Court Opinion

ID: 7744872
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-30 20:08:30.356817+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:27:34.880865
License: Public Domain

J.P.C. ("the putative father") appeals from a judgment of the Circuit Court of Jefferson County, Bessemer Division, declaring him to be the legal father of J.S.B., a child born during the marriage of O.C.B. ("the mother") and R.B. ("the former husband"). Because the mother did not timely initiate a paternity action against the putative father, we reverse and remand with instructions.
The mother and the former husband were married in 1978. In 1985, the mother began having an affair with the putative father. In December 1986, while the mother and the putative father were engaging in regular sexual relations, the mother approached the former husband, who had not yet discovered the affair, and sought his consent for her to attempt to become pregnant through artificial insemination. The former husband agreed to the procedure. Over the next three months, the mother obtained a number of semen samples from the putative father that were used during the artificial-insemination procedure; however, the sexual liaisons between the mother and the putative father also continued during that period.
The mother became pregnant in March 1987, and gave birth to the child in November 1987. The former husband identified himself as the father of the child on the child's birth certificate, and the joint income-tax returns filed by the mother and the former husband for 1987 identify the child as their dependent. In addition, the former husband obtained health-insurance coverage for the child through his employer, and the child remains subject to that coverage as the former husband's dependent.
In August 1988, the mother filed a complaint in the trial court seeking a divorce. In that complaint, she asserted that "there were no children born to the parties . . . as *Page 487 
a result of their marriage." The former husband filed an answer and waiver, and the trial court entered, on August 23, 1988, a judgment divorcing them. That judgment did not address issues of custody of the child or any support obligation owed by the former husband.
The former husband, in January 1992, filed a motion seeking modification of the judgment to reflect the birth of the child, to award visitation, and to address child support. The mother counterclaimed, seeking enforcement of certain property awards in the divorce judgment. That proceeding was dismissed in January 1993.
On May 16, 1994, the mother filed a petition in the Jefferson County Family Court seeking a judgment declaring the putative father to be the biological father of the child and directing him, among other things, to pay prospective and retroactive child support. The putative father moved to dismiss the mother's petition, asserting, among other things, that the mother's action was barred by the expiration of the five-year limitations period provided in § 26-17-6(a), Ala. Code 1975. A guardian ad litem was appointed for the child, and the former husband was made a party to the action. The guardian filed a motion to dismiss the mother's petition. Before the mother's petition could be heard on its merits, however, the Family Court transferred the matter to the circuit court.
After the case had been transferred, the circuit court ordered blood testing of the mother, the child, and the former husband, the results of which excluded the former husband as the child's biological father. The putative father again moved to dismiss the proceedings, on the authority of § 26-17-6(a), Ala. Code 1975, and also asserted that defense in his answer (which contained a jury demand). The trial court denied the putative father's motion to dismiss, as well as his subsequent motion requesting that the trial court revisit that denial, and directed the mother, the child, and the putative father to submit to blood testing. The case was later set for trial on the circuit court's jury-trial docket.
During the trial, the putative father moved for a judgment as a matter of law, again asserting, among other things, the five-year statute of limitations; the trial court denied that motion. After receiving ore tenus evidence,1 the trial court concluded that § 26-17-6(a) did not apply because, it said, the putative father had "held the child . . . out as his own and [the former husband] did not insist [upon] the stronger presumption afforded a child born during a marriage." The putative father was declared to be the father of the child, and was directed to pay child support, a portion of the mother's attorney fees, and a portion of the fees of the child's guardian ad litem. The trial court later denied the putative father's postjudgment motion.
The putative father, who was the only party to appeal from the judgment, raises four issues on appeal. However, we find dispositive the question of the timeliness of the mother's action.2
The Alabama Uniform Parentage Act ("AUPA"), § 26-17-1 et seq., Ala. Code 1975, contains a number of provisions that *Page 488 
are pertinent to the timeliness issue. Under subdivision (1) of §26-17-5(a), a man is presumed to be the natural father of a child if he and the child's natural mother have been married to each other and the child is born during the marriage. Under that subdivision, the former husband is presumed to be the child's father, and while that presumption is certainly not the equivalent of an adjudication of paternity (State ex rel. T.L.K. v. T.K., 723 So.2d 69, 71
(Ala.Civ.App. 1998)), the existence of such a presumption has a profound effect on a party's ability to maintain a paternity action.
As we discussed in Carr v. Osborn, 757 So.2d 1205 (Ala.Civ.App. 2000), where a child has no presumed father under the AUPA, no statute of limitations prevents an interested party from obtaining a judicial declaration of paternity. However, where a child has a presumed father under subdivision (1) of § 26-17-5(a), as here, Alabama cases have held that a paternity action respecting that child must be brought within five years of the child's birth. That result is based upon the language of § 26-17-6(a), which provides that "a child, a child's natural mother, or a man presumed to be the child's father under subdivision (1), (2) or (3) of Section 26-17-5(a), may bring an action within five years of the birth of said child for the purpose of declaring the existence of the father and child relationship."
The principal case applying § 26-17-6(a) in a similar legal setting is State ex rel. E.K.D. v. M.R.W., 662 So.2d 910 (Ala.Civ.App. 1994), cert. quashed, 662 So.2d 913 (Ala. 1995). In M.R.W., the mother of a child became pregnant three months before meeting her future husband, R.K.D., and seven months before marrying him; the child was born during the first two months of the mother's marriage to the husband. In addition, the child's birth certificate listed the mother's husband as the child's father. Approximately five years and six months after the child's birth, the State of Alabama, on the relation of the mother, brought a paternity action against M.R.W. seeking to have him declared the father of the child. The circuit court dismissed the State's action against M.R.W. based upon the five-year limitations period stated in § 26-17-6(a). This court affirmed the dismissal:
 "The facts of this case are clearly within the parameters of § 26-17-5(a)(1), Ala. Code 1975. The child was born during the mother's marriage to R.K.D., he is listed on the child's birth certificate as the father, and R.K.D. has been the child's presumed father during the child's lifetime. Section 26-17-6(a) `carries with it a five-year period of limitations, which had already expired before this action was brought.' Ex parte Presse, 554 So.2d 406, 412 (Ala. 1989).
 "The legislature placed a five-year period of limitations on bringing an action when the child has a presumed father. `If a statute is not ambiguous or unclear, the courts are not authorized to indulge in conjecture as to the intent of the Legislature or to look to consequences of the interpretation of the law as written.' Ex parte Presse, 554 So.2d at 411 (citing Clark v. Houston County Comm'n, 507 So.2d 902 (Ala. 1987)). Our supreme court has held that § 26-17-6(a) is clear and unambiguous and that it carries with it a five-year period of limitations within which to bring an action. Ex parte Presse. `The decisions of the supreme court shall govern the holdings and decisions of [this court].' § 12-3-16, Ala. Code 1975. Consequently, we must hold that the mother's petition was untimely filed."
M.R.W., 662 So.2d at 912.
The interpretation of § 26-17-6(a) by this court in M.R.W. — that paternity actions *Page 489 
seeking to have a man declared the father of a child (as against a presumed father under § 26-17-5(a)(1)) must be brought within five years of the child's birth — was approved by our Supreme Court in Ex parte State ex rel. State of Ohio, 718 So.2d 669 (Ala. 1998):
 "In M.R.W., the alleged father moved to dismiss a paternity action filed against him, based on the five-year statute of limitations in § 26-17-6(a). The Court of Civil Appeals correctly held that the five-year limitations period applies in an action brought to determine the existence of the father-and-child relationship when a child has a presumed father, as set forth in § 26-17-5(a)(1)."
718 So.2d at 670. Although the Supreme Court in State of Ohio
distinguished M.R.W. because the defendant in State of Ohio had not pleaded or argued the applicability of § 26-17-6(a), the Supreme Court's approval of M.R.W. has been noted in two subsequent cases. SeeState ex rel. T.L.K., 723 So.2d at 70-71 (affirming the trial court's judgment against the State in an action to establish paternity and to collect child support that was not brought within five years of child's birth); State ex rel. P.W. v. T.H.P., 726 So.2d 279, 281-82 (Ala.Civ.App. 1998) (affirming summary judgment entered against mother and child in favor of putative father in paternity action where that action was not filed until 14 years after child's birth); see also id. at 282-83 (special concurrence by dissenting judge in M.R.W. on the authority ofState of Ohio's approval of M.R.W.).
The appellees attempt to distinguish M.R.W., State of Ohio, and their progeny in two ways. First, relying upon the former husband's filing of an amended answer asserting the results of the court-ordered blood tests in this case, they claim that § 26-17A-1, Ala. Code 1975,3
overrides § 26-17-6(a) in this factual setting. As the Supreme Court noted in Ex parte Jenkins, 723 So.2d 649 (Ala. 1998), "[u]nder § 26-17A-1(a), a previously adjudicated father can petition for areopening of the final judgment of paternity . . . if he presents scientific evidence indicating that he is in fact not the biological father." 723 So.2d at 652 (emphasis added). The emphasized words ofJenkins are crucial: while § 26-17A-1(a) is applicable to divorce judgments as well as "pure" paternity judgments (see S.W.M. v. D.W.M.,723 So.2d 1271, 1272 (Ala.Civ.App. 1998)), a prerequisite to the application of § 26-17A-1(a) is that a final judgment must exist
that declares the petitioning party to be the father of a child. Here, the trial court's 1988 divorce judgment did not refer at all to the child, much less adjudicate the former husband to be the child's father, and there is thus no previous adjudication upon which § 26-17A-1(a) can operate.
Second, citing § 26-17-6(b), Ala. Code 1975, and caselaw construing that statute, the appellees contend that no statute of limitations applied to the action. Section 26-17-6(b) provides that an action may be brought at any time "for the purpose of determining the existence or non-existence of the father and child relationship presumedunder subdivision (4) or (5) or (6) of Section 26-17-5(a)" (emphasis added). Those subdivisions provide for a presumption of paternity that applies to (a) men who receive minor children into their homes or "otherwise openly hold out" such children as their natural children, (b) men *Page 490 
who acknowledge paternity of children by a writing filed in accordance with statutes governing legitimation, or (c) men who execute, jointly with the mothers of children, affidavits of paternity.
However, the record in this case does not establish that the putative father performed any of the acts set forth in subdivisions (5) or (6) of § 26-17-5(a). As to these subdivisions, there is no evidence of the putative father's having acknowledged his paternity in a writing acknowledged before a probate judge in the county of his residence (as required by § 26-11-2(a), the "legitimation statute" to which §26-17-5(a)(5) refers), nor is there evidence that he and the mother have executed any affidavit of paternity. Indeed, the record reveals that the putative father refused in 1994 to sign papers drafted by lawyers employed by the mother that would have acknowledged paternity of the child.
The appellees insist that the following evidence presented at trial supports the trial court's conclusion that the putative father "openly held out" the child as his own under subdivision (4) of §26-17-5(a): between 1993 and 1994, the putative father regularly visited her, gave greeting cards to her, allowed his picture to be taken with her, told her that she had a brother and a sister,4 and told her that he loved her. We do not dispute the veracity of mother and the child's testimony that these events did, in fact, occur. However, we do not agree with the proposition that these events amount to "openly
holding out" the child as being the child of the putative father. The actions of the putative father relied upon by the appellees do not amount to declarations of paternity to any person other than the mother and the child themselves; those actions lack the requisite degree, inherent in the terms "openly" and "holding out," of a public
acknowledgment of the child as being the putative father's own. They certainly fall short of the clear statements made by the putative father- decedent in Hampton v. Hampton, 597 So.2d 233 (Ala.Civ.App. 1992), to family members and members of the community that the claimants were his children. Cf. Harrison v. Racca, 360 So.2d 974, 974-75 (Ala. 1978) (evidence that no public documents existed showing a putative husband to be married defeated elements of public recognition of the marriage or open assumption of marital duties and obligations, and supported judgment that no common-law marriage existed). Thus, we conclude that § 26-17-5(a)(4) does not apply here.5
The final argument offered by the appellees in support of their contention that the mother's action was timely is that the scientific and other evidence introduced during the trial to demonstrate that the putative father was the child's biological father rendered the child "a child who has no presumed father under Section 26-17-5," so that an action could be brought at any time to establish her paternity. See
§ 26-17-6(c), Ala. Code 1975; see also Carr, 757 So.2d at 1207 (discussing legal principles governing paternity actions brought in the absence of a presumption of paternity). We cannot accept that argument, however. *Page 491 
Under § 26-17-5(a)(1), the former husband was, as a matter of law, presumed to be the child's father before the mother's action was filed. The mother may have adduced proof that tended to rebut the presumption that the child was fathered by the former husband (i.e., that the child was legitimate) to the satisfaction of the trial court, but the presumption in favor of legitimacy was not destroyed by that proof. As was noted in M.R.W., § 26-17-5(c) has no application where a presumption of fatherhood exists (662 So.2d at 913), and the absence of any efforts on the part of the mother within the five-year period after the child's birth to bring an action to challenge the presumption of paternity as to the former husband is fatal to the mother's action here. See also State ex rel. P.W., 726 So.2d at 282 (because the 16-year-old child had not been a party to a divorce action in which a judgment had incorporated the parties' agreement, which stated that the child was not the child of the parties, the presumption of paternity with respect to the former husband of the child's mother continued to apply to him, rendering § 26-17-6(c) inapplicable).
Based upon the foregoing facts and authorities, we conclude that the mother's paternity action against the putative father was time-barred and that the trial court therefore erred in denying the putative father's motions and in entering a judgment declaring him to be the father of the child in this case. For that reason, we reverse the judgment of the trial court, and we remand the cause for that court to enter a judgment consistent with this opinion. The appellees' request for an attorney fee on appeal is denied.
REVERSED AND REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS.
Yates, Monroe, and Thompson, JJ., concur.
Crawley, J., dissents.
1 The trial court's judgment indicates that it treated the jury's verdict as advisory only. See Rule 39(c), Ala.R.Civ.P.
2 Because the circuit court, which had entered a judgment divorcing the mother and the former husband, retained jurisdiction over those parties and the marital res, and because the child was born during the parties' marriage, that court was a proper forum to hear the issue of the child's paternity. See Floyd v. Floyd, 701 So.2d 1151 (Ala.Civ.App. 1997).
3 That Code section provides, in pertinent part: "Upon petition of the defendant in a paternity proceeding where the defendant has been declared the legal father, the case shall be reopened if there is scientific evidence presented by the defendant that he is not the father. "
4 The record reveals that the putative father and his former wife have two children.
5 Even were the evidence sufficient to demonstrate an open holding out of the child as the putative father's own child, the presumption under subdivision (1) that the child is that of the former husband would prevail over a countervailing presumption; public policy considerations upon which a husband is presumed to be the father of his wife's child are weightier than the other presumptions under § 26-17-5. Ex parteC.A.P., 683 So.2d 1010, 1011 (Ala. 1996).