Mr. Bolden satisfied three of the
four requirements of section 78B-6-121(3). The one requirement
that he did not satisfy—the affidavit requirement—does not sig-
nificantly contribute to the government‘s important interest in
protecting children or ensuring that caretakers are committed to
fulfilling their parental role.
  ¶104 In Nguyen v. I.N.S., the United States Supreme Court
upheld an immigration statute that favored mothers over fathers
on the basis that, due to biology, at birth the father may be un-
known while the mother is easily identifiable.66 The majority at-
tempts to justify section 78B-6-121(3)(b) in part by alluding to this
identity rationale.67 But the affidavit requirement has nothing
whatsoever to do with identifying the father, as its plain terms
and the bulk of the majority‘s reasoning make clear—it is in-
tended to ensure the father‘s ―commitment‖ to care for the child.
Moreover, other provisions of the statute amply ensure that the
father is not only identified but has indicated a desire and inten-
tion to be a parent to his child, with all of the legal, moral, ethical,
and practical obligations that come with that.
  ¶105 The other requirements of section 78B-6-121(3) ensure
that the father is both identified and has ―com[e] forward to par-

   65 As explained, the father must swear that he ―at least‖ has a
plan for how he will ―financially care‖ for the child as well as how
he will ―meet daily care-giving responsibilities.‖ In re Adoption of
Baby Boy Doe, 2008 UT App 449, ¶ 5 & n.2; UTAH CODE § 78B-6-
121(3)(b).
   66 533 U.S. at 62–64.
   67 See supra ¶ 79 (―[An unwed father‘s] connection to his
offspring may be unknown or at least indeterminate.‖).

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                      NEHRING, A.C.J., dissenting

ticipate in the rearing of his child.‖68 Thus, even if the govern-
ment interest in ensuring a father‘s commitment is accepted, the
affidavit requirement is unnecessary because other provisions of
the Adoption Act already accomplish that goal.
3. Physical Differences Cannot Be Used to Justify Discrimina-
   tion Based on Stereotypes
  ¶106 The majority‘s reference to abortion is baffling.69 The
majority attempts to justify the discrimination wrought by section
121(3)(b) by turning to the physical differences between men and
women, seemingly inspired by the reasoning used by the Su-
preme Court in Nguyen v. I.N.S.70 The majority proceeds under
the premise that a woman‘s capacity to gestate and deliver a child
provides ―useful information‖ about her attitude toward the child
and commitment to its interests.71 But instead of citing any legal
authority, the majority‘s reasoning on this issue appears to stem
from its own beliefs about ―the fundamental differences‖ between
men and women and what mothers ―express‖ by way of gestation
and delivery.72 Yet the majority‘s attempt to use a woman‘s phys-
ical experience of pregnancy to stand in for and justify assump-

    Lehr v. Robertson, 463 U.S. 248, 261 (1983) (internal quotation
   68

marks omitted).
   69 Supra ¶ 78 (―By electing to carry the child to term (and not
ending it by abortion or emergency contraception), a mother gives
an objective indication of her commitment to the best interests of
her child.‖).
   70 533 U.S. at 64 (reasoning that, ―[g]iven that the mother is al-
ways present at birth, but that the father need not be,‖ a statute
that employed a gender classification permissibly used ―gender
specific terms‖ because it did so merely as a way of ―tak[ing] into
account a biological difference between the parents,‖ namely, the
mother‘s ―unique relationship to the event of birth‖(emphasis add-
ed)); supra ¶ 78 n.34. The reasoning in Nguyen is inapplicable to
the statute we are faced with here because there is no inherent
biological difference between mothers‘ and fathers‘ commitment
to their children. 533 U.S. at 64.
   71   Supra ¶ 78 n.34.
   72   Supra ¶ 80.

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tions about her ―inherent‖ parental attitudes73 is itself founded in
stereotypes.74
  ¶107 Carrying a child to term could—but does not necessari-
ly—indicate a mother‘s concern for the fetus‘s interest before
birth.75 Regardless, the successful completion of pregnancy and
delivery says nothing about a mother‘s commitment to care for
the child after it is born. In other words, carrying a child to term
says nothing about a mother‘s ability or willingness to have cus-
tody of the child post-birth. It says nothing about her ―plan‖ to
care for the child. And it does not ensure that she is able to pay
expenses she incurs in connection with the pregnancy and birth.
In short, the fact that a woman carries a child to term is complete-
ly unrelated to the goals of the affidavit requirement.76 Accor-

   73 Supra ¶ 2 (―Unwed mothers acquire parental rights—and the
accompanying right to object to an adoption—as a result of the
objective manifestation of the commitment to the child that is
demonstrated by their decision to carry a child to term.‖); ¶ 78
(―By electing to carry the child to term (and not ending it by abor-
tion or emergency contraception), a mother gives an objective in-
dication of her commitment to the best interests of her child‖);
¶ 80 (―[F]undamental differences between unwed mothers and
fathers explain the basis for our statute‘s requirement of an affi-
davit for only the latter.‖(footnote omitted)); ¶ 78 n.34 (―[w]e are
unwilling to denigrate the level of commitment inherent in the
decision to carry a child to term, or to gainsay the difficulty of
pregnancy‖); id. (―[a] mother‘s decision to bring a child into the
world . . . provides some useful information‖).
   74 Cf. Nguyen, 533 U.S. at 68 (explaining that because it is ―un-
deniable‖ that the unwed mother and father‘s circumstances are
different in terms of their need to be present at the birth and thus
different in terms of the state‘s ability to identify them, this dis-
tinction ―does not result from some stereotype, defined as a frame
of mind resulting from irrational or uncritical analysis‖).
   75It is not a difficult thought experiment to imagine a pregnant
woman who lacks concern for her unborn child‘s best interest, or
who, for example, is unaware that she is pregnant.
   76 See UTAH CODE § 78B-6-121(3)(b) (requiring unwed father to
file an affidavit stating that he is ―fully able and willing to have

                                 63
                        In re Adoption of J.S.
                     NEHRING, A.C.J., dissenting

dingly, I would hold that the gender discrimination effected by
the affidavit requirement is not reasonably related to the State‘s
objective, however that objective is framed.
  ¶108 The affidavit requirement not only requires the father to
declare that he is ―able and willing‖ to take full custody of his
child, but also forces him to make a written ―plan‖ for the child‘s
care.77 These requirements are future-oriented. I fail to see how
the mother‘s decision not to get an abortion indicates anything
about her ability or willingness to care for her child after it is born.
Moreover, I vehemently disagree that a woman‘s so-called ―vo-
luntary decision‖ to carry the baby to term ―express[es]‖ anything
about her plan for the child‘s care or her commitment to the
child‘s best interest after it is born.78 For one thing, obtaining an
abortion is painful, costly, time-consuming, morally and religious-
ly fraught, and, for many women, nearly impossible or actually
impossible due to age,79 religion, geography, employment de-
mands, or cost. For another, the fact of being pregnant and carry-
ing a baby to term is a physical reality that cannot rationally be
used to surmise anything about the woman‘s internal feelings and
intentions. In short, the majority‘s abortion rationale is not only
based on impermissible gender stereotypes, but even taken on its
own terms, it is absurd and illogical.

full custody,‖ ―setting forth his plans for care of the child,‖ and
―agreeing to a court order of child support and the payment of
expenses incurred in connection with the mother‘s pregnancy and
the child‘s birth‖).
   77   Id.
   78 The majority attempts to conflate a woman‘s pre-birth action
of not aborting the fetus with a post-birth commitment to the
child‘s care. This defies logic. Indeed, one does not need to look
far to find examples of women who chose not to have an abortion
but who nevertheless failed to provide the necessary care for their
children. Regrettably, our juvenile courts are full of cases of ma-
ternal abuse and neglect.
   79See UTAH CODE § 76-7-304.5(2)(a)–(b), (5) (prohibiting minors
from obtaining abortions absent parental consent or judicial ap-
proval).

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                    NEHRING, A.C.J., dissenting

  ¶109 While it is of course true that a woman is inherently dif-
ferent from a man in that she can become pregnant and theoreti-
cally undergo an abortion, the majority improperly uses this dif-
ference to justify a statute that is based not on biological difference
but rather on invidious stereotypes about the parenting attitudes
and capabilities of men and women.80
  ¶110 The majority‘s assumptions about the difference in
―commitment‖ between an unmarried mother and an unmarried
father are not actually based on the physical reality of pregnancy
and birth. This is because a difference in commitment does not
stem from a biological reality in the way that parental identity
under Nguyen does.81 In other words, it is a biological reality that
a father need not be present at birth. It is not a biological reality
that a woman is committed to the best interest of her child.
  ¶111 The majority uses a woman‘s physical characteristics to
make generalizations about her feelings and assumes, based on
her gender alone, that she has a greater commitment to the best
interest of her child.82 This is a classic example of an ―overbroad

   80 Virginia, 518 U.S. at 533 (stating that the State‘s justification
for a discriminatory law ―must not rely on overbroad generaliza-
tions about the different talents, capacities, or preferences of males
and females‖); Caban v. Mohammed, 441 U.S. 380, 389 (1979)
(―[M]aternal and paternal roles are not invariably different in im-
portance . . . .‖).
   81 533 U.S. at 62–63 (―In the case of the father, the uncontesta-
ble fact is that he need not be present at the birth. If he is present,
furthermore, that circumstance is not incontrovertible proof of fa-
therhood.‖).
   82  The majority claims that it merely uses a woman‘s biology as
a ―rough parallel‖ to the affidavit requirement. Supra ¶ 80 n.36;
see also supra ¶ 83 n.38 (―[W]e find the rough comparability between
the mother‘s expression of commitment and planning and that
required of the father to be sufficient.‖ (emphasis added)). But
simply adding the word ―rough‖ does not overcome the defects in
the majority‘s reasoning—today the court holds that a woman‘s
mere physical biology is ―parallel‖ to a father‘s written, sworn
statement that, among other things, he has a detailed plan to raise
his child.

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                         In re Adoption of J.S.
                      NEHRING, A.C.J., dissenting

generalization[]‖ about gender.83 Though I do not doubt my col-
leagues‘ good intentions, the majority upholds a statute that is
founded in sex stereotypes—which are ―fixed notions‖ the differ-
ent genders are better or worse suited to certain tasks, such as
nurturing.84 Such stereotypes should have no place in our law,
our courts, or our public policy. The court today upholds a dis-
criminatory statute on the basis of so-called innate differences be-
tween men and women. But this reasoning ties it to a long line of
overruled laws and cases. In other words, unfair sex discrimina-
tion has long been perpetuated by arguments that sound in biolo-
gy.85 True, cases like Bradwell present particularly egregious ex-
amples of gender discrimination, but the reliance on ―nature‖ in
such cases finds echoes in today‘s decision. The State may not use
biology to justify ―classifying unwed fathers as being invariably
less qualified and entitled than mothers to exercise a concerned

   83 Caban, 441 U.S. at 394 (internal quotation marks omitted); see
also Virginia, 518 U.S. at 541 (cautioning courts to take a ―hard
look‖ at justifications for gender discrimination that rely on ―ge-
neralizations or tendencies‖ or are ―based on fixed notions con-
cerning the roles and abilities of males and females‖).
   84 Virginia, 518 U.S. at 541; see also id. at 533 (describing gender
stereotypes as “overbroad generalizations about the different tal-
ents, capacities, or preferences of males and females‖).
   85 See, e.g., Bradwell v. Illinois, 83 U.S. 130, 141 (1872) (―[T]he civ-
il law, as well as nature herself, has always recognized a wide dif-
ference in the respective spheres and destinies of man and wom-
an. Man is, or should be, woman‘s protector and defender. The
natural and proper timidity and delicacy which belongs to the
female sex evidently unfits it for many of the occupations of civil
life. The constitution of the family organization, which is founded
in the divine ordinance, as well as in the nature of things, indi-
cates the domestic sphere as that which properly belongs to the
domain and functions of womanhood.‖); see generally, Virginia,
518 U.S. at 542–545 (explaining historical attitudes about the dif-
ferent roles of men and women); Frontiero, 411 U.S. at 684–685
(―There can be no doubt that our Nation has had a long and un-
fortunate history of sex discrimination. . . . [O]ur statute books
gradually became laden with gross, stereotyped distinctions be-
tween the sexes . . . .‖).

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                     NEHRING, A.C.J., dissenting

judgment as to the fate of their children.‖86 For this reason I dis-
sent and would strike down Utah Code section 78B-6-121(3)(b).
  ¶112 I also take issue with the majority‘s assertion that we
simply ―disagree about the wisdom of the legislature‘s policy de-
cision to add a requirement of an affidavit.‖87 My disagreement
with the majority is about the constitutionality of the statute, not
the legislature‘s wisdom. The majority today upholds a statute
that discriminates on the basis of gender. With all due respect,
and as explained herein, the majority‘s decision is deeply flawed.
The majority perpetuates the sexual stereotypes embodied in Utah
Code section 78B-6-121(3)(b) and its decision today has allowed
unfair discrimination to remain enshrined in the laws of our State.
I would hold that because Utah Code section 7B-6-121(3)(b) treats
unmarried men and unmarried women differently without justifi-
cation, it unconstitutionally discriminates based on sex.
         II. THE AFFIDAVIT REQUIREMENT VIOLATED
         MR. BOLDEN‘S RIGHT TO THE PROTECTION OF
        PROCEDURAL AND SUBSTANTIVE DUE PROCESS
  ¶113 Mr. Bolden‘s challenge to the constitutionality of the af-
fidavit requirement is a matter of first impression in this State.88

   86 Caban, 441 U.S. at 394; see also Frontiero, 411 U.S. at 686–87
(―[S]tatutory distinctions between the sexes often have the effect
of invidiously relegating the entire class . . . to inferior legal status
without regard to the actual capabilities of its individual mem-
bers.‖).
   87 Supra ¶ 80 n.36; see also supra ¶ 79 n.35 (―It is a fair question
to ask whether the requirements of Utah law . . . go further than
necessary. But that is at heart a policy question . . . .‖).
   88 Although Utah appellate courts have been presented with
cases where a putative father complied with all of the require-
ments except the affidavit requirement, each time, the constitutio-
nality of the affidavit requirement has evaded review. See Don-
juan v. McDermott, 2011 UT 72, ¶ 22, 266 P.3d 839 (putative father
failed to preserve constitutional argument); E.G. v. C.C.D. (In re
Adoption of Baby Girl), 2010 UT App 114, ¶ 21 n.2, 233 P.3d 517
(constitutional argument not raised or preserved); N.T. v. Doe (In
re Adoption of Baby Boy Doe), 2008 UT App 449, ¶¶ 4–7, 199 P.3d
368 (constitutional argument not raised). In his dissent in In re

                                   67
                         In re Adoption of J.S.
                      NEHRING, A.C.J., dissenting

Mr. Bolden concedes that he did not comply with the affidavit re-
quirement of Utah Code section 78B-6-121(3). He challenges that
requirement as a violation of due process—a challenge that in-
cludes both the procedural and substantive branches of that con-
stitutional doctrine.
                       A. Procedural Due Process
  ¶114 The majority baldly states that Mr. Bolden‘s due process
claim ―sounds only in substantive due process‖89 I respectfully
disagree. Mr. Bolden has squarely challenged the statute under
the Due Process Clause, which contains both procedural and subs-
tantive elements. The majority itself claims that the ―right to due
process is principally about process—procedure, not substance.‖90
However, despite this view, and despite the majority‘s professed
suspicion of the very notion of substantive due process,91 the ma-
jority is nevertheless unwilling to evaluate Mr. Bolden‘s claim
through the lens of fair process.
    ¶115 ―A due process right of access to the courts exists when
fundamental interests are present and the State has exclusive con-
trol over the adjustment of [the] legal relationships involved.‖92
The United States Supreme Court has held that states may not ir-
rationally deny people access to the courts, particularly where, as

Adoption of Baby Girl, Judge Thorne noted that the requirements of
the current statute had not ―been expressly approved‖ by this
court. 2010 UT App 114, ¶ 39.
   89   Supra ¶ 28.
   90   Supra ¶ 29.
   91 See supra ¶ 30 (stating that ―the Due Process Clause is not a
license for the judicial fabrication of rights that judges might pre-
fer, on reflection, to have been enshrined in the constitution‖ and
citing Regents of University of Michigan v. Ewing, 474 U.S. 214, 225–
26 (1985), for the proposition that ―[a]lthough the Court regularly
proceeds on the assumption that the Due Process Clause has more
than a procedural dimension, we must always bear in mind that
the substantive content of the Clause is suggested neither by its
language nor by preconstitutional history‖ (internal quotation
marks omitted)).
   92   Logan v. Zimmerman Brush Co., 455 U.S. 422, 430 n.5 (1982).

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                          NEHRING, A.C.J., dissenting

here, ―resort to the judicial process‖ is, ―in a realistic sense,‖ invo-
luntary.93 In Logan v. Zimmerman Brush Co., the Court explained
that ―[t]he State may erect reasonable procedural requirements for
triggering the right to an adjudication, be they statutes of limita-
tions, or, in an appropriate case, filing fees,‖ but nevertheless
―what the Fourteenth Amendment does require, however, is an
opportunity . . . granted at a meaningful time and in a meaningful
manner, for [a] hearing appropriate to the nature of the case.‖94
This is because ―courts, even in aid of their own valid processes,‖
are limited by the Due Process Clause in their ability to ―dismiss
an action without affording a party the opportunity for a hearing
on the merits of his cause.‖95 ―[H]aving made access to the courts
an entitlement or a necessity, the State may not deprive someone
of that access unless the balance of . . . interests favors the gov-
ernment scheme.‖96 Moreover, as the Court explicitly held in
M.L.B. v. S.L.J., ―decrees forever terminating parental rights‖ fall
in the ―category of cases in which the State may not bolt the door
to equal justice.‖97
    ¶116 While it is true that Mr. Bolden frames his argument in
terms of substantive due process, he has squarely challenged the
statute under the Due Process Clause, and this court has said that

   93  Boddie v. Connecticut, 401 U.S. 371, 376–77 (1971) (holding
that it was unconstitutional under the due process clause to deny
indigent individuals access to the courts because of their inability
to pay a filing fee); M.L.B. v. S.L.J., 519 U.S. 102, 107 (1996) (declar-
ing unconstitutional a state requirement that parents pay a fee for
preparation of the trial record in order to appeal a termination of
custody); Logan, 455 U.S. at 437.
   94 455 U.S. at 437 (alterations in original) (citations omitted) (in-
ternal quotation marks omitted); see also id. at 430 n.5; M.L.B, 519
U.S. at 120; Wilson v. Iseminger, 185 U.S. 55, 62–63 (1902) (―In all
such cases the question is one of reasonableness, and we have,
therefore, only to consider whether the time allowed in this sta-
tute is, under all the circumstances, reasonable.‖); Burford v. Ten-
nessee, 845 S.W.2d 204, 208 (Tenn. 1992).
   95   Logan, 425 U.S. at 429.
   96   Id. at 430 n.5.
   97 519 U.S. at 124 (internal quotation marks omitted).

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                           In re Adoption of J.S.
                      NEHRING, A.C.J., dissenting

it will be ―unwilling to disregard controlling authority that bears
upon the ultimate resolution of a case solely because the parties
did not raise it below.‖98 The majority claims that no authority
exists that ―yields a judicial prerogative to second-guess the wis-
dom of state law standards . . . under the guise of procedural due
process.‖99 But on the contrary, if the legislature has violated the
constitution, such ―second-guessing‖ is this court‘s raison d‘être.
Moreover, evaluating a properly presented constitutional chal-
lenge to a given law is in no way an exercise of ―free-wheeling au-
thority‖100—it is a proper exercise of our actual authority.101

   98   Patterson v. Patterson, 2011 UT 68, ¶ 18, 266 P.3d 828.
   99   Supra ¶ 23 n.9.
   100   Supra ¶ 23 n.9.
   101 See, e.g., Burford, 845 S.W.2d at 208 (striking down a statute
of limitations as depriving plaintiff of a ―reasonable opportunity‖
to have his claim heard and holding that ―before a state may ter-
minate a claim for failure to comply with procedural requirements
. . . due process requires that potential litigants be provided an
opportunity for the presentation of claims at a meaningful time
and in a meaningful manner‖); see also Logan, 455 U.S. at 426, 428;
Ky. Union Co. v. Kentucky, 219 U.S. 140, 156–57 (1911) (―A time not
unreasonably short for the beginning of actions may be fixed by the
legislature, having in view particular conditions without violating
the due process clause.‖(emphasis added)); Wilson, 185 U.S. at 62
(―[A]ll statutes of limitation must proceed on the idea that the par-
ty has full opportunity afforded him to try his right in the courts.
A statute could not bar the existing rights of claimants without
affording this opportunity; if it should attempt to do so, it would
not be a statute of limitations, but an unlawful attempt to extin-
guish rights arbitrarily, whatever might be the purport of its pro-
visions.‖); Terry v. Anderson, 95 U.S. 628, 632–33 (1877) (―[S]tatutes
of limitation affecting existing rights are not unconstitutional, if a
reasonable time is given for the commencement of an action be-
fore the bar takes effect.‖); Fields v. Legacy Health Sys., 413 F.3d 943,
956–57 (9th Cir. 2005) (analyzing a procedural due process chal-
lenge to a statute of limitations and rejecting it because the statute
was not ―arbitrary [or] irrational‖ and noting that ―[c]ourts will
generally uphold a statute of limitations against a due process
challenge as long as the plaintiff is accorded a reasonable time,

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                      NEHRING, A.C.J., dissenting

When presented with a constitutional challenge, it is our job to
evaluate whether the legislature has overstepped its constitutional
bounds.102 That is what Mr. Bolden has asked us to do here, and
the majority abrogates its judicial duty by refusing to fully ad-
dress his constitutional claim.
    ¶117 Procedural due process issues arise when an individual
is ―claiming a right to a fair process in connection with [his] suffer-
ing a deprivation of life, liberty, or property.‖103 The fundamen-
tal requirement of due process is the opportunity to be heard ―at a
meaningful time and in a meaningful manner.‖104 It is well estab-
lished that there is a ―requirement of fair procedure before men
are denied or deprived of rights.‖105 As Justice Frankfurter elo-

under all the circumstances, to bring suit before the bar takes ef-
fect‖ (emphasis added)); People v. Germany, 674 P.2d 345, 350, 353
(Colo. 1983) (holding that statute creating an absolute time bar to
collateral attacks by defendants on criminal convictions violated
due process of law under the United States and Colorado Consti-
tutions because it was not reasonable and did not provide a
―meaningful opportunity‖ for the litigant to be heard).
   102Marbury v. Madison, 5 U.S. 137, 177 (1803) (―It is emphatical-
ly the province and duty of the judicial department to say what
the law is.‖).
   103 ERWIN CHEMERINSKY, CONSTITUTIONAL LAW: PRINCIPLES AND
POLICIES 579 (3d ed. 2006); see also Mathews v. Eldridge, 424 U.S.
319, 332 (1976) (―Procedural due process imposes constraints on
governmental decisions which deprive individuals of ‗liberty‘ or
‗property‘ interests . . . .‖); Mullane v. Cent. Hanover Bank & Trust
Co., 339 U.S. 306, 313 (1950) (―Many controversies have raged
about the cryptic and abstract words of the Due Process Clause
but there can be no doubt that at a minimum they require that de-
privation of life, liberty, or property by adjudication be proceeded
by notice and opportunity for hearing appropriate to the nature of
the case.‖).
   104   Mathews, 424 U.S. at 333 (internal quotation marks omitted).
   105 Joint Anti-Fascist Refugee Comm. v. McGrath, 341 U.S. 123, 165
(1951) (Frankfurter, J., concurring); see also Lassiter v. Dep’t of Soc.
Servs., 452 U.S. 18, 33 (1981) (―In its Fourteenth Amendment, our
Constitution imposes on the States the standards necessary to en-

                                  71
                          In re Adoption of J.S.
                      NEHRING, A.C.J., dissenting

quently stated in 1951, ―[t]he heart of the matter is that democracy
implies respect for the elementary rights of men, however suspect
or unworthy; a democratic government must therefore practice
fairness.‖106
    ¶118 Utah has recognized the importance of due process since
its founding.107 Utah‘s Due Process Clause provides a guarantee
―that a party shall have his day in court.‖108 Due process of law
―hears before it condemns, proceeds upon inquiry, and renders
judgment only after trial.‖109
    ¶119 Due process is ―flexible,‖ and requires analysis of the
―given situation‖ in order to ensure that individuals facing depri-
vation are afforded procedures that comport with fundamental
fairness.110 ―Applying the Due Process Clause is therefore an un-

sure that judicial proceedings are fundamentally fair.‖); Nelson v.
City of Orem, 2013 UT 53, ¶ 28, 309 P.3d 237; In re Worthen, 926
P.2d 853, 877 (Utah 1996) (―[T]he demands of due process rest on
the concept of basic fairness of procedure and demand a proce-
dure appropriate to the case and just to the parties involved.‖ (in-
ternal quotation marks omitted)).
   106 McGrath, 341 U.S. at 170–71 (Frankfurter, J., concurring)
(―The validity and moral authority of a conclusion largely depend
on the mode by which it was reached.‖).
   107  See UTAH CONST. art. I, § 7 (―No person shall be deprived of
life, liberty or property, without due process of law.‖); see also
PROCEEDINGS & DEBATES OF THE CONVENTION ASSEMBLED TO ADOPT
A     CONSTITUTION FOR THE STATE OF UTAH (1895),
http://le.utah.gov/documents/conconv/utconstconv.htm.
   108   Christiansen v. Harris, 163 P.2d 314, 316 (Utah 1945).
   109 Id. at 316–317 (internal quotation marks omitted) (explain-
ing that due process requires certain ―steps essential‖ before the
state may ―deprive a person of life, or liberty‖).
   110 Labrum v. Utah State Bd. of Pardons, 870 P.2d 902, 909, 911
(Utah 1993); Worthen, 926 P.2d at 876; accord Mathews, 424 U.S. at
334; see also Thurnwald v. A.E., 2007 UT 38, ¶ 38, 163 P.3d 623 (not-
ing that to deprive an unwed father and his child of the possible
benefits of their relationship simply because the unwed father

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                       NEHRING, A.C.J., dissenting

certain enterprise‖ in which the court ―must discover what ‗fun-
damental fairness‘ consists of in a particular situation.‖111 But the
overarching principle is that due process ―expresses the require-
ment of fundamental fairness.‖112
    ¶120 When deciding whether a certain procedure has been
fundamentally fair in accordance with the constitutional guaran-
tee of due process, we begin by determining what private interest
has been ―affected by governmental action.‖113 This is because
―[t]he extent to which procedural due process must be afforded
the recipient is influenced by the extent to which he may be ‗con-
demned to suffer grievous loss.‘‖114 Indeed, the Supreme Court
has long held that ―the degree of potential deprivation that may
be created by a particular decision is a factor to be considered in
assessing the validity of any . . . decisionmaking process.‖115
   ¶121 According to the majority, Mr. Bolden could not raise a
procedural due process claim where he failed to file the affidavit
as a ―result of his own procedural misstep.‖116 But Mr. Bolden
challenges the constitutionality of that very procedure. To dis-
miss Mr. Bolden‘s constitutional challenge to section 78B-6-
121(3)(b) by reasoning that Mr. Bolden should have complied
with the statute he challenges is an excellent example of circular
reasoning.117 I agree with the majority that the State ―accords due
process when it terminates a claim for failure to comply with a

failed to file a notice on time ―[flies] in the face of fundamental fair-
ness and due process‖(alteration in original) (emphasis added)).
   111   Lassiter, 452 U.S. at 24–25.
   112   Id. at 24 (internal quotation marks omitted).
     Goldberg v. Kelly, 397 U.S. 254, 263 (1970) (internal quotation
   113

marks omitted).
   114   Id. at 262–63 (citation omitted).
   115   Mathews, 424 U.S. at 341.
   116 Supra ¶¶ 6, 28 n.12 (claiming that Mr. Bolden is ―in . . . no
position to complain that his own failure amounted to a violation
of procedural due process‖).
   117   Supra ¶¶ 6, 28 n.12.

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                          In re Adoption of J.S.
                       NEHRING, A.C.J., dissenting

reasonable procedural or evidentiary rule.‖118 But the majority
fails to recognize that the given procedural requirement must be
reasonable, and the affidavit requirement is not. Due process is not
necessarily satisfied because a person receives some variety of no-
tice and some opportunity, however minimal, and however arbi-
trary, for a hearing. Instead, due process ―calls for such proce-
dural protections as the particular situation demands.‖119 This
court has held that the essential requirements of due process in-
clude ―an inquiry into the merits of the question‖ and a ―fair op-
portunity to submit evidence‖ at one‘s hearing.120 Mr. Bolden re-
ceived neither.
    ¶122 The loss of one‘s children is rightly viewed as one of the
most ―grievous‖121 losses a person can suffer. It is ―plain beyond
the need for multiple citation that a natural parent‘s desire for and
right to the companionship, care, custody, and management of his
or her children is an interest far more precious than any property
right.‖122 Despite the majority‘s dismissive stance toward the
right of an unmarried biological father to raise his child, 123 a de-
sire to parent and a fundamental interest in parenting one‘s child
does not turn on whether a person is male or female, unmarried
or wed.
   ¶123 The United States Supreme Court held in Lehr v. Robert-
son that an unwed father who ―demonstrates a full commitment to
the responsibilities of parenthood by ‗com[ing] forward to partic-
ipate in the rearing of his child‘‖ acquires ―substantial protection

   118   Supra ¶ 28 n.12 (citing Logan, 455 U.S. at 437).
   119   Mathews, 424 U.S. at 334 (internal quotation marks omitted).
   120   Christiansen, 163 P.2d at 317.
   121   Santosky v. Kramer, 455 U.S. 745, 758 (1982).
   122   Id. at 758–59 (internal quotation marks omitted).
   123 See supra ¶ 55 n.20 (―A general tradition of respect for pa-
rental rights comes nowhere close to establishing a fundamental
right for unwed fathers to unfettered control of their offspring.‖);
¶ 60 (dismissing Mr. Bolden‘s ―insist[ence]‖ that his interest is
―more than a mere biological connection‖ as having ―no prin-
cipled basis‖).

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                          NEHRING, A.C.J., dissenting

under the due process clause.‖124 Because unwed fathers are ―not
automatically identified by virtue of their role in the process of
birth,‖125 it is true that ―the mere existence of a biological link‖
alone does not merit full constitutional protection.126 Yet, an un-
wed father who has ―merely‖ a biological link to a given infant
still benefits from constitutional protection. Even if a father has
failed to or has not yet demonstrated a ―full commitment to the
responsibilities of parenthood,‖ under the Due Process Clause, a
state must still adequately protect an unwed father‘s opportunity to
form a parental relationship.127 Of course, in Lehr, the child in
question was over two years old and the father had done nothing
to develop a relationship with her.128 Thus, the question of
whether the father had made a commitment to parent her was
much easier to answer in the negative. The situation is quite dif-
ferent where a days-old infant is concerned, as in this case. When
a child has just been born, no one has a substantial ―relationship‖
with that child yet. Here, Mr. Bolden tried to ensure he would
have a relationship with his infant daughter both before she was
born and in the days immediately after her birth. Unlike in Lehr
and Quilloin v. Walcott, this is a case in which the unwed father
has at all times sought custody of his child. 129 Accordingly, our

   124 463 U.S. 248, 261 (1983) (alteration in original) (citation
omitted). I would hold that Mr. Bolden demonstrated a full
commitment to his parental responsibilities and was thus entitled
to substantive due process protection, see infra Part II.B, but even
if he did not, Mr. Bolden‘s procedural due process rights as an
unwed father were also violated.
   125   Wells v. Children’s Aid Soc’y of Utah, 681 P.2d 199, 203 (Utah
1984).
   126Lehr, 463 U.S. at 261. This court has characterized the un-
wed father‘s right to parent his child as ―provisional.‖ R.C.S. v.
A.O.L. (In re Baby Girl T.), 2012 UT 78, ¶ 11, 298 P.3d 1251.
   127   Lehr, 463 U.S. at 261–63.
   128   Id. at 249–50.
   129434 U.S. 246, 255 (1978) (holding that natural father‘s rights
under the Due Process Clause were not violated by application of
the ―best interests of the child‖ standard where natural father had

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                       NEHRING, A.C.J., dissenting

analysis of the fundamental fairness of the procedures afforded
Mr. Bolden should be different.
    ¶124 The procedures in place in Utah Code section 78B-6-
121(3) determine whether an unwed father has successfully as-
serted his ―inchoate‖ parental right.130 Utah Code section 78B-6-
121(3) thus critically affects that father‘s ―protected liberty interest
in the opportunity to preserve a relationship with his child.‖131
Under our caselaw, while unwed fathers may not have a ―full-
blown‖ parental interest in their newborn children, they neverthe-
less have a fundamental interest in their ability and opportunity
to assert full parental status.132
    ¶125 In this case, Mr. Bolden sought to assert his opportunity
interest in raising his biological child. This right is a remarkably
important one, and is inextricably tied with the fundamental right
to rear one‘s own children. The right to a relationship with one‘s
children is one of the most precious rights known to humankind
and thus individuals facing the loss of this right deserve ample,
vigorous procedural protection,133 not a statutory labyrinth.
Mr. Bolden was deprived of a relationship with his biological
child based on a technicality—he received bad advice from his

not petitioned for ―legitimation‖ at any time in an 11-year period
between the child‘s birth and the filing of an adoption petition).
   130   In re Baby Girl T., 2012 UT 78, ¶ 18.
   131   Id. ¶ 19 n.6; accord Thurnwald, 2007 UT 38, ¶ 28.
   132  In re Baby Girl T., 2012 UT 78, ¶ 18; Thurnwald, 2007 UT 38,
¶ 28 (―[A]n unwed father‘s opportunity interest in developing a
relationship with his newborn [is] a ‗provisional right‘ that is itself
protected by the due process clause of the Utah Constitution.‖);
see also Lehr, 463 U.S. at 262; Santosky, 455 U.S. at 759 (―A parent‘s
interest in the accuracy and justice of the decision to terminate his
or her parental status‖ is a ―commanding one.‖).
   133  See Stanley v. Illinois, 405 U.S. 645, 651 (1972) (―It is plain
that the interest of a parent in the companionship, care, custody,
and management of his or her children ‗come(s) to this court
with a momentum for respect lacking when appeal is made
to liberties which derive merely from shifting economic arrange-
ments.‖ (alteration in original) (citation omitted)).

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lawyer and failed to submit an affidavit, though he had already
submitted numerous other documents and complied with our un-
iquely complex adoption statute in every other way.
    ¶126 The majority dismisses Mr. Bolden‘s due process con-
cerns as posing the risk of leading this court to ―a series of line-
drawing problems.‖134 Even if this were true, such a rationale
cannot justify perpetuating a statute that is fundamentally unfair
as applied to Mr. Bolden.135 By refusing to robustly address Mr.
Bolden‘s constitutional challenge, the majority upholds a statutory
regime that was created to reduce unmarried biological fathers‘
rights to the barest minimums.136 The majority simply dismisses
Mr. Bolden‘s procedural due process claim. It is not clear at what
point, if any, the majority would agree that a statute‘s strict re-
quirements become so onerous and arbitrary—so fundamentally
unfair—that they violate procedural due process. I believe that
the affidavit requirement, as applied to Mr. Bolden, is over the
line and deprived him of fair process.
    ¶127 Because an unmarried father‘s liberty interest in assert-
ing his parental status is so strong, I would hold that, as applied
to Mr. Bolden, the affidavit requirement was fundamentally un-
fair.137 The application of the affidavit requirement here deprived

   134   Supra ¶ 60.
   135 See Stanley, 405 U.S. at 656–57 (―Procedure by presumption
is always cheaper and easier than individualized determination.
But when, as here, the procedure forecloses the determinative is-
sues[,] . . . when it explicitly disdains present realities in deference
to past formalities, it needlessly risks running roughshod over the
important interests of both parent and child.‖).
   136 A statutory regime, indeed, that gleefully set out to ―test the
bounds of Constitutional protection for . . . biological fathers.‖
Brent J. Clayton, Note, A Day Late & A Dollar Short: Should Utah’s
Unmarried Dads Get One More Chance to Claim Their Newborns?,
10 J.L. & FAM. STUD. 249, 260 (2007) (quoting sponsoring Senator
Charles H. Stewart‘s 1994 drafting instructions for the Utah Adop-
tion Act). It has certainly succeeded on that account.
   137Lassiter, 452 U.S. at 24–25 (―[T]he phrase [due process] ex-
presses the requirement of ‗fundamental fairness,‘ a requirement
whose meaning can be as opaque as its importance is lofty. Ap-

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                      NEHRING, A.C.J., dissenting

Mr. Bolden, who complied with section 78B-6-121(3) in every oth-
er way, of his right to a meaningful hearing138 before he lost the
opportunity to be a father to his son. It was thus fundamentally
unfair, and under these circumstances I cannot agree that
Mr. Bolden received the protection of the United States and Utah
Constitutions‘ guarantee of due process of the law.
    ¶128 Accordingly, I would hold that Mr. Bolden was denied
adequate procedural due process and that his consent to the adop-
tion was required.
                       B. Substantive Due Process
    ¶129 Mr. Bolden claims that his interest in parenting his bio-
logical child is a fundamental right and as such deserves protec-
tion under the Due Process Clause. The majority mischaracterizes
Mr. Bolden‘s claim, stating that he has asserted the ―right to per-
fect his parental rights on something less than the grounds pre-
scribed by the legislature‖ and ―a perfected right in unmarried
biological fathers arising upon their mere filing of a paternity
suit.‖139 This is not the right that Mr. Bolden has asserted. This
misstatement cannot be traced to anything contained in
Mr. Bolden‘s briefs or oral argument. Instead, Mr. Bolden expli-
citly stated that the right he is asserting for protection under the
Due Process Clause is ―an unwed father‘s provisional right to
raise his newborn.‖ And we have clearly announced the proper
framework for such a challenge: ―the proponent of legislation in-
fringing parental rights must show (1) a compelling state interest

plying the Due Process Clause is therefore an uncertain enterprise
which must discover what ‗fundamental fairness‘ consists of in a
particular situation by first considering any relevant precedents
and then by assessing the several interests that are at stake.‖).
   138 Worthen, 926 P.2d at 876 (―[A]n opportunity to be heard in a
meaningful way [is] at the very heart of procedural fairness.‖ (in-
ternal quotation marks omitted)); see also id. at 876 & n.14 (―em-
phasiz[ing]‖ that the opportunity to be heard in a meaningful way
is a ―minimum requirement[]‖ and noting that due process ―calls
for the procedural protections that the given situation demands‖
(internal quotation marks omitted)).
   139   Supra ¶¶ 59, 61.

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in the result to be achieved and (2) that the means adopted are
narrowly tailored to achieve the basic statutory purpose.‖140
    ¶130 The majority dismisses Mr. Bolden‘s clear invocation of
his parental right as ―fram[ed] at too-high a level of generality‖
and, even more strangely, claims that his assertion of a so-called
―generic interest in parenthood‖ is not ―precise‖ enough.141 This
position cannot be squared with Supreme Court precedent, which
has long recognized that the private interest of a father in the cus-
tody of his children is both ―cognizable and substantial.‖142
Mr. Bolden is not required to claim any more precise an interest
than the fundamental, if provisional, right to raise his child, and
the majority‘s requirement that he provide something more ap-
pears to avoid the issue. First, the court claims that Mr. Bolden
did not and cannot raise a procedural due process challenge, but
then it refuses to acknowledge that he has a protected substantive
due process right. This rhetorical ploy gives the impression that
the court is unmotivated to engage in a robust treatment of the
issues.
    ¶131 Contrary to the plurality‘s143 assertion that Mr. Bolden‘s
substantive due process claim rests on an ―innovation[] undiscip-
lined by any but abstract formula[],‖144 Mr. Bolden‘s claim rests
upon ―perhaps the oldest of the fundamental liberty interests‖
recognized by the Supreme Court145 and a right that has been rec-

   140 Wells, 681 P.2d at 206 (internal quotation marks omitted); see
also Thurnwald, 2007 UT 38, ¶¶ 28–35.
   141   Supra ¶ 59 n.22.
   142Stanley, 405 U.S. at 652; Lehr, 463 U.S. at 262–63 (discussing
an unwed father‘s due process right, stemming from his inchoate
parental right, to the ―opportunity to form‖ a full parental rela-
tionship with his child).
   143 Because Judge Orme concurred in the judgment and did not
join Part II.A.2.c or Part II.A.3 of Justice Lee‘s opinion, throughout
this section I will refer alternatively to either the ―plurality‖ or the
―majority‖ opinion, depending on whether the section was or was
not joined by Judge Orme.
   144   Supra ¶ 59.
   145   Troxel v. Granville, 530 U.S. 57, 65 (2000).

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                       NEHRING, A.C.J., dissenting

ognized by this court.146 The plurality fails to appreciate that our
1982 case Wells v. Children’s Aid Society explicitly recognized an
unwed father‘s fundamental, ―provisional right‖ to raise his
children and held that a statute that interferes with such a right is
subject to strict scrutiny.147 There, we stated very clearly that un-
der the Utah Constitution, ―an unwed father‘s right to his relation-
ship with his newborn is a provisional right . . . . [and] [w]e meas-
ure the statutory specifications for the termination of that provi-
sional right against the tests of compelling state interest and nar-
rowly tailored means.‖148 The plurality goes to great lengths in its
attempt explain Wells away, but it ultimately fails to convincingly
to do so. Instead of following Wells as precedent under the prin-
ciple of stare decisis, the plurality instead (1) spuriously labels it
―dicta,‖ (2) claims that it has been effectively overruled by later
cases, and finally (3) simply asserts that the court today would
have decided the case differently—maligning the decision as hav-
ing ―shaky‖ support and a ―bit too facile‖ conclusion. 149 The plu-
rality asserts that the Wells court relied on an ―abstract formula‖
when it deemed an unwed father‘s parental interest fundamen-
tal.150 But one does not need to rely on any formula to conclude
that a father has a deep, personal interest in his child, and if he
steps forward at the child‘s birth, that right should not be taken
away by the government absent a compelling reason.151

   146 See, e.g., Thurnwald, 2007 UT 38, ¶ 33; Wells, 681 P.2d at 206–
07; In re J.P., 648 P.2d 1364, 1373–74 (Utah 1982).
   147 681 P.2d at 206–07.
   148   Id. at 206.
   149   Supra ¶¶ 50, 51.
   150   Supra ¶ 52.
   151 Cf. Lehr, 463 U.S. at 256 (―The intangible fibers that connect
parent and child have infinite variety. They are woven throughout
the fabric of our society, providing it with strength, beauty, and
flexibility.‖); id. at 261 (―When an unwed father demonstrates a
full commitment to the responsibilities of parenthood by com[ing]
forward . . . his interest in personal contact with his child acquires
substantial protection under the due process clause.‖(first altera-
tion in original) (internal quotation marks omitted)).

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    ¶132 Despite this court‘s decisions in Wells, Thurnwald, and
the bulk of United States Supreme Court authority to the con-
trary,152 the plurality proceeds as though unmarried biological fa-
thers have no substantive due process rights, provisional or oth-
erwise.153 Without justification, the majority describes Mr. Bol-
den‘s asserted right to the custody of his biological child as a re-
quest that this court recognize a ―new‖ right of substantive due
process.154 The right of an unwed father to assert his parental sta-
tus is not new, and the majority‘s approach constitutes a dramatic
departure from our jurisprudence.
    ¶133 The majority begins its discussion with a lengthy exposi-
tion of the United States Supreme Court‘s Lochner era.155 This

   152Michael H. v. Gerald D., 491 U.S. 110, 128–29 (1989) (Scalia, J.,
plurality opinion); Lehr, 463 U.S. at 261; Santosky, 455 U.S. at 746;
Stanley, 405 U.S. 645 at 657–58.
   153  Supra ¶¶ 38–39, 51–53, 57. The plurality asserts that the Su-
preme Court‘s longstanding exaltation of the fundamental interest
of parents in the care, custody, and control of their children, see,
e.g., Troxel, 530 U.S. at 65, ―comes nowhere close to establishing a
. . . fundamental right of an unwed father.‖ Supra ¶57 n.21 (em-
phasis added). Instead, the plurality goes on, unwed fathers have
only a ―provisional right, subject to reasonable regulation.‖ Id.
Thus, the plurality envisions an unwed father‘s interest in his
child as utterly separate and distinct from any historical right of
parents to care for their children, and instead classifies the paren-
tal right of unwed fathers as subject to the lowest level of constitu-
tional protection.
   154Supra ¶ 34 n.14 (explaining the court‘s view that the Lochner
era cases provide a ―cautionary reminder of the perils of over-
exuberant invocations of the judicial power to recognize new fun-
damental rights‖ (emphasis added)); ¶ 6 (Mr. Bolden ―fails to
present evidence that the right he asserts (to preserve his rights as
an unwed father without filing an affidavit) is a matter deeply
rooted in established history and tradition‖).
   155  A majority of this court has disapproved of opinions that
contain ―length[y]‖ writing on topics that do ―not affect the reso-
lution‖ of the case. State v. Walker, 2011 UT 53, ¶ 21, 267 P.3d 210;
see also Utah Safe to Learn-Safe to Worship Coal., Inc. v. State, 2004 UT
81
                          In re Adoption of J.S.
                       NEHRING, A.C.J., dissenting

discussion has no place in the analysis. Even post-Lochner, the
United States Supreme Court and this court have consistently
upheld substantive due process concerning certain non-economic
rights, including ―parents‘ inherent right and authority to rear
their own children.‖156 While placing the law in ―historical con-
text‖ may be a proper academic pursuit, I believe such verbosity
is best curtailed, particularly in what is already a lengthy opinion.
While extended historical analysis may occasionally be called for,
it should be used sparingly and with restraint. In my view, the
court should be reluctant to include dicta indicating its opinions
about the history of the law.157 The truth is, it is well established
under the law of both the United States and Utah that an unwed
father‘s interest in asserting custody of his infant child or retain-
ing custody of his older children is ―cognizable and substan-
tial.‖158
   ¶134 Moreover, though the plurality claims that there is no
―historical basis‖ for a deeply rooted fatherly parental right,159 in

32, ¶ 19, 94 P.3d 217 (―The courts are not a forum for hearing aca-
demic contentions . . . .‖).
   156 Stanley, 405 U.S. at 651; In re J.P., 648 P.2d 1365, 1373 (Utah
1982) (recognizing and upholding ―parents‘ inherent right and au-
thority to rear their own children‖ under a substantive due
process analysis).
   157 Compare supra ¶ 30 (―the Due Process Clause is not a license
for the judicial fabrication of rights that judges might prefer, on
reflection, to have been enshrined in the constitution‖), and ¶¶ 32–
37 (explaining the ―lesson of Lochner‖), with ¶ 31 (―That said, the
principle of substantive due process is ingrained in both federal
and state precedent. So although we proceed cautiously in this
domain we cannot repudiate the substantive due process inquiry
altogether.‖).
   158   Stanley, 405 U.S. at 652; Wells, 681 P.2d at 202, 206–07.
   159 Supra ¶¶ 59, 54. Indeed, the majority itself unwittingly ac-
knowledges this, stating that ―[t]he integrity of the family and the
parents‘ inherent right and authority to rear their own children
have been recognized as fundamental axioms of Anglo-American
culture, presupposed by all our social, political, and legal institu-
tions.‖ Supra ¶ 39.

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                      NEHRING, A.C.J., dissenting

fact the recognition of the parental rights of fathers has a strong
basis in American and English history. As this court explained in
1982, the ―parental right . . . is rooted . . . in nature and human in-
stinct. . . . [T]he parent‘s right, as well as duty, to care for a child
may be termed natural, as well as legal and moral.‖160 The histor-
ical importance of fathers is well captured in a Mississippi Su-
preme Court case from 1900:
         Undoubtedly, the father has primarily, by law as
         by nature, the right to the custody of his children. .
         . . Nature and the law ratifying nature assume that
         the author of their being feels for them a tender-
         ness which will secure their happiness more cer-
         tainly than any other tie on earth. Because he is the
         father, the presumption naturally and legally is
         that he will love them most, and care for them
         most wisely.161
Or, as we stated in In re J.P.,
         Men and women in most cultures have long viewed
         their offspring as somehow being an extension of
         themselves, and as more than mere ‗property.‘ The
         bearing and raising of children has probably
         brought people into contact with some sense of the
         Infinite, the mysteries of the universe, or Nature—
         however one may express it—more than any other
         human experience. Thus, it is not surprising that
         common law judges refer to parental interests as
         ‗sacred,‘ ‗natural,‘ or ‗fundamental‘ rights, espe-

   160In re J.P., 648 P.2d at 1374–75 (internal quotation marks
omitted).
   161 Hibbette v. Baines, 29 So. 80, 81 (Miss. 1900). While it is true
that much has changed in our society‘s view of children and mar-
riage since 1900, the point is that fatherhood has long been exalted
and recognized as a right deserving of the utmost protection. So-
cietal changes since 1900 have erased the stigma of illegitimacy
and drastically increased the number of children born outside of
wedlock. Cases like Hibbette merely illustrate what should go
without saying—that fathers‘ parental rights have long been con-
sidered of fundamental importance.

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                       NEHRING, A.C.J., dissenting

         cially when the constitutional standard for a ‗fun-
         damental‘ right is whatever judges find when they
         look to the traditions and (collective) conscience of
         our people to determine whether a principle is so
         rooted (there) . . . as to be ranked as fundamen-
         tal. . . .162
    ¶135 It is true that, historically, out-of-wedlock births were
relatively rare and socially inappropriate, exposing both father
and child to social and legal stigma. In the twenty-first century,
however, cultural attitudes toward out-of-wedlock births have
shifted. In 2012, over 40 percent of births in the United States
were to unmarried women.163 As we noted in In re Baby Girl T.,
―policies predicated on the notion that unwed fathers are univer-
sally uninterested in their offspring or unwilling to embrace pa-
renthood—even when unwed mothers on occasion are not—are
being overtaken by stark . . . changes in public attitudes toward
marriage.‖164
    ¶136 Due to the nature of the birth process, the identity of the
father of an unmarried woman‘s baby is not immediately ob-
vious.165 While on that basis the United States Supreme Court and
this court have held that an unmarried father‘s parental right is
―provisional‖ or ―inchoate‖—we have never held that it is no

   162 648 P.2d at 1376–77 (alterations in original) (emphasis add-
ed) (internal quotation marks omitted).
   163Joyce A. Martin et. al, Births: Final Data for 2012, NATIONAL
VITAL STATISTICS SYSTEM, CENTERS FOR DISEASE CONTROL &
PREVENTION,          2            (Dec.           30,         2013),
http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/nvsr62/nvsr62_09.pdf.
   164 2012 UT 78, ¶ 18 n.5; see also George A. Akerlof & Janet L.
Yellen, An Analysis of Out-Of-Wedlock Births in the United States,
BROOKINGS              INSTITUTE,           (Aug.            1996),
http://www.brookings.edu/research/papers/1996/08/childrenf
amilies-akerlof (stating that ―[b]efore 1970, the stigma of unwed
motherhood was so great that few women were willing to bear
children outside of marriage‖ but ―out-of-wedlock childbearing
no longer results in social ostracism‖).
   165   Nguyen v. I.N.S., 533 U.S. 53, 62 (2001).

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right at all.166 Indeed, this court has said that an unmarried fa-
ther‘s opportunity to assert parental rights demands protection
from governmental infringement through the use of strict scruti-
ny.167 I would recognize the importance of an unwed father‘s
provisional right by applying strict scrutiny to legislation that in-
fringes upon it. The plurality denies that Mr. Bolden has any pro-
tected substantive due process interest in his newborn, fails to
employ strict scrutiny, and thereby abandons decades of
precedent. In short, the court fails to protect the parental rights of
unmarried fathers, to say nothing of the children who will grow
up without ever knowing them.
    ¶137 The court acknowledges that our decision in Wells v.
Children’s Aid Society ―adopted a different standard [of scrutiny]
under the Utah Constitution.‖168 The court explains, correctly,
that ―we concluded in Wells that the proponent of legislation in-
fringing parental rights must show (1) a compelling state interest
in the result to be achieved and (2) that the means adopted are
narrowly tailored.‖169 Despite this, the plurality nevertheless dis-
regards Wells on the basis that the standard employed there ―is in
some tension with . . . subsequent cases‖ and is ―in any event . . .
dicta.‖170 It is neither.

   166 In re Baby Girl T., 2012 UT 78, ¶¶ 18–20; Thurnwald, 2007 UT
38, ¶ 28; Wells, 681 P.2d at 206.
   167 Wells, 681 P.2d at 207 (―We measure the statutory specifica-
tions for the termination of [an unwed father‘s] provisional right
against the tests of compelling state interest and narrowly tailored
means.‖); Thurnwald, 2007 UT 38, ¶ 28.
   168   Supra ¶ 42.
   169   Supra ¶ 42 (internal quotation marks omitted).
   170  Supra ¶¶ 43, 47–48, 50. Additionally, in our 2007 case
Thurnwald v. A.E., we cited and employed the Wells standard.
2007 UT 38, ¶¶ 32–33. There, we held that a provision of the
Adoption Act that cut off unwed fathers‘ ability to file on holidays
and weekends was ―not necessary to achieve the state’s compelling
interests‖ nor was it a ―narrowly tailored means of achieving those in-
terests.‖ Id. ¶ 35 (emphasis added). Because we recognized that
strict scrutiny was the proper standard there, and because the re-
levant statute would not survive that scrutiny, we engaged in a

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                       NEHRING, A.C.J., dissenting

    ¶138 The plurality explains that it would overrule Wells171 in
part because it claims that two later cases, In re Adoption of T.B.
and In re Baby Girl T., control as the ―most recent pronounce-
ments‖ on the issue of the standard of scrutiny.172 But the plurali-
ty fails to note that there is an obvious reason that the Wells-
Thurnwald line of cases was not used in In re Adoption of T.B. and
In re Baby Girl T—it is because the putative father in those cases
did not bring a claim under the Utah Constitution.173 This omission is
glaring and deeply undercuts the plurality‘s justification for pro-
ceeding as though Wells and Thurnwald were overridden.174 It is
true that In re Baby Girl T, the court states that ―due process re-

constitutional avoidance analysis and instead read into the statute
a caveat that a father‘s rights could not be cut off simply because
the birth occurred on a weekend. Thurnwald, thus, was a case
where this court emphasized that the Wells standard applied, even
if it was ultimately not needed on the basis of constitutional
avoidance.
   171  Because Judge Orme has remained silent on these issues
and has provided no opinion on the proper standard of scrutiny
or the nature of Mr. Bolden‘s asserted right, the court today issues
no holding concerning the level of scrutiny that should be applied
to Mr. Bolden‘s substantive due process claim. A majority of the
court believes that the Wells standard is ―in some tension‖ with
later cases, supra ¶ 43, but without a third vote, the court is unable
to provide a solution to the asserted conflict. Supra ¶¶ 46–57 (Lee,
J., plurality opinion). As a result, the status of the law in this area
appears to be unsettled.
   172Supra ¶ 49; R.C.S. v. A.O.L. (In re Baby Girl T.), 2012 UT 78,
298 P.3d 1251; T.M. v. B.B. (In re Adoption of T.B.), 2010 UT 42, 232
P.3d 1026. The plurality would also abrogate Thurnwald, which
approved of and used the Wells strict-scrutiny standard as part of
a constitutional avoidance analysis. 2007 UT 38, ¶¶ 28, 32–33, 35.
   173 In re Adoption of T.B., 2010 UT 42, ¶¶ 16, 17 (citing Mathews,
424 U.S. at 339–50); see also id. ¶ 24 (―[T]he putative father asserts
that [the adoption code‘s] application to him is unconstitutional,
both under the Due Process and Equal Protection clauses of the
United States Constitution.‖).
   174   Supra ¶ 50.

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                       NEHRING, A.C.J., dissenting

quires only that an unwed father have ‗a meaningful chance to
preserve his opportunity to develop a relationship with his
child,‘‖ but this statement was made in the context of a procedural
due process analysis175—not a substantive due process analysis as
in Wells and Thurnwald. Moreover, in Baby Girl T., the father nev-
er ―expressly articulated‖ his constitutional challenge and failed
to even use the words ―due process‖ in bringing his claim176—
thus, in Baby Girl T., the court was not addressing a claim brought
squarely under the Utah Constitution‘s Due Process Clause. Simi-
larly, In re Adoption of T.B. involved a constitutional challenge
brought solely under the United States Constitution, not the Utah
Constitution.177
    ¶139 The plurality also claims that ―in any event, the Wells
standard of scrutiny was unnecessary to the outcome in that case,
and may thus be viewed as over-enthusiastic dicta.‖178 I disagree.
A court‘s reasoning is not ―dicta‖ just because the court ―could
easily have reached the same conclusion‖ by using a different
standard.179 A court‘s holding stems from the reasoning it actual-
ly used, and such reasoning cannot be dismissed as mere ―dicta.‖
The majority‘s concept of obiter dictum flouts the basic meaning
of that term. Obiter dictum is a ―judicial comment made while
delivering a judicial opinion, but one that is unnecessary to the
decision.‖180 In other words, it is an ―‗extrajudicial expression[] of
legal opinion‘‖ given by way of ―‗illustration, argument, analogy,

   175 In re Baby Girl T, 2012 UT 78, ¶¶ 11, 16, 20 (―[Unwed fa-
ther‘s] private interest therefore is in the opportunity to develop a
substantial relationship with [his infant]. The Act must give him a
meaningful and adequate procedure to protect this interest.‖)..
     Id. ¶¶ 33, 36 (unwed father ―repeatedly made due process
   176

arguments, although they were not labeled as such‖).
   177   2010 UT 42, ¶¶ 16, 24.
   178   Supra ¶ 50.
   179   Supra ¶ 50.
   180   BLACK‘S LAW DICTIONARY 1177 (9th ed. 2007).

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                          In re Adoption of J.S.
                       NEHRING, A.C.J., dissenting

or suggestion.‘‖181 The rule of law used by a court as the basis of
its legal conclusion is fundamentally and squarely not obiter dic-
tum. That was the role of the strict scrutiny standard in Wells. In
Wells, the court explicitly measured a statute‘s infringement of an
unwed father‘s rights against ―the tests of compelling state inter-
est and narrowly tailored means,‖ and found that the statute
passed strict scrutiny.182 Thus, very simply, the court applied
strict scrutiny to reach its conclusion, and that application was not
―unnecessary to the outcome.‖183 Under the plurality‘s approach,
if a court could have reached an outcome in a different way, the
court‘s actual analysis can later be dismissed wholesale as ―dic-
ta.‖184
     ¶140 Wells established the standard of scrutiny for a legisla-
tive infringement of parental rights—and more specifically, the
parental rights of unwed fathers—under the Utah Constitution,185
and the plurality‘s reasons for abrogating it fall flat.186 I agree that
litigants in Utah should be ―entitled to rely on our explication of
the law as definitive.‖187 But today the court has, at best, cast

   181Id. (citing William M. Lile et al., BRIEF MAKING AND THE USE
OF LAW BOOKS 304 (3d ed. 1914)). For an example of this, see the
majority‘s discussion of Lochner, supra ¶¶ 32–36.
   182   Wells, 681 P.2d at 206–07.
   183   Supra ¶ 50.
   184   Supra ¶ 50.
   185 Supra ¶ 42 (acknowledging that ―[o]ur Wells decision
adopted . . . a standard of heightened scrutiny . . . under the Utah
Constitution‖).
   186 See, e.g., Vorher v. Henriod, 2013 UT 10, ¶ 13, 297 P.3d 614
(―Under the doctrine of stare decisis, a party asking us to overturn
prior precedent has a substantial burden of persuasion. . . . [L]ong
standing precedent should not be overruled except for the most
compelling reasons.‖ (second alteration in original) (internal quo-
tation marks omitted)).
   187Supra ¶ 49 & n.17. Contra supra ¶¶ 51–52 (asserting that the
analysis in Wells, 681 P.2d at 206–07, was ―shaky‖ and ―should
have‖ been done differently).

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                       NEHRING, A.C.J., dissenting

doubt upon the precedential value of Wells,188 a case that has been
the law in Utah for thirty years.
    ¶141 In sum, I would evaluate Mr. Bolden‘s claim using strict
scrutiny and would find that section 78B-6-121(3)(b) fails to satisfy
that demanding standard because it is not narrowly tailored, nor
does it achieve a compelling government interest. The affidavit
requirement violates due process because (1) it is fundamentally
unfair to irrevocably foreclose an unwed father‘s parental rights
without affording him robust procedural protection; (2) the State
does not have a compelling interest in legislating based on gender
stereotypes, nor is the statute narrowly tailored to any compelling
interest; and (3) other requirements—which Mr. Bolden satis-
fied—suffice to ensure that the unwed father has accepted respon-
sibility and stepped forward as a parent as required by Lehr.189
                             CONCLUSION
    ¶142 The court‘s decision today represents an indefensible
departure from this court‘s and the United States Supreme
Court‘s constitutional jurisprudence. I would first and foremost
hold that Utah Code section 78B-6-121(3)(b) is a violation of Equal
Protection under both the Utah Constitution and the United States
Constitution. In my view, it impermissibly discriminates on the
basis of outdated, offensive, and harmful gender stereotypes.
Second, by refusing to engage in a procedural due process analy-
sis, the majority unfairly sidesteps this important issue without an
adequate justification for doing so. Finally, the court distorts and
essentially abandons the time-honored constitutional law of subs-
tantive due process by holding that an unwed father‘s right to as-
sert himself as the parent of his child is deserving of the lowest
level of protection. The Utah and United States Constitutions
strictly protect the fundamental right to parent one‘s own child-
ren; a right that is inextricably linked to the unwed father‘s oppor-
tunity to step forward and assume his parental role. I would hold
that section 78B-6-121(3)(b) is fundamentally unfair as applied to
Mr. Bolden and deprived him of a meaningful chance for a hear-
ing before he lost his rights as a father. Alternatively, I would
hold that section 78B-6-121(3)(b) violated Mr. Bolden‘s substantive

   188   Wells, 681 P.2d 199.
   189   Lehr, 463 U.S. at 262.

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                           In re Adoption of J.S.
                       JUSTICE PARRISH, dissenting

due process rights because it infringed his opportunity interest in
asserting the fundamental right to parent his newborn son and
was not narrowly tailored to serve a compelling government in-
terest.

   JUSTICE PARRISH, dissenting:
  ¶143 I agree with Justice Nehring that the affidavit requirement
of the Utah Adoption Act (the Act), Utah Code section 78B-6-
121(3)(b), unconstitutionally discriminates against unwed fathers
on the basis of their gender. But I find the tenor of his dissent re-
grettable. In my view, the constitutional validity of the affidavit
requirement presents a close issue on which reasonable minds can
legitimately disagree. I therefore write separately on the narrow
issue of equal protection. I would strike the affidavit requirement
as violative of the Equal Protection Clause of the United States
Constitution. As a result, I would not address Mr. Bolden‘s claim
that the affidavit requirement violates his right to due process or
the uniform operation of laws.
  ¶144 As both the majority opinion and Justice Nehring‘s dissent
explain, the affidavit requirement discriminates on the basis of
sex.1 In order for an unwed father to perfect his parental rights, he
must
           file[] with the court . . . a sworn affidavit:
             (i) stating that he is fully able and willing to
            have full custody of the child;
             (ii) setting forth his plans for care of the child;
            and
              (iii) agreeing to a court order of child support
            and the payment of expenses incurred in connec-
            tion with the mother‘s pregnancy and the child‘s
            birth.2
An unwed mother is not required to file a similar affidavit; her
parental rights are perfected by default.

   1   See supra ¶ 72; infra ¶ 87.
   2   UTAH CODE § 78B-6-121(3)(b).

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                       JUSTICE PARRISH, dissenting

  ¶145 This is facially disparate treatment on the basis of sex. Ac-
cordingly, to pass muster under the Equal Protection Clause of the
United States Constitution,3 the affidavit requirement must with-
stand intermediate scrutiny.4 To satisfy this standard, the propo-
nent of the requirement, in this case the Does, must demonstrate
that the disparate treatment of an unwed mother and an unwed
father is ―substantially related‖ to achieving an important go-
vernmental objective.5 Phrased another way, ―[t]he fit between
the means and the important end [must be] ‗exceedingly persua-
sive.‘‖6 In my view, the Does have not satisfied their burden.
                     I. INTERMEDIATE SCRUTINY
  ¶146 The majority correctly recognizes that legislative classifica-
tions that discriminate on the basis of gender are evaluated under
a standard of intermediate scrutiny. In my view, however, the
majority unfairly distinguishes controlling precedent from the
United States Supreme Court by implying that there are actually
two categories of intermediate scrutiny and then evaluating the
affidavit requirement under the less stringent standard.
  ¶147 The majority would apply a higher level of scrutiny to
those cases of ―‗official action that close[] a door or den[y] oppor-
tunity to women (or men).‘‖7 In cases of this nature, the majority
says that the standard is ―difficult‖ to satisfy because it requires
―an ‗exceedingly persuasive‘ justification.‖8 The majority says the
standard is ―easier to satisfy‖ in all other ―less imposing‖ cases of
discrimination on the basis of sex.9 In particular, when ―differen-
tial treatment of men and women stems initially . . . from a
straightforward matter of biology,‖ the majority would require

   3   U.S. CONST. amend. XIV, § 1.
   4   Nguyen v. I.N.S., 533 U.S. 53, 60 (2001).
   5   Id.
   6   Id. at 70.
   7 Supra ¶ 70 (quoting United States v. Virginia, 518 U.S. 515, 532
(1996)).
   8   Supra ¶ 70 (quoting Virginia, 518 U.S. at 532).
   9   Supra ¶ 70.

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                          In re Adoption of J.S.
                       JUSTICE PARRISH, dissenting

only a ―substantial fit‖ between the legislative objective and the
discriminatory means at issue.10
  ¶148 But the United States Supreme Court has not recognized
the distinction suggested by the majority. It has articulated only
one definition of intermediate scrutiny applicable in sex discrimi-
nation cases. In fact, it has defined an ―exceedingly persuasive
justification‖ as one in which the discriminatory scheme is ―sub-
stantially related‖ to the ends it seeks to achieve.11 I therefore am
not persuaded that the United States Supreme Court cases strik-
ing sex-based classifications for failure to advance an exceedingly
persuasive justification are distinguishable.12 And while I ac-
knowledge that the United States Supreme Court‘s precedent in
this area is far from clear, it appears to me that the majority opi-
nion‘s formulation of the lower level of intermediate scrutiny it
applies is, in practice, virtually indistinguishable from the rational
basis review applicable in cases that involve no discriminatory
classification.
   II. THE DOES HAVE FAILED TO MEET THEIR BURDEN
     OF ESTABLISHING AN EXCEEDINGLY PERSUASIVE
        JUSTIFICATION FOR THE DISCRIMINATORY
                AFFIDAVIT REQUIREMENT
  ¶149 In my view, application of the established standard of in-
termediate scrutiny to the affidavit requirement leads to the con-
clusion that the Does have failed to meet their burden of establish-
ing that the Act‘s disparate treatment of unwed fathers and un-
wed mothers is substantially related to achieving an important

   10   Supra ¶ 73.
   11  In Nguyen, Justice Kennedy, with Justices Rehnquist, Ste-
vens, Scalia, and Thomas joining, recognized a single standard for
evaluating claims of sex discrimination under the Equal Protec-
tion Clause, ―explain[ing] that an ‗exceedingly persuasive justifi-
cation‘ is established ‗by showing at least that the classification
serves important governmental objectives and that the discrimina-
tory means employed are substantially related to the achievement
of those objectives.‘‖ 533 U.S. at 70 (quoting Miss. Univ. for Women
v. Hogan, 458 U.S. 718, 724 (1982) (internal quotation marks omit-
ted)).
   12   See, e.g., Virginia, 518 U.S. at 523–24; Hogan, 458 U.S. at 724.

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                       JUSTICE PARRISH, dissenting

governmental objective. The starting point of the analysis is to
identify the objectives that the Act is intended to promote.
  ¶150 The Act sets forth a variety of governmental objectives. It
declares that ―[i]t is the intent and desire of the Legislature that in
every adoption the best interest of the child should govern.‖13
The Act further declares that ―the state has a compelling interest
in requiring unmarried biological fathers to demonstrate com-
mitment‖ to the responsibilities of parenthood.14 While the Legis-
lature may prefer that we simply accept what is set out in the
―Legislative intent and findings‖ section of the Act,15 intermediate
scrutiny requires a more searching analysis. This is particularly
true in cases such as this, where one of the stated legislative objec-
tives is itself discriminatory—that of requiring that only unmar-
ried biological fathers demonstrate commitment to the responsi-
bilities of parenthood. Therefore, while the Legislature has de-
fined the purpose of the Act as requiring only unmarried biologi-
cal fathers to demonstrate commitment to parenthood, we must
ask why it has no similar objective with regard to unmarried bio-
logical mothers. And while the Act purports to further the broad
objective of advancing the best interest of the child, we must con-
front why only biological fathers—and not biological mothers—
must express a future commitment to accept full custody of their
biological child before they may have any say in the child‘s fu-
ture.16

   13   UTAH CODE § 78B-6-102(1).
   14   Id. § 78B-6-102(5)(f).
   15   See id. § 78B-6-102.
   16  In practice, the Act defines the best interest of the child as a
commitment by the biological father to ―have full custody,‖ to de-
velop ―plans for care,‖ and to ―agree[] to a court order of child
support and payment of [pregnancy and birth] expenses.‖
Id. § 78B-6-121(3)(b). And this forward-looking commitment is
required before an unwed father can have any say regarding the
future of his child, whether he intends to consent to a proposed
adoption, consent to adoption by others of his choosing, place the
child with a close family member, or raise the child himself. No
such forward-looking commitment is required on the part of an
unwed biological mother.

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                         In re Adoption of J.S.
                      JUSTICE PARRISH, dissenting

  ¶151 Because we cannot allow a discriminatory legislative ob-
jective to justify a discriminatory legislative requirement, we must
conclude that the Act‘s objective is to secure a forward-looking
commitment by a parent to raise a child before allowing that par-
ent to have any say in the child‘s future. And if that is the objec-
tive, we must ask why such a forward-looking commitment is re-
quired of only unwed fathers.
  ¶152 The majority maintains that the Act serves two purposes.
First, the majority posits that it provides a mechanism of promptly
identifying those who might be designated as parents.17 Second,
it ensures that such persons will fulfill their parental role.18 I ac-
knowledge that biological differences between men and women
justify their disparate treatment with respect to the identification
of unwed fathers. But I fail to see how such biological differences
justify treating men and women differently when it comes to their
forward-looking commitment to fulfill their parental role. Be-
cause the affidavit requirement relates only to this second objec-
tive, I conclude that it fails intermediate scrutiny.
  ¶153 The starting point for analyzing the Act‘s disparate treat-
ment of men and women is the legitimate difference between a
mother‘s and a father‘s biology. A mother‘s biological relation-
ship with her child is readily apparent; a father‘s is not. Because
of this biological fact, I believe it is entirely legitimate for the Act
to provide a mechanism for prompt and reliable identification of a
child‘s biological father. The Act accomplishes this by requiring
an unwed biological father to ―initiate[] proceedings in a district
court of Utah to establish paternity‖ and to ―file[] notice of the
commencement of paternity proceedings . . . with the state regi-
strar of vital statistics.‖19 And because the biological mother‘s
identity is obvious, while a biological father‘s is not, the Act‘s li-
mitation of these requirements to biological fathers has an excee-
dingly persuasive fit with the statutory objective of parental iden-
tification.
  ¶154 Similarly, a mother‘s biology requires her to shoulder re-
sponsibility for the expenses of pregnancy and child birth; a fa-

   17   Supra ¶ 75.
   18   Supra ¶ 75.
   19 UTAH    CODE § 78B-6-121(3)(a), (c).

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                       JUSTICE PARRISH, dissenting

ther‘s biology does not. Based on this legitimate biological differ-
ence, the Act provides a mechanism that is substantially related to
achieving the important governmental objective of requiring each
parent to pay ―a fair and reasonable amount of expenses . . . in ac-
cordance with his [or her] financial ability.‖20 The Act accom-
plishes this by requiring unwed biological fathers to pay a fair
share of such expenses. Again, I find that this requirement is jus-
tified by legitimate biological differences and is substantially re-
lated to the legislative objective that parents share the financial
burden of bringing a child into the world.21
  ¶155 But once a child is born and his or her parents are identi-
fied, I do not believe that biological differences between men and
women justify disparate treatment of unwed mothers and unwed
fathers. The majority posits that a mother‘s biology allows her to
show a commitment to a child by carrying the child to term.22
And because a father‘s biology allows no similar biological ma-
nifestation of commitment, the majority accepts the affidavit re-
quirement as a ―defensible . . . attempt to put unwed parents on
equal footing.‖23 Assuming that the legislative objective is to put
unwed parents on equal footing, I do not believe that the affidavit
requirement substantially advances that objective. Indeed, the af-
fidavit requirement demands a commitment from unwed fathers
that goes far beyond what a mother‘s biology necessarily implies
about her forward-looking commitment to raise her child.24 While

   20   Id. § 78B-6-121(3)(d).
   21 There may be some concern that an unwed mother will, as a
result of her biological position as a mother, be forced to raise an
unwanted child and be burdened with postbirth expenses if the
biological father is allowed to refuse consent to adoption but nev-
ertheless does not take custody of the child or fulfill his financial
responsibility. But Utah law provides a mechanism pursuant to
which a biological mother can safely relinquish her parental rights
and responsibilities apart from adoption. UTAH CODE §§ 62A-4a-
802, 78A-6-504, -514.
   22   Supra ¶ 78.
   23   Supra ¶¶ 79–80.
   24 The plain language of the Act supports this conclusion. In-
deed, in the same section of the Act that asserts the State‘s com-

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                          In re Adoption of J.S.
                       JUSTICE PARRISH, dissenting

a father is required to swear ―that he is fully able and willing to
have full custody of the child,‖ to ―set[] forth his plans for care of
the child,‖ and to ―agree[] to a court order of child support and
the payment of [pregnancy and child birth] expenses,‖ no such
commitment is required of unwed mothers.25 In my view, the af-
fidavit requirement provides something less than an exceedingly
persuasive fit with the biological differences of commitment ex-
pressed through the gestation and birthing process.
  ¶156 By carrying her child to term, an unwed mother demon-
strates some level of commitment. But that commitment cannot
necessarily be interpreted as a forward-looking commitment to
raise her child. Indeed, because the affidavit requirement is found
in the Utah Adoption Act, it will only be implicated when a biolog-
ical mother has no commitment to ―have full custody of the
child,‖ to develop ―plans for care of the child,‖ or to ―agree[] to a
court order of child support and payment of [pregnancy and
birth] expenses.‖26 So while a mother without any forward-

pelling interest in requiring unwed fathers to demonstrate their
commitment to the responsibilities of parenthood, the Act ex-
plains that an unwed father ―demonstrate[s] [his] commitment by
providing appropriate medical care and financial support and by
establishing legal paternity.‖ UTAH CODE § 78B-6-102(5)(f). By
fulfilling subsections (3)(a) and (3)(c) (the paternity requirements)
and (3)(d) (the payment-of-pregnancy-expenses requirement) of
section 78B-6-121, an unwed father has satisfied the State‘s
mandate that he demonstrate his commitment to the responsibili-
ties of parenthood. The affidavit requirement is therefore beyond
what the Legislature itself has stated is necessary for an unwed
father to demonstrate his commitment.
   25   Id. § 78B-6-121(3)(b).
   26  Id. Further, the Legislature has recognized that some moth-
ers have no commitment to raise a child and has, therefore, pro-
vided two mechanisms whereby a mother may relinquish her pa-
rental rights and responsibilities. A mother ―may safely relin-
quish a newborn child at a hospital . . . and retain complete ano-
nymity‖ without fear of investigation or prosecution. Id. § 62A-
4a-802. Alternatively, she may voluntarily relinquish or consent
to termination of her parental rights so long as a court finds that it
is in the ―child‘s best interest.‖ Id. §§ 78A-6-504, -514.

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                       JUSTICE PARRISH, dissenting

looking commitment to her child has standing, a father with an
identical level of commitment does not.
  ¶157 In my view, the fit between the Act‘s objective of securing
a specific, forward-looking commitment to raise a child and the
affidavit requirement is simply too imprecise to justify the dispa-
rate treatment of unmarried biological mothers and unmarried
biological fathers. While biology may demonstrate a biological
mother‘s commitment to bring a child into the world, it does not
necessarily demonstrate a commitment to raise her child. But the
Act requires that an unwed biological father unequivocally ex-
press his forward-looking commitment to raise his child. In my
view, such a disparate advancement of the State‘s stated objective
in securing parental commitment is not a close enough fit to with-
stand intermediate scrutiny.
                              CONCLUSION
  ¶158 Because the affidavit requirement of the Utah Adoption
Act results in the disparate treatment of unwed fathers and un-
wed mothers, the Does have the burden of showing that the re-
quirement satisfies intermediate scrutiny. In other words, they
must establish that the affidavit requirement is substantially re-
lated to achieving an important governmental objective.28 I do not
believe that they have satisfied their burden. The affidavit re-
quirement goes one step too far by requiring unwed fathers, but
not unwed mothers, to make forward-looking commitments to
child rearing. In so doing, the affidavit requirement tips the bal-
ance against the unwed father by requiring him to demonstrate
more than the unwed mother demonstrates by the sheer fact of
her biology. I would therefore hold that the affidavit requirement
of the Utah Adoption Act, Utah Code section 78B-6-121(3)(b), vi-
olates the Equal Protection Clause of the United States Constitu-
tion.

   28   Nguyen v. I.N.S., 533 U.S. 53, 60 (2001).

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